Another Week Beyond – 1832

Dear Friends
“One More Light” is our latest forum theatre production which played at Leng Kee and the Lavendar neighbourhoods the last 2 weekends. The title is taken from a song with the same name sung by Linkin Park which has a line asking, “Who cares when one more light goes out in the sky with a million stars?” The youth in our Community Theatre Programme insists that they do care about their friends who are troubled, and their show invites the audience to consider the pain of loss, the helplessness of parents seeking to protect their children from harsh realities and the loneliness of children who do not quite know how to express their hurt.

Both shows attracted about 150 people and what was a little different this time was that half of those present did not live in the neighbourhood. Some told us that they came to support the efforts of our youth while others simply said that it was a different and meaningful Saturday night out. “Rallying people to act on social challenges” is our programme’s tagline and it heartened us tremendously to see people from different backgrounds sitting together on mats and engaging with the range of emotions and situations our young thespians enacted.

People were touched in different ways and with clarification of responses, perspectives changed. A student who took on the role of the “school counsellor” told the “teacher” referring a troubled student to her to do more. What looked like the relinquishing of responsibilities was not so when she explained. “My teachers were the reason why I kept going to school. They supported me during difficult times and that’s why I feel that the teacher should be there for the student more than the counsellor.”

After the show, a teacher who was in the audience shared that she found a scene “guiltily familiar.” She elaborated that like the teacher in the play she has advised students who poured their hearts out to her that they should just move on and think of their bright future. She recognized that students feel barely heard and too often “we attempt to solve things with neat platitudes in 5-minute conversations.”

Yesterday, Singapore came together proudly to celebrate 53 years of nation building. Listening to the updated version of “We are Singapore” moved me tremendously but as I write this note, I think my National Day moment arrived a little earlier this year. At the end of the performance at Leng Kee, a member of the audience who was not a resident of the neighbourhood stood up, offered words of encouragement to the “mother” on stage and then walked over to give her a hug.

Happy National Day weekend.

Gerard

But growth alone is not enough. Individual Singaporeans must see progress in their lives, must feel that their future is bright, and must know that each one of us has our stake in it. – PM Lee Hsien Loong, (Debate on the President’s Address in Parliament on 16 May 2018.)

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2605 – It Takes Time

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2604 – When Learning is Small Enough to Notice

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2603 – When Youths Take the Field

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PAST AWB POSTS

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Story Contributed by Dira, Neighbourhood Leader Some evenings come together in unexpected ways. Our monthly community birthday celebration in Ang Mo Kio happened to fall at a time when Chinese New Year was still in the air and Ramadan was already underway. So the evening became a mix of all three – oranges for the New Year, dates for those breaking fast, and party plates laid out for the children celebrating their birthdays that month. Close to a hundred residents – seniors, adults and children – came downstairs to join the gathering. A few of us residents helped organise the

Read more >

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Story contributed by Anne Marie, Resource Mobilisation It has been some years since we last stood behind a volunteer recruitment booth in a school setting, and so earlier this month, when we were invited to take part in Nanyang Technological University’s Social Impact Week, it felt like a return of sorts. For two afternoons, we found ourselves in the middle of student activity, surrounded by clubs, social enterprises and fellow agencies. We were there with a simple invitation: to talk about volunteering, particularly in support of the older youths in our academic programmes. At our booth, we asked visitors to

Read more >

2608 – Holding The Middle

Written by The Beyond Editorial Team She has always cared for others. Long before we knew her, Mdm Sng* was already checking in on elderly neighbours, helping them navigate services, passing along information, gathering what they needed. When we began working in the area, she reached out quickly. Not for herself. For others. Over time, though, something shifted. There was no single incident. Just the quiet accumulation of strain. Our team had become leaner. Priorities evolved. Expectations were not always spoken clearly. Along the way, misunderstandings surfaced. Community tensions are rarely linear. They sit in the middle of relationships –

Read more >