http://www.theborneopost.com/2012/10/14/whispering-hope/
by Chang Yi. Posted on October 14, 2012, Sunday
A YOUNG Kelabit girl cried for days when she could not further her
education in Marudi. Elsewhere, the Bario Government Secondary School
had been set up and she was to join the first Form 1 batch in the new
school with the rest of her Bario Primary 6 peers.
She
felt as if her dream of joining older relatives in Marudi and Miri were
dashed. However, three years later, upon completion of her Form 3 in
Bario, she moved further afield – to study at St Teresa’s School in
Kuching.
Her life from thence would be fairytale-like. And dearest
to her heart, she was able to help her family in ways she never dreamed
of. Instead of becoming a doctor herself, she married a doctor and not
only brought up all her younger siblings but put them through college
and university. Now, after bringing up her own two children it is time
for her to do something for her community in the Bario Highlands.
This
is the story of a Bario-born Kelabit lady, PDNR Datin Pearl Jai Mohan
(PJK) and District Extension chairman (2012-2013) of Inner Wheel
District 330. In West Malaysia, she is often mistaken for a North Indian
lady because of her name and their unfamiliarity with the Kelabit
ethnic group.
Recently, she and her friends went to Bario to carry
out an Inner Wheel Whispering Hope project. They donated six large
boxes of materials, including pencil cases and other items, to the Bario
Primary School students.The excess luggage (for the donation) charged
by MAS was RM300.
Headmistress Dora Tigang was delighted to host a
special morning assembly to welcome the three Inner Wheel members –
Pearl herself, Rokiah Abdul from the Kota Kinabalu branch and Florence
Enau, president of Sarawak Inner Wheel. In Bario, they were joined by
Inner Wheeler Joanna Joy.
The morning assembly gave the ladies the opportunity to speak from their hearts to the children.
Pearl told her own story of how she aimed high and how she has been able to give back to her beloved homeland.
Why
was she giving pencils, for instance? When she was in primary school,
she had to be creative in using pencils down to the last centimetre by
using the stalk of ‘resam’ to extend her pencil. She had blisters in her
little finger because she was writing with short pencils. Nowadays, she
values pencils more than ever.
The disciplined primary school
children, all sitting cross legged on the floor of the wooden Astaka
(open assembly hall), were awestruck by her gracious presence and her
short but effective speech.
Rokiah advised the students to study
hard so that they could become pilots and doctors. She advised them to
stay healthy and be active.
Florence,
who spoke in English, advised them to learn English and go far, saying
anyone could do this if they worked and studied hard and believed in
themselves.
According to Dora, the children were very good in both
Bahasa Malaysia and English because they and their parents were very
enthusiastic about learning English. Tourists who come to Bario also
help to open the minds of the people to the outside world.
At the
end of the assembly, the students showed their appreciation in the Bario
student way – clap clap clap clap … muah muah muah muah.
Still barefoot
“Many of the Penan students are still not wearing shoes,” remarked the observant Pearl.
She was already thinking of how to send school shoes to them.
The
Penan students, in particular at the primary school level, are
boarders. School mothers or student hostel administrators look after
them and give them a good boarding programme of food and accommodation.
Food
is prepared by a local Kelabit cook in the employ of the Sarawak
government who has worked here for six years. By 11 o’clock, he has
already prepared a balanced meal of curry chicken and a local vegetable
with fragrant rice. Rice is fresh from the farm whenever parents bring
extra rice to share.
Lovely children
The
ladies also visited the pre-school department and met the lovely little
Penan and Kelabit children – almost all of them undersized and dressed
in a variety of clothing.
The favourite garb was long pants with
an overly long dress and a sweat shirt on top. Pink is definitely the
‘in’ colour for the girls and blue of various shades for the boys. The
pre-school teachers see to their snacks and the cleanliness of the
classroom. There are 28 of them. Many of these Penan kids have walked
one hour with their mothers to the school and they do that for more than
200 days a year!
In a separate project, the Miri Inner Wheel
Club, headed by Florence, made a special charity drive and collected
items to be donated to the Penans in the village of Arul Dalan. Home
essentials like kettles and cooking pots are very much needed by the
Penans who live in Arul Dalan, a newly set up Penan settlement about one
hour’s walking distance from Bario Asal. Other donations include baby
clothes and even a parang. A great essential is canvas which the Penan
villagers appreciate.
The Penan children need more clothes and perhaps even special tuition to help them master their lessons in the primary school.
The
Penan pre-schoolers have to walk one hour to school and one hour back.
Their mothers walk one hour to bring them to school, then one hour back
to their homes to do their chores. After that, they walk another one
hour to school again, then one more hour to bring their children back
home.
It is no wonder these Penan women are pencil-slim. They walk
four hours a day just to make sure their children are safe in school
and are back home in time to be with the family. Many modern city women
don’t do so much on their treadmills!
Pearl and her friends are
definitely thinking of more ways in which the Inner wheelers can help.
They might see another project coming to Bario in November.
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