Author: Valentine Tawie Salok

Crocodiles, men and an unbroken pact

“I feel uncomfortable looking at the photo of a crocodile stomach being dissected for human remains on our New Sarawak Tribune inside page yesterday. However, it is necessary to solve a puzzle,” said an official of Sarawak Forestry Corporation. The Iban community of Krian, Saratok have lived in peace with

Of teaching ‘empty air’ and teachers

Hopefully former Rajang Teachers College (RTC) trainees who came across and spent just a few minutes reading my article entitled “Teachers – The good, bad and ‘ugly’” in the same column last week, would kindly place me in the “good” category. With limited teaching experience in the schools – except

Of teaching ‘empty air’ and teachers

Hopefully former Rajang Teachers College (RTC) trainees who came across and spent just a few minutes reading my article entitled “Teachers – The good, bad and ‘ugly’” in the same column last week, would kindly place me in the “good” category. With limited teaching experience in the schools – except

Teachers – the good, bad and ‘ugly’

Trainee teachers undergoing training at the former Rajang Teachers College (now known as IPG Rajang) in Bintangor between 1979 and 1983 must have heard this many times. As a lecturer in Philosophy, Psychology as well as Sociology of Education there, I must have told every class there no fewer than

‘Why’ questions: Don’t play Socrates

It’s better to refrain from asking for a reason or reasons why a person starts or stops doing something, unless you are Socrates, who once extended the spheres of the ‘why’ questions and did not get all the answers – he committed suicide in 399 BC by drinking poisonous hemlock

Moments of ‘just thinking’ good for you

A former classmate, who now holds an MBA from Unimas, last week came to my house in Merdang Lumut, Kota Samarahan and found me sitting underneath a tree beside the fish pond. “Enjoying the fresh air and serene view, bro?” he asked. “Well, just thinking, bro,” I replied. The man,

Music education: Blind leading the blind

Every child, woman and man has an innate musical ability. This latent potential can be developed and nurtured for healthier and more enriching lifestyles. Research shows that a good music education stimulates creativity, builds confidence and enhances a child’s all-round development. As adults they enjoy enhanced social recognition because of

Thou shalt tell no lie

Iban children are taught not to tell lies. Parents would start telling them since childhood that lying is a sin. “Do not tell lies; it is bad for you and your development,” dad used to tell me during meals – dinner was always the best time for longhouse Iban parents

Ponder well before naming your children

Naming a child at birth is a big responsibility for parents. Modern parents, irrespective of race and creed, may even turn to books to find what they consider would be the most suitable for their newly born. Iban parents usually name their infants after their forebears – though some may

Instances of truly colour-blind love

Let me start by telling a crush that I had on someone when I was in Primary Five – she was studying Primary Six in a town school about three hours away by longboat from my humble “ulu” school.  During that Christmas of 1966 I was on cloud nine but