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Listen by Heart | Stories from Women of the South China Sea | Peacebuilding for Mental Health
Jasmine H. Low | AFT Podcasts by AsiaFitnessToday.com
35 episodes
5 days ago
Listen in to conversations with women of the South China Sea in search of one common thread -- life purpose... Podcast host Jasmine Low speaks with women of this region, shares their stories and narrates articles from yesteryear and delves into her 10-year research into sound frequencies and how that got her to "Listen by Heart" in finding her own purpose. Were all of the women before her in search of the same goal? It's telling in the daily greeting by Nanyang migrants in their own dialects, "Have you eaten?". Is this why so many people share food pics because it's a trophy for survival?
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All content for Listen by Heart | Stories from Women of the South China Sea | Peacebuilding for Mental Health is the property of Jasmine H. Low | AFT Podcasts by AsiaFitnessToday.com and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Listen in to conversations with women of the South China Sea in search of one common thread -- life purpose... Podcast host Jasmine Low speaks with women of this region, shares their stories and narrates articles from yesteryear and delves into her 10-year research into sound frequencies and how that got her to "Listen by Heart" in finding her own purpose. Were all of the women before her in search of the same goal? It's telling in the daily greeting by Nanyang migrants in their own dialects, "Have you eaten?". Is this why so many people share food pics because it's a trophy for survival?
Show more...
Personal Journals
Society & Culture
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A Merdeka Story: from little things big things grow šŸ–¤šŸ’›šŸ’™ā¤ļø
Listen by Heart | Stories from Women of the South China Sea | Peacebuilding for Mental Health
21 minutes 31 seconds
4 years ago
A Merdeka Story: from little things big things grow šŸ–¤šŸ’›šŸ’™ā¤ļø
Welcome to a special edition of Listen by Heart, narrated by Jasmine H. Low.Ā Ā  šŸ–¤ On August 9th 2021, International Day of the World’s Indigenous Peoples themed ā€˜Leaving No One Behind’ left me thinking of our future, and of the concept of freedom.Ā  šŸ’› It's August 30th, Malaysia's Merdeka Day. A quick dip into historical events would show the timeline from when the British East India Company made a deal in 1786 with the Sultanate of Kedah, a state bordering Malaya and Thailand, to form the first of what would be the Straits Settlement, comprising of Malacca and Singapore later on. And that is history, as told by text books. Blindsided in school textbooks are stories about the indigenous peoples, like the Orang Aslis and Orang Asals, leaving generations of children growing up without much knowledge or understanding for the cultures of the first people. Where were they in history? What happened? Didn’t they also fight for peace during WWII? They make up 13.8% of Malaysia’s 32 million population so it’s a good question to raise and a strong reason to lobby for indigenous peoples and their stories to be told in schools, at the workplace and local community programs.Ā  šŸ’™ Voice from the heartland. Coming from migrant stock, I’m sensitive to this topic and have been all in for First Nations appreciation since my arrival to Australia as a teenager when it celebrated its bicentenary. Australia is my heartland. It’s a second home and it always has a place in my heart. Imagine arriving at a celebration of 200 years since the first British settler set foot in Australia. I quickly learned at that impressionable young age, that one man’s meat is indeed another’s poison and that there were two events in the one same city; Sorry Day in La Perouse south of Sydney and Australia Day in the harbour front of Gadigal Land. How can one celebrate when another is somber? This juxtaposition of thought camps remains the crux of January 26th for me personally.Ā  ā¤ļø A dedication to all Malaysians, especially Malaysia's indigenous communities. As a Malaysian-born, I've been conscious of its long dumbed-down history of land rights among the aboriginal native orang asli and orang asal. I've seen friends tell through personal experiences, through documentaries they'd shoot, horrendous tales of blockades in the centre of the Earth as termed by the Temiars in the East Coast of Peninsular Malaysia, blocking tree loggers from pulling roots out from their earth, their land, which was licensed out to commercial loggers. These brave individuals would set up blockades ala man versus tractor.Ā  The song by Paul Kelly, remade by Ziggy Ramo and Electric Fields keeps the fire burning for the other people fighting land rights and there needs to be fires burning long through the nights for this fight to be fought. On the eve of this 64th Independence Merdeka Day in Malaysia, I've had this song translated into Bahasa Malaysia, and written this short piece to show respect to a culture if not protected, will be forever lost. It's really baby steps forward but giant strides backwards if we allow our last remaining forests, ancestral land for the first peoples of Malaysia, what's left of it, to be plummaged with no recourse. There is no turning back if we let it happen. We must not let it happen. Protect it at all costs just like how the tree huggers, Chipko activists in the 1970s in India did.Ā  Read the full article here: https://www.jasminelow.com/merdeka-from-little-things-big-things-grow/ Learn more about Listen by Heart Podcast: https://listenbyheart.webprojx.com. Thank you. Written and produced by Jasmine H. Low Bahasa Malaysia translation by Syuhada Adam.
Listen by Heart | Stories from Women of the South China Sea | Peacebuilding for Mental Health
Listen in to conversations with women of the South China Sea in search of one common thread -- life purpose... Podcast host Jasmine Low speaks with women of this region, shares their stories and narrates articles from yesteryear and delves into her 10-year research into sound frequencies and how that got her to "Listen by Heart" in finding her own purpose. Were all of the women before her in search of the same goal? It's telling in the daily greeting by Nanyang migrants in their own dialects, "Have you eaten?". Is this why so many people share food pics because it's a trophy for survival?