Koh Yi Na / With contribution from Teng Jingwei

Mondays, Thursdays and Saturdays. On these three days, Mr Loh Hak Seet, 75, sits at the junction of Orchard Road and Bideford Road from morning to night, playing his harmonica as shoppers hurry across the road from Ngee Ann City to The Paragon.

This has become a common sight in Orchard Road: elderly ice cream sellers and buskers juxtaposed against the backdrop of glitzy international fashion boutiques, peddling their goods and services for a few dollars – or whatever change passersby can spare – while busy consumers splurge hundreds on their purchases.

Dressed in a red t-shirt and khaki shorts, Mr Loh was taking a break when The Online Citizen approached him. “The birds,” he explains in chinese, “people can’t hear my music over them.” He is referring to the cacophony of noise from the birds as they returned to their nests in the evening.

Mr Loh lost most of his right leg to diabetes. For the past three years, he has been busking at Orchard Road, earning $600 to $800 a month. “There’s no fixed income”, he said. “On good days I get $150, but some days I can only get $30.  Life is tough, but what else can I do?”

Before he started busking at Orchard Road, Mr Loh used to perform outside Causeway Point. “I used to play there because it was near my house. Then the SMRT people kept complaining to the police, so I had to move.” Now he commutes from Woodlands to Orchard by long train rides on the MRT.

Mr Loh has a license from the National Arts Council to perform, but he admits that the process is inconvenient. The license has to be renewed, and each time he re-applies, he has to sit for a test to ensure that his skills are up to the mark.

Mr Loh maintains a cheerful disposition by taking pride in his work. “I play the harmonica well,” he told us, whipping his harmonica out of his waist pouch for a quick demonstration. “Also, I enjoy myself when I’m playing. That’s why people are willing to give me money. Just now, this woman came and asked for a song, then she gave me 20 000 rupiah. Some of the other buskers can barely play; they’re out to cheat you. But I’m good at what I do.” He says with a smile.

Married with a daughter, Mr Loh’s monthly income is barely enough to support both his dependents. His wife does not work. “She’s old, and she has problems getting around because of her bad leg,” he says. Neither does his daughter, who is studying in a local university. “I don’t expect her to work or give me any money. Whatever she earns won’t even be enough for her, much less me… We shouldn’t rely on the next generation. They need money to get married and start their own families.”

When we asked about social welfare programmes offered by the Community Development Councils (CDC), Mr Loh shook his head. While he used to receive $300 a month in the past, this has since been reduced to $100 after he received his performance license. “The secretary from CDC reviewed my case,” he said. “She asked me why my daughter wasn’t contributing to the household income, and I asked her, ‘Miss, do you give money to your parents?’ She didn’t have anything to say to that.”

“In the past, families used to live together – the grandparents, parents, children. It was easier to get by,” he reminisces. “But the world has changed, and it’s a lot more expensive now. The people at the CDC say there are a lot of families who require assistance, so they can’t give us any more money.”

It is clear, however, that despite his frustration towards the lack of financial help he is receiving, Mr Loh is fiercely patriotic. When he told us about his days of driving a tour bus, he grew increasingly animated, speaking of the envy that tourists from less developed countries expressed towards the convenience and efficiency of Singapore.

“Here, you can wake up in the middle of the night, walk for a few minutes, and you’ll find a shop or hawker centre open. For these people, they might be rich, but they have nowhere to go,” he says. “So in this aspect, Singapore is better.”

—-

Read also:

Gentle under the warmth of the sun

He is on the streets seven to eight hours everyday, starting from 4pm. “Now prices [for cardboards] aren’t that good,” he explains. “And when it rains, I cannot collect them.” Thus he also collects drink cans to supplement his income. He ends his day at 11pm and takes a taxi home. “It costs about fifteen dollars for the trip to and from my house,” he says. We guess that he takes the taxi because he has to bring his trolley along. Our curious eyes spot a bunch of keys hanging from his belt. They’re for locking up his trolley at night, we later learned. He hopes to sell it, because it is rusty and rickety, for four or five dollars and get a new one. It will make pushing it easier, he says. That would be a great help under such scorching conditions during the day.

A key maker and his dying trade

Turning somewhat sombre, however, Uncle laments that key making is a dying trade in Singapore. The keys produced nowadays with sophisticated technology makes it difficult for traditional key makers to reproduce.

“Some keys are made so delicate and complicated, I can’t produce them with my old machine,” Uncle bellows, adding that “it would also be too expensive to pay for the materials and machines required” if he wanted to keep up with the times.

“一天过一天,平平安安就好.”

Uncle Fortune worked as a volunteer in a Thai temple in his younger days. It was there that he learnt the ways of the Buddha from the monks. And evidently, he holds the teachings close to his heart. “Everyone changes as time goes by, so does the world,” he says. “Just live simply.” He still visits the temple about two or three times a week.

In his 30 years as a fortune teller, he has seen people from all walks of life. His customers range from a police officer complaining about his superior at work, to a person dying of cancer.

—–

Subscribe
Notify of
0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
You May Also Like

司机无视居民安危 轿车穿过游乐场健身区

司机疑为了方便,无视人群地驾车穿过游乐场和健身区块,令人们感到愤怒不已。 虽然我国常常传出驾车人士随处停车等新闻,可谓见怪不怪了,但是将车子驶入住宅区内的游乐场和健身区块,实在令人难以置信。 一名居住在文礼大道183A栋组屋的读者向新加坡网络媒体《Stomp》指出,他和妻子曾在8月29日早上7时2分,见到一辆车牌为SLJ1690G的白色丰田普锐斯驶入该住宅区的游乐场和健身区块。 他指出,当时在场的儿童和年长者都惊呆了,他们大喊并跑到邻近的组屋内,以便躲开司机的鲁莽行为。 读者和妻子当时也感到非常震惊,“妻子朝着车辆大声叫喊,因为车辆朝着我们驶来”。 “在确定我们都安全之后,我才拿出手机记录一切。” 读者表示,他相信驾驶者为私人雇佣司机。 读者表示他在事后两周才公布有关的视频和消息,因为他需要向居民委员会主席投报有关事件,认为类似危险行为不可取。他也在事后报警促查。

China approves trials for two more coronavirus vaccines

China has approved clinical trials for two more experimental vaccines to combat the novel coronavirus, officials said Tuesday, as the world’s…

律师打人视频再流传 萧丁明报警反击“玩火者”

本地“明星律师”萧丁明已经针对早前泄露,有关他于一年前肢体和语言攻击两名名女性员工的两个视频,向警方报案。 他也于周五(4月26日)发表声明,对那些不断且存心伤害他的人进行反击。 现年46岁的萧丁明,是萧丁明律师事务所的经理,且开设光线演艺经纪公司(Beam Artistes)。他是一位知名的娱乐律师,曾担任本地前艺人郑雪儿(Michelle Saram)以及女歌手蔡健雅的代理律师。 事件于去年发生 双方和解 据报导,于周四(4月25日)开始在优管上流传的视频中,遭殴打的光线演艺经纪公司员工已经于去年报警了。当时,他被指控在不同事件中,对两名员工进行肢体和口头攻击。 两个视频明显是办公室闭路电视摄像头所拍下,显示了当天的日期2018年4月17日。 在首个约1分钟的视频中,萧丁明正在和一名长发女员工说话,随后他扬起右手数次拍打女员工的脸部和上半身。他也数次用手大力推女员工的额头。 在第二个约6分钟的视频中,萧丁明追捕同一名女员工,还重复喊道“你打我”。两人随后互相攻击,多名员工自办公室外进来劝架和拉开萧丁明,女员工被带离开办公室。 随后,萧丁明又和另外一名原本来劝架的女员工发生语言冲突,甚至将对方推到在地上,在场同事见状立刻再次趋前阻拦。…

GE is about us, our future: Chen Show Mao

Ko Siew Huey / The Worker’s Party (WP) introduced its final slate…