http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2011/03/10/sepi-and-surat-miskin.html

Sepi and Surat Miskin
Contributor | Thu, 03/10/2011 9:13 PM | Feature 
| 



Award winning: Sepi sits next to the wood fired autdoor stove of the family's 
home in Karangasem, Bali.
Sepi's family of three, her mother Kerim and sister Nengah are registered as 
poor and have a Surat Miskin (document proving their poverty). 

A Surat Miskin allows, on paper, for free medical assistance and schooling. 
However in the case of Sepi's family this document that should allow for Sepi 
and her sister to attend school without charge, 
and her mother to receive the medicines she needs, is not completely successful.

"Our family has had the Surat Miskin for many years, but we still have to pay 
for school. In the beginning PEMDA promised to help and in primary school we 
only had to pay for the building fee and uniforms. I got two scholarships to 
middle school and again only paid for my uniforms and the [school] building 
fee. Now I am at high school we have to pay IDR 110,000 each month and each 
semester we have to pay IDR 105,000 for books. Each year we pay more than Rp 1 
million for the building fee and uniform. There is no scholarship. Mum sells 
rubbish from the sea or little cakes to get the money needed. There was one 
time Mum had no money so she could not pay my fees. She had to sell two goats 
and we borrowed from neighbors. It's very hard to pay for school, but I like 
school - I love education," says Sepi.

Her goal is to become a journalist. As part of her prize in the Anne Frank 
Photography Award, Sepi was invited by Radio Nederland to write a story of her 
time in Holland.

"They gave me a laptop computer, but it's not working now - perhaps because we 
have no electricity to charge it properly. I wrote five stories for Radio 
Nederlands, but I have never heard back from them. I emailed them a long story 
about my time in Holland, but without response," says Sepi who started writing 
three years ago. "I wrote about my daily life, my inspiration was Anne Frank's 
Diary, so I write in diary form, as she did," says Sepi of her writing style.

In the future Sepi hopes to make a career from the written word. " If I become 
a journalist I want to tell of the poverty in the hills around here [northeast 
Bali], because people in the hills here are so far from the cities and 
education, and I want to tell people who don't care about the poor that there 
are kids out there without parents, crying, begging for compassion. Their lives 
remind me of my own childhood - that was me. I want the Government to 
understand it's hard for us to find food. The Government needs to be aware of 
the life we have and give more compassion to the children of these mountains - 
there is no water and no food," says Sepi of her goal to become a journalist.

-JP/Trisha Sertori


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