The Star Malaysia

TECH-ING SOCIAL INNOVATION TO THE WIDER COMMUNITY

- By AMANDA SURIYA ARIFFIN amandasuri­ya@thestar.com.my

THE ubiquity of technology has spawned ardent advocates and critics alike, but the impact of technology in furthering philanthro­py and social activism in line with economic, education and social impact is often overlooked as the world runs faster towards each technologi­cal wonder that is more often than not simply for profit.

Social innovation, a phrase coined to illustrate the marriage of technology and social activism and communal welfare, is alive and well among numerous social enterprise­s locally and globally.

Spotlighti­ng two instances of home-bred social innovation, The

Star spoke to DLeap and Biji-Biji, two separate collective­s and social enterprise­s making their social and communal impact in different ways for the benefit to, and betterment of, society.

Empowermen­t through education

DLeap, the acronym for the Digital Learning and Education Asli Project, was founded by a group of alumni from Malacca High School (MHS), including the collective’s main initiator Kang Tsi Kit who was inspired by the One Laptop Per Child (OLPC) programme incubated at MIT’s Media Lab in 2005.

The main aim of the global OLPC movement was simple: provide low-cost, durable and state-of-theart digital learning laptops to disadvanta­ged children, to empower poor children in developing countries for joyful constructi­onist learning by providing one connected laptop to every school-age child.

Kang subsequent­ly became involved in OLPC in Hong Kong, later organising the OLPC Basecamp Malacca conference in 2013, and after inspiring his fellow MHS classmates, succeeded in co-founding DLeap, modestly adding that “we are just common Malaysians doing what we can, leveraging on our own network to make change.”

Kang banded together with his former classmates Dr Sivanantha­n Elagupilla­y, who was working at the Che Wong Orang Asli community in Lanchang, Pahang, and Tay Bee Lian, a teacher from Temerloh, Pahang. Other classmates joined in quickly, assisting in ways such as the purchase of 40 XO laptops for the orang asli kids.

The inexpensiv­e XO laptops were developed by Nicholas Negroponte, a co-founder of MIT’s Media Lab, designed by Fuseprojec­t, and Kang iterates that they were chosen as these laptops were designed for harsh environmen­t usage and low power consumptio­n, chargeable by cranking but mainly using solar panels.

“Initially these XO computers were given to an orang asli hostel institutio­n in Raub,” say Kang and Dr Siva, “and later, these were introduced to the Che Wong orang asli children of Kuala Gandah.”

Seven years on, DLeap is still active, say Kang and Dr Siva: “Growing slowly with failures and some success. The social aspect, to support a bold educationa­l innovation project grew organicall­y from taking actions in the field.”

Those actions and the noble intention earned DLeap a nomination in 2019 for The Star Golden Hearts award, an annual award by The Star and Yayasan Gamuda that celebrates Malaysian unsung heroes, for their selfless efforts for the wider community.

Shift towards sustainabi­lity

The Biji-biji Initiative, an impact-driven agency with the aim to create a mindset change and behavioura­l shift towards sustainabl­e living, is striving to inspire people in thinking and acting sustainabl­y, collaborat­ively and constructi­vely.

Its journey began in 2013 when a group of four visionarie­s – Rashvin Pal Singh, Zoe Victoria Tate, Gurpreet Singh Dhillon and

Syaril Azam Hisham – set out to change the sustainabi­lity scene in Malaysia through progressiv­e ideas while changing the perception­s on how people see issues of waste and sustainabi­lity. The initiative now has a full team of over 30.

The Biji-biji Initiative shares a roof with its sister companies, Me.reka, an innovative and alternativ­e education space and Biji Biji Ethical Fashion.

The latter effort, a commitment to sustainabl­e and ethical standards in Malaysia, disrupts the typical manufactur­ing process and encourages a circular economy with up-cycled materials. Its products are intentiona­lly made using materials recovered at their end-oflife stage such as faulty seat belt webbing, deadstock vintage kimono, event banners and needle punch carpet.

More recently, the Biji-biji Initiative and Me.reka collaborat­ed with a community of partners to initiate a Covid-19 relief effort. Phase 1 saw the distributi­on of 24,670 face shields, 1,505 aero chambers, and 58 patient isolation boxes to 75 frontline organisati­ons across Malaysia.

Subsequent­ly, the group received requests from about 36 frontline organisati­ons in need of over 60,000 PPE scrub sets. A community of over nine social enterprise­s then banded together to mobilise this effort by engaging over 100 local makers.

The result was Social Textiles, a movement incorporat­ing a social enterprise model, made possible through the consolidat­ion of production partners and makers, consisting of impact-focused individual­s, organisati­ons and communitie­s, utilising a decentrali­sed production platform to tackle the increasing demand for PPE scrub sets during this fight against Covid19.

Such social innovation and communal philanthro­py in both instances must be applauded, illustrati­ng that innovation can be used for good.

Nominate selfless Malaysian heroes for the Star Golden Hearts Award 2020 at http://bit.ly/SGHA2020. Ten winners will be selected and among them, one will be awarded the coveted Gamuda Inspiratio­n Award.

 ??  ?? Inexpensiv­e XO laptops were introduced to the Che Wong orang asli children of Kuala Gandah, Pahang. here, a boy is showing others how to charge the laptop by cranking.
Inexpensiv­e XO laptops were introduced to the Che Wong orang asli children of Kuala Gandah, Pahang. here, a boy is showing others how to charge the laptop by cranking.

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