YOU-th ESSSAY COMPETITION  |   March - May 2005

 

University Category Foreign Student Prize Winner
Gloria Arlini
, National University of Singapore

 

 

 

Title
DARING ENOUGH TO CHANGE THE WORLD


Years ago, as I joined my family erupting in laughter as Sandra Bullock benignly said the clichéd “World Peace” during the Miss Universe Q & A session in Miss Congeniality, I secretly squirmed uncomfortably. Would other people also laugh when they know that I, too, have the same utopia: a world where everyone lives in harmony with everyone else regardless of their differences and where conflict and war are the common enemies of mankind?

For a small individual like me, it would be self-defeating to think that I could single-handedly succeed on the task powerful individuals and nations have yet to achieve. However, refusing to rest contented while tragedy after world tragedy appears on the newspaper headlines, I seek to do what little I can. The words of Neale Walsch, the author of the book Conversation With God inspire me: “You will not change the world by trying first to change the world. You will change the world by first changing yourself.” Deciding to heed this advice, I would share in this essay ways that I see myself to be the agent of change that I wish to see in the world, and from there, inspire others to find in their hearts conscience to make this world a better place.

There are three simple yet pertinent ways that I believe are practical and meaningful to build a better world. The first is to build a culture of care, because afterall, humanity is the foundation of civilization. Next, the concretization of this culture is expressed in the generosity to give and share with the less fortunate, not only materially, but also emotionally. However, care and generosity would be useless if people only help those whom they sympathize with and neglect those they are prejudiced against. Dispelling stereotypes and prejudice is therefore important for the world to advance further, and this will be discussed in the last section. While these steps still sound somewhat theoretical, I would use anecdotes to show how they are in fact very much achievable even within my capacity as a foreign student in Singapore.


Building the culture of care

Singapore is not lacking in its attempt to build the culture of care. The nation-wide Singapore Kindness Movement was launched in the year 2000 under the jurisdiction of Ministry of Communication and the Arts to build a more gracious Singapore. However, despite its best interest to imbue Singaporeans with desirable traits, my reaction to this campaign progresses from curiosity, amusement, and currently, skepticism. The Wedding Punctuality Campaign 2004 was the last straw.

Indeed, the “late culture” is un-gracious. Indonesians joke among themselves as possessing jam karet or rubber watches because of their tendency to be late, and nothing could be done about this because Indonesia is simply too big for any nation-wide campaign to be effective. However, taking advantage of the size of Singapore to micro-manage the ways in which its people behave is not advisable either. Indeed, the fact that the state should encourage such campaign borders on the ridiculous, and like a rebellious child who is overly constrained, the intended outcome might swing to the other extreme end.

Nevertheless, I believe that the culture of care is crucial in building a better world, for without kindness that comes from within, what stops people from perpetuating conflict and taking gains on the expense of others in capitalistic societies? However, the key to build this culture is not by making it a full-fledged top-down movement, and definitely not a punishable legislation such as the Parental Maintenance Act. Such regulations would fail in building what Weber calls substantive rationality, or the rational actions based on deep-seated values and norms, and instead brings about formal rationality where people calculate their actions based on its merits and demerits before the efficient state bureaucracy.

Instead, I propose that these changes should come from bottom-up. To quote Walsch, “Change is an act of freedom, not an act of compliance” and to change a people, one should be voluntarily inspired by one’s own peers through real actions so that one could change what Walsch calls their “inner truth.” The chance for individuals to do meaningful things to inspire one another is better today than ever in Singapore, as the government increasingly encourages people to take charge of their own lives. By doing real actions on positive things, I believe that small as I am, I would be able to inspire some changes towards a better world. Indeed I have begun some of these actions, which I will outline next.

“It is more blessed to give than to receive” Acts 20:35

The first change that I would like to inspire in people is to widen the concept of ‘giving’ beyond its monetary sense. Singaporeans are definitely not desensitized, selfish and money-minded as some bitter critics have it. One merely needs to look at the outpouring of cash donation for the tsunami victims last December. Just two days ago, when I helped out at the merchandise booth for my faculty’s musical production in aid of Patient Care Centre of Tan Tock Seng Hospital, a lady generously paid ten times more for the merchandise she purchased. I have not the slightest doubt that Singaporeans are a generous lot.

However, the problem with this generosity is that it confines the philosophy of giving strictly to monetary contributions. This is understandable because living in a capitalist society, it is hard for us to understand that money is not the solution to everything. Unfortunately, this deters those who are not materially advantageous from giving other intangible forms of support, such as emotional or physical support. In fact, in light of the recent tsunami disaster, a more cynical newspaper article asked whether those who do not contribute any form of help are just excusing their apathy on their material scarcity.

Partly because of my shoestring budget that renders it impossible to give monetary contribution, and partly to prove to myself that there still are individuals who value non-monetary forms of compassion, my friend and I decided to go down to Aceh in the wake of the tsunami on the first available opportunity offered by The Necessary Stage and University Scholars Programme of NUS. My aim then, other than to interview the tsunami survivors as part of the project, was simply to show my solidarity as an Indonesian to my countrymen, and to give selflessly.

Upon reaching Aceh with the Mercy Relief team, I immediately proved myself wrong as I saw how teams after teams of SAF doctors under Mercy Relief worked tirelessly to provide medical and psychological aids to the locals. My in-depth interviews with the locals further proves to me how much they appreciate human compassion after the massive losses that they experienced, much more than simply monetary contributions. However, the ultimate reward upon my return to Singapore was when my friends expressed their interest that they would like to go to Aceh, and later Nias, to be involved in the reconstruction period of these disaster-stricken areas. In some inexplicable way, I have unintentionally become the flesh-and-blood inspiration of many other ordinary students in Singapore who are convinced that one needs not possess some kind of superiority to do their bit of charity.

These are very real ways in which as an undergraduate student, I could make changes to the lives of the people around me. As university students, there are even greater opportunities because we are given freedom to initiate projects. I contemplate to propose some school adoption scheme or to initiate partnership between NUS and Aceh university students to chart a long-term plan to rebuild Aceh, while some friends of mine are initiating Youth Expedition Project to tsunami-stricken areas. There are definitely plenty opportunities to show that we care, monetarily or otherwise.


Difference≠Unequal

In a heterogeneous society like Singapore, generous Singaporeans could very easily fall into the trap of clannish solidarity. It is pointless to deny the existence of prejudices and stereotypes. Attempting to eliminate them would only bring frustration to the idealists because it is part of human’s social psychology. Yet, history has shown us the horrors of Nazi concentration camps and the ethnic cleansing in Kosovo to be the result of racial prejudice. For myself, if I could not eliminate these deeply-rooted sentiments, I would at least show a clear stance that I am against them and hoping that my actions would inspire others around me to behave similarly.

As an Indonesian, I am deeply concerned with the misfortune born by my fellow Indonesian foreign domestic workers (FDWs) who sell their labour in Singapore. My own research in this field has allowed me a chance to spend time with them, be it talking personally, spending time with them during their language classes, or going out in groups during their day off at Lucky Plaza. I have received weird stares from shopkeepers who silently asked me through their looks why I mix around with the underclass in Singapore. My answer is simple: if not their fellow countrymen who are also sojourners in this foreign land, who else would and could care for these FDWs?

At first my mother (like many other people would, I imagine), cringes at the thought of her daughter (who studies overseas) going about holding hands and giving farewell hugs to ‘lowly’ maids. However, she eventually gets use to the idea and I could see that she ceases to view them in the stereotype she used to hold before. The same change happens to my friends who are more cautious in expressing their class-based stereotypes. While they have not yet fully overcome their stereotyping viewpoints, I am thrilled that they slowly appreciate my involvement with the FDWs, and in turn, appreciate these ladies for what they are worth: Indonesian foreign exchange heroes.

However, I would fall prey to the clannish solidarity that I warned against earlier in this section if I use nationality as an excuse to only help my fellow nationals. While my nationality bonds me with fellow Indonesians in distress, my humanity bonds me with anyone in distress, regardless of race, religion or nationality. I am heartened to see the numerous civic society groups which seek to help marginalized groups of people in Singapore, such as the Student Mentorship Programme (SMP) to help youths in school, and various religious-based support groups that provide classes and activities for the FDWs. While as individuals we could begin to inspire changes on others through our actions, civic groups consisting of a group of people concerned over a common cause who come together to bring about the desired changes would definitely be more powerful and more efficient in advocating desired changes. Through these channels, I am more confident of the changes that I could contribute in my own small ways.

SMP is an interesting project that I have contemplated doing for a long while. The idea of being able to impart my personal turn-of-age experience to another person and be a role model to him/her appeals very much to me. Its philosophy is similar to the Peer Support Programme I was involved in in my first year of coming to Singapore, where I as a secondary three student helped my secondary one Singaporean juniors to adjust to their secondary school lives. Although I myself was no more ‘settled’ than them in secondary school, being in Singapore for only a year then, being able to share with them personal anecdotes and experience in surviving my teenage years sparked interesting conversation among us. We were no longer Singaporeans and an Indonesian, but a group of girls in their early teens who went through similar turbulences in our lives.

Indeed, while there are limits as to what foreigners like myself can do in inspiring changes in this foreign land, our foreign-ness should not be employed as a reason to shun away from our social responsibility as a human being. Undeniably, Singaporeans and I have many differences, but we have far more commonalities as daughters, students, teenagers, women, etc. from which we could learn from each other.


Conclusion

As an individual and a foreigner, there are definitely limits to the ways that I could touch others’ lives and change the world to the better. However, such hindrances should not deter foreigners from also having a vision and making small valuable actions that could advance towards this goal. Making use of civic opportunities to care for others are just some of the many ways to build the culture of care and giving, as well as to help those who are different from us. The utopia might be elusive, but at least, they are not that far.

 

 



University Category Winners

1st Prize Sri Ranjini, Mei Hua (Nanyang Technological University)
2nd Prize George Baylon Radics (National University of Singapore)
Consolation Prize Patricia Loke Mei Khay (Nanyang Technological University)
Foreign Student Gloria Arlini (National University of Singapore)

Junior College/Polytechnic Category Winners
1st Prize Pang Tze Wei (Catholic Junior College)
2nd Prize Tan Li Ling (Hwa Chong Junior College)
Foreign Student Loo Li Jimmy (Ngee Ann Polytechnic)

Secondary School Category Winners
1st Prize Hannah Rheya Devaser (CHIJ St Theresa's)
2nd Prize Rohit Sajjan (Tanjong Katong Secondary School)
Consolation Prize Chen Jin Guan (Hwa Chong Institution)

Award Ceremony was held on 3 September 2005 at YOU-th SpeaK! Conference 2005