Seah started his blog, Blog To Express, in 2007 and describes himself as a “recycled teenager learning to blog”. Well, amen to that because Seah is essentially an archivist and his blog is a trove of history lessons on Singapore. Incidents like the Bukit Ho Swee fires, for example. These are close to his heart because he was born in the estate. There were no less than three fires that swept through Bukit Ho Swee over a period of 40 years – in the mid-1920s, 1934 and 1961. In 1968, one last fire obliterated all remaining squatter huts. Bukit Ho Swee wasn’t HDB (Housing Development Board) heartland it is today. Back then, it was largely a squatter colony littered with makeshift huts.
History and nostalgia are what interest Seah, so much so that he started a Facebook group – Ways Done In The Past – that is a repository of memories, “to pass to my children and grandchildren for posterity.”
Seah is also on Instagram (@thimbuktu).
So, why did Seah bother with navigating his way through technology to have an online presence in aid of history and nostalgia? Why not stick to plastic photo albums and anecdotes at weekly family dinners?
He replies, “Because some things we learn in the past have to be unlearned and we have to let new things teach us. Education is endless as long as a person is alive.”
NATURE IS A DANCE
John Krishnaputra is, by any definition, a Renaissance man. Crowned the Over-45 Singapore tennis champion in 2015, Krishnaputra is quick to remind anyone that “oikonomia” in Greek is the art of managing a household and he thinks that the word ‘modern’ is rude.
“Being ‘modern’ essentially means that you’re disconnected from the earth, from Nature. Everything is so industrialised that there’s nothing human anymore,” he laments.
The son of a Buddhist father and Catholic mother, Krishnaputra was the quintessential troublemaker as a schoolboy in Medan, Indonesia. He can’t remember ever studying for a test or exam and when he failed high school, his parents shipped him off to Brockwood Park School in England. Krishnaputra spoke hardly any English then.
Krishnaputra credits Brockwood for turning things around for him – for one thing, it was there that he learned how to make organic tomato chutney. The school was founded in 1969 by Jiddu Krishnamurti, an educator and philosopher, and its key tenets are an awareness of self, equality and nurturing “a spirit of responsibility, co-operation and affection”.