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Här skriver jag om vårt nya liv i Singapore.

Ett land i sorg...

Publicerad 2015-03-23 04:35:09 i Allmänt,

Idag är det landssorg i Singapore. Den före detta premiärministern och Singapores grundare och landsfader, Lee Kuan Yew dog tidigt i morse.
Man har utlyst landssorg i 7 dagar. På onsdag till lördag kommer alla medborgare som vill skänka en sista hälsning och visa sin respekt för Mr Lee Kuan Yew att kunna besöka kistan med hans kropp i Parlamentshuset. På söndag är det begravning.

Många går idag till olika platser där man har gjort iordning tavlor för invånarna så att de kan få sätta upp kondoleanskort, hälsningar och lämna blommor mm.
Lee Kuan Yew
1923 - 2015

Singapore's founding father Mr Lee Kuan Yew dies aged 91 at 3.18am on Monday

Published on Mar 23, 2015 4:32 AM
 9172  1489  6  31 PRINT EMAIL
 
 
Former Singapore prime minister Lee Kuan Yew has died at the age of 91. -- PHOTO: ST FILE

 

SINGAPORE - Singapore's founding father, Mr Lee Kuan Yew, has died, leaving behind the unlikely nation that he and his colleagues fostered and built over five decades as his lasting legacy.

Mr Lee, who would have turned 92 this September, died at the Singapore General Hospital where he had been warded for severe pneumonia since Feb 5.

A statement from the Prime Minister's Office said: "The Prime Minister is deeply grieved to announce the passing of Mr Lee Kuan Yew, the founding Prime Minister of Singapore. Mr Lee passed away peacefully at the Singapore General Hospital today at 3.18 am. He was 91."

Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong has declared a seven-day period of national mourning. As a mark of respect, the state flags on all government buildings will be flown at half-mast for the mourning period, which starts on Monday, March 23, and ends on Sunday, March 29. 

A private family wake will be held on Monday, March 23, and Tuesday, March 24, at Sri Temasek.

Mr Lee's body will lie in state at Parliament House from Wednesday, March 25, to Saturday, March 28, for the public to pay their last respects. They can do so from 10 am to 8 pm daily during that time.

A state funeral service for Mr Lee will be held at 2pm on Sunday, March 29, at the National University of Singapore's University Cultural Centre.

The service will be attended by the late Mr Lee's family, friends and staff, President Tony Tan Keng Yam, Cabinet Ministers, Members of Parliament, and Mr Lee's fellow founding members of the ruling People's Action Party.

Senior civil servants, grassroots leaders and Singaporeans from all walks of life will also be attending the service, which will be followed by a private cremation at Mandai Crematorium.

Condolence books and cards will be available in front of the Istana main gate from Monday to Sunday, for those who wish to pen their tributes to the late Mr Lee. Condolence books will also be opened at all overseas missions for overseas Singaporeans and friends.

Mr Lee leaves behind his sons, Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong, 63, and Mr Lee Hsien Yang, 57, daughter Dr Lee Wei Ling, 60, daughters-in-law Ho Ching, 61, and Lee Suet-Fern, 56, seven grandchildren and two siblings. His wife, Madam Kwa Geok Choo, died in 2010, at the age of 89.

 
 

The elder Mr Lee is widely regarded as the man most instrumental in shaping Singapore, from the time he and his People's Action Party colleagues pushed for self-government in the 1950s, to their quest for merger with Malaysia in the early 1960s, and their efforts to secure the country's survival after independence was thrust on it on Aug 9,1965.

He famously wept on that occasion, which he immortalised as "a moment of anguish", not only as he had believed deeply in a unified Malaysia as a multi-racial society, but also as he must have sensed the enormity of the task for this fledgling state to make a living in an inhospitable world.

He would lead a pioneer generation of Singaporeans to overcome a series of daunting challenges, from rehousing squatters in affordable public housing, rebuilding the economy after the sudden pull-out of British forces and the oil shocks of the 1970s, and a major economic recession in the mid 1980s. Through it all, Mr Lee would exhort his people to take heart and "never fear" as they looked forward to a better life.

"This country belongs to all of us. We made this country from nothing, from mud-flats... Over 100 years ago, this was a mud-flat, swamp. Today, this is a modern city. Ten years from now, this will be a metropolis. Never fear!" he thundered at a grassroots event in Sembawang in September 1965.

- See more at: http://www.straitstimes.com/news/singapore/more-singapore-stories/story/lee-kuan-yew-singapores-founding-father-dies-aged-91-201#sthash.Uo575G21.dpuf
Lee Kuan Yew
1923 - 2015

Singapore's founding father Mr Lee Kuan Yew dies aged 91 at 3.18am on Monday

Published on Mar 23, 2015 4:32 AM
 9172  1489  6  31 PRINT EMAIL
 
 
Former Singapore prime minister Lee Kuan Yew has died at the age of 91. -- PHOTO: ST FILE

 

SINGAPORE - Singapore's founding father, Mr Lee Kuan Yew, has died, leaving behind the unlikely nation that he and his colleagues fostered and built over five decades as his lasting legacy.

Mr Lee, who would have turned 92 this September, died at the Singapore General Hospital where he had been warded for severe pneumonia since Feb 5.

A statement from the Prime Minister's Office said: "The Prime Minister is deeply grieved to announce the passing of Mr Lee Kuan Yew, the founding Prime Minister of Singapore. Mr Lee passed away peacefully at the Singapore General Hospital today at 3.18 am. He was 91."

Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong has declared a seven-day period of national mourning. As a mark of respect, the state flags on all government buildings will be flown at half-mast for the mourning period, which starts on Monday, March 23, and ends on Sunday, March 29. 

A private family wake will be held on Monday, March 23, and Tuesday, March 24, at Sri Temasek.

Mr Lee's body will lie in state at Parliament House from Wednesday, March 25, to Saturday, March 28, for the public to pay their last respects. They can do so from 10 am to 8 pm daily during that time.

A state funeral service for Mr Lee will be held at 2pm on Sunday, March 29, at the National University of Singapore's University Cultural Centre.

The service will be attended by the late Mr Lee's family, friends and staff, President Tony Tan Keng Yam, Cabinet Ministers, Members of Parliament, and Mr Lee's fellow founding members of the ruling People's Action Party.

Senior civil servants, grassroots leaders and Singaporeans from all walks of life will also be attending the service, which will be followed by a private cremation at Mandai Crematorium.

Condolence books and cards will be available in front of the Istana main gate from Monday to Sunday, for those who wish to pen their tributes to the late Mr Lee. Condolence books will also be opened at all overseas missions for overseas Singaporeans and friends.

Mr Lee leaves behind his sons, Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong, 63, and Mr Lee Hsien Yang, 57, daughter Dr Lee Wei Ling, 60, daughters-in-law Ho Ching, 61, and Lee Suet-Fern, 56, seven grandchildren and two siblings. His wife, Madam Kwa Geok Choo, died in 2010, at the age of 89.

 
 

The elder Mr Lee is widely regarded as the man most instrumental in shaping Singapore, from the time he and his People's Action Party colleagues pushed for self-government in the 1950s, to their quest for merger with Malaysia in the early 1960s, and their efforts to secure the country's survival after independence was thrust on it on Aug 9,1965.

He famously wept on that occasion, which he immortalised as "a moment of anguish", not only as he had believed deeply in a unified Malaysia as a multi-racial society, but also as he must have sensed the enormity of the task for this fledgling state to make a living in an inhospitable world.

He would lead a pioneer generation of Singaporeans to overcome a series of daunting challenges, from rehousing squatters in affordable public housing, rebuilding the economy after the sudden pull-out of British forces and the oil shocks of the 1970s, and a major economic recession in the mid 1980s. Through it all, Mr Lee would exhort his people to take heart and "never fear" as they looked forward to a better life.

"This country belongs to all of us. We made this country from nothing, from mud-flats... Over 100 years ago, this was a mud-flat, swamp. Today, this is a modern city. Ten years from now, this will be a metropolis. Never fear!" he thundered at a grassroots event in Sembawang in September 1965.

- See more at: http://www.straitstimes.com/news/singapore/more-singapore-stories/story/lee-kuan-yew-singapores-founding-father-dies-aged-91-201#sthash.Uo575G21.dpuf
Lee Kuan Yew var Singapores premiärminister från 1959 till 1990, vilket är den längta period någon har varit premiärminister i historien (eller hur man utrycker sig??).
År 2004 blev hans äldsta son premiärminister. Många hade hoppats på att han skulle få vara med och uppleva Singapore's 50:e år som självständigt land den 9 augusti, men så blev det tyvärr inte. Han blev 91 år och har kämpat för att göra Singapore själständigt och byggt upp landet till vad det är idag.
Lee Kuan Yew
1923 - 2015

Singapore's founding father Mr Lee Kuan Yew dies aged 91 at 3.18am on Monday

Published on Mar 23, 2015 4:32 AM
 9172  1489  6  31 PRINT EMAIL
 
 
Former Singapore prime minister Lee Kuan Yew has died at the age of 91. -- PHOTO: ST FILE

 

SINGAPORE - Singapore's founding father, Mr Lee Kuan Yew, has died, leaving behind the unlikely nation that he and his colleagues fostered and built over five decades as his lasting legacy.

Mr Lee, who would have turned 92 this September, died at the Singapore General Hospital where he had been warded for severe pneumonia since Feb 5.

A statement from the Prime Minister's Office said: "The Prime Minister is deeply grieved to announce the passing of Mr Lee Kuan Yew, the founding Prime Minister of Singapore. Mr Lee passed away peacefully at the Singapore General Hospital today at 3.18 am. He was 91."

Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong has declared a seven-day period of national mourning. As a mark of respect, the state flags on all government buildings will be flown at half-mast for the mourning period, which starts on Monday, March 23, and ends on Sunday, March 29. 

A private family wake will be held on Monday, March 23, and Tuesday, March 24, at Sri Temasek.

Mr Lee's body will lie in state at Parliament House from Wednesday, March 25, to Saturday, March 28, for the public to pay their last respects. They can do so from 10 am to 8 pm daily during that time.

A state funeral service for Mr Lee will be held at 2pm on Sunday, March 29, at the National University of Singapore's University Cultural Centre.

The service will be attended by the late Mr Lee's family, friends and staff, President Tony Tan Keng Yam, Cabinet Ministers, Members of Parliament, and Mr Lee's fellow founding members of the ruling People's Action Party.

Senior civil servants, grassroots leaders and Singaporeans from all walks of life will also be attending the service, which will be followed by a private cremation at Mandai Crematorium.

Condolence books and cards will be available in front of the Istana main gate from Monday to Sunday, for those who wish to pen their tributes to the late Mr Lee. Condolence books will also be opened at all overseas missions for overseas Singaporeans and friends.

Mr Lee leaves behind his sons, Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong, 63, and Mr Lee Hsien Yang, 57, daughter Dr Lee Wei Ling, 60, daughters-in-law Ho Ching, 61, and Lee Suet-Fern, 56, seven grandchildren and two siblings. His wife, Madam Kwa Geok Choo, died in 2010, at the age of 89.

 
 

The elder Mr Lee is widely regarded as the man most instrumental in shaping Singapore, from the time he and his People's Action Party colleagues pushed for self-government in the 1950s, to their quest for merger with Malaysia in the early 1960s, and their efforts to secure the country's survival after independence was thrust on it on Aug 9,1965.

He famously wept on that occasion, which he immortalised as "a moment of anguish", not only as he had believed deeply in a unified Malaysia as a multi-racial society, but also as he must have sensed the enormity of the task for this fledgling state to make a living in an inhospitable world.

He would lead a pioneer generation of Singaporeans to overcome a series of daunting challenges, from rehousing squatters in affordable public housing, rebuilding the economy after the sudden pull-out of British forces and the oil shocks of the 1970s, and a major economic recession in the mid 1980s. Through it all, Mr Lee would exhort his people to take heart and "never fear" as they looked forward to a better life.

"This country belongs to all of us. We made this country from nothing, from mud-flats... Over 100 years ago, this was a mud-flat, swamp. Today, this is a modern city. Ten years from now, this will be a metropolis. Never fear!" he thundered at a grassroots event in Sembawang in September 1965.

- See more at: http://www.straitstimes.com/news/singapore/more-singapore-stories/story/lee-kuan-yew-singapores-founding-father-dies-aged-91-201#sthash.Uo575G21.dpuf
"This country belongs to all of us. We made this country from nothing, from mud-flats... Over 100 years ago, this was a mud-flat, swamp. Today, this is a modern city. Ten years from now, this will be a metropolis. Never fear!" he thundered at a grassroots event in Sembawang in September 1965. - See more at: http://www.straitstimes.com/news/singapore/more-singapore-stories/story/lee-kuan-yew-singapores-founding-father-dies-aged-91-201#sthash.Uo575G21.dpuf

"This country belongs to all of us. We made this country from nothing, from mud-flats... Over 100 years ago, this was a mud-flat, swamp. Today, this is a modern city. Ten years from now, this will be a metropolis. Never fear!" he thundered at a grassroots event in Sembawang in September 1965.

R.I.P
Mr Lee Kuan Yew

Byn där tiden stog stilla

Publicerad 2015-03-21 16:27:03 i Allmänt,

Jag gjorde en liten utflykt tillsammans med vännerna (och kollegerna) Kerstin, Carina och Eva, till Kampong Buankok. Kampong är malay och betyder by. Här har tiden stått still sedan 50-talet. Vilket är ovanligt för Singapore, eftersom man river allt gammalt (utom de kulturmärkta shophouses) och bygger nytt överallt. Så det var mycket spännande att gå in i denna lilla by - den sista kampongen i Singapore.
Det var inte helt lätt att hitta byn för den ligger inklämd i grönskan bland en massa nya hus och pågående byggen, men efter lite frågande så hittade vi den till slut.
Det först man möts och förundras av är detta myller av elkablar som verkar vara kopplat av en mycket oteknisk person!
Smala, smala grusvägar som nätt och jämnt rymmer en bil.
En del hus var ganska välskötta och såg ganska mysiga ut, medan andra var som lapptäcken, med plåt ppå plåt, och lappat med nån brädskiva här och var.
Denna lilla by etablerades år 1956. I dag bor här ca 30 malaysiska och kinesiska familjer.
De boende i Buangkok betalar en liten summa på $13 i månaden till sin landlord, Madam Sng Mui Hong, som ärvde marken av sin far.
Den lilla byn fick vatten och el indraget 1963, två år före Singapores själständighet.
De har i alla fall moderna bilar ;o)

På 60-talet, jobbade de flest som bodde i byn på det närligande sjukhuset, Woodbridge Hospital eller fabriker.  På den tiden var hyran $2–$3. Idag består byns innevånare av make-up artister, arbetare och mestadels äldre.

Det växer bananpalmer precis utanför tomterna.

Vi kände oss lite som nyfikna inkräktare, med det var det värt! Det var en spännande dag med mycket att se.

Hittade också en Orb-spider. Jag höll precis på att gå in i det kraftiga spindelnätet, men uppstäckte det i sista stund!
 
 

Lo Hei

Publicerad 2015-03-20 11:19:31 i Allmänt,

Det här inlägget har dröjt lite. Denna händelse hänger ihop med Chinese New Year som var i slutet av februari, men bättre sent än aldrig!
 
Lo Hei är en spännande tradition bland kineser här i Singapore i samband med nyåret. Då träffas de och  "tossar" mat. 
Det fick jag och andra sweor pröva på under en SWEA-aktivitet. En kinesisk kvinna berättade om det kinesiska nyåretoch instruerade oss i, hur man tossar mat.
Vi var ett gäng tjejer som var hembjudna till Maggan, SWEAs orförande (vid den tidpunkten). Vi blev välkomnade med champagne och lite gott tilltugg.
Sedan bänkade vi oss runt demonstrationsbordet och guiden började berätta. Maten (eller salladen) består av bl a strimlade morötter, rättika, pomelo, gurka, rödkål, paprika, ingefära, lax, plommonsås, vinäger, sesamfrön mm.
 
Själva ordet Lo Hei kommer från kantonesiskan och betyder "kasta för god lycka".
Först lägger man lägger upp de strimlade grönsaker. Sen strör man på nötter, fröer, dressig och sist toppar man allt med fisk (sashimi) av något slag.
När allt ligger prydligt på tallriken ska man med sina pinnar, kasta denna blandning så högt upp i luften samtidigt som alla runt bordet ropar ut lyckönskningar, typ "God lycka", "God framgång" "God hälsa"
Ju högre man kan kasta desto större blir lyckan och framgången.
Sedan äter man denna "tossade" salladen som en förrätt innan middagen. Den var faktiskt överraskande god!!
Alla ingridienser som ingår har också en speciell betydelse. Mycket väl genomtänkt.

Gong Xi Fa Cai

Publicerad 2015-03-01 03:40:43 i Allmänt,

...eller Gott Nytt År, som det heter på svenska. För en vecka sedan firade vi nyår för andra gången. Det är det kinesiska nyåret som har firats efter konstens alla regler. Farfar och jag tog en trip till China-town dagarna innan nyåret. Där var det pyntat överallt och försäljningen av "nödvändiga" saker inför nyåret var i full gång....
....som t ex röda laternor och nyårspynt i rött. Tavlor i rött med kinesiska tecken..
Det här är viktigt också. Varje gång man går bort under nyåret, eller får besök, så ska man alltid lämna två mandariner till den man besöker, eller till sina gäster som hälsat på. Man får inte lämna samma mandariner heller som man fått av någon. Man ska också lämna pengar till människor i sin omgivning, i ett litet särskilt kuvert. Det får absolut inte vara 4 dollar bara  - det betyder otur.
En del säljer nötter o frön - andra säljer sånger. Dock tror jag den gulliga farbror tjänade mer pengar på sin charm än på sin sång! Det lät inget vidare i mina öron. Men söt var han ;o))
Vi gick in och tittade på religiösa ceremoier av munkarna, i det vackra buddist-templet.
Vackert med alla offer-gåvor.
Så nu har vi lämnat hästens år (alla födda -66 är födda i hästens år) och gått in i getens år. Spännande..;o))
 

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