Unseen Faces, Unheard Voices is a print and digital exhibition celebrating 5 women food vendors of Penang. This is a project undertaken in conjunction with International Women's Day 2015. The print and digital exhibition was launched on 8 March 2015 at LUMA Gallery, Whiteaways Arcade, Beach Street, George Town, Penang. We're working on documenting many more of Penang women's stories. Join us as a volunteer (interviewer, researcher or photographer) or give us your feedback. Email to: ufuvpenang@gmail.com
Lightning Talk #9: How UX and Data Storytelling Can Shape Policy by Mika Aldabaux singapore
How can we take UX and Data Storytelling out of the tech context and use them to change the way government behaves?
Showcasing the truth is the highest goal of data storytelling. Because the design of a chart can affect the interpretation of data in a major way, one must wield visual tools with care and deliberation. Using quantitative facts to evoke an emotional response is best achieved with the combination of UX and data storytelling.
Lightning Talk #9: How UX and Data Storytelling Can Shape Policy by Mika Aldabaux singapore
How can we take UX and Data Storytelling out of the tech context and use them to change the way government behaves?
Showcasing the truth is the highest goal of data storytelling. Because the design of a chart can affect the interpretation of data in a major way, one must wield visual tools with care and deliberation. Using quantitative facts to evoke an emotional response is best achieved with the combination of UX and data storytelling.
Essay on Appreciating Mom
Motherhood and Pregnancy
Essay about Mother-daughter Relationships
Characteristics Of My Mother
Essay on Working Mothers
Mothers & Daughters Essay
Becoming a Teenage Mother Essay
Narrative Essay : My Mom
Hola! I’m Anastacia Hauldridge but just call me “Ace”.
I’m glad you stopped by my story page because let’s keep it real right, its best to take the right amount of time to get to know someone first before doing any kind of business or having any type of relationship with that person.
Dear Mom Essays
My Mom Taught Me
A Moment With My Mother
One And Only Mom Essay
My Mom Essay
My Mom Essay
Mother Definition Essay
Mother Essay : My Mother
My Mother Essay
My Mom Essay
Essay on Appreciating Mom
My Family Research Paper
My Family Dream
Family Narrative Essay
My Family Short Story
My Family Story
My Family Story
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My Familys Immigration
Essay about My Family Heritage
A Story Of My Family
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" Women being women, we tend to take work seriously, and if not balanced, will continue to work and neglect everything else, especially our families. A few instances that I've learn over the years, is to make certain efforts and use the great family support network, if we have it." Maznida Mokhtar
This tutorial offers a step-by-step guide on how to effectively use Pinterest. It covers the basics such as account creation and navigation, as well as advanced techniques including creating eye-catching pins and optimizing your profile. The tutorial also explores collaboration and networking on the platform. With visual illustrations and clear instructions, this tutorial will equip you with the skills to navigate Pinterest confidently and achieve your goals.
Essay on Appreciating Mom
Motherhood and Pregnancy
Essay about Mother-daughter Relationships
Characteristics Of My Mother
Essay on Working Mothers
Mothers & Daughters Essay
Becoming a Teenage Mother Essay
Narrative Essay : My Mom
Hola! I’m Anastacia Hauldridge but just call me “Ace”.
I’m glad you stopped by my story page because let’s keep it real right, its best to take the right amount of time to get to know someone first before doing any kind of business or having any type of relationship with that person.
Dear Mom Essays
My Mom Taught Me
A Moment With My Mother
One And Only Mom Essay
My Mom Essay
My Mom Essay
Mother Definition Essay
Mother Essay : My Mother
My Mother Essay
My Mom Essay
Essay on Appreciating Mom
My Family Research Paper
My Family Dream
Family Narrative Essay
My Family Short Story
My Family Story
My Family Story
My Family : A Short Story
My Familys Immigration
Essay about My Family Heritage
A Story Of My Family
Autobiography Of My Family
My Family Essay
Essay on My Family History
The Story Of My Family
Essay on My Familys Ancestry
" Women being women, we tend to take work seriously, and if not balanced, will continue to work and neglect everything else, especially our families. A few instances that I've learn over the years, is to make certain efforts and use the great family support network, if we have it." Maznida Mokhtar
This tutorial offers a step-by-step guide on how to effectively use Pinterest. It covers the basics such as account creation and navigation, as well as advanced techniques including creating eye-catching pins and optimizing your profile. The tutorial also explores collaboration and networking on the platform. With visual illustrations and clear instructions, this tutorial will equip you with the skills to navigate Pinterest confidently and achieve your goals.
Fashionista Chic Couture Maze & Coloring Adventures is a coloring and activity book filled with many maze games and coloring activities designed to delight and engage young fashion enthusiasts. Each page offers a unique blend of fashion-themed mazes and stylish illustrations to color, inspiring creativity and problem-solving skills in children.
Explore the multifaceted world of Muntadher Saleh, an Iraqi polymath renowned for his expertise in visual art, writing, design, and pharmacy. This SlideShare delves into his innovative contributions across various disciplines, showcasing his unique ability to blend traditional themes with modern aesthetics. Learn about his impactful artworks, thought-provoking literary pieces, and his vision as a Neo-Pop artist dedicated to raising awareness about Iraq's cultural heritage. Discover why Muntadher Saleh is celebrated as "The Last Polymath" and how his multidisciplinary talents continue to inspire and influence.
Hadj Ounis's most notable work is his sculpture titled "Metamorphosis." This piece showcases Ounis's mastery of form and texture, as he seamlessly combines metal and wood to create a dynamic and visually striking composition. The juxtaposition of the two materials creates a sense of tension and harmony, inviting viewers to contemplate the relationship between nature and industry.
1. U N S E E N F A C E S ,
U N H E A R D V O I C E S
A S P E C I A L
I N T E R N A T I O N A L W O M E N ’ S D A Y
P H O T O E X H I B I T I O N T O C E L E B R A T E 5 W O M E N F O O D V E N D O R S I N P E N A N G
14. My husband had an accident
and had problems
getting work.
So I started a business
to support the family.
I began in 1996.
15. I have two children.
My daughter studied
Business Administration.
My son is studying engineering in college.
16.
17. My husband wakes up at 4am
to prepare the sour dough
for thosai and kneads the chapati dough.
18.
19. I have no formal schooling
but I can speak Hokkien very well.
I learned it when I was 14,
living with my grandmother in Sungai Petani.
We had many Chinese neighbours.
20.
21. I am grateful for the support
of my husband
who helps me in the business.
22. He does all the marketing
and difficult work
of preparing the dough.
I only cook the curries.
23. I have been quite fortunate…
I sell about 500 to 600 vadeys a day.
I also make sweet apom and thosai.
24.
25. I am really good at making the dhal (for vadey).
Many have tried to copy my dhal
but have never been able to do it.
26. Even my daughter can’t prepare it the way I do.
She gets upset if I teach others
the recipe for the dhal as she believes
it is our family’s secret recipe.
27.
28. I’m happy I have customers
who have stayed loyal to me
all these years.
29. The local council used to take away my stall.
Once they came three times in a month.
Since then, I’ve applied for the necessary
permits and done my vaccination.
30.
31. I’d like my daughter to take over from me.
She’s keen but she feels she
would not be able to cook like I do.
32. I plan to retire when my son
completes his studies.
It is my hope to sell this stall and retire.
33.
34. Jeya’s stall is at Sg Nibong.
Originally her stall was in front of Lam Wah Ee Hospital.
35. K O A Y T E O W T H ’ N G
S E L L E R
A H T E E N
37. My husband, Ah Chin, and I have been selling
koay teow th’ng for a very long time.
He is 83 years old.
38.
39. In exactly a month’s time, we would have been
doing this business for 40 years.
40.
41. Our house is not too far away from this coffee shop.
That’s why we like it here.
It’s not too far for us to move our push-cart here every day.
42.
43. The work is shared
between us.
My husband wakes up
at 3.30am
to do the marketing.
44.
45. Our neighbour is a very old friend.
He is free and loves coming to our stall
in the mornings to help us out.
He helps pluck taugeh.
46.
47. I am up at 5am to prepare the food.
We are out of the house with our push cart by 6.30am.
We are usually sold out by 1pm and get home around 2pm.
48.
49. We have a simple lunch when we get home.
But I still have to cook the evening meal.
We usually eat dinner early and are in bed by 8.30pm.
50. The price of ingredients have gone up.
But we have not raised our prices.
How to increase prices when our customers are like family?
They all call me Ah Poh, Ah Ee, Ah Chee.
Kids call me Ah Mah.
51.
52. We only have 1 child, a son who lives and works in KL.
He’s a good son.
53. He studied hard and got a loan to go to university.
His employer liked his work
and sponsored him for his Master’s degree.
We didn’t have to make huge sacrifices for his education.
54.
55. Even at our age, we don’t mind working, not at all,
except on days when we are not feeling too good.
56. I am diabetic and also have high blood pressure.
So I do have my occasional “down” days.
57. We earn an honest living.
We earn enough to live on.
We’ll continue selling this
as long as we’re both healthy
and have the energy to do so.
59. We’d just be sitting at home with nothing to do.
Besides we’ll miss the joy of interacting with our customers.
60. Their stall is located
outside Kedai Kopi Hin Leong, Jalan Macalister.
They open 5 days a week,
Saturday through Wednesday from 7am to 1pm.
61. N A S I C A M P U R
S T A L L O W N E R
M A K L A N
62.
63. I have been in this nasi campur business for 36 years.
I started due to poverty.
64. Due to poverty, I will stand and work like the Chinese.
And like the Chinese, I never give up.
65.
66. I borrowed RM100 from a chettiar to start.
Back then it was just a simple push cart
but I opened from 6am to 6pm.
I’d wake up at 3am to prepare
my dishes with my aunt’s help.
67.
68. Many people tell me it’s tiring to run a food business.
I say, how can you be tired?
I was a one-woman show when I started.
69. I did the marketing, cooking and selling.
I’d drive to the wholesale market
at midnight and start cooking at 3am.
It was like this, day in, day out.
70.
71. My specialities are kerabu,
black chicken and fried terubok.
We now serve 30 or more dishes
from 7am to 9pm, Monday to Saturday.
72. My workers start preparing and cooking
at 4.30am because we open at 7am.
73.
74.
75. You know how expensive red chillies are these days?
But we still make our sambal belacan every day.
We may not make as much money but it’s OK.
76.
77.
78. I don’t know what to do if I retire!
I am so used to being here at my stall.
If I don’t work, it’s so hard for me to pass the time!
79.
80. My KL and Johor customers
often fly into Penang
just to eat at Lidiana.
81. You should see my business
on the first day of Chinese New Year.
All my Chinese customers would come here
to eat with their families!
82.
83. I have a Raya open house every year
and I invite all my Chinese customers.
(Lidiana attracts so many Chinese customers that
people outside of Penang
have asked if the stall is owned by a Chinese!)
84. Puan Lall Bee binti Ibrahim or fondly known as Mak Lan
studied until Form Three at Convent Pulau Tikus.
85. She started her nasi campur business
because she was a young divorcee with children.
She also had to take care of her 16 siblings.
86. I want to advise divorced women that
a divorce is not the end of the world.
It’s not the end of the world
when your husband leaves you.
87. Lidiana is the name of her stall.
It’s the combined names
of her 2 daughters, Nordiana and Lidia.
Nordiana now runs the bustling business,
assisted by her husband.
They also cater for events.
88. Lidiana’s is located at the food court near Ratu Mutiara
opposite the floating mosque of Tanjung Bungah.
The stall is closed on Sundays.
89. I am thankful to God
for good health,
strength
and determination.
90. H O K K I E N M E E
S T A L L O W N E R
P O H K I M
91.
92. I started this business 23 years ago.
Our family needed extra regular income to supplement
my husband’s earnings as a small-scale building contractor.
93.
94. I dropped out of school after Standard Six.
No one told me about the importance of education!
95. In my younger days, I worked in a garment factory
and did other part-time jobs. All were low-paying jobs.
My family found it very difficult to make ends meet.
96.
97. After trying out various options, relatives suggested
I should sell Hokkien mee.
I asked my sister-in-law
to teach me my mother-in-law’s recipe
which people used to like a lot.
98. My day starts at 7.30am and I only get home at midnight.
99.
100. We are an all-woman operation.
In the kitchen there’s me, the chief cook.
We are assisted by 3 foreign maids
for food preparation and waitressing.
101. Then there’s my god-sister’s daughter.
She’s a key person at the stall.
Her fantastic memory allows her to whip up
customers’ orders without messing them up.
103. She just got married and will soon join her husband in the US.
I worry she cannot be replaced.
I can’t perform her important role.
I don’t have her fantastic memory.
104. 7 years ago, my husband was disabled by a work injury.
I have since become the primary breadwinner of our family.
105.
106. The most time-consuming task is peeling prawns - tonnes of them!
Both prawns and shells are used for our Hokkien mee.
107. I personally oversee
the stock preparation
because that’s what gives
Hokkien mee its distinct flavour.
People from outside Penang
call it prawn mee.
108.
109.
110. As you know, there’s the basic bowl of Hokkien mee.
Then there’s the “keh liao” bowl.
You can add extra “liao” or toppings like pork ribs, roast pork,
entrails, mantis prawns at extra charges of course.
111.
112.
113. This is my god sister, Ah Lean.
She is my best friend and partner.
We pooled our savings to buy a house in the early days.
Our families have since been living together as one big family.
We share and manage all our resources as one.
114. I am very grateful for strong family support.
My mother whom I love very much
but is no longer around.
My eldest brother who generously allowed me
to use his shop house rent-free.
115. Ah Lean who happily stays home
to care for all our children and grandchildren.
Family is top priority for both of us.
116.
117. I have a son, a daughter and 3 grandchildren.
My son has a successful hairdressing business.
My daughter tried opening a prawn mee stall but didn’t like it.
She has now followed in her father’s footsteps as a contractor.
118. We don’t have retirement on our minds.
We are used to hard work.
119. Poh Kim runs her Hokkien mee stall
at Presgrave Street (Sar Teow Lor) from 5pm - 11pm.
The shop is closed for 2 days every month
on alternate Thursdays.
You can order her Hokkien mee in bulk
for home parties and takeaway.
121. Bee Kim sells curry mee
in the morning on Macalister Road.
In the evenings, she sells
at a corner coffeeshop
on Burma/Tavoy Road junction.
Her day starts at 6am and
ends before midnight.
122. Her family has been selling curry mee
for more than 30 years
over 3 generations,
from her grandmother
to her father and now to her.
123.
124. Thank goodness I have always
been strong and healthy.
How else could I have slogged the way
I have been doing all these years?
I’ve had to work like a cow.
125.
126. But it’s OK. I am not afraid of hard work.
My husband and I have to earn a living
to raise a family the best we can.
Rain or shine, we have to work.
127. I have 3 children.
My eldest daughter is almost
finishing her degree at MMU
while my second daughter is studying in USM.
My youngest son is in Form Five this year.
128.
129. When I completed my Form Five,
I worked for several years as
an electronics factory operator
doing long 12-hour shifts.
But soldering work was hard and stressful.
When my father grew too old to carry on toiling, I took over.
130.
131. I started helping him
at his stall as a young school girl.
I continued helping my father even when I was working in Motorola.
And I helped him throughout my pregnancies.
132. I clearly remember having to assist
my father to push his stall
even when I was pregnant.
I was so afraid this heavy work
would cause me to lose my baby.
But we had no choice.
133. My children were sent to child-minders while I ran the stall.
Thank goodness babysitters were quite affordable in those days.
134.
135. Whenever she can, my daughter helps me out.
My husband who is now a retiree does the marketing for me.
He also helps out at the stall at night.
136. When the day is done at 11pm,
I am a spent force.
I return home and sleep like a log
till the next morning.
137.
138. But I think it is much better to run my own business,
to be my own boss.
139. I don’t think that far ahead.
I just live from day to day.
Hopefully we’ll have some savings
at the end to live on when I cannot
carry on selling curry mee
or have grown too tired.
140.
141. Bee Kim runs her curry mee stall in 2 locations 6 days a week.
Her morning stall opens from 7am - 11am
while her evening stall opens from 5.30pm-10.30pm.
Her goal is to give her 3 children a good education
so that they can live better lives.
142. S H A R E & W I N
• Snap a photo of your favourite woman street food vendor in Penang.
• Hashtag it with #ufuvpenang
• Share on Facebook or Twitter.
• You might win a yummy prize! Deadline: 31 March 2015.
143. V O L U N T E E R W I T H U S !
• Enjoy photography? Good at telling stories?
• Join us for Phase 2 of this project.
• We want to document much more of the history of Penang women - women
in sports, women in NGOs and more.
• Contact us: ufuvpenang@gmail.com
144. Photography by:
Mariam Lim
Lee Hau Chern
Sandra Leng
Interviews by:
Mariam Lim
Krista Goon
Janarthani Arumugam
Partially funded by:
Gerakbudaya