Back to Bantar Gebang with AIS Students

Grade 1 playing “Pass the Parcel”

Ready for the presentation of new desks and chairs for the Bantar Gebang students

AIS Students

Each child received a special lunch and drink from AIS students

More beautiful students

Some very loud praying before eating..

AIS students waiting to give out bags of goodies to all the children

New bags and a delicious meal and everyone heads home again

A happy end to a fun morning at Bantar Gebang school

Area for sorting plastic bags..

A worker at Bantar Gebang

A Visit to Bantar Gebang Landfill School, Bekasi

A beautiful young student at Bantar Gebang Primary School

Young boys doing their school work

Lost in concentration

Such sweetness

Busy doing his maths work

Some classrooms had up to 70 children in them for only one teacher

I watched these girls giggling as they played with flies outside the classroom

A quick walk through the landfill kampong outside the school

At work on the landfill site

In search of recyclable waste products

A young boy working in the landfill

 

This is the second year that Treen has been teaching her students about poverty and taking them on a field trip to the dumpsite to show them first hand the conditions that some people must live and work in here in Jakarta, and also to raise money to donate to the students who attend school on site.

Bantar Gebang is located in Bekasi and is the largest landfill waste site in Indonesia and has 600 trucks offloading 5,000 tonnes of rubbish every day.  On the site there are approximately 5,000 workers who work in 12 hour shifts, 7 days a week, sorting through the rubbish to search for recyclables for a mere 15,000Rp (around AUD 1.20) a week.  There are villages set up in the site were the workers and their families live, and a school where the children attend each morning before helping their parents sort through waste in the afternoons.  From the age of 5 the children will work alongside their parents as they can make the same amount of money which goes towards living expenses for the family.  Many children will stop attending school at 10 years of age and begin working full time in the landfill and the cycle continues to repeat itself without a chance for the children or parents to dream of a different future for themselves.

As you would expect in a landfill site which covers hundreds of hectares, the place is swarming with flies and I had to contain myself from losing it as soon as we stepped out of the car into the school grounds.  We visited all the classrooms and introduced ourselves to the beautiful and welcoming young students as they sat in their stifling classrooms with no lightbulbs or air conditioning.  I wondered how they had the energy to concentrate at all in the heat and with no water stations for cooling down in sight, and to add to that there seemed to be a lack of teachers in some classrooms although there are up to 70 children in one classroom at a time.

We met with the principal and after much discussion it was agreed that Treen’s school would provide new desks and chairs for the students along with lunch in two weeks time.  It’s a small step towards making a difference for the young students, but you have to start somewhere and I am so proud of Treen for making things happen.

Before leaving we went on a quick tour of the dumpsite and I was in shock at the mountains and mountains of rubbish everywhere and wondered how can anyone survive in such conditions and how can anyone get the chance to dream for a different future when this is the only life you are exposed to? The roads were lined with hundreds of trucks waiting to offload their rubbish for the day.  This means backing up onto one of the mountains which has a line of cranes scooping the rubbish from the trucks, much of it falling onto the workers standing below, ready to sort the recyclables into the cane baskets carried on their backs.

I am now dreaming and hoping that someone may be able to help some of the school children, to offer them a scholarship to continue on at school at a location off the dumpsite.  This would give them a chance to dream and find another healthier way to help to support their families, and for all of us living in Jakarta, it’s easy to start making even a small change and sorting our recyclables before we put them in the bin and they are taken to the dumpsite….

 

Batak Documentary Premiere!

I want to tell the world just how proud I am of Mahatma Putra for his Batak documentary – it’s been a fun journey and finally the premiere is nearly here!!

For anyone in Jakarta on 20 December, please join us for the screening and photo exhibition at 7.30pm at:

Galeri Foto Jurnalistik Antara
Jl Antara no. 59 Pasar Baru
Jakarta 10710

I look forward to seeing you all there 🙂

Batak – Perjalanan ke Tanah Leluhur (Trailer) from Mahatma Putra on Vimeo.

Jakarta Fashion Week_Day 7_Fashion Forward_Albert Yanuar

Oh these clothes were beautiful too… and came with a twist at the end of the show…. as the models stood in their beautiful dresses, they suddenly pulled at the bottom halves of their outfits and they transformed into beautiful jackets! AMAZING…. loved this…..

Albert Yanuar

Albert Yanuar

Albert Yanuar

A beautiful top and skirt…..

….transformed into a dress and jacket!

 

Jakarta Fashion Week_Day 7_Fashion Forward_Barli Asmara

WOW!!! I was super surprised by this show and absolutely LOVED IT!!! I loved the beautiful bright colours, the beading, the gorgeous tribal inspired prints and clothes.. and now I desperately want to go to Kalimantan where the inspiration for these designs came from.

Beautiful! I want one of those amazing bags too to carry around on my back…. hmmmm….

Barli Asmara

Barli Asmara

Barli Asmara

Barli Asmara

Barli Asmara

Barli Asmara

Barli Asmara

Barli Asmara

Barli Asmara

Barli Asmara

Barli Asmara

 

Jakarta Fashion Week 2013_Day 7_Fashion Forward_Jeffry Tan

Jeffry Tan presented his ‘LUNA’, Spring Summer 2013 collection at Jakarta Fashion Week 2013.

Inspired by his clientele of women with poise, polish and sophistication but young at heart. The theme was carried through by the Japanese Manga created artist Naoko Takeuchi, and the story of magic powerful young women fighting evil. Jeffry highlighted the X shape and boxy silhouette flattering the body in all forms by focusing on a variation of volumes, vests, Jackets, laser cut skirts and columnar dresses.

Jeffry Tan

Jeffry Tan

Jeffry Tan

Jeffry Tan

Jeffry Tan

Jeffry Tan

Jeffry Tan

Jeffry Tan

Jeffry Tan

Jeffry Tan

Jakarta Fashion Week 2013_Day 7_Fashion Forward_Major Minor

Major Minor was established in 2011 and their range is made by putting together a mixture of modern art, colour, current fashion as well as cutting edge fashion in each concept.  Their core philosophy is “exciting and quirky, but  ready to wear signature clothing at an affordable price”.

Their theme for this year was named ‘Holi, The Festival of Colour’ that is celebrated at the beginning of spring in Hindu religion.  The vibrant colours were inspired by the feel of the festival and mood of the people, and the printed fabrics are filled with splashes of those colours.  The shape is inspired by the way in which Indian women wear their clothing, so mixed together with the colours, they create the mood of the Holi Festival

Major Minor

Major Minor

Major Minor

Major Minor

Major Minor

Major Minor

Major Minor

Major Minor

Major Minor