Lecturer, wife’s love for making grass jelly turns into thriving side business 14 May 2021 / 14:11 H. Bernama
KUANTAN: Muhammad Syafik and his wife Nor Hafsah Omar love cincau or grass jelly drinks, but little did they know that their newly-found skill to make the grass jelly would bring a side income for them.
It all started when the couple, both 32, uploaded photographs of their homemade grass jelly on their Facebook page.
“My husband and I just shared the grass jelly that we made after my sister-in-law showed us how to make it last year but I didn’t expect anyone to ask us to sell it,” Nor Hafsah, who works as a bank executive here, told Bernama recently.
PETALING JAYA: Speak out when you see someone not following Covid-19 precautions, say health experts.
They implored Malaysians to be proactive by advising those who do not follow the standard operating procedure (SOP) or by reporting them to the authorities.
Public health specialist Asst Prof Dr Mohammad Farhan Rusli from the International Islamic University of Malaysia said the public should be community monitors and point out those who do not abide by the SOP.
“We must also be brave to tell them to comply with the SOP.
It is no longer about safeguarding one person but an entire country and, ultimately, the entire world.
Disabled professor fights to give OKU students chance for success
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MALAYSIANSKINI | After spending decades striving to achieve her academic goals, a disabled professor is now using her experience to ensure disabled students in Malaysia have the opportunity to succeed in higher education.
Now a professor of economics at the International Islamic University of Malaysia (UIA), Ruzita Mohd Amin, 57, said her struggles started from the day her parents tried to register her for primary school.
She lost the ability to walk after being infected with polio at the age of one.
Today, she is a wheelchair user, but when she enrolled in primary school, her mother had to physically assist with her movements at the time.