Good old traditional media!
Yesterday we were contacted by a man
called William, to inform us that he had been observing the progress of the After
School Project over the local
newspapers and he wanted us to take the children of his longhouse (RumahAmpik) into
our program!
The After School Project is an
educational program where we ‘foster’ groups of children from the community and
carry out various educational activities with them, to teach them that learning
can be a fun and rewarding experience. We currently have three groups of
children under our charge, which are the Kompleks Hamidah Yakub orphanage,
Rumah Anak Amal Kesayangan Kami orphanage and the children of the nearby
community in Kampung Wireless.
We were invited today Mr. William’s
longhouse to meet with the village chief and his assistant and during our
meeting they told us of the high dropout rate of their village, as well as the
high marriage rate, especially of those under 18-years-old. These marriages
were usually due to unplanned teen pregnancy and are legal in Malaysia, as the
parents of the under-aged individuals gave their consent. Something Mr. William
said really shocked me and made me realise that the After School Project and
the education it brings really is important.
“Parents protect our children,
saying ‘don’t scare them, let them be!’ but when they get older, they get
wilder. They say ‘help them, but don’t scare them, let them be!’ and later when
they’re young adults, they are set in their ways and cannot be changed. They
are poor and will always be poor because they are uneducated, all they can do
is mix cement and sit in guardhouses. They are poor, so they drink, which makes
them more poor; this makes them sadder, so they drink some more. Their parents
say ‘help them!’
How? It’s too late.”
Traditional media has a way of
reaching the local communities that the internet can’t, not just because they
might now have internet connections where they are but because there is
something about an article in the newspaper that says something about an
organisation’s reliability. Aside from that, it doesn’t take any effort or
commitment to comment on a post on Facebook, but it takes a certain amount of
conviction and investment in a situation to call a phone number on a newspaper
article, talk to a receptionist and wait to be transferred before asking for
help from a complete stranger.
Hopefully, after meeting with him and discussing the situation with him, we can help him and his people in the future.
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