Mums struggling to survive in Chow Kit


Nazir Sufari

HARI Raya is only two days away. On Jalan Chow Kit, city folk are swarming the Ramadan bazaar there as they make their final festive preparations.

Chow Kit is known as the market centre of Kuala Lumpur, boasting a daily wet market and night market alongside its many businesses operating along the main thoroughfare.

People from all parts of the country, including Sabah and Sarawak, come to Kuala Lumpur in search of job opportunities.

They come to Chow Kit to start a new journey – some enjoy happy endings but for some, luck is not on their side.

Especially for mothers living in a small room or broken houses in Chow Kit. The rental rate for a room in Chow Kit is about RM480 to RM500 per month, which leaves them with little choice.

Some are mothers with small children dumped by their husbands and some live with their husbands who earn only RM1,100 a month, so they can’t afford to buy or rent a house.

Baitulmal also provides them monthly aid of about RM300. Living in a big city like Kuala Lumpur with only RM700 to RM800 after paying rental is hard.

This photo essay is about mothers who are trying their best to crawl out of poverty in Chow Kit.

Whether they are single parents or husbands with low income, all are struggling, worrying about the next meal.

Aid from civil society groups in the form of food, milk powder, nappies and personal care items lifts a little burden.

For this Hari Raya, many groups and companies have brought food and new clothes for their children. Some families haven’t celebrated Hari Raya with their family in their kampung for nearly seven years. On the festive day, they will stay in their rooms in Chow Kit or just meet their friends on the street.

Then, there are the mothers who end up living in the street… – June 3, 2019.


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