Archive for the ‘Indian’ category

Happy New Year 2007

April 9th, 2007
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To all fellow Hindus, wishing you all advanced Happy New Year!
May the new year bring good tidings, greater awareness, fulfilling bounty, and wonderful feeling of contentment.
PS: new year is on 14th April and the year is Sarvajit.
refer more at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hindu_calendar
Poobalan http://poobalan.com/blog http://www.friendster.com/mpoobalan

NEWS:Muhunthan brings home the homeless, elderly

April 9th, 2007
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Perhaps our members/friends in Johor can do something – spend time, provide assistance in registering association for him. For more info, you have to contact NST via email news@nst.com.my or call them (http://www.nst.com.my/Current_News/NST/corpcontact.htm)
Muhunthan brings home the homeless, elderly http://www.nst.com.my/NST/Article/vArt?did=20070409074348 E-mail : news@nst.com.my By : Lau Meisan
2007/04/09 Muhunthan chatting with one of the people he brought home. Over the years, he has brought home 14 people.
JOHOR BARU: When her husband died, M. Vengammah came here from Perak to look for her son.
But he cast her off, she said. With nowhere else to go, the 76-year-old woman slept at night on the five-foot way of a shoplot in Jalan Skudai.
Lorry driver S. Muhunthan found her and took her in.
Over the last three years, Muh- unthan has brought home with him 14 elderly and homeless people.
Some, like Vengammah, he found living on the streets of Johor Baru. Others were patients deserted in hospitals by their families. Now they all live in a small single-storey terrace house in Taman Johor Jaya, a mostly blue-collar area, looked after by Muhunthan’s wife, V Radamanai.
“I don’t mind having a few extra mouths to feed,” said Muhunthan, 34.
His words understate the size of the commitment he has made.
He spends about half of his RM5,000 monthly income feeding and clothing them, and gets help from friends to meet expenses such as the RM600 rent for the house.
Muhunthan owns and drives a two-tonne lorry. He has four young children, and his 68-year-old father, L. Subramaniam, lives with them in another house in Plentong.
In the living room of the Taman Johor Jaya house, there is space for nine people to sleep. Seven of his homeless dependents sleep on camp beds, while his wife and a six-year-old son occupy double bunk beds in a corner.
The rest sleep in the other two rooms in the house. The dining table is placed in the porch, where they have their meals together.
The keeper of a nearby Chinese temple in the neighbourhood tries to help, bringing a little food whenever he can.
“You don’t see many people like Muhunthan around,” said the man, who gave his name only as Ah Choy.
Muhunthan said: “I will do this for as long as I can afford it. I don’t want to go to the Welfare Department for help because I can still pay for their meals and expenses.
“I don’t need any financial help.
“If you want, you can provide food and spend some time with them but please don’t donate money.
“I don’t want others to say that I am making use of these people for financial gain,” he said.
It began three years ago, when a friend who worked in a charity home in Kajang, Selangor, asked him for help.
The home was too crowded and needed someone to take care of some of the homeless people living there.
After a lengthy discussion with his wife, his children and his father, the family agreed to take in three elderly people.
“I told my friend, as long as they didn’t mind eating what we eat and sleeping in makeshift beds, I would be more than willing to take them in.”
He did it partly because both his father and his wife were born lame.
“Taking care of the less fortunate and less able-bodied is part of my daily life,” he said.
He has even tried finding family members of the homeless by highlighting their plight in the Tamil newspapers.
So far, none has come forward for these dependents, aged between 52 and 83.
For the future, Muhunthan is thinking of getting some land in Plentong to build a proper charity home, and is applying for a licence from the Welfare Department.
Johor Baru Welfare Department officer Manayi Ibrahim urged him to register his home as a non-profit organisation.

“He can also try and get a grant from the government to lighten his financial burden,” Manayi said.
Johor Jaya state assemblyman Tan Cher Pok, who paid a visit to the home yesterday, urged Muhunthan to set up an association to better manage the home and register it with the Welfare Department.

NEWS:Indian youth urged to study to help improve Indian community

April 9th, 2007
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Indian youth urged to study to help improve Indian community
http://www.thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2007/4/8/nation/20070408150605&sec=nation
BY A. LETCHUMANAN
SEREMBAN: Indian youth should strive to enrich themselves with education as it is the gateway for the betterment of the community, MIC Youth chief S.A. Vigneswaran said here.
He said education is important to upgrade the socio-economic and living standards of the community.
Speaking at the 14th state MIC Youth convention here late Saturday, he said it is also the agenda of MIC president Datuk Seri S. Samy Vellu to champion the Tamil schools as well as to reduce the number of dropouts from these schools.
“It is the MIC’s wish to ensure that the Tamil school students, mainly from the low-income group, were given an opportunity to compete on a level playing field with the national schools,” he said.
Vigneswaran, who is the parliamentary secretary of the Youth and Sports Ministry, said poverty, lack of infrastructure facilities and lack of teachers should not be a barrier for students to succeed in education.
He said that more Indian youth have been allowed to participate in vocational courses in government skills training institutes in the country.
He also urged the youth to provide proper guidance to the younger generation to ensure that they were in the right path.
“Today’s youth should have awareness, education, vision, spirited, creative, leadership qualities and good character,” he said.
Vigneswaran said the youth should be committed in taking the opportunities available for youth in the country.
“They should not be sloppy, lazy or have a tidak apa attitude. Many still hope for the opportunities to come to them,” he said.
State MIC chairman Datuk T. Rajagopalu, who was the guest of honour, said the youth wing had played a crucial role in attending to the problems of the needy.
He said that Teluk Kemang youth division had organized more activities last year and announced a RM2,000 incentive for them.
“I hope this would encourage the other seven divisions to have more activities and try to win the special incentive next year,” he said

NEWS:Race on to be candidate in Ijok

April 9th, 2007
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Race on to be candidate in Ijok http://www.thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2007/4/8/nation/17382446&sec=nation
By A. LETCHUMANAN and WANI MUTHIAH
KLANG: The clamouring has started among MIC members aspiring to be the candidate in the up-coming Ijok by-election, causing information chief M. Saravanan to warn them against pressuring the leadership.
“Pressure will not go down well with the leadership,” he said, adding that party president Datuk Seri S. Samy Vellu will evaluate all prospective candidates.
He added that Samy Vellu knew who, among the hopefuls, had served the community well or otherwise.
“Given this, they (the hopefuls) should leave it to the party to pick the most suitable candidate,” said Saravanan.
Speculation has begun on the potential candidate for the Ijok state seat, which fell vacant following the death of Selangor MIC deputy chairman Datuk K. Sivalingam.
Although the date of the by-election and the nomination day have yet to be fixed by the Election Commission, some Tamil and Chinese newspapers have already reported on the likely candidates.
Among the names mentioned are MIC Youth social and welfare bureau chairman T. Mohan, who is known for his philanthropic work and said to be in the president’s good books.
Another possible candidate is former Youth secretary S. Murugesan, who was voted into the party’s central working committee last May despite a fall-out with Youth chief S.A. Vigneswaran.
Three-term Shah Alam city councillor R.S. Maniam is also regarded as a prospective candidate.
Sivalingam, 61, died of a heart attack in Chennai, India, on Wednesday.

MCCBCHST Prayer at Perumal Temple 6.30pm Friday 6/4

April 3rd, 2007
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Hindus will hold prayers on Friday (6.30pm at Sundaraj Perumal Temple in Klang) and the Buddhists on Sunday (10am at Wisma Buddhist, Jalan Klang Lama). 
 
 

Non-Muslim council holds special prayers

http://www.thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2007/4/3/nation/17328068&sec=nation

KUALA LUMPUR: The Malaysian Consultative Council of Buddhism, Christianity, Hinduism, Sikhism and Taoism (MCCBCHST) will hold special prayers in light of the Court of Appeal decision where a Hindu woman was asked to seek marital recourse in a Syariah Court. 

President Datuk Chee Peck Kiat told a press conference that “a brief statement of concern would be read to the congregations and followed by a prayer for the restoration of religious freedom.” 

Prayers were held by the Sikh community on Saturday, Christians on Sunday and the Taoists yesterday. 

Hindus will hold prayers on Friday (6.30pm at Sundaraj Perumal Temple in Klang) and the Buddhists on Sunday (10am at Wisma Buddhist, Jalan Klang Lama). 

The special prayers were held after the various communities expressed disappointment over the courtÂ’s decision in R. SubashiniÂ’s case.