Another Week Beyond 1809

ArtsWok Collaborative is an arts-based community development organisation that nurtures thriving communities by harnessing the power of the arts to create dialogue, invite social participation and build bridges across difference. In partnership with them, we are aiming to get our youths to develop and showcase an original play at the Esplanade next year which deals with the issue of poverty in Singapore. This effort is part of M1 Peer Pleasure Youth Theatre Festival which is a platform for young people aged 13-25 to stage productions at professional theatre venues, under the mentorship of theatre professionals, for audiences young and old.

Last Saturday, 4 of our youths joined 40 drama students and their teachers from Anderson Secondary School and Anglo Chinese School (Barker Road) to kick-off a process of deepening their understanding of poverty; gathering information and insights that facilitate their ability to produce theatre pieces for next year’s theatre festival.

Listening to the stories shared, was an exercise in value clarification. What do we make of someone who raised money illegally out of desperation but eventually found legal employment to alleviate her family’s debts and to stay in school? Do good intentions or good outcomes justify morally ambiguous means? Such and other questions got the group pensive and the notion of poverty was expanded. Many commented that poverty comes in many forms and it was suggested that emotional poverty affects people badly too. The process enabled young people to have a conversation with their peers about an issue that they normally would not touch. As a result, they communicated perspectives that widened and enriched our collective understanding of poverty.

Asnur, an 18-year-old was moved by the experience to speak up. During a question and answer segment, he whispered to a friend, “I want to say something, but I feel so uncomfortable.” Eventually, he raised his hand and took the microphone with shaky hands. “This will be a long story. I think I am one of the few here who lives in a rental flat and let me tell you it is hard.”

He elaborated that as a teenager he felt like he could not fit in anywhere because he had to keep making excuses not to accept invitations from friends to lunch or the movies. The room caught on that he was feeling very vulnerable and offered at supportive presence that enabled Asnur to confidently end his sharing forcefully, “When you guys say you are broke, you just mean that you have run out of pocket money. But when I say I’m broke, I mean my whole family is broke. There is no money! It’s real!”

Today is the 15th and last day of the Lunar New Year festivities. May the festive cheer remain with you throughout the year.

Sincerely,

Gerard

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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

2610 – Oranges, Dates, and Party Plates

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 >

2609 – How We Spend Our Time

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 >