Saturday, July 11, 2009

RELIEF FOR JULY 7 FIRE VICTIMS

In time of hardship following a disaster, help and assistance shall be much appreciated. To the July 7 fire victims of Kampong Bagiang Kunak, today’s visit by the local State Assemblyman, Nilwan Kabang , distributing rice and other grocery items somehow lessen the grievance of the victims

The contribution was donated by Perbadanan Baitulmal Sabah (Sabah Islamic Relief Board) and brought from Kota Kinabalu by one of the Board’s officer, Ruhaizad Mohd Salleh. Also present were Kunak Assistant District Officer, Hussin Haji Ibrahim, Kunak District RELA Officer, Lieutenant Colonel Rosmi Saad and staff from Kunak Community Development Unit.

Two days earlier on July 9, the Silam Member of Parliament Tuan Haji Salleh Kalbi also visited and distributed groceries to the victims.

Thursday, July 9, 2009

21 FAMILIES LOST HOME TO FIRE

KAMPUNG BAGIANG KUNAK MAY 8, 2009.

KAMPUNG BAGIANG KUNAK May 8, 2009. Eleven houses were burnt down to the ground at Kampung Bagiang in Kunak on May 7, 2009 leaving 71 people of 21 families homeless. The local State Assemblyman, Nilwan Kabang who yesterday rushed to the site of incident when the houses were ablaze revisited the charred zone this morning. He was accompanied by the District Officer, Susilo Sumarto and officials facilitating the process of delivering relieve to the victims.

Some of the victims are now staying with relatives while others seek refuge in makeshift relief centers at the rest house and nearby mini halls. A spoke-woman from Kunak District Welfare Department says that cooked food will be distributed to the victims during the first three days from the incident. In addition, each family of the victims shall receive disbursement of RM 3,000 for purchase of basic daily necessities.

In response to a question by the press, the District Officer said that he will arrange aid to the victims in accordance with the regulation of the Natural Disaster Relief directive.

On a question to whether the victims be given houses under the House for the Poorest Scheme (PPRT), YB Nilwan responded, “That form of assistance is given to those who passes the criteria outlined under the scheme”. He added that efforts are being undertaken to provide more decent housing sites for families of the victims to rebuild their houses. Meanwhile he advised them to be patient in face of this hardship and to keep in touch with the local authorities.

This fire incident is the third in the district within the last four months. The two previous cases were both at Kampong Sungai Atas, that is on April 9 where a house was burnt to the ground and on June 21 when three houses caught fire and turned into an inferno.

Wednesday, July 8, 2009

TEACHING AND LEARNING OF SCIENCE AND MATHS IN BM & MOTHER TONGUE IN 2012

The teaching and learning of science and mathematics in national schools will revert to Malay Language while in Chinese and Tamil national-type schools will be carried out in their respective mother tongue. The matter was announced today, July 8 2009 by the Deputy Prime Minister who is also the Education Minister, Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin in Putrajaya.

Malaysians particularly parents should accept the decision positively and with open mind. We must realize that the decision was not made lightly, not dictatorially, free from sentiments and from pressures. Experts in this particular field made it after careful and extensive studies.

Personally I fervently hail the announcement for reasons as put forward in a post,Pengajaran dan Pembelajaran – Guna Bahasa Yang Paling Difahami (Teaching and Learning – Use Languages That Are Most Understood) in my Malay blog, kunakians, on Jun 25, 2009.

Current first graders will be fourth graders by the time this latest strategy come to effect in 2012. In the meantime, science and mathematics teachers shall be teaching in bi-language.

We, parents ought to look into the schedule for the implementation of the strategy and help prepare our children so that they are eagerly ready to take up the lessons in their own mother tongue when the day comes.

I prepare the timetable below to help me track which classes my children will attend within the next ten years. I hope it somehow can also give some assistance to fellow Malaysian parents out there.

Saturday, July 4, 2009

ON TRAIL OF THE HISTORY OF KUNAK - PART 8

The pottery industry at Bukit Tengkorak since 4300 BC had changed the lifestyle of the prehistoric people in the east coast of Sabah as well as in the neighboring South East Asian region. Since then, they were able to cook their food and store water close to their dwellings. Sailors were able to bring ample amount of water in their journey enabling them to make long distance voyages with only occasional break offs at the numerous small islands along the route to refill their jars.

The industry had also brought to light the artistic talents of the early settlers as revealed by the decorative designs on many of the broken pieces of potteries found at the Bukit Tengkorak Site. Whether the decorations have any hidden message or not is still open for discussion. Nevertheless about the same time (3000 BC) in the north, the ancient Egyptians and Sumerians introduced the first writing in the form of hyrogliphic and cuneiform.

In Mesopotamia, people had practiced agriculture for at least 3000 years. Around 4000 BC the Sumerians constructed canals to irrigate fields as well as transporting their agricultural products by boats to the cities. They have improved their roads where their donkeys trod, some pulling carts on wheels. There were at least 12 Sumerian cities and Ur was one of the biggest with a population of about 24,000. With big population came job specifications that brought about the birth of the Sumerian civilization in 3800 BC.

Agriculture was also in practice in South East Asia including in Madai, Kunak. As the population was very small agriculture was not practiced in big scale, not as intense as in Sumer. The small ratio of population to vast arable lands enables each clan to pick their favorite spot for farming without much disturbance or competition. With the absence of struggle for arable lands, the tribes left areas that had been used for planting several times, and considered not fertile, to open new areas. They became shifting cultivators.

It is still not very clear what type of crop the early settlers in the east coast of Sabah had planted. The most logical guess is, it could be plants that are endemic to the region such as yam and taro. Rice could have been introduced from Taiwan. It could also be brought by sailors from Sulawesi where archaeologists had found traces of the crop dating back to 3000 BC.

The practice of shifting cultivation had brought about to further colonization of the vast area in Sabah and Borneo as well as in other parts of South East Asia. As families became bigger, they split and went their separate ways to colonize new areas. As time went by, their dialects, beliefs and customs evolved independently leading to the rise of many different ethnic tribes. (See the blog abdnaddin or MySabah for images)

Rice was planted where the crop could grow well as in an area around the cave Gua Sireh in Sarawak where traces of rice that date back to 2000 BC had been found. Meanwhile, the Madai Caves, the last cave dwellings in Kunak, remained uninhabited apart from occasionally used as temporary shelters from 2000 BC to 500 BC.

Friday, July 3, 2009

Blogger Turns 10: What's your story?

Dear Blogger,

This is a respond to your invitation on blogger.com dated 18 Jun 2009. This is my story and of what Blogger has meant to me.

I tried my fingers on the web sometime in the year 2000. Back then, in my hometown here in Sabah, there were not so many of us who had access to the internet. Data transfer was also very slow. I used the internet mainly to get information related to my job at that time as an Oil Palm Plantation Estate Manager. Websites that I frequented most were those hosted by The Malaysian Palm Oil Registration and Licensing Authority (PORLA) and Palm Oil Research Institute of Malaysia (PORIM). The sites had helped me to keep updated with issues pertaining to the oil palm industry particularly on the highly fluctuating market.

I joined Blogger on March 2009 with my blog, Kunakians, which literally means The People of Kunak. Kunak is a small town on the east coast of Sabah, Malaysia. Little did I know then that there is another place in the world known as Kunak (in Kazakhstan) until I recently, thanks to Google earth.

My first post at Kunakians is in Malay or as we, Malaysians, like to call the language Bahasa Malaysia (the Malaysian Language) just to distinguish it from the Indonesian Malay Language. The article is in the form of a report on the activities of 70 elderly village headmen attending an outward-bound course on an isolated island.

On April 27, 2009, I introduced another blog at Blogger, Kunakians2, to post my articles that are written in English. The first post, Luffa Aegyptiaca, still bears the report format with a little sense of research.

Following a power crash on April 29, 2009, my hard disk was badly damaged and I had to replace it with a new one. Indeed, I lost innumerable valuable data, including materials on the subject of the history of my hometown, Kunak that I have accumulated over the past four years.

After getting a new hard disk and installed the operating program, I browsed the web using Google Chrome. I was so happy to see that the articles and images that I had posted on Kunakians and Kunakians2 are still there. It makes me realized that one of the benefit bloggers get from blogging is the safekeeping of articles. Now, I am back to gathering information on the history of Kunak, write whatever I can and immediately post it to Blogger for “safekeeping”.

Wide interactions with people have brought me to frequent open discussions. Some offers ideas while others asked for opinions. I post subjects that in my opinion are worthwhile to share with the public.

A few weeks back, I was at a coffee house with three friends when we overheard the afternoon news from the coffee house TV set mentioning a pandemic called Influenza A(H1N1) which has been confirmed to be affecting Malaysians. One of my friends, the eldest among us asked, “What kind of illness is that? Is it similar to AIDS?”

As a Microbiology graduate, somehow I managed to recall some information about the topic so I said to him, “Influenza shows symptoms similar to that of common cold, fever, coughing, headache and the like. But I’m not very sure of H1N1”.

“If an illness is on TV, it is dangerous”, quipped another friend scratching his quite bulging belly.

Our eldest companion began to look worried. The piece of roti canai (Indian bread) he was about to deposit into his gaping mouth stopped in mid air. “Is there any medication for it?” he asked intently.

“Don’t worry so much. Our friend here will find out and tell us about it”, said our friend with the big belly. Pointing at me, he continued, “Our friend here was a science teacher. He should be able to find out how to avoid getting that illness and to find out whether there is medication for it or not”. He went further to tap my back, too hard, that I can tell because it hurt, and added, “You can, right?”

“I’m not sure, Panglima”, I replied honestly. “Maybe I can find some clues about it from my old college textbooks and lecture notes. Maybe there are some information on the web as well”. (Note: Panglima is a Malay word for warrior. Here, in Kunak we amiably called a friend Panglima as a sign of mutual respect).

As soon as I get home, I began to dig into my old lecture notes and textbooks on virology, browse the web for accounts on the new pandemic then scribbled some notes. Three hours later, I found myself struggling to type an article in the simplest term that I can think of for my friends at that coffee house. I came up with, “Mengenal dan Menangani Influenza A(H1N1)” (Identifying and Coping with Influenza A(H1N1)) which I posted at Kunakians on May 29, 2009. I printed three copies of the article and distributed them to my three coffee-house friends.

I posted a serial “Keajaiban Nombor” (The Fascinating Numbers) following suggestions from some of my ex-students who claimed that the method of calculating I taught them when they were in school had helped to improve their mathematics. They also mentioned that the skill is also very useful in everyday life.

There is so much to tell on Blogger and I albeit of myself being just joining a few months back, what more of those who have been with Blogger from the start.

For me, it is suffice to sum up with two main reasons for me to keep on posting to Blogger:

  • It is the best way to share information with people around the world who find the information in my posts worthwhile, while realizing that I tried as much as possible to avoid hurting or discredit anybody.
  • It is a safekeeping place for ideas that may never come again.