Saturday, March 10, 2007

Someone is reminding us just in case we forget



ummahfilms

Thursday, March 08, 2007

Ekstra!

Pesta Perdana 9 Ekstra is making a rerun tomorrow at 7.30pm on Suria Channel just before the actual award show itself which will be telecast at 9.30pm.

Ekstra is only half an hour and features Diva N Huda presenting 9 reasons why you should watch Pesta Perdana. Peppered with some wicked humour, it takes a jab at the nominees and nominations of Pesta Perdana. I would call it sindir-sindir sayang. There are certain things that I could possibly be brutal with but it's not too nice to dry your dirty linens for all to see and you still have to sayang the hands that rock the cradle, if you know what I mean. The first watch was entertainingly wicked but I don't know how the second telecast will feel, after all we already knew the winners of Pesta Perdana 9.

Have fun watching and give me your constructive feedback.

Saturday, March 03, 2007

No Vision?

Forgive me if I sound cynical or critical of my own race. But I can't help feeling burdened by the apathy of some of my people, yes some, not all. But this some, and the other some(s) do add up. And the sum of all the some(s) is negative.

Do read the following article, the ones in red is just me "thinking aloud".

1 in 6 Malay adults living with bad vision
(Study finds over 50% simply short-sighted which is easily treated)
by Salma Khalik, The Straits Times Health Correspondent

One in six Malay adults here is living with bad vision, even though many of the problems faced are easily correctable. Easily correctable so what's the problem...?

The findings from a two-year study have startled the doctors who conducted it. Associate Professor Wong Tien Yin said: "The situation here is comparable to rural Sumatra and not what would be expected in a developed country." Rural Sumatra??? That explains it all, isn't it? From the problem of lack of education to lack of eyesight, the Malay Singaporean mentality is that of rural Sumatra?!!! Really???

The opthalmologist with both the National University of Singapore and the Singapore National Eye Centre said more than half of them were simply short-sighted, a situation easily corrected with spectacles. Yes, short-sighted in all sense of the word.

A third had cataract, a layer clouding the eye lens, which can be surgically removed. The rest had more severe problems like glaucoma or pressure on the eyeball, and diabetic retinopathy which is a leading cause of blindness.

But what shocked Prof Wong was, when told that they would see better with spectacles, many said there were unlikely to follow up as they could not afford to pay for them. He said: "Some of them are very short-sighted." Puns intended, I supposed. They are short-sighted and they are short-sighted. Double whammy!!!

Prof Wong who headed the two-year $500,000 eye study on Malays here, said women were twice badly off as men. And among people 70 years and older, one in two is struggling with poor eyesight.

He did not have hard data to support it, but felt that "more men may have corrected eyesight because they go out to work. More women stay at home and feel they don't need to see so well."
Why? Why do Malay women have to feel that they don't need to see so well? Many household chores need you to see well!

It could also be ignorance on their part, he said, as well as financial constraints. Ignorance and financial constraits, again and again. These two traits seem to fit in well with the Malays, I mean some of the Malays. Kenapa agaknya?

Prof Wong said the team - which included members from the medical faculty, hospitals and the Muslim Religious Council, with help also from eye doctors from Australian and American universities - decided to study eye diseases in Malays because such data "is completely absent."

He is following this up with a three-year study of Indians here, starting this month. Later, the Chinese here will also be studied.

Comparing the Malay results with similar studies done in Beijing and Sydney, Malay Singaporeans are twice as likely to do nothing about their poor eyesight. No money, don't do lah. Got money, don't care.

The study of 3200 Malays aged 40 - 80 years old also found that out of five people, one had diabetes, three had high blood pressure and two had smoked with one still on cigarettes today.
hmmm...

The study findings were presented yesterday morning at an Asian eye meeting that has attracted more than 800 delegates from 33 countries. The four-day meeting at Suntec is hosted by the Singapore Eye Research Institute. The whole world is going to know the visionless state of the Malays.

When told of the findings, Madam Halimah Yacob, head of the Government Parliamentary Committee for Health, was "very disturbed." Yes, be disturbed. Be very disturbed. I'm disturbed too.

This will affect their quality of life. We must find out why. If it's ignorance, we must find some way of reaching out to them," she told The Straits Times. Yes, precisely. All the ignorance in eyesight or other equally important things lead to poor quality of life.

If it is cost, she said her constituency in Jurong GRC gave out 200 pairs of free spectacles last year and also in 2005 - following free eye checks. The same could be done for these people. Kalau free, mesti semua nak punya. Is it our Melayu semua nak free ke? Takkan, semua gamen nak bagi free dari free preschool education to free spectacles. Are the Malays too reliant on handouts? Or mungkin memang gaji kita ni the lowest tak kalau nak dibandingkan dengan rakan-rakan kerja yang melakukan kerja yang sama tapi mungkin dalam aliran yang lain...ish jangan cakap kuat-kuat.

She plans to get the Malay community to work with the doctors to help this group see better. Puns intended. See better and see better. Yes, please! Wake up lah Melayu and look at the bigger picture.

Prof Wong responded immediately to say that he was pleased that she is taking up the cause and would be happy to work with her.

Thursday, March 01, 2007

Silver Screen Star ... Wahid Satay.



I took Mak's hands and quickly descended the steps of the TV Theatre to where Pak Wahid Satay was seated with his beloved wife. Fortunately for me, there were no one there to cajole or congratulate Pak Wahid, and I immediately took that opportunity to ask him for a photo. He obliged willingly taking out his trophy from the blue box.

Anugerah Perdana Emas, the most prestigious award of Pesta Perdana that honours an individual for his or her lifetime contribution to the world of television, radio, music or movies was presented to Pak Wahid Satay, a silver screen star of the 1950s and 1960s. Despite knowing that he will be receiving the award some three weeks before the show, one cannot deny the elatedness in his expression and words. When his name was announced, he kissed his wife on her cheek on national tv, much to the applause and standing ovation of the audience at the theatre. In his acceptance speech, he was too overjoyed to be totally coherent and after he left the podium, he was dancing cheekily on stage and the camera managed to catch him with his antics.

According to the Straits Times, this 77 year old actor was lauded as the Jerry Lewis of Malaya, thanks to the slapstick humour in many Cathay-Keris black-and-white films of that era. Among his film credits would be Chelorong Chelorong, Jula Juli Bintang Tujuh, Badang, Bawang Putih Bawang Merah, Che Mamat Parang Tumpul, Pontianak, Anak Dara, and many more. Perhaps (and I've yet to check this out) it was through the film Satay, that earned him the tag Wahid Satay as we know him today. Born Abdul Wahid Ahmad, he is just one of a handful silver screen stars that is still living in Singapore. Among his comrades is S Samsudin, one of the Bujang Lapuk trio, in which I still adore to this day. Others that I know and making Singapore their home includes the First Queen of "Air Mata" (tears) Neng Yatimah. We also have the anggun Hashimah Yon, whom I remembered as the lady who was killed in an accident in Anakku Sazali, because Sazali (P Ramlee) refused to marry her after having her. Then of couse, we have another actress Salmah Ibrahim, and Zainon (Fiji) who has left the limelight.

I hope that there could be more awards, or events to honour these silver screen stars for what we have now - tv stars and not movie stars - pales in comparison to the contribution that they have made to our local film scene during their time. Have the Singapore Film Festival forgotten them? Just because they are not Zoe Tay or Fann Wong or Gurmit Singh for that matter. But they do matter.