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Want to deepen your understanding of developmental work within a Christian context?

The Master of Transformational Development aims to create space for people working in aid and development or serving vulnerable people to develop their theology and practice of integral mission in a community of peers. 

The MTD was developed using the Open Seminary methodology and is the product of a rich collaboration between Eastern College Australia and TEAR Australia, with significant input from CBM, Interserve and World Vision Australia. In partnership with the Asian Graduate School of Theology (Alliance), Malaysia Care, Interserve International and the Uganda Christian University, intensives are offered in Melbourne, Kuala Lumpur, Cairo and Kampala. 

Six units are offered on a 3-year cycle:

  • Doing Theology in the Context of Poverty and Injustice;
  • Economics, Development and Human Flourishing;
  • Community Development;
  • Biblical Justice, Human Rights and Advocacy;
  • Climate Change, Justice and Sustainability;
  • Leadership and Organisational Development.

Entry to the programme can be at any point in the cycle.

Worried about the cost?

Full & partial scholarships are available and and arrangements can be made to connect with the course administrator or current or graduated student for an 'inside' look at the course. Full & partial scholarships are available. Applications for semester 2 close on the 23rd of April.



More information about the course and how to apply: https://www.eastern.edu.au/.../master-transformational...

Living God's Story on Asian Beacon Magazine

Following the conference in early March, Asian Beacon wrote an article highlighting the key points of the event. Below is an excerpt from the article for your reading


"The Christian life is not just a Sunday thing. It is complete and whole. It changes and informs our whole worldview, gives us purpose, and a privileged function and positions as co-partners with God in His mission. It is ingrained into our identities. Having the right worldview transforms God’s people. 

Taking Up the Call of Authenticity       

In essence, the Living God’s Story conference was a call for integral missions. The hope is that once we understand how intertwined we are to God’s mission and story it will transform our perspective of our respective roles within it. Many Christian leaders and advocates shared as panel speakers their stories of challenges and aspirations. There is optimism that the seed planted will continue to grow in time to come."


Read more here: The Call to Living God's Story

 


 


Living God's Story

by Rei Lemuel Crizaldo

There are stories that subtly play in our heads. It tells us who we are, why we are where we are, and how the future can possibly turn out for us.

For some people, these stories are almost tragic narratives of being victims of time, chance, and the way things are in their own corners of the world. Stories that small workers tell each other at the next lay-off. Stories that abused women cry with during the night. Stories that indigenous people forcefully embrace after being thrown out of their lands.

Stories as such can be so powerful and disarming that it makes people cower in fear, resign in helplessness, and settle in a state of hopelessness. It makes us accept that injustices are indelible marks of society. It makes us believe that poverty is an irrevocable reality. It makes us agree that environmental degradation is the price we need to pay for progress and development. Not only that stories such as these dull our imagination, they also harden our heart and form in us apathy and indifference.

But the Bible opens to us a narrative that disrupts these stories. It tells us about a God on a mission to make a beautiful world wherein human beings and the rest of His creation alike can dwell together in peace and harmony. It tells us a story wherein every individual, regardless of gender, color, and social status, is wrapped with love, being made in God’s very image. It tells us a story of a happy ‘neighborology’ wherein every life is valuable and deserving of nurture, and every living thing is worth protecting. A most remarkable storyline against today’s headlines wherein we hear of a world slowly being ripped to shreds by disasters both man-made and not.

From the books of Genesis to Revelation, we see instead a God relentlessly pumping grace after grace even if all of His creation spirals out of the wonderful design He has for it. With human beings leading the drift towards defiance and the unhappy charge towards self-destruction. Tucked in every page, are images of a God who kept on choosing compassion over condemnation. And in the story of Jesus, we see a God stooping down at His lowest, being willing to see Himself crucified on a cross. To give us a vivid picture of how forgiveness and mercy is the antidote needed to cure a world being torn apart by forces of hatred and waves after waves of injustice. And as Jesus rose back to life, we are shown that this is a story wherein it shall ever be that love shall eventually win.

Today, God continues to stage a live performance of this daunting drama whenever people called by His name live lives that celebrate justice, sings of mercy, and does it in a gentle spirit of humility. Together, as the church that Jesus has built, they show that love is true and that grace is life-changing. They are driven by a most joyous portrait of everything set apart being put together again and everyone kept apart happily reconciled to each other. With God Himself moving into the neighborhood to share in a most intimate community birthed in His heart from the very beginning.

Inviting the world to experience how this story works out in reality is the life the church is called to live today.

Rei Lemuel Crizaldo is the Advocacy Coordinator for Integral Mission of MICAH Philippines.
 
This article is part of a series written by various authors after a Christian Writing for Advocacy Workshop organised by Micah Global, Malaysian CARE, and CTI in mid-2019.

Bridge Building – the Journey

by Patricia Nunis

Like most Malaysians before the 13th General Election (GE13) in 2008, I lived and worked in a comfortable silo of separated communities coming together in the workplace. I fostered workplace relationships that did not have relevance in the family or in my religious practice, other than casual conversations about how society was changing and the widening gaps between us and them – whoever the “us and them” might be. Though I had a firm belief that all Malaysians share in the future of our nation, there seemed no way to work towards a more effective integration of the different ethnic groups and interests, apart from relying on the actions of the various race-based component parties. Our political leaders campaigned on ethnic interests. There seemed little possibility of change except if they could form new alliances among the emerging parties hoping to provide alternatives to the Barisan Nasional, in power since independence in 1957.  There seemed to be little chance of changing the social dynamics in Malaysia. I sometimes was dismayed that we were hurtling down the road of greater and greater separation and suspicion between our ethnic communities. 

The first indications of possible change came after GE13 when the Pakatan Keadilan Rakyat successfully provided a strong opposition, winning 5 key states.  The change had begun, and it continued to snowball with an ongoing churn of alliances, broken promises and new possibilities. As I write this in 2020, 12 years from that point, we are facing a new crisis of leadership.  The work of bridge building begun in 2008 is now even more important for the future of our nation. 

Building my Bridge

My personal journey of bridge building began in 2008 when I met Hamidah Marican at a conflict management workshop.  We were both participants and soon partners in sharing our experiences of conflict and how we each worked at resolving them. Our unlikely pairing resulted in a new friendship that has grown deeper and stronger over the past years.  Sharing our family stories and life experiences from our Catholic and Muslim perspectives led us to see that though different, we had much in common.

Hamidah had a corporate background and training in Diversity and Inclusion and I had my abiding interest in the impact of ethnicity on nation-building. Soon after we met, we viewed a documentary of the work of Pastor James Wuye and Imam Ashafa of Nigeria, who came together to work for peace in Nigeria after experiencing open conflict that cost them the lives of family and friends. We also had the privilege of meeting with James and Ashafa in person that year, when they made a visit to the region. They inspired us to begin a project of our own, which we called Building Bridges. We believed that our experience of learning from each other and our mutual respect was something that we could share with other Malaysians.

We began by screening the documentary on the Imam and Pastor to our network of friends and civil society groups, using it as a catalyst for conversation on interethnic relations and mutual respect. The response was encouraging, and we gradually moved into community groups hoping to bring this message to as many Malaysians as we could. Our work caught the eye of a donor connected to a private university and led us to designing and facilitating a Diversity and Inclusion Youth Camp (DIYC), for private and public university students.  The DIYC was an annual 3-day residential programme hosted by UTM Skudai under the patronage of HRH Sultanah Raja Zarith Sofiah of Johor. It was mostly funded by a private donor and supported by anchor universities like UTM Skudai, UCSI, Inti, and KDU at different times.  We ran the camp in 2012, 2014 – 2017 before taking a break. The DIYC today still runs, as a programme supported by KDU, but with a different programme content and format. 

After GE14 in July 2018, in collaboration with Rev Hermen Shastri, General Secretary of the Council of Churches, Malaysia, we began Building Bridges, Connecting Communities – a revised programme targeted at community leaders of all ethnicities, interest groups, and religious institutions. The idea was to provide opportunities to break through barriers between groups and help build a shared Malaysian identity that would strengthen our social fabric and build our nascent democracy.  The 4-hour workshop was based on promoting respectful dialogue based on current Malaysian issues.  We introduced dialogue tools like focused conversation, managing stereotypes and the Ladder of Inference. 

Now we are in 2020 – and we have had 6 sessions and about 150 people go through our programme.  It has evolved to include a 2-hour segment on key articles of the Federal Constitution and a reality game called Harmony Hub. Prior to the political gambit that happened in the last week of February, we were beginning to get support from the wakil rakyat and a hope that the programme would be shared with residents’ associations, youth, volunteers and the larger community. All of this will now have to be re-evaluated in the light of impending changes in government.

Moving Forward with Malaysia

What are we to do now about the state of Malaysia? The years of reshaping our polity and society begun so hopefully in 2008 seem to have been frittered away in the recent in-fighting among political parties. Are all the work done by concerned citizens and groups to build Malaysia to be abandoned because our leaders have failed us?

Perhaps it is a call to re-examine our role as community leaders and citizens.  This is the intent of holding Building Bridges, Connecting Communities workshops regularly for all Malaysians.

A key insight that has emerged for me in meeting all the wonderful people in our sessions is that every individual has a gift to contribute to society, a talent, a way of being, a personal story, a life lived with others. When we meet in a safe space and share our stories, we open the doorway to getting to know each other and building community.

One of the objectives of the Building Bridges workshop is a deeper understanding of who we are as Malaysians, sharing common values and principles.   We also aim to provide participants with insights on the Federal Constitution and what it means for the different communities in Malaysia – and what is needed to build Malaysia. This year, we have added a reality game component called Harmony Hub Malaysia where players are challenged to make principled decisions based on their values and see how they play out in a socio-economic environment. 

Hamidah and I believe that change must begin with individuals – despite what may be happening at the macro level.  It takes individuals to respond to news, real or fake, and individuals to reach out across boundaries, real or imagined, to foster shared understanding with people of different cultural traditions. If we can strengthen the core universal values in the hearts of individuals across different faith traditions and communities, we have a hope of combatting the effects of partisan politics and xenophobia. The person in the street must be aware and intentional enough to reject fake news, false prophecies, and predictions of gloom and doom. We need to acknowledge our real differences and honour our shared interests so that we can work together to build a Malaysian society. It’s not going back to what it was in the 60’s – a false nostalgia for “good times” that were essentially untested. We need to build a society that is respectful of the other where every person is equal and valued for what they bring to the nation.   We must come to value the richness of our diversity that provides us with flexibility and possibilities of growth in many spheres of action. In doing this, our youth will be the key. The internet generation is in many ways globally tuned in, and have little time for restrictive boundaries of race, religion, class and privilege. These things disappear on the virtual platforms where they are clearly seen as attachments that do not add real value to the issues of daily living.

Deep Learning from My Journey

I wanted to share my experience of Building Bridges in connection with the words of Micah 6:8

He has shown you, O mortal, what is good.

And what does the Lord require of you?

To act justly and to love mercy

and to walk humbly with your God

 

I think the key for Building Bridges is the last line – walk humbly with your God. There are activists and groups clamoring daily in our current situation for justice and mercy and equality of rights and representation. Not much is said about walking humbly.

There are people who comment that a programme like Building Bridges is too wishy-washy – ignoring the real problems that divide society.  I believe that there is more than enough airtime given to dismal news.  Also, there is limited time to interact face to face in seminars and symposiums that talk about race, religion and various perspectives – it’s just a repetition of positions and perspectives with a little time given to questions. The same ground is covered again and again leaving listeners with a sense of frustration about what needs to be done.

In Building Bridges, the key is to provide time and space for participants of different ethnicities to interact, listen and share views in a safe space such that there is a real encounter with the other.  The result is shared perspectives and greater understanding. This is for me – a way of walking humbly, with each other and with God.   Can we really see our Creator in the being of our neighbor, whoever that neighbor may be? 

Each person needs to experience this walk as an individual journey. Hamidah and I experienced it as we got to know each other from our first meeting in 2008.  Though I had minimal negative perceptions of any community in Malaysia – partly due to my Social Science background, I really did not have a close friend who was also a Muslim. There seemed to be a barrier to that which all my training in sociology and psychology could not overcome. My spiritual foundation taught me that all humanity shares the fatherhood of God and each of us is unique and precious in His sight. Yet, it was difficult to see that in my communications with Muslims – especially in the face of what I saw as unfair affirmative rights and practices in our society.

As I got to know Hamidah and we shared our personal challenges and difficulties, I realized that the perceptions I had held earlier were too simplistic and tarred a whole community for the actions of the few who would manipulate the system. Inequality and prejudice exist within a community just as much as it exists across communities. When we come to know individuals as persons and friends, we then truly see them and listen to them. We will find it much harder to stereotype. Instead we start to see individuals as having to deal with inequality and life challenges.  We will begin to see people as they are – and relate to them differently.  We begin to know them, even as we become known to them, as sharers in humanity. We begin to walk humbly with them, and in so doing, walk humbly with our God.

I have entered my 6th decade and have developed a certain resilience to what life brings to my doorstep.  I am certain that the Lord holds all in His hands, and He will work it in His own time. We may experience this as long waits or delays – but I have a sneaking suspicion that the delays are given to us as opportunities to cleanse ourselves that we might be ready for Him. 

I spend my waiting time working and walking with my Muslim friend, building bridges and connecting communities. We share an understanding of how our work links us to our faith and praxis. Yet, we live in our different faith traditions, as we realise we are products of our upbringing and culture. We accept our limitations of being bound in time and space. We realise too that in working together, we witness to others that this partnership is a possibility and may work for others too.

Our wish for those of you who read this is that you too may open your hearts and minds to welcoming someone from a different faith tradition as a friend. You will find your world opening up and you see a whole new way of being.  You too may find new ways to walk humbly with another, and in doing so, walk humbly with your God.

Patricia Nunis

4 March 2020

POSTSCRIPT on 13 January 2021

The Malaysian Movement Control Order to flatten the COVID-19 curve was announced on 18 March 2020 and the following exercises throughout the year resulted in much of my work migrating to a virtual platform. All the events planned were postponed or changed to zoom encounters. I found that virtual meetings provided for a different level of connection and privacy – in some ways, providing a sense of safety to encourage people to connect. The work continues and I have begun a series of Dialogue Events for both interfaith and social issues encounters. We continue to find ways to connect to other Malaysians and build community. 

A Note from Micah Malaysia:
Patricia Nunis writes on the changing times of Malaysia, and how her experiences have led to a broadening of her life. Her involvement with Harmony Works and Building Bridges has taught her to walk humbly with people and with God. It is an intentional step to go beyond our social and cultural bubbles and realise a common humanity. Living God’s story calls for societal transformation, and that begins with you and I.

 

Patricia is committed to Community Development efforts in Malaysia focusing on promoting positive inter-ethnic relationships and dialogue across faith communities. After graduating in B.Soc Sc she served in UNHCR VBP camps in Malaysia.  She moved on to work with girls and women in crises with an NGO for 8 years before moving to the corporate sector to lead a Training & Development function. She is now an independent facilitator providing dialogue and facilitation services and promoting connections across ethnic groups in Malaysia. Writing is a hobby and a way of reaching out to others.


 

 

 

This article is part of a series written by various authors after a Christian Writing for Advocacy Workshop organised by Micah Global, Malaysian CARE, and CTI in mid-2019.
 

 

Living God’s story – Who are we, what are we doing here?

by Shaila Koshy

I have always felt God’s hand over me. I didn’t despair when I was unable to find a job as a property valuer after I graduated. Sure enough, God gave me a job teaching bumiputra scholarship students hoping to further their studies overseas. It was an amazing opportunity. Jesus tells us to be good citizens. So, during their English lessons, we discussed governance and social issues by looking at local/overseas examples of accountability, standing up for what was right regardless of one’s race/religion/gender, registering to vote, and questioning everyone (including me). It gave me an insight into the psyche of young Malay youths and I learnt that not every Malay knew about the racial quota in the Malaysian education system that favoured them over the other races. It was 1986-1987; there was no Internet for them to have learnt otherwise. They assumed that I studied overseas because my parents were wealthy. They were amazed that government school teachers were able to save up for their children’s education.

After some time, God gave me the opportunity to be a writer. I was not allowed to study journalism because my paternal uncle was then the Foreign Editor of the newspaper that employed me eventually, and we hardly saw him because of his work schedule. So I selected a course that sounded most like news reporting. It took five years, but the lessons I learnt along the way prepared me for a calling that would last 29 years.

Should I tell a lie to get at the truth? Does the end justify the means? Unschooled in journalism principles, I based my work ethics on Jesus. Serving the public and God are not mutually exclusive. I reported on the civil/Syariah legal systems, and social and political issues. Because the readership was multi-racial and multi-religious, I did not state my Christian beliefs when writing. But in commentaries on inter-religious harmony and unilateral child conversions I made my faith known. Sometime in the early 2010s, God told me that my purpose was to be a peacemaker. So I had to think harder. Would my report get the public enraged at corruption and injustice, or pit sides against each other, or was I seeking a solution as well?

Since then, my role has changed. Downsizing, my newspaper “encouraged” me to leave after the general election in May 2018. I received several job offers, but my mother’s poor health has kept me at her side. I am learning about patience and kindness as God refines me for the next race for the Kingdom of God. I want to prepare the way for Jesus, as John said, so we can see God’s transforming work in Malaysia.

A note from Micah Malaysia:
Shaila writes how her faith has guided her life, from her early days as a teacher, to a full-time journalist, to a caretaker of her aging mother. Wherever she was, she listened for God's voice - What did God want her to do, and how should she live? What about ourselves? What can we do where we are?


 

 

Bio: Shaila Koshy is a member of the Mar Thoma Syrian Church. Her parents were migrants from Kerala, India.  She loves learning, so asking questions comes naturally. That was a handy skill while she worked as a journalist for 29 years, especially in uncovering instances of social injustice and inequality.

 

 

 

 

 

This article is part of a series written by various authors after a Christian Writing for Advocacy Workshop organised by Micah Global, Malaysian CARE, and CTI in mid-2019.

Living God's Story - His Story - My Stories

by Pat Lee

Have you ever tried ruminating (as a dear friend put it) on God's story in your life as you go about your daily house chores? Here I was, doing something I absolutely detested, and trying to reflect on God's story in my life. The only thoughts were, "What a life sentence this is!"

Then, in the midst of a more enjoyable chore, that of feeding the dogs, a wife and mother of young children asked of me, "Aunty, my husband told me we may have to move to another town. I am worried. I don't know the town. Will I be able to make new friends? What about the educational needs of my children?"

I shared with her how God provided me with friends when I married and moved to Kampar. The pastor of the local Methodist church was the Girls' Brigade captain of my teenage years. My ex-classmate married my husband's ex-school mate; they were serving in similar ministries and living in the same housing estate as us. Members of the Methodist Church embraced us in love and hospitality.

I was also able to share with her about our year in England, how a Christian couple whom we do not know opened their home to us while we were looking for accommodation. Their warmth and generosity enabled us time to get the right place to rent, not too far from the university and at an affordable rate. God provided friends at the Baptist church where we worshiped, at the playgroup where I worked, and amongst my husband's university course mates.

I was able to tell her with confidence that the God we serve is a faithful God. He has seen my needs and has provided. She can rely on Him to do the same for her.

More recently, in the midst of bad bouts of coughing and fighting the flu while my other half is across the sea, I received these two messages:

"Aunty, I will feed the dogs tomorrow morning. You can rest. Good night. Sleep well."

"Selamat pagi, how are you, Aunty? How are you feeling this morning? You need anything?"

These two young ladies have shown me God's story of care and compassion.

God, thank you for opportunities to share Your story. Allow me to see Your story in the lives of people You bring into my life. Thank you for reminding me constantly of Your faithfulness to me. Thank you for Your story in my life. Amen.

A note from the editors at Micah Malaysia:
Pat’s story tells us that God is with us wherever we are, even when we are doing things that we detest! It is often in the things that challenge us that God speaks to us to bring us comfort and perspective, if we take the time to ruminate and think. God’s story of compassion and mercy in our lives should translate into our compassion and mercy to others. How has God used others to show kindness to you? How has God used you to show kindness to others?

 


 

 

Pat Lee is a reluctant housewife who prefers to read, teach and help children to enjoy learning.

This article is part of a series written by various authors after a Christian Writing for Advocacy Workshop organised by Micah Global, Malaysian CARE, and CTI in mid-2019.
 

Watchwoman for God

by Loh Foon Fong

One lesson in university that caught my attention was the need to remove unjust social or economic structures in order to rid society of poverty or other social ills. The enormity of these problems made me realise that soup kitchens or charity was not enough to address those issues.

When I became a journalist, targeting structural changes seemed to be in my subconscious, driving what I write. While I strive to uphold truths and public interests, I try to bring changes to policies by highlighting pertinent issues to enhance people’s quality of life, especially those who are oppressed, poor or disabled. I see this as bringing God’s love to the nation.

As a health writer with a mainstream newspaper in Malaysia for 28 years in the past, I have written about healthy lifestyle, diseases and outbreaks, as well as on issues relating to health policies and systems. In covering these issues, I have encountered an unequal world that is very much defined by capitalism and outrageous profiteering. This is particularly worrying for the healthcare sector because when life-saving medicines are astronomically high, many patients cannot afford them and some may die for lack of access to medicine.

I wrote about the Hepatitis C issue in Malaysia and the lack of access to the latest drug sofosbuvir because of the exorbitant price. The Hepatitis C drug cost a whopping US$84,000 (more than RM300,000) when it was first introduced in the United States. A report in a journal stated that by the first quarter of 2016, those marketing the highly effective Hepatitis C medicine had accumulated over US$35bil in global revenue since its launch in December 2013.

I raised some questions and issues -- should healthcare be commercialised or treated as a commodity especially when it can determine whether a person lives or dies? What purpose does it serve when some 71 million people do not have financial access to a new Hepatitis C discovery or innovation which could benefit them? There is also the concern that the efforts to stop the spread of a disease are hampered by the high cost for a life-saving drug.

Following the write-ups and with the input of NGOs working with the relevant ministries in Malaysia, the government decided to apply for the compulsory licence enabled under the World Trade Organisation’s trade agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPs) to import a generic version of the drug. This was after failed negotiations between the government and the pharmaceutical company on an agreed price for the new drug. The Health Ministry managed to obtain the generic version of sofosbuvir at US$300 for the 12-week treatment. In addition, the Ministry also asked the World Health Organisation (WHO) to look into drug pricing as pressure mounted on Malaysia to withdraw the compulsory licencing requirement.

In 2019, I also highlighted the United States’ bi-partisan Congress asking big pharmaceutical companies to explain the exorbitant pricing, and Italy’s resolution to the WHO for pharmaceutical companies to disclose their costs in producing drugs. After tough negotiations, the resolution was reduced to just a “voluntary” effort required from companies. But, civil society organisations felt this was a start.

Loh sharing her experience as a health journalist to young journalists at an Evidence-based medicine workshop.

FACING GIANTS TOGETHER

Little did I expect that I would be swept into a global wave of “war” against the oppressive practices after I wrote the articles which highlighted the plight of Hepatitis C patients. I recall sitting in the office a few months before that, having this sense that I would be facing “giants” soon. I had goose pimples. I didn’t know who these giants were then.

I told the Lord, “Lord, if this is from you, you send me collaborators because no one can fight giants alone. And it must be people who can understand and accept me.” Not long after, a foreign communications adviser for a non-profit organisation tracked me down. She emailed me and we got connected and her organisation collaborated with me.

We worked very well together. She introduced me to a global network of people who were also fighting the same cause – to address the high drug prices - and I was able to grapple with the many sides of the issue by learning from them. I was able to write with more depth as a result of all the exposure. It was only much later that I realised these must be the collaborators that God had sent.

Currently, the world is also under pressure from COVID-19 pandemic. The emergence of more new viruses indicates that continuing unbridled capitalism has led to massive environmental and ecosystem disruptions and destructions. These destructions have led to more newly discovered diseases.

As a writer, I can write to bring about awareness of the sufferings of many under such accepted practices. But, we also need economists, philosophers, theologians, business owners and the like to rethink the way we live - we need a new world order for sustainable living.

God requires that we uphold justice, mercy and faithfulness. Matthew 23:23: “But you have neglected the more important matters of the law: justice, mercy and faithfulness. You should have practiced the latter, without neglecting the former.”

Isaiah 1:17: “Learn to do right; seek justice. Defend the oppressed. Take up the cause of the fatherless; plead the case of the widow.”

Many people tend to go with the crowd without much thought or wanting to “rock the boat.” And without realising, we sometimes get sucked into unholy alliances. If we make the conscious effort to make a difference, we can be a catalyst of change in our society in our different professions.

A note from the editors of Micah Malaysia:
The structures of this world loom above us like giants. Often, we are afraid to challenge injustices that are rooted into these structures, like the exorbitant costs of life-saving drugs that Foon Fong has written about. Yet, God calls us to seek justice. We can do this in different ways, from the societal level to the individual, but it is necessary to seek; to search for, and to speak out. What are some ways you can seek justice in your circles? 


Bio: Loh Foon Fong was a journalist with The Star English daily in Malaysia for 28 years. She covered general news but her focus was health. She was the Assistant News Editor of The Star before she left the company in August 2020. Loh graduated from Universiti Sains Malaysia with a Bachelor's degree in Communication in 1992 and received her Master's degree in Journalism from Boston University, Massachusetts, in the United States in 1998. She finds that her life path has been to address and bring down oppressive structures through writing although she had not envisioned that her life would take such a route when she first started out as a journalist. She was given a short two-month contract by the World Health Organization country office in Malaysia and served as its external communications and media relations from November to December 2020. She is now in between jobs.

This article is part of a series written by various authors after a Christian Writing for Advocacy Workshop organised by Micah Global, Malaysian CARE, and CTI in mid-2019.