iopcourse.blogg.se

Apa salahku apa salah ibuku
Apa salahku apa salah ibuku













apa salahku apa salah ibuku

'I felt that what they really wanted to know was if we think of them as terrorists,' she said. She also told them how, in secondary school, she bought food in the canteen by tapping on a card reader.Ī common question she got, from both adults and children, was: What do Singaporeans think about us? She told them about bomb shelters in HDB estates and of how 'in Singapore, you can go out at 2am in your pyjamas and nothing will happen to you'.

APA SALAHKU APA SALAH IBUKU SOFTWARE

She gave them postcards of Raffles Place, showed them her three-room Sengkang flat through the Google Earth software and even sang Majulah Singapura to them. When she arrived, Miss Natasha found that some Afghans didn't even know about Singapore. She had nothing but she was not afraid to dream big ,' said Miss Natasha. Sunbol suffers from a kidney problem but dreams of becoming a 'kidney doctor' when she grows up. They live in a mud house at the foot of a mountain on the outskirts of Kabul. Her mother works as a cook to support Sunbol and her four siblings. Sunbol's father was killed by the Taliban in the 1990s. She also attached her report card and drew pictures. Sunbol's replies were short, simple sentences in English. Mrs Hawa Meskinyar, the founder of Jahan, translated her English letters into Farsi, Sunbol's language. Miss Natasha would write telling Sunbol to study hard. The money was used for food and clothing for Sunbol. It cost her $60 a month, which she split evenly with an uncle. When she was 15, she decided to sponsor a child there. 'If the wind blew and you showed an inch of your ankle from under your burqa, they would have caned you in public,' she said. Under the Taliban, women were not allowed to work or go to school. She found out how women were oppressed under Taliban rule in Afghanistan.

apa salahku apa salah ibuku

She said she has been interested in women's rights since she was 13. The former Balestier Hill Secondary School student had left Singapore after six months in Meridian Junior College, when she got a scholarship offer from St Michael's College in the UK. Miss Natasha has a 16-year-old brother and 20-year-old sister studying in Singapore. She is now 18 and is a first-year law student at the University of Warwick.

apa salahku apa salah ibuku

But the only loose clothing I had were my pyjamas.' She said: 'In Afghanistan, a woman must wear loose clothing. Often she was wearing borrowed men's clothes. She spent two weeks in Kabul visiting Sunbol Ghulam Habib, a 10-year-old girl she sponsors through Jahan, a non-governmental organisation. Miss Natasha was then in her first year of study for her A-level exams in the UK. Instead, she flew solo on a roundabout 48-hour flight to Kabul, the capital of war-torn Afghanistan, where she spent two weeks. So in August last year, Miss Natasha told her mother, a 53-year-old divorcee, that she was going to volunteer in an orphanage in the Czech Republic. 'I tried to persuade her for two months but there was just no way she was going to let me go to Afghanistan,' said Miss Natasha. Though she was just 17 then, she wanted to go so much that she lied to her mother, who wouldn't let her. A VISIT to Afghanistan does not usually figure in most teenage girls' to-do list.















Apa salahku apa salah ibuku