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What RM100 means to the hardcore poor

While RM100 may seem a pittance to some, it can feed a poor family for a week.

Nik Imran Nik Hussein
2 minute read
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There are certain things that only the poor in the country will thoroughly understand and appreciate.

What can you buy with RM100 these days? Well, for a rich man, probably two slices of cheesecake and two coffees at Starbucks or Coffee Bean.

However, for a poor family like mine, it can feed us for a week. Sounds impossible for some? Well, that is the reality.

We do not have our meals at restaurants or hotels. Instead, we use the money to buy rice and other essentials which are cooked at home and can last us several days.

I grew up in a very poor family in Gemas, Negri Sembilan, and truly know how valuable RM100 is to a family like mine.

My father was an odd-job worker and my mother washed dishes at a restaurant near our home. We struggled, but we were happy and through my parents’ hard work, I managed to get a sound education.

Having encountered such hardships, I find it rather upsetting and painful to read how some quarters are ridiculing the RM100 additional aid recently announced by our prime minister.

As I mentioned earlier, RM100 may be pittance to some, but for the hardcore poor, it means an extra week or more with food.

People like my family and I understand the hardship of earning RM100 and we would like to take this opportunity to thank the prime minister for this additional aid.

That extra RM100 will go a long way for us. Also, as far as I can remember, families in my village used nothing but cooking oil sold in polybags. In fact, I never saw a single bottle of cooking oil until I finally left my kampung to pursue my studies.

This is also something my family is very grateful for. The subsidy for the 1kg polybag cooking oil will certainly help those in the lower income groups.

Overall, as someone who comes from a hardcore poor family, the announcement by our prime minister is greatly welcomed and will go a long, long way for us.

There is no point in making it an issue as those quarters, especially the opposition parties, will never understand the plight of the hardcore poor.

This is something “orang miskin” like us appreciate and understand, and once again, we would like to take this opportunity to say a big heartfelt thank you to our prime minister.

The views expressed in this article are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the position of MalaysiaNow.