April 2008


I, like many others, have bemoaned our unfortunate circumstances and how God must be angry with us for we are plagued with problem after problem after problem. We embrace this frustration so deeply that it has become ingrained into our minds, embedded deeply into the recesses of our consciousness until we cannot separate ourselves from these feelings of distraught and thus our every movement, be it physical or spiritual, become tainted with them.

Any little thing will set us off, somehow reminding us of our woes and pathetic circumstances, enabling us to plunge further into the black-hole of despair, rendering us unable to free ourselves from the vicious cycle of self pity.

If we really have time to ponder, to reflect on our circumstances, are we able to, for a moment, release the restraints of despair and introspect on the reality of our conditions:

Are we really that bad off?
Is life really that horrible?

Many of us forget, so caught up in our woes, how fortunate we really are.

On pages 250 and 251 of my Sociology book, there is a photographic essay on the city of Phnom Penh, Cambodia. The photographs are not depicting normal touristy attractions, but a hidden place, so far off from the tourist map and one where many would not even venture to peek into, either literally or even vicariously. It is of the village within the city dump of Phnom Penh.

Yes, there are people living in the city dump, not just adults but also children.
There are photographs depicting their normal lives that revolve around carrying bags and bags of their newfound treasures from the trash of others; of children riding around in bikes, playing ontop of the road–which consist of nothing more than leveled trash; and of them eating and bathing amidst the mounds and mounds of garbage.

Now tell me, could any one of us really live like that?

The photographs also remind me of the conditions of my fellow Indonesians who live beside the foul-smelling river in Jakarta. I remember having to walk across a plank not even 5 inches wide, to get to this part of the city. Conveniently tucked away, underneath the numerous bridges, the houses are compact and close together. You cannot reach them by car, only by foot or by motorcycle. Inside, they mainly have one room as their living space. And this is shared by 4-5 people, sometimes more.

I wonder now if they ever cringe from the smell emanating from that foul river, so heavily infested with waste and garbage and maybe a mutant animal or two, or how they could withstand being flooded every time the rain comes down.

There is also this elderly lady who would, every morning, walk around the neighborhood of comfortable houses safely behind proudly erected gates and pick away at the trash left behind in the front, by the street. She would have with her this burlap bag, filled to the max and seemingly impossible for her to burden her small, tiny frame with. Somehow, though, she manages to do it, every morning, of every day, of every week, every month, and every year.

And then there’s the ‘Children of the Street’ (Anak Jalanan). They weave in and out of traffic–stopped momentarily by the red of the stoplight–and glance inside each waiting car to catch someone’s eye, hopefully a friendly eye. The clothes on their back are crumpled, wrinkled, and smudged with debris and mud from pollution. Despite their wretched conditions, they manage a smile, a big smile at either the occupants of the car or at one another.
Their playground is the side of the busy highway, beneath the toll road up above buzzing with cars going to and from the overly populated capital. Balls are thrown in the air to gleeful faces awaiting to catch them in return; a cluster of three gather to sit on the edge of the sidewalk engrossed in a conversation probably speckled with childhood imagination and tainted with the depressed state of their own realities.

I drove past them behind the gated comforts of my conditions back home and I wonder, with sympathetic curiousity, what are their lives like, what would it be like to be in their shoes for even one day, what would make me smile in those conditions? Would I be able to remain positive?

I may not know what life for them is like, and I may not be able to properly wear their shoes, but I do know that it does take more than a smidgen of strength to endure such hardships day in and day out–especially to endure it with a smile on your face and a positive spirit that refuses to be cut down no matter the obstacle facing it.

..many great deeds are accomplished in times of squalid struggle…Hardship, loneliness, and penury are a battlefield which has its own heroes, sometimes greater than those lauded in history.

Strong rare characters are thus created; poverty nearly always a foster-mother, may become a true mother; distress may be the nursemaid of pride, and misfortune the milk that nourishes the spirits “– Les Miserables

- Fall 2007

*written a few months back*

My memories of Soeharto are heavy with smoke and chaos, as it was during my first return to my country that Indonesia fell from its glitz and glamour into a cloud of erupted suppressed frustration, hurling itself at any passing target, wreaking havoc all over the archipelago with Jakarta, its capital, sustaining the most damages. The May 1998 riots are still embedded in my mind as I, at the mere age of 16, was right in the middle of it.
Soeharto was away in Egypt, if my memory serves me well, and it was the day following the deaths of the Trisakti students who fell at the hands of the authorities during a protest. Indonesia was suffering from an economic crisis (krismon we called it) and the dollar was ridiculously high at 12000 Rupiah for 1 US Dollar. Prices for the basic goods sharply rose, and Soeharto had been re-elected again as President.

The people would have no more. Students came out in throngs to protest the re-election results and the rising prices. They sat in hordes atop the Parliament building in Jakarta. I remember passing them one day and begging my mom to let me join. She, of course, denied my requests seeing how I was just 16 and a female, with an American accent no less! I would become prime target should anything happen.

And something did happen.
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*Thank you, Rima for including this link in one of your posts.

In the name of Allah the most beneficial the most merciful

I would like to start by saying I wanted to speak from my heart and not through any particular position that this temporarily world may have given me. Am also being very challenged right now because I am a public speaker because I want to say a meaning that is very sincere, and I think sincerity is something that is very difficult and a very rare commodity nowadays and am speaking for myself I think that the very word personality finding it’s root in Latin word persona meaning mask and I don’t want to have a mask before I speak and am hoping that everyone has shed their mask before they leave and have truly understand one another and looked at one another face trying to genuinely understand another one in what we all believe in below is a verse from the Qur’an.

O people we (God) have created you from a pair from a male and a female and we have made you into peoples and tribes that you may know one another.

I think that I would like to live it of saying that to me in this context Allah, God is if I am allowed to say sin ominous in this context with truth, justice, beauty and a sovereign good and I think that everybody here in one way or the other believes, that there is something true you wouldn’t be here if you believed that nothing can be true and there is something beautiful one way or the other again and there is something good because everybody has good in them, and that there is justice but the only difference between us is how we define respectively truth, justice, beauty and good so let me just tell you that Walahi by Allah I swear is all semantic (more…)

“North and South” chronicles the journey of the heroine, Margaret Hale, as she moves from the gentile South to the smog-filled Industrial North. There, she encounters a disparity she has not yet been accustomed to: that of the working class poor and the affluent merchants. The divide between the two extremes have not yet been bridged by a rising middle-class.

As the movie progressess, the modern phenomena of the rich getting richer and the poor getting poorer is poignantly portrayed through the unsuccessful strikes leading to the demise of not only the working class proponents of the strike but also a manufacturer as others, mainly the merchants, maximized their income through speculation. Despite the abject poverty in the heart of the city, the affluent walk on by without a flinch. The level of acceptance shown by the elite of the wretched conditions afflicting the great majority of the citizens in Milton is deeply unsettling.

As I watch the movie, for probably the fourth time, I am struck by the thought that in our times, with all its advances and economic superiority, there still exists the working-class poor and the homeless. In our Washington DC suburbs area, considered one of the most affluent in the nation, we are still confronted by this disparity, though probably not as stark. Or perhaps its invisibility is not because of location or frequency of encounter but because of our own shielding of such sights, our own censureship of the harsh realities around us. Or have we become accustomed and when we go out we only see a blended, blurred image of our surroundings?

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2008 is on its way to becoming the year of life-changing experiences. All around, couples are either newly engaged, married, or pregnant. I know of more than a handful of women who are now pregnant or have just become mommies, or are newly pregnant again. Weddings also abound this year as well as engagements. Though the economy is slowing, the housing market plummeting, and a recession is seemingly around the corner (hopefully not), people are continuing on with their lives – which is a very good thing. The not so good thing is the continuing of the “keeping up with the Joneses” complex that seems to plague everyone who are in the middle of this wonderful, oh so magical, life changing experience. The government encouraging (or pushing) us to spend, spend, spend! does not help the situation at all. The journey towards these blessed events are ever more burdened with the race towards maintaining a degree of comfortability that at times exceeds our capabilities.

The baby can’t have just any old stroller, s/he needs a Bugaboo, a Quinny! The crib bedding has to be Serena and Lily, Ducduc, not secondhand! Clothing has to be from Gymboree, Baby Gap, Burberry, not from Ebay or thrift stores! Her engagement ring can’t be less than half a carat or 10k in white gold, it needs to be more than one carat and platinum with flawless diamonds encircling it! Our wedding can’t be at home, it needs to be at the Grand, the OmniShoreham, the Four Seasons!

But does it really? (more…)