Calling all JC/Pre-U/Poly/Pre-U Madrasah Students!
Want to learn how to write an effective CV?
Want to master crucial interview techniques that can clinch you that dream scholarship or prestigious internship?
Don’t miss the chance to sign up for this “double-combo” session!!
“Learn everything you can, anytime you can, from anyone you can – there will always be a time when you are grateful you did” ~Sarah Caldwell
CV WRITING AND INTERVIEW SKILLS
Saturday 27 February 2010
Time: 10:30am – 5:30pm
Location: WISMA MENDAKI
and
MOCK INTERVIEW SESSIONS
Sunday 28 February 2010
Location: WISMA MENDAKI
REGISTER for this 2-in-1 package NOW!
SMS: 8200 7332
EMAIL: aishah@mendaki.org.sg
<TDP-CarpeDIem><FullName><School> and <EMAIL>
Let’s pass the word around to help protect women from this deadly cancer. Visit: www.pocc.sg
It pains me to think that in a developed country like Singapore, women are still dying from this very preventable cancer.
It is cervical cancer which claims the life of one woman every five days in Singapore.
Doctors describe this cancer as the “Cancer of Neglect” because women keeping putting their children and family needs before their own well being. As a result, they delay going for their regular women’s health check.
And contrary to what people think, it is not a cancer that claims the lives of only promiscuous women. In fact, doctors say ALL women are at risk once they have begun sexual activity. And even after they have stopped it.
In the course of my work as a public relations consultant helping to disseminate public education messaging on this cancer, I met housewife Siti Fatimah who married her first love at the age of 17. She has four children aged from 10 to 18. Unfortunately for her, she was diagnosed with second stage cervical cancer while pregnant with her fourth child. She heard about her pregnancy at the same time that she was diagnosed with the cancer. It has been a day she has since not forgotten. Today she is fighting for her life.
In a parliamentary response to MP Zaqy Mohamed last year, Health Minister Khaw Boon Wan said that the risk of sexually transmitted diseases is growing exponentially showing that more young women than men are coming down with sexually transmitted Infections. This has been happening since 2003. Such increases the risk of girls and women to also cervical cancer that is transmitted skin to skin through sexual intimacy by the Human Papiloma Virus.
To inform and educate women to protect themselves from cervical cancer, a coalition was formed. It was led by the Society of Colposcopy and Cervical Pathology (SCCPS), and was launched in July by MP Halimah Yacob of Jurong GRC. Called Power Over Cervical Cancer (POCC), the Coalition seeks to get 18,000 women island wide to take the POCC online risk test. In doing this, they will get to learn more about the disease burden of cervical cancer and how to easily protect themselves from this most preventable of cancers. Have you heard of a cancer that you can vaccinate away Or if you detect it early at its precancerous stage, you can safely be cleared of it and save your life! It is cervical cancer that is the most easily preventable. Unfortunately only 60 percent of women here go for regular pap smear screenings.
Pledging their support for the newly-formed POCC coalition were entertainers and theatre world stars Irene Ang, Beatrice Chia, Neo Swee Lin, Rosalyn Lee, Tan Kheng Hua and Kay/Kai Ying from 88.3FM. This movement also attracted my friends and youth leaders from the Lam Soon CC who are doing their bit to protect women from this deadly cancer by raising their awareness of this cancer and how to prevent it.
Vaccination to prevent cervical cancer and pap smear screening to detect it early at even the pre cancerous stage will go a long way to saving the lives of women we love.
Whether they are our moms, sisters, grandmothers, best girlfriends or daughters. Surely because we care for each of them, should it not become our mission to pass on the word to women who have touched our lives to please go today and now, to take the cervical cancer online risk test at http://www.pocc.sg
Play YOUR part in supporting the POCC Coalition: Take your Risk Test today! Link : www.pocc.sg
Prague, the largest city in the Czech Republic, is famously known as the golden city of a hundred spires, and on my virgin trip to Europe in a summery July, I had the opportunity to find out why. Whether it was crossing Charles Bridge, the most historical bridge in Prague, or stepping into the interior of a church lined with human bones, every corner of this UNESCO World Heritage site had something enchanting to offer.
Historical Charles Bridge
The Charles Bridge crosses the Vltava River, and it is considered as Prague’s most historical bridge. The bridge is 516 meters long and nearly 10 meters wide, resting on 16 arches shielded by ice guards. It is protected by three bridge towers. The Old Town bridge tower is often considered to be one of the most astonishing gothic-style buildings in the world. The bridge is decorated by a continuous alley of 30 statues and, most of them Baroque-style, erected around the 1700. By night, it is a picture of tranquility and quietness. By day, however, the bridge transforms into a bustling hub of painters, traders and numerous tourists passing by.
I myself ended up walking up and down the bridge several times in a day, soaking in the sights and the glistening calm of the river. I even sat at the edge of the bridge for various photo opportunities with the picturesque backdrop.
Experiencing Prague’s Countryside- Town of Kutna Hora
Nestled outside the bustling city of Prague is a tin-mining town called “Kutna-Hora”. Unlike the bustling atmosphere experienced at Charles Bridge, this one felt like a simple countryside with a beautiful skyscape. As I looked up to the sky, I felt a quiet happiness looking at the bright blue sky dotted with woolly clouds drifting past.
This town was once a rich tin-mining area. But beneath this folksy landscape lay some fascinating surprises. One such attraction that I did not expect to see was the Sedlec Ottuary, which looks like a normal church from afar. But as I stepped in, I was amazed to see that the walls and pillars were lined from the floor to the ceiling with some 40,000 human bones. The human skeletons have been derived from and arranged in different forms to reflect the people that died during the Black Death in the mid 14th Century. Then, come 1870, František Rint, a woodcarver, was employed by the Schwarzenberg family to put the skeleton bone heaps into what we see today.
Interesting & Exotic Museums
Prague is such an interesting place with quirky attractions. I chanced across a museum that I did not expect to visit – the Museum of Medieval Torture Instruments. This three-storey museum was located just at the brink of Prague’s Old Town, at the mouth of Charles Bridge. Dating back to the 18th century, I took in the sights of a wide array of torture instruments used in the medieval ages. Some may have found it gory and hard to stomach. For me, I found the exhibits original and even ingenious, to a certain extent. So fascinating! The creativity harnessed in the medieval ages goes beyond the requisite electric chair. However, just thinking about the gruesome acts of torture gave me the shivers, as I thought about how cruelly people must have been tortured in the past.
Transport and Communication
As with most Eastern Europe countries, many people do not use English to communicate, but it did not pose as a major barrier for me. I managed to converse with people in simple English. Otherwise, I just ended up using hand gestures to convey my message across. I even had an enthusiastic shopkeeper who spoke to me in Czech for an extended period of time, even though I could not understand what she was saying.
Transport-wise, it was relatively easy to get around Prague. There are several signages and maps which are easily available in English to guide one along.
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The writer attended a six day International Youth Leadership Conference in Prague sponsored by the following bodies: Yayasan Mendaki, Mendaki Club, Lee Foundation and also the National Youth Council. She is currently an EXCO member of Mendaki Club.
Mohamed Faizal, one of our Executive Committee members, spent the past year pursuing his postgraduate studies at Harvard Law School. Given our ample persuasion skills (i.e. us putting a metaphoric gun to his head and asking him to write up something about his adventures in the United States) in requesting that he pen his adventures in the United States, he writes to us from Cambridge, Massachusetts:
I’m sitting here by the bedroom window in my apartment in Cambridge, Massachusetts. It’s a rainy evening, my last evening here in the United States before I return to Singapore. I’m penning this blog post in large part because it’s always a good habit to crystallize one’s thoughts on such a unique experience in print before they fade into the recesses of memory but more importantly, because doing so allows me to procrastinate from finding a solution to the insufferable problem of developing a viable strategy to fit the barang-barang that I’ve accumulated over the preceding twelve months into two tiny suitcases.
My time in the United States over the past year has proven to be enjoyable and fulfilling on a few different fronts. From an academic viewpoint, I’ve been fortunate to have been able to hone my understanding of the intricate and complex interplay between law, social and economic policy through exposure to the wide variety of viewpoints held by the different constituents in class that draws upon the diverse student body’s multi-jurisdictional and multi-disciplinary experiences. By having my assumptions questioned on a daily basis through such cross-fermentation of ideas as well as vigorous debates in class, I found myself learning through the process of unlearning: disabusing my mind of commonly-held assumptions, stereotypes, and viewpoints, and in the process, deepening my appreciation for the rule of law and its central role in modern-day society.
The past year has been a historical one for the United States for a myriad of reasons, and I am fortunate to be here at a time of continuous flux, for it has afforded me countless opportunities to broaden my education outside the confines of class: whether be it the opportunity to obtain a first-hand appreciation of the American electoral process (and experience the painful process of watching faculty member after faculty member go on leave from the Law School to take up appointments in the Obama administration!), or the opportunity to intimately understand and make sense of the economic crisis at ground zero (i.e. Wall Street), it would be fair to say that the experiences that I received out of class have been just as educational and enriching as the intellectual stimulation provided through academic classes at the Law School. Short trips to a wide variety of different parts of the North-East of the United States, in particular to neighboring states such as Rhode Island, New York and Washington, have also allowed me to sate my wanderlust.
On a personal level, I’ve had the opportunity to work, and become close friends, with people from a wide variety of countries including Australia, the United Kingdom, Nigeria, South Africa, China, India and the Philippines, to name a few countries, fostering bonds that I am confident will persist long after my time here in the United States. Through these friendships, I have come to be able to better appreciate the unique intricacies and beauty of a variety of cultures and, as quid pro quo, have afforded them a chance to sample Singaporean culture and way of life. Of course, such international friendships have another (ancillary, though equally wonderful) benefit – that of being able to have an excuse to visit breathtaking parts of the world in future: I’ve already been invited for three weddings in two different continents over the upcoming months, and have been blessed with numerous open invitations to visit many other fellow students in their home countries.
Acclimatization to life here has thankfully been without significant challenges, with the presence of a large and tight-knit Singaporean community making the transition relatively easy. Being introduced to the relatively large Malay-Muslim Singaporean and Malaysian community in Boston to celebrate Hari Raya, in particular, was a real treat. The warm and welcoming atmosphere at the Singapore-Malaysia Hari Raya party reminded me of the convivial and hospitable atmosphere of the numerous Iftars get-togethers I would otherwise have attended if I were back home in Singapore. The get-together was very much appreciated for another reason: after a few months of Western fare (and the consumption of not-too-palatably-cooked-food, by yours truly), the array of scrumptious Singapore and Malaysian food in the dining hall in which the celebrations were held were truly a feast for eyes and the palate! It was also immensely comforting to be able to use and hear the Malay language in full flow all around me during the gathering.
Although I’ve enjoyed my time here, that’s not to say there haven’t been things in Singapore that I have missed. Having been located outside Singapore’s jurisdictional boundaries these past twelve months, the wonders of modern technology like E-mail and the Internet are such that it continues to be relatively easy to be plugged in on developments, both at work as well and in MClub. From the perspective of being an MClub volunteer, one thing, however, has definitely changed over the course of the past twelve months: whilst in Singapore, it was always extremely easy for me to take for granted the wonderful people I’ve grown accustomed to sharing my Friday evenings (Executive Committee meetings) and Saturday afternoons (YMC sessions) with. Having suddenly found myself some 15,000 km away from home, I’ve come to sorely miss, and appreciate, not only their hard work and dedication, but the wonderful personalities of the volunteers and secretarial staff that form the core of the organization that I’ve gotten to know and love during the course of this journey. For that reason, although this journey has been an amazing one, the best part of this journey remains one that is yet to be taken: coming back and, hopefully, using the knowledge that I’ve been able to gain here both in my day-to-day work as a Legal Service Officer and as a volunteer with MClub!
Mohamed Faizal has, since writing this post, returned to active service as a Deputy Public Prosecutor and State Counsel with the Attorney-General’s Chambers. He is grateful to the Singapore Legal Service (the Legal Service Commission Scholarship) as well as Mr David Worth and White & Case (the Kathryn Aguirre Worth Memorial Scholarship) for the opportunity to pursue his postgraduate studies at Harvard Law School. All opinions contained herein are his own and may not necessarily reflect the views of the Attorney-General’s Chambers or the Singapore Legal Service.
Salam there,
The buzz everywhere is about the economic recession, how our GDP forecasts have plunged again, how many jobs are at stake and so on… and everyone’s organising a public talk or special forum on it. At least I hear about one every other week!
We’re doing one too – but this time, we’ve asked the man himself to share his views on the recession. Minister of Finance, Mr Tharman Shanmugaratnam, will be swinging by SMU this Saturday (that’s the 18th of April 2009, at 2pm) to share his thoughts on the recession and how young professionals and graduating students can go with the flow in overcoming the challenges of a recession. There’ll be a Q and A and of course, refreshments at the end of it all. If that’s not a useful way to spend a Saturday afternoon, I don’t know what is.
Details of the talk are on the front page of the Club’s website – do check it out and tell your friends about it.
Wassalam – j
Hi everyone,Â
The Islamic Development Bank (IDB) has approached Muis for assistance with their recruitment for the Young Professionals Program in Singapore. We are also helping to spread this great opportunity.
IDB is scheduled to visit Singapore in May 2009 to interview suitable candidates for their Young Professionals Program. Details of the Program is available at http://www.isdbcareers.com/careers/isdb/Page.aspx?PageID=2505.Â
This is a great career opportunity for young muslim professionals and those interested are invited to email their CV by 15 Apr 09 to :IDB_Recruitment@muis.gov.sg  Â
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Do share this to all you think are interested!
Salam -
At yesterday’s Conversations session with Dr Ann Florini (Director, Centre on Asia and Globalisation, Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy, NUS) on Global Governance Amidst Financial Disorder, a couple of interesting themes werre discussed, one of which was the power of consumers’ choices shaping the economics and politics of global challenges.
An example was climate change – consequence-conscious consumers (brilliant alliteration, thank you) who, given enough information on the outcome of buying a certain product, can ultimately vote to change the path the Earth takes. That is, you make a choice to buy or use a product based on more than the pricing mechanism. If you knew the product you were buying cost not only $5, but cost the environment because 400 grammes of chemical waste was generated, 2 animals were tested on (and died!), and 96 cubic metres of CO2 was released, you would probably not buy it.
Would this work in saving our world? Maybe not. I think we’d just get too much more information which we’ll ignore and go on buying what we’ve always bought based on price. Because it takes too long to think about alternatives, and it’s inconvenient to change our HABITS. We’re essentially creatures of habit…
Wassalam – Jalees
Salam there,
Yesterday evening MUIS, Harmony Centre and MClub hosted a welcome dinner for Dr Mohammed Abu-Nimer, Director of the Peacebuilding and Development Institute at the American University. We had a mixed group of policy-makers, interfaith practioners and academics at the dinner. Dr Abu-Nimer will be in town for the next 3 days engaging various groups in conversations on peacebuilding and nonviolence in the Islamic context.
Dr Abu-Nimer’s research examines the many teachings from the Qur’an and hadith that espouse peace and nonviolence in conflict resolution. He is also an inter-faith practioner who has had experience in conflict zones such as the Palestine and the Mindanao region.
At the welcome dinner last night, we all had a stimulating and entertaining discussion on a framework for inter-faith peacebuilding. The three models of peacebuilding that Dr Abu-Nimer presented in his clear (and at times very humourous style) included the harmony model, the differences/conflict model and liberation theology model. I don’t wish to lecture you on these, so go ahead and do more research on these theories.
He’ll be giving a lecture today, on Friday, 12 December 2008, from 7.30pm – 10.00pm, at the Toa Payoh Central Community Club (Theatrette, Level 3)Â on The Alternative Vision: Peacebuilding and Nonviolence in Islam. Tell your friends about it and hope you can join us too!
Wassalam – Jalees