Monday, 07 October 2024
Kampung Pictures Tale in Ten BR1Mless
BR1Mless PDF Print E-mail
Written by straits-mongrel   
Sunday, 23 February 2014 14:00

Yesterday (Sat, Feb22, 2014) RM4.6 billion was disbursed to some 7.9 Malaysians in the form of BR1M 2014. Each registered Malaysian head of household earning less than RM3,000 a month would have received RM700, while those getting RM3,000-4,000 would receive RM450. Registered single Malaysians earning less than RM2,000 a month would have received RM300 in this scheme. This, according to PM Najib Razak, is the government's way "to change the policy from bulk subsidy to targeted subsidy in stages and shift the savings to the people through BR1M. BR1M is an example of the targeted subsidy". Yes, but a top-down targeted subsidy.


See, let's first dwell on who qualifies as a Malaysian. A bearer of a MyKad.


And what if you don't have one?


pov09

This is a story of a boy who lives with his mother and father in the slums of Air Panas near Setapak, KL. He goes by the name Zahka. At least that's how he spells it. The six-year-old hasn't been to school, knows only a smattering of Malay and speaks mostly Tamil with his friends and family. He won't be going to school anytime soon if things stay the same.


His story is captured in this photo essay, the final year project by graphic design graduate Chia Hong. His work was exhibited at the recently concluded Art and Design Graduation Show at New Era College, Kajang, and caught the attention of many visitors.


Said Chia: "I wanted to document the difficulties faced by the poor. So many of us refuse to acknowledge they exist, that there isn't such a problem here. But it is around us, as I found out, and bigger than we imagine."


"Zahka is adopted. His mother found him as a new-born baby abandoned in a lorong near their squatters. Despite being poor, she decided this boy had to live. She took him in and nursed him.


"His mother, Firiza (that's how she spells it), has never been to school. She doesn't have a MyKad nor a birth cert. Zahka, too, does not have any birth documentation. I just felt hopeless hearing their story. My only way would be to create awareness through these photographs."

 


pov12

Zahka spends the day scavenging the dumpsite near their home. Apparently entire families eke a living in this landfill, hawking off anything that is of value in the recycling market.


"They look for bottles, cans, discarded steel parts... anything that can fetch a few ringgit at the besi buruk outlet. With that, they get their meals," said Chia. "This was where I first met Zahka. He was digging through the garbage with his hands. When I approached him, he smiled happily rather than run away.


"I tried to start to a conversation but Zahka hardly knew Malay. That evening at home, I decided to pick up new words in Tamil. Google Translate was very helpful," laughed Chia. He noted key phrases in Tamil into his phone and used them the next day with the boy. "It really worked. Zahka laughed at my pronunciation. We shared a simple meal and he shared with me his friends, other kids from the area."


pov11

While we drink treated water from piped sources, the scavenging community in Air Panas live directly off from the Klang River. They wash there amidst the trapped debris of the city-dwellers.


pov01a

For Zahka and his parents, home is a rented single room in a dilapidated zinc-roofed wooden house set among a dozen others. All their belongings fit inside this compartment and no cooking is allowed by the landlord. The roof leaks everywhere and it blisters in the midday sun. His family is considered more fortunate. The entire neighborhood gets filled with beggars and odd-job workers who return to the area towards sundown. They sleep in the alleyways and outside the shacks.


"I was not prepared for the change in atmosphere. To be frank, I was frightened," said Chia about dusk at the settlement. "Among them were drunks, and they seemed aggressive. They kept asking me what I was doing there, what was in my bag, and basically told me to leave."


pov03

Chia returned to the area half a dozen times in a period of a month to document the life there. Through his visits, he got to know more of Zahka 'The Cheerful'.


"He has such a big heart. He has a natural love for animals and the way he plays with his friends in the neighborhood, you could just tell his warmth. On one of my earlier visits, Zahka had found an injured monkey. It seemed like its legs were broken. Somebody hurt it. Zahka gave the monkey a bath and cared for it lovingly. He said he wanted to keep it as a pet.


"When I returned the next day, Zahka was sobbing. I found out the pet monkey died that night."


pov06

So here's a big-hearted boy raised in a family without identity. No papers, no property, just the flattened plastic bottles which protect his feet. The way things are, he won't be in a classroom, won't be getting out of this intergenerational cycle of poverty. And BR1M won't be coming his way either.


pov05

But is he a lesser human being than you and I?


Lesser a Malaysian?


pov08

Saya Anak Bangsa Malaysia believes the country can be more strategic in improving the lives of the poor and the marginalised. Top-down prescription is not working despite the claims otherwise by the government. For aid to really work, one needs to get into the fine-grain pockets of pain and the ignored because each case is unique. For one it may be about education, for another about a gambling habit or a handicap or of self-esteem. It's not about opening the money tap per se, but how you distribute and use these funds.


To this end, SABM and friends have produced the Social Inclusion Act and plan to table it as a Private Member's Bill in Parliament.


You can get the draft copy here (English) and here (Bahasa Melayu).


pov10

Social inclusion embraces the many layers of society and gives every individual a fighting chance to better his or her life. It is premised on the fact that we are human beings, all equal.


"Firiza loves Zahka. You can see that so clearly. But she can only do so much," said Chia Hong, as we ended the interview. "I only hope we the people can find a way to do more in a deeper way, a more effective way."


Malaysians, we surely can.

 

In the coming weeks, we will be highlighting key features about the proposed Act and how it can change the way we help one another. A way which involves you and I.



All pictures courtesy of Chia Hong

 

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