Friday, July 24, 2015

Dear God

Dear God
 Let me not  be sheltered from dangers
 but to be fearless in facing them.
 Let me not beg for the stilling of my pain
  but for the heart to conquer it.
 Let me not look for allies in life's battlefield
   but to my own strength.
 Let me not crave in anxious fear to be saved
  but hope for the patience to win my freedom.
 Grant me that I may not be a coward
  feeling your mercy in my success alone;
 But let me find the grasp of your hand in my failure.  
; Rabindranath Tagore.

The Plight of the Migrant construction workers.

I am sharing my concern based upon my interactions with some foreign workers.
I am not sure how many of you are aware of the low wages paid to the Migrant workers.
 As my apartment is near a canal I sometimes see foreign workers there so I usually stop and ask then how they are doing and if the employer is treating them well. One of the worker who I met some months back said that  he is a construction worker and he was not paid for a few months.  I refered him to TWC2 the foreign workers org and they referred him to MOM and then he was paid the salary so it was settled. From what I have been given to understand that Employers cannot hold salary for more than a month.
I gave him my mobile number and  and asked him to contact me if he needed help. He did last week and said that his Employer has cancelled his work permit as well as of  three fellow workers. MOM has issued them with a temporary pass.If he is unable to find another job he will have to go back.He has been here since only nine months and as we all know how much money they have to pay the agent to come here .it seems these foreign workers have no job security.I am  shocked about it that they can be sent back anytime the Employer wishes to discontinue their services. Not only that he said he is paid a  mere nineteen dollars for a full days work from 8 to 5pm and two hours overtime until 7pm for 3$ an hour that is an extra six dollars.
This is shocking and amounts to slavery as part time helpers get 15 dollars for one hour of house work and minimum is four hours and cash upfront.
Again I told him to see  TWC2 foreign workers org and they referred him to MOM.
The MOM issued a letter to them and told then to go and look for jobs but when they approach any company they are told that they cannot take them as the temporary pass issued starts with the letter AE .I am not able to understand what that means.
> They also said that they have given a total of seven thousand dollars each in Bangla Desh to an agent .
> I asked them to contact their agent here in Singapore. The are not aware of any agent here. think that the MOM should have proper laws to make sure these workers are attached to an agent in Singapore who they can approach in case of any problem.
> Not only that the Bangla Desh embassy should register them on arrival and they should be told that they can also approach them if any problems arises.I  am surprised that they did not even know that an embassy exists. I got the address of the Bangla desh Mission and asked them to go and see then as I was sure they would try their best to  help their  country men.
I rec another shock that the Embassy told them that they are unable to do anything.
Since last week I have been running around contacting  people,organizations etc etc and sending emails until late at night. With all this stress I had a headache for two days as this whole episode affected me very badly and I decided that I must go all out and try my best to help these poor workers.
It saddened me that we live in nice homes and a beautiful city built by these migrant workers sweat and blood.
It is absolutely shocking that these Employers  are allowed to pay them pittance.  No wonder our locals are not hired for these jobs as  they will not except this kind of ridiculous and disgusting salary .  Employers can hire cheap foreign labour while they make millions. And the pathetic $3 per hour for overtime ?? The part time  Helpers for house work get $ 15 per hour and  minimum 4 hours and cash upfront.
 I think the policy is not at all fair at all and something should be done about it.if the foreign worker has not broken any law he should not be sent back unless two year contract is completed/  or the Employer should transfer him to another Employer as Employer should be responsible and not leave these poor workers in a lurch. Where ever they turn to they are simply told to keep looking for jobs.How can he go back  to their Country  when they owe money back home and came here for a better future for then and their families.if the employer is unable to get him another job then he should pay a compensation to the worker.These points are important for job security. Right now they have no job security.
The full time helpers are better off as they get food and decent accommodation although some are treated very badly and even deprived of food.
These foreign workers though they do such hard work get a meagre salary and no food. They are provided with accomodation but usually it is in pathetic conditions
19$ a day for a whole days hard work is totally unfair . can anyone even imagine what kind of diet they must be eating as they need to send money to their families and also pay off the debts that they have incurred to come here.These four workers share a room with three others
 in the basement of a construction site.The room itself is under construction.
 Some time ago I wanted to see the living quarters so I went with the worker but then I realised it was in the basement and it was late evening and I was alone so I decided  not to go down to see it. The worker who met up with me yesterday said that he rec a call from MOM to go down to see them today and I will be meeting then later this evening.I hope the outcome is positive.
I was also given to understand that the Employer is  holding some of their money and  they were told that because the Employer is bankrupt some part of their money will be cut for insurance I did not really understand what he actually meant but he did say some thing like 47 % will be cut. I am not an expert with
the law nor the foreign workers but I try to use my common sense and my heart.
I hope that these workers find jobs and will not have to return home.

A good article on Islam published in TIME magazine

A good article on Islam published in TIME Magazine.
The True, Peaceful Face Of Islam
By Karen Armstrong
There are 1.2 billion Muslims in the world, and Islam is the world's fastest-growing religion. If the evil carnage we witnessed on Sept. 11 were typical of the faith, and Islam truly inspired and justified such violence, its growth and the increasing presence of Muslims in both Europe and the U.S. would be a terrifying prospect. Fortunately, this is not the case.
The very word Islam, which means "surrender," is related to the Arabic salam, or peace. When the Prophet Muhammad brought the inspired scripture known as the Koran to the Arabs in the early 7th century A.D., a major part of his mission was devoted precisely to bringing an end to the kind of mass slaughter we witnessed in New York City and Washington. Pre-Islamic Arabia was caught up in a vicious cycle of warfare, in which tribe fought tribe in a pattern of vendetta and countervendetta. Muhammad himself survived several assassination attempts, and the early Muslim community narrowly escaped extermination by the powerful city of Mecca. The Prophet had to fight a deadly war in order to survive, but as soon as he felt his people were probably safe, he devoted his attention to building up a peaceful coalition of tribes and achieved victory by an ingenious and inspiring campaign of nonviolence. When he died in 632, he had almost single-handedly brought peace to war-torn Arabia.
Because the Koran was revealed in the context of an all-out war, several passages deal with the conduct of armed struggle. Warfare was a desperate business on the Arabian Peninsula. A chieftain was not expected to spare survivors after a battle, and some of the Koranic injunctions seem to share this spirit. Muslims are ordered by God to "slay [enemies] wherever you find them!" (4: 89). Extremists such as Osama bin Laden like to quote such verses but do so selectively. They do not include the exhortations to peace, which in almost every case follow these more ferocious passages: "Thus, if they let you be, and do not make war on you, and offer you peace, God does not allow you to harm them" (4: 90).
In the Koran, therefore, the only permissible war is one of self-defense. Muslims may not begin hostilities (2: 190). Warfare is always evil, but sometimes you have to fight in order to avoid the kind of persecution that Mecca inflicted on the Muslims (2: 191; 2: 217) or to preserve decent values (4: 75; 22: 40). The Koran quotes the Torah, the Jewish scriptures, which permits people to retaliate eye for eye, tooth for tooth, but like the Gospels, the Koran suggests that it is meritorious to forgo revenge in a spirit of charity (5: 45). Hostilities must be brought to an end as quickly as possible and must cease the minute the enemy sues for peace (2: 192-3).
Islam is not addicted to war, and jihad is not one of its "pillars," or essential practices. The primary meaning of the word jihad is not "holy war" but "struggle." It refers to the difficult effort that is needed to put God's will into practice at every level--personal and social as well as political. A very important and much quoted tradition has Muhammad telling his companions as they go home after a battle, "We are returning from the lesser jihad [the battle] to the greater jihad," the far more urgent and momentous task of extirpating wrongdoing from one's own society and one's own heart.
Islam did not impose itself by the sword. In a statement in which the Arabic is extremely emphatic, the Koran insists, "There must be no coercion in matters of faith!" (2: 256). Constantly Muslims are enjoined to respect Jews and Christians, the "People of the Book," who worship the same God (29: 46). In words quoted by Muhammad in one of his last public sermons, God tells all human beings, "O people! We have formed you into nations and tribes so that you may know one another" (49: 13)--not to conquer, convert, subjugate, revile or slaughter but to reach out toward others with intelligence and understanding.
So why the suicide bombing, the hijacking and the massacre of innocent civilians? Far from being endorsed by the Koran, this killing violates some of its most sacred precepts. But during the 20th century, the militant form of piety often known as fundamentalism erupted in every major religion as a rebellion against modernity. Every fundamentalist movement I have studied in Judaism, Christianity and Islam is convinced that liberal, secular society is determined to wipe out religion. Fighting, as they imagine, a battle for survival, fundamentalists often feel justified in ignoring the more compassionate principles of their faith. But in amplifying the more aggressive passages that exist in all our scriptures, they distort the tradition.
It would be as grave a mistake to see Osama bin Laden as an authentic representative of Islam as to consider James Kopp, the alleged killer of an abortion provider in Buffalo, N.Y., a typical Christian or Baruch Goldstein, who shot 29 worshipers in the Hebron mosque in 1994 and died in the attack, a true martyr of Israel. The vast majority of Muslims, who are horrified by the atrocity of Sept. 11, must reclaim their faith from those who have so violently hijacked it.
Karen Armstrong has written many books on religion, including Islam: A Short History, published last year by Modern Library.

Saudi award for Dr Zakir Naik

Saudi Award Goes to Muslim Televangelist Who Harshly Criticizes U.S.
By BEN HUBBARD
 Dr. Zakir Naik, a prominent Muslim from India, has said that the Jews? control America and that the United States government was responsible for the Sept. 11 attacks.

Netanyahus unconvincing speech to congress


nytdirect@nytimes.com> Opinion
> Wednesday, March 4, 2015
>
>
>
> For more Opinion, go to NYTimes.com/opinion »

> Editorial
>
> Mr. Netanyahu's Unconvincing Speech to Congress
>
> The prime minister of Israel offered no new reasons to reject the agreement being negotiated by the United States to constrain Iran's nuclear program.
>
> Op-Ed Contributor
>
> Netanyahu's Nuclear Deceptions
>
> By GHOLAMALI KHOSHROO
>
> The world should see through the Israeli prime minister's alarmist rhetoric about Iran.
>
> THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN
>
> What Bibi Didn't Say
>
> Now that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel has had his say, it's time to ask: What is in America's best interest?

> Abuse at Attica Calls for Federal Scrutiny
>
> With deep problems very apparent at the state prison, the Justice Department should examine the case of a savage beating of an inmate in August 2011.
>
> Op-Ed Columnist
>
> Hillary's Messy Habits
>
> By FRANK BRUNI
>
>  In recent weeks, as in the past, the Clintons have been needlessly arming their opponents.
>
> Editorial
>
> Hillary Clinton's Use of Personal Email
>
> By using a private account to conduct government business as secretary of state, there is no way of knowing that all official correspondence was preserved.
>
> Op-Ed Contributors
>
> What Hillary Clinton's Emails Really Reveal
>
> By MATTHEW CONNELLY and RICHARD H. IMMERMAN
>
> Our public officials keep writing pieces of history we may never get to see.
>
> THOMAS B. EDSALL
>
> Establishment Populism Rising
>
> Larry Summers wants to talk about inequality. What does that mean for the Democratic Party and Hillary Clinton's potential presidential candidacy?
>
>
>
> Maxwell Holyoke-Hirsch
> Op-Ed Contributor
>
> Las Vegas Gets a New Act
>
> By BRITTANY BRONSON
>
> Can the city clean itself up and still remain diverse?
>
>
>
> Room for Debate
>
> When a Candidate Leaves the Pack Behind
>
> When a front-runner takes a dominant lead so early in a campaign, or tries to, what is lost or gained?
>
>
>
>
>

More Public toilets for women.


I was at the Botanic gardens on the 11th of july 2015 for the Singapore Symphony orchestra in honour of the Straits Times anniversary.
There were about fifty women in the queue waiting to use the toilet. While no queue on the men's side.
From years of experience we know that we need to provide more toilets for women. But somehow it is always the same amount of toilets constructed for men and women.
I hope in the future this will be addressed so that there are less toilet cubicles for men and more for women.
Besides it is mostly the women that take children along to toilets not so much the men.