Island relief
A tiny island off Batam is home to 26 families who
make do with very little. Recently, a group of
Singaporean and Indonesian youths toiled to make life a
little better for these sea-faring villagers.
Photographer JOYCE LIM was there
Nov 12, 1998
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UP TO MARK: Tougher
planks were used to re-build the walkways to
make them safer.
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CHILDREN can once again swing high up into the
sky.
A new community hall has been built.
The school and mosque have fresh coats of paint.
And new walkways link the stilt houses.
These are among the projects recently completed by
Operasi Raleigh Bertam '98, a joint effort by Raleigh
International (Singapore) and the Indonesian Red Cross
Society in Batam.
Two batches of about 100 people each, aged 17 to 30,
spent a week on the island, staying in tents.
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HOPE SPRINGS ETERNAL: A
child from the village bathing herself at the
spring bath that was rebuilt with the help of
the Operation Raleigh team.
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Pulau Bertam, only about the size of Sentosa, is 4 km
south-west of Batam. It had been turned into a
resettlement village for Orang Laut (sea gypsies) 12
years ago.
The chief of the fishermen, Mr Mahadan, 54, said the
island's 26 families could not afford to do much as they
are quite poor.
Mr Mahadan lives in a stilt house with his mother,
wife, five children and two grandchildren.
NO UTILITIES
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BRIGHT AND EARLY: Robi
Mahadan, nine, having lessons in a classroom
which has had fresh coats of paint applied by
the volunteers.
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Like other families on the island, Mr Mahadan and his
family depend on fishing for their livelihood. He goes to
sea at 5 pm and returns around midnight.
He keeps some of his catch for the family and sells
the rest for 30,000 to 50,000 rupiah. ($4.75 to
$7.85)
The villagers have no electricity, no clean drinking
water or proper sanitation. They just jump into the sea
to bathe.
The wooden planks making up the walkways that link the
stilt houses had rotted over the years. Some collapsed.
Some villagers even had to abandon house.
The community hall had been destroyed in a storm.
But with the help of the Raleigh team, the hall was
rebuilt. Safer walkways were also built using tough
wooden planks.
Some volunteers were doctors. In their two weeks on
the island, they ran a temporary clinic for the
villagers.
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CENTENARIAN:Village chief
Mr Mahadan's mother, Madam Penoh, 107, receiving
medical attention from a doctor
volunteer.
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"It is a great accomplishment for the volunteers of
Operasi Raleigh Bertam, especially when they see
villagers making use of the re-built facilities, like
going to the re-constructed spring to collect water and
bathe,'' said expedition leader Dr Eric Tan Sohn Joo,
30.
The villagers are so happy with the difference that
they hope to get help to build new houses and more cement
paths.