For 33 years, he has befriended city’s desperate By : Sri Kuehnlenz and Adeline Lau
KUALA LUMPUR, Thurs:
Two hours past midnight, the phone rings. S. Gangadara Vadivel picks it up and listens.
Gangadara is the city’s longest-serving Befriender and he’s been listening to the desperate and friendless for 33 years.
Night is the toughest time.
“That’s the time when people feel lonely,” he said.
Callers don’t always pour out their troubles immediately and he has learnt to wait for them to open up. “Sometimes, there’s silence for minutes.”
Gangadara, 60, has manned the Befrienders’ 24-hour crisis hotline here, for thousands of hours since 1974.
He has provided a shoulder to cry on for countless distressed callers, especially those who are contemplating suicide.
It was a suicide that prompted him to join the organisation, which was then 4 years old.
A colleague in his late 30s had been struggling with illness, a spinal disease, and killed himself.
Gangadara, who worked at the Rubber Research Institute until his retirement in 2001, did not know his colleague well. Nevertheless, the death made him realise that many people suffered in silence.
“If only there had been people who could have helped, he might not have had to go through the hardship all by himself.”
Gangadara was made chairman of the Befrienders Kuala Lumpur this year, and president of the National Association of Befrienders Malaysia.
Today, he still listens to those in need, as he did in 1974.
“Eighty per cent of Befriending is listening. In a big city like Kuala Lumpur, people don’t have the time to listen to each other.
“We don’t give advice or solutions. We listen. In my opinion, advice is a dime a dozen.”
Like the other 89 Befrienders, he spends three to four hours a week at the centre in Petaling Jaya, answering calls and talking to those who walk in.
He still takes one night shift, from 10pm to 8am, every week.
Befrienders Kuala Lumpur receives 20,000 calls a year on the two lines it maintains. One in four is desperate enough to consider suicide, and many are youths.
Suicide is the second highest cause of death after accidents in the 15-30 age group.
“Suicide is still considered a taboo subject. (Because) many people do not want to talk about it, over time, the thought of it could lead to real action.
“That’s where Befrienders play a role. We give space to people to talk and express their feelings anonymously.”
For someone in distress, even a small problem can assume monstrous proportions.
“We look into problems like a student failing a mid-term test because these small problems can build up to mental illness and suicide attempts,” he said.
Other problems include a daughter fighting with a mother, or husbands fighting with wives, or someone pregnant with an unwanted child.
Befrienders persuades callers to confide in family members, or, in the case of those with signs of mental illness, to seek medical help.
To reassure callers, conversations are kept confidential and no records are kept of names. This explains why Gangadara is reluctant to share too many details.
He is now a trainer who works with new volunteers together with professional psychologists and other counsellors.
The most rewarding moment is knowing when he has made a difference to someone.
He recalled an outreach programme for plantation workers a few years ago. He said a woman there told him: “You’re the only people who have ever understood me.”
NSTP and PwC are looking to honour Malaysians who have gone beyond the call of duty and performed outstanding acts of public service. Nominations are open until July 16. For information, log on to www.nstp.com.my or www.pwc.com/my
Archive for the ‘Indian’ category
Gangadara of Befrienders
July 5th, 2007
Ex- Judge addresses Putera MIC
July 5th, 2007By A. LETCHUMANAN
RETIRED High Court judge R.K. Nathan has urged Putera MIC members to set their goals very high so that even if they did not quite reach their target, they would have achieved something.
Nathan, who was addressing 300 Selangor Putera MIC members in Kuala Lumpur recently, told them about his early days.
He said he was inspired to take up law after seeing Englishmen dressed in lawyer's robes, complete with wigs, rushing to court as he was on his way home from St John’s Institution in the early 1950s.
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Treasured advice: Nathan (right) studying a document shown by Selangor Putera MIC chief S. Kamaleswaran. Looking on are Putera MIC chief coordinator P. Kamalanathan (partly hidden) and secretary Mahaganapathy Dass (second from left).
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“I set my goal then that I would become a lawyer. After completing the ‘O’ Levels, I told my father that I wanted to study law but my father, who was a clerk, said he did not have the money.
“When I was in Form Six, there was an elocution contest but I was not considered. So I decided to train on my own with the help of a teacher.
“I managed to win the elocution contest and the following year, had the honour of being appointed a prefect, a post usually reserved for students whose parents made donations to the school,” he said.
He later attended a teacher-training course in Liverpool and was posted to a rural school in Dungun, Terengganu upon his return.
Nathan never forgot his ambition of becoming a lawyer. He sat for an entrance examination for mature students wishing to study law at the University of Singapore (now the National University of Singapore in 1960.
Informed that he was placed second and offered a place to study law he rushed to Kuala Terengganu to get approval from the state education director but was told to pay back RM10,000 before taking up the course. So, Nathan studied law part-time and qualified as a lawyer in 1969.
Nathan called on youths not to waste the facilities and opportunities they had.
Earlier, Putera MIC coordinator P. Kamalanathan said about 3,100 youths had signed up as members since its inception in February.
Selangor Putera MIC chief S. Kamaleswaran said various programmes would be held for the benefit of the members as well as the Indian community.
“We are also planning for an Internet bloggers workshop for Indians in Kuala Lumpur next month,” he said.
Indian restaurant in Cyberjaya
July 5th, 2007By GEETHA KRISHNAN
Photos by M. AZHAR ARIF
A CROWDED restaurant bears testimony to the quality of food offered.
Add pleasant and amiable service to this and you have a winning formula that ensures a long line of repeat customers.
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Spongy lentil cakes: Tairu vadai or vadai soaked in yoghurt at Khush.
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Such is the daily scenario at Khush Vegetarian, a nondescript restaurant tucked away in Cyberjaya’s Century Square. Save for black lettering on the glass doors, Khush draws no other attention to itself.
The year-old restaurant is especially popular with Indian expatriates working in Malaysia’s own Silicon Valley. The mishmash of dialects, Hindi, Tamil, Telugu, Malayalam, Urdu and Gujerati, creates a din during lunch, Khush’s busiest time of the day.
Malaysians too count among the numbers.
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Variety: Swrn Kaur (right) and her niece Sunita Kaur laying out the lunch buffet.
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Owner and former nurse Swrn Kaur started Khush after successfully running an outlet at the Multi Media University.
“Vegetarian food was hard to come by when my eldest son was studying there. I used to bring home-cooked meals for him and his friends so when the idea to operate at the varsity was proposed, I readily accepted,” said Swrn whose name is pronounced as Srn.
“Cooking has always been my passion and I believe in home-cooked meals. As for business acumen, I learnt some valuable tips from my parents who used to sell Indian sweetmeats.”
She has help now at the kitchen in Khush but when the restaurant first opened, Swrn tirelessly cooked all the meals herself. Now she is at the restaurant daily to ensure it runs smoothly and divides her time between Khush and the outlet at MMU.
Khush serves a wide variety of tasty North and South Indian dishes plus Malaysian food, buffet-style.
The enticing spread for lunch often includes freshly made Indian breads like naans, parathas and chappatis while the accompaniments mainly include a variety of grains, lentils and legumes.
Regular offerings at the buffet table include Kala Tadka (using black chickpeas), Aloo Paneer (cottage cheese with potatoes), Dhall Tadka (dry-style dhall) and Channa (horse gram curry).
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Legume: This is part of the dishes served at Khush Vegetarian.
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Specials like Masala Beans and Pulli Satam (tamarind broth) are available on certain days.
“We offer variety because Khush has many regulars. There should be five to six main curries with an equal number of side dishes and the vegetables are usually stir-fried just before lunch to appeal to the health-conscious,” said Swrn, whose husband and three children are vegetarians.
“For breakfast, we have nasi lemak, roti canai, paratha and savouries. For tea, there are vadais and pakoras.”
A hearty meal can be washed down with steaming mugs of Mysore Coffee or Masala Tea, all for under RM10 per diner.
Year 2000 statistic, 2.4 child per indian woman
July 5th, 2007Board statistics showed that in 1957, the average birth rate in Malaysia was 6.7 children per woman, but it has declined to three children per woman in 2000.
Dr Abdul Majid said Malays were the most fertile ethnic group in 2000 with an average birth rate of 3.5 children per woman compared with 2.5 among the Chinese and 2.4 among Indians
Beauty queen organises charity event single-handedly
July 3rd, 2007By STUART MICHAEL
Photo by CHUA KOK HWA
REIGNING Miss MalaysiaIndian Global 2006 Mourhrna Aneta Reddy organised a “Living Skills” programme for residents of Cheshire Home in Selayang recently – and it was a learning experience for both.
The 16 residents of the home who attended the programme at the Royal Selangor Visitors Centre learnt how to fashion a bowl from a sheet of pewter, while Mourhrna learnt a lesson in humility.
The Cheshire Home residents, most of whom were disabled, were given first-hand experience by Royal Selangor's K.C. Chan on how to shape a sheet of pewter into a bowl using a hammer – a technique that can be used to make other items.
Wheelchair-bound Leong Swee Lin, 39, said after learning the skill, that she wanted to make pewter decorations for her house.
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Easy does it: Mourhrna helping to hold a block for one of the Living Skills’ participants as he knocks away in the process of making his own pewter bowl.
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“Malaysia is noted for its pewter. And this gives me a chance to learn something new to teach to others in the Cheshire Home.
“I also felt proud to have made my own bowl and it had my name engraved on it. I will cherish it for ever,” said Leong.
Mourhrna, 23, said it was an eye-opening experience, and it was tough organising even a simple event like that on her own.
“I took two weeks to organise this event and found that asking for money – even as little as RM100 – was so difficult,” said Mourhrna, who needed about RM5,000.
“Most of the time, there were sweet words but empty promises. But, I persisted and kept on calling and finally got a sponsor.
“I had to think of everything from the food and the speeches to the residents' needs and mobility, and even provide the souvenirs.
“From all this, I learnt to persevere – and that Malaysians are not so generous after all. In fact, all the bad publicity about charity organisations has taken a big toll on genuine organisations like ours,” she said.
Mourhrna, who wants to be a lawyer, said the best way to do charity work was by doing it on her own.
“When I become a lawyer, I will play a more active role in helping charities,” she added.
The residents were treated to lunch and given souvenirs before they returned home.
Film director Datuk L. Krishnan also presented mementos to the residents..
The event was supported by Krishnan, Royal Selangor and the Miss Malaysia India Care Association.