Remembering Lee Kuan Yew - Thank you - The nation with you in your final journey - See u in heaven

Remembering Lee Kuan Yew - Thank you - The nation with you in your final journey - See u in heaven
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Tuesday, 24 March 2015

Tearful residents pay respects to their MP


Tearful residents pay respects to their MP

Young and old, people in Mr Lee's Tanjong Pagar GRC mourn his death 

Residents of Everton Park, in Tanjong Pagar GRC, paying their respects to Mr Lee Kuan Yew. They arrived with flowers and waited in quiet grief for their turn to write messages of condolences. -- ST PHOTO: ALPHONSUS CHERN
Residents of Everton Park, in Tanjong Pagar GRC, paying their respects to Mr Lee Kuan Yew. They arrived with flowers and waited in quiet grief for their turn to write messages of condolences. -- ST PHOTO: ALPHONSUS CHERN 

Mr Seow Cheong Choon, 80, wept yesterday as he described how his faith in Singapore's first Prime Minister grew over the years. -- ST PHOTO: ALPHONSUS CHERN
Mr Seow Cheong Choon, 80, wept yesterday as he described how his faith in Singapore's first Prime Minister grew over the years. -- ST PHOTO: ALPHONSUS CHERN 

Mr Richard Kan, 39, and his mother, Madam Lui Wan Yin, 69, viewing a photo tribute to Mr Lee Kuan Yew. -- ST PHOTO: ALPHONSUS CHERN
Mr Richard Kan, 39, and his mother, Madam Lui Wan Yin, 69, viewing a photo tribute to Mr Lee Kuan Yew. -- ST PHOTO: ALPHONSUS CHERN 

A sombre Mr Liou Heng Chai, 56, and his mother, Madam Lee Siew San, 83, were among the mourners who turned up to honour their late MP and Singapore's first Prime Minister. -- ST PHOTO: ALPHONSUS CHERN
A sombre Mr Liou Heng Chai, 56, and his mother, Madam Lee Siew San, 83, were among the mourners who turned up to honour their late MP and Singapore's first Prime Minister. -- ST PHOTO: ALPHONSUS CHERN 

Madam Ang Kuan Kuan, 64, a consultant, is overcome with emotion as she signs the condolence book at the Tanjong Pagar Community Club. She also left flowers in memory of former Prime Minister Lee Kuan Kew. -- ST PHOTO: ALPHONSUS CHERN
Madam Ang Kuan Kuan, 64, a consultant, is overcome with emotion as she signs the condolence book at the Tanjong Pagar Community Club. She also left flowers in memory of former Prime Minister Lee Kuan Kew. -- ST PHOTO: ALPHONSUS CHERN 

A candle light-up to remember and honour Mr Lee Kuan Yew. -- ST PHOTO: LIM YAOHUI
A candle light-up to remember and honour Mr Lee Kuan Yew. -- ST PHOTO: LIM YAOHUI 

AS A young man, Mr Seow Cheong Choon had little faith in Mr Lee Kuan Yew.

"When we were kicked out of Malaysia, he said he would give us all a house. Not just one or two people, but the thousands living in attap houses.
"I was angry with his promises of false hope. Who could believe him? Singapore was chaotic, muddy, full of gangsters," recounted Mr Seow. Now 80, he has lived almost all his life in the Tiong Bahru ward, in Tanjong Pagar GRC, that Mr Lee represented for 60 years.
Yesterday, the retired calligrapher wept as he described how his faith in Singapore's first Prime Minister grew over the years.
It began in 1968 when he and his wife, Madam Lee Geok Hwa, now 70, moved from the ramshackle attap house they shared with about 15 people to a three-room HDB flat in Tiong Bahru's Kim Tian Road.
His faith grew as more homes and schools were built, jobs were created with increasing foreign investments, and Singapore's armed forces advanced.
Yesterday, he and his wife were among about 5,000 Tanjong Pagar residents who turned up at their community club to bid goodbye, many tearfully, to their MP.
They arrived with flowers and waited in quiet grief for their turn to write messages of condolences.
Mr Seow was in tears as he bowed before a black-and-white portrait of Mr Lee and, in a final show of respect, saluted.
A tearful Mr Mohan Ramakrish, 47, recalled his father's gratitude as he lay sick in Singapore General Hospital.
"My father said he was proud to see a C-class ward with clean bedsheets and a fan that kept the room well-ventilated. I couldn't understand it at first, but he told me that I didn't know what Singapore was like before Mr Lee," the financial adviser said.
"My father kept Mr Lee's photo in his shirt's breastpocket till the day he died. I'm grateful Mr Lee was my MP, too."
Younger Singaporeans like regional account manager Linn Lee were just as overwhelmed.
Said the 29-year-old: "It has been non-stop tears since I found out he had passed away. I know some in my generation disagree with his policies, but without him, where would we be today?
"I'm worried about how his legacy will continue beyond Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong."
Senior Minister of State for Law and Education Indranee Rajah, an MP in Tanjong Pagar GRC who had been helping the late Mr Lee with his Meet-the-People sessions, said in her tribute that he was a man who "did not forget the common man".
During the 2003 Sars crisis, while many were pre-occupied with safety measures like temperature-taking, Mr Lee wanted to know about the plight of taxi drivers as he had heard people were avoiding taking cabs.
"That struck me deeply, because in the midst of all the big-picture planning, he did not forget the common man," she told reporters at the Tanjong Pagar Community Club.
Minister for Social and Family Development Chan Chun Sing, another MP in the GRC, and Minister of State Sam Tan, MP of neighbouring Radin Mas, were also at the club to pay their respects and comfort residents.
Former MP Koo Tsai Kee, who is second adviser to grassroots organisations in Mr Lee's ward, said the late leader never stopped being a mentor.
"He told me it was important to get grassroots work done. 'Let government policies do good in the medium and long term. But in the short term, that's where MPs come in. They must ensure the people get their day-to-day problems solved.' "
The Straits Time / Top of The News    Published on 24 March 2015
By Rachael au-Yong                           rachelay@sph.com.sg


BACKGROUND STORY
'LIKE MY OWN FATHER'
"The biggest contribution Mr Lee made was how he governed Singapore. The changes are great. We used to live in attap houses. The roads were curved and full of potholes. Now they are even and straight. Malays and Chinese used to fight each other. Now we are united.
My daughter shook his hand before. She told me it was warm, because of the hundreds of people who shook his hand before her. She said he was like 'gong gong' (grandfather), and it makes me think of my father. In many ways, he was."
- Madam Ng Siew Ching, 56, housewife, resident of Tanjong Pagar since 1997

HE DELIVERED ON HIS PROMISES
"I wanted to come by (the day before) to wish him good health. But today, I have to settle for goodbye instead. I will remember the man whose vision made Singapore 100 years ahead of its time. When he cried on TV in 1965, we could feel his sadness. He didn't know what was going to happen, neither did we. But he made us promises, and he delivered on all of them."
- Madam Ang Kuan Kuan, 64, consultant

TRIBUTE FROM 3 GENERATIONS
"My parents came to Singapore in 1963, when this was still a part of Malaysia. They set up a family here in a peaceful country. I brought my daughter here even though she's very young because I want her to know our founding father. He and the pioneers made a country out of nothing."
- Mr Iong Kiong Heng, 45, engineer, who paid tribute alongside his mother Madam Tiong Siew Choo, 75, and daughter Josephine, three

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