One North June 2013

Vol 10 June 2013

The Alumni Magazine of UWC South East Asia

Overland from Singapore

to Wales, 35 years ago

Alumni profiles

Graduation 2013

Campus updates

Reunions

Every student who leaves UWCSEA,

regardless of how long they were here, is

automatically a member of the UWCSEA

alumni community. Some of the services

that we offer alumni include:

OneºNorth

The alumni magazine of UWC South East

Asia, first published in December 2007,

is published twice per year. Please send

your contributions and/or suggestions to:

alumnimagazine@uwcsea.edu.sg.

UWCSEA alumni online community

Our password-protected alumni website

located at http://alumni.uwcsea.edu.sg

allows you to maintain your own profile,

search for and contact other registered

members, post photos and blogs, stay

informed about news and events, etc.

Friends of UWCSEA online community

The ‘Friends of UWCSEA’ password-

protected website located at

http://friends.uwcsea.edu.sg allows

parents of former students to stay

in touch with each other and with

the College.

Reunions and get-togethers

A reunion of the 40, 30, 25, 20 and 10

year anniversary classes will be held each

August in Singapore. Other alumni are also

welcome. Additional class reunions and

alumni gatherings take place in various

locations throughout the year, planned by

both UWCSEA and its alumni. Watch the

alumni website for updates and details,

and let us advertise your events!

Alumni eBrief

The Alumni eBrief is a newsletter emailed

to alumni throughout the year, containing

brief news and information to keep you

updated and informed.

Dunia

The College magazine is published

three times during the academic year,

containing College news and reports of

events and activities.

Mentor opportunities

Volunteer to be listed in the mentor section

of the alumni site if you are willing to be

contacted by current students or other

alumni for information or advice regarding

your university or career; or visit the pages

if you have questions of your own.

Career services

Check this section of the site for career

opportunities or candidates, or post

your own job opening or resumé. You

can even set up alerts to be notified of

new postings.

Gap year-type opportunities for alumni

Check the Volunteer page of the website

for short to long term volunteer work

opportunities in Southeast Asia working

with organisations supported by UWCSEA.

Old Interscols

Order your old Interscol in soft copy

format via the store on the website.

Visits, tours and other requests

We are always happy to help in any

way we can. Send your requests to us

at alumni@uwcsea.edu.sg. If you are in

Singapore and would like to drop in for

a visit or a tour, we would be more than

happy to show you around anytime.

Please keep in touch!

Albania, Argentina, Australia, Austria, Bahamas, Bahrain, Bangladesh, Barbados, Belgium, Benin, Bermuda, Botswana, Brazil, Brunei, Bulgaria,

Cambodia, Cameroon, Canada, Chile, China, Colombia, Costa Rica, Croatia, Curaçao, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Denmark, Egypt, England, Ethiopia,

Fiji, Finland, France, Germany, Ghana, Greece, Guam, Guatemala, Guyana, Haiti, Hong Kong, Hungary, Iceland, India, Indonesia, Ireland, Israel, Italy,

Japan, Jersey, Kenya, South Korea, Laos, Lebanon, Luxembourg, Macau, Malaysia, Maldives, Malta, Mauritius, Mexico, Mongolia, Myanmar, Namibia,

Nepal, Netherlands, New Caledonia, New Zealand, Northern Ireland, Norway, Oman, Pakistan, Panama, Papua New Guinea, Peru, Philippines,

Poland, Portugal, Qatar, Romania, Russia, Rwanda, Saudi Arabia, Senegal, Serbia and Montenegro, Sierra Leone, Singapore, Slovenia, South Africa,

South Sudan, Spain, Sri Lanka, Swaziland, Sweden, Switzerland, Taiwan, Tanzania, Thailand, Timor-Leste, Trinidad And Tobago, Turkey, Turks And

Caicos Islands, Ukraine, United Arab Emirates, United Kingdom, United States, Uruguay, Venezuela, Vietnam, West Indies, Zimbabwe

OUR ONLINE COMMUNITY

Alumni services

OneºNorth June 2013 3

Events and activities at UWCSEA ......... 20

UWCSEA statistics ................................... 22

House Calls

Mark Nowaczynski ’77

treating seniors in their

own homes..................................................24

Conscious capitalism

Shradha Agarwal ’04................................ 26

Kids win life-changing scholarship .........27

My gap year in India

Michaela Vebrova ’11

Not a spoiled sausage! ............................ 28

Become involved

UWCSEA’s Centre for

International Education...........................30

Careers Fair ................................................30

UWCSEA Foundation update .................31

Teo Eng Seng living and breathing art

Former UWCSEA

art teacher/Head of Art

1971–1996.................................................. 32

Reunion 2012 ............................................34

Recent reunions ........................................ 36

Long-serving teachers leaving ...............38

Upcoming reunions ..................inside back

Letter from the Head of College ..............4

Note from the Alumni Office ...................5

Shelby Davis inspires ..................................5

Cover story

Overland from UWCSEA

to Atlantic College

Amazing 16,000km road trip

exactly 35 years ago; five

students and a staff member

drove an old Land Rover

from Singapore to Wales .....6

Graduation 2013

Another 324 students

become young alumni..............................10

Mr. Rambo, I presume …

Sebastian Brack ’94 reflects

on being a delegate of the ICRC..............12

The Budden Initiative

A sponsored

student project ..........................................14

Campus updates .......................................15

From beneficiary to benefactor

Linda de Flavis

interviews Mike Ogutu ’08 .....................16

Coming of age

Louise Okatch ’14.......................................19

OneºNorth is published by UWC South East Asia twice per year for alumni, staff and friends of UWCSEA. Reproduction in any manner is prohibited without

written consent. Send your address change to alumnimagazine@uwcsea.edu.sg and/or update your profile on the UWCSEA alumni website. We welcome

your feedback. Send your comments to alumnimagazine@uwcsea.edu.sg.

Please send your articles and/or suggestions for articles, as well as your class notes, for the next issue to alumnimagazine@uwcsea.edu.sg.

Cover photo: A river crossing on the Overland trip from UWCSEA to Atlantic College.

Photo courtesy of Tony Dilley

Contents

Editor

Brenda Whately

Design

Gregory Parker

MICA (P) 034/03/2013

4 OneºNorth June 2013

whilst that threat has receded, the

tensions that exist within and across

national boundaries, among and between

peoples, are ever present.

When I have the opportunity to spend

time with our students I am always

inspired by their optimism, and it

leaves me optimistic that they are

developing the skills and qualities

necessary to lead by personal example

and courageous action to tackle the

issues the world is facing.

There is no doubt in my mind Hahn would

have been immensely proud of what we

are doing here at UWCSEA.

Julian Whiteley

Head of College

UWC South East Asia

Letter from the Head of College

In September 2012, we celebrated the

50th Anniversary of the founding of the

UWC movement.

When Atlantic College opened its doors

on 19 September 1962, it was hailed by

the Times of London as “the most exciting

experiment in education since the Second

World War.” The concept was innovative,

and whilst international schools existed,

never before had anyone sought to

so deliberately bring young people

together from so many different nations

to be educated. The aspiration was to

promote intercultural understanding; the

inspiration was Kurt Hahn.

Hahn was by all accounts an

extraordinary man, a man of ideas, a man

of words and a man of action. People

who met him were not only struck by

his intellect but also his compassion.

He had an intuitive feel for what an

education should be about. He believed

strongly in the notion that it was about

personal development—a preparation

for life, not just university; he believed

in the importance of students taking

responsibility for themselves and their

actions; and he was adamant that service

to one’s fellow beings should be central

to that education. It is clear beyond any

possible doubt that active service to

those in need of help does, both in deed

and reality, constitute a common bond

between people, nations and cultures.

Hahn was an entrepreneur, a man ahead

of his times, a visionary. As well as being

instrumental in the development of

UWC, he founded the Outward Bound

Movement and the Duke of Edinburgh

Award Scheme, which later morphed into

the National Youth Achievement Award.

The Round Square movement, of which

there are now over 100 schools, was one

of his initiatives and the structure of the

IB Diploma Programme including the

requirement to study a range of subjects

(although science was not offered),

CAS and the Extended Essay evolved

from the curriculum at Atlantic College.

His legacy is huge.

So what of the future? Hahn could not

possibly have imagined the world we live

in today and the impact of technology

in creating globalization. The need, and

I do mean need, for schools of a similar

ilk to UWCSEA is more pressing today

than it has ever been before. The UWC

movement was founded at a time when

the world was faced with the very real

possibility of a nuclear holocaust and

OneºNorth June 2013 5

This is our tenth issue of the alumni

magazine! It’s been a full year since the

last issue, and the time has gone by very

quickly. We now have 324 new alumni

from the Class of 2013.

Note from the

Alumni Office

Photos of the graduation day ceremony

have been included in these pages as well

as photos of Reunion 2012 and alumni get-

togethers that have taken place around

the world since then. Further photos

can be viewed on the event calendar of

the alumni site. This issue again features

updates about the College along with a

number of interesting profiles and articles

by and about some of your fellow alumni.

One of these articles describes a road

trip taken 35 years ago by five graduating

students and a teacher who drove from

UWCSEA in Singapore to UWC Atlantic

in Wales! Please read on—I hope you will

enjoy the stories that follow.

There are a number of teachers retiring this

year, each having taught for a significant

number of years at UWCSEA. They will be

missed. We wish them all the best.

If you have any contributions or

suggestions for the next issue of the

alumni magazine, or for the alumni

programme, please do let us know.

On behalf of Sona, Siti and myself, Alumni

Relations wishes you all the best!

Regards,

Brenda Whately

Director of Alumni Relations

UWC South East Asia

alumni@uwcsea.edu.sg

Brenda and Sona with Niru at the New York alumni

gathering May 2013

By Wyclife Onyango Omondi

UWCSEA 2011-2013

Class of 2013

On 21 February, Shelby Davis,

philanthropist and founder of the

Davis UWC Scholars Program visited

UWCSEA with his wife Gale.

Grade 12 student, Wyclife Onyango

Omondi shares his experience of the visit:

The much-anticipated Shelby Davis

visit coincided with Mother Language

Day. Dressed in our fabulous cultural

costumes, a group of UWCSEA Dover

students and staff welcomed Shelby

Davis and his wife, Gale Davis, with a

lunch at the Nelson Mandela Library.

I was greatly inspired by his story. His first

encounter with the UWC movement was

when he met two boys—one Israeli, one

Palestinian—discussing their countries’

conflict at UWC-USA. This was his

inspiration to embark on an exciting but

challenging journey—the Davis UWC

Scholars Program.

At the student presentation after the

lunch, Mr. Davis stood up and held the

attention of all in the room with his

first words, “There are three types of

people in the world: those who make

things happen, those who watch things

happen and those who wonder what

happened. I invest in you because you

make things happen.”

Mr. Davis is a great leader and mentor

to our community. Not only a generous

donor who has helped many of us to

achieve quality education regardless of

our backgrounds, he is also a role model

to students, reminding us of the power of

determination in helping us make positive

changes to our communities.

Over 12 years, 233 UWCSEA students

have received scholarships to US

universities through the programme.

Since its establishment in 2000, 4,843

scholars from 147 countries have been

provided with scholarships to 90 different

US universities and colleges.

Visit www.davisuwcscholars.org to

learn more, and visit the eDunia on

the UWCSEA main website to watch

a video of Shelby Davis explaining his

commitment to the programme.

Shelby Davis inspires

6 OneºNorth June 2013

By Brenda Whately

At the end of the 1978 academic year

exactly 35 years ago, an amazing two-

month, 16,000km road trip took place.

After many months of planning, four new

UWCSEA graduates, a young UWCSEA

alumnus and a teacher drove a second-

hand Land Rover from Singapore to

Atlantic College in Wales, through

many countries that would not be

possible to travel through today. The

teacher was Head of Biology at the time,

Tony Dilley. The alumnus was Giorgio

Conti, Italian and the four new graduates

were Paul Cummins, Australian, Hans

Kleppa, Norwegian, Nicolai Foong,

Malaysian at the time and Monica Lugato,

another Italian. Unfortunately, the

students who originally proposed the idea

ended up being unable to participate for

various reasons.

Starting out on 30 June, the group drove

across the causeway from Singapore to

Johore Bahru, up to Kuala Lumpur and

into Penang, Malaysia. From there they

took a ferry to Madras (now Chennai),

India, because at the time it was not

possible to go through Burma (now

Myanmar). They drove from there to

Bangalore, Goa, Bombay (now Mumbai),

north to Agra to see the Taj Mahal and on

to Delhi where they picked up visas that

would allow them to continue their trip.

From there they crossed into Pakistan

and Afghanistan. From Islamabad they

travelled to Peshawar, Kabul, Kandahar,

Herat and then on to Tehran, Iran. They

proceeded on through Ankara and

Istanbul, Turkey; Athens, Greece; Rome,

Italy; Geneva, Switzerland; Paris, France

and London, England, finally arriving in

Wales on the first of September.

from UWCSEA to Atlantic College

Overland

OneºNorth June 2013 7

Although they arrived on schedule,

there were many unforeseen difficulties

along the way, involving delays due to

bureaucracy and mechanical problems

with the vehicle, attempted thefts,

constant changes in diet and a few

serious health issues. They were six adults

cramped into an old Land Rover, two

in front and four in the back. Despite

the inevitable problems, meeting the

people, observing the culture and seeing

the scenery in many parts of Asia that

became unsafe for travellers soon

afterwards and remains that way today

due to politics and war, it was an amazing

experience for five young UWCSEA

alumni and one teacher.

The following article is based mainly on

Tony Dilley’s article The Overlanders that

appeared in the UWCSEA Mengembara

magazine of September 1979 along with

some recent updates.

On the very first day of the trip, the

group encountered problems entering

Malaysia because they didn’t have the

correct paperwork for the Land Rover.

After a delay of 24 hours, the trip finally

began again, stopping on the way to

Penang to pick up new tires that had

been donated to them. Four days later,

on the fourth of July, the Land Rover was

loaded onto a ferry heading to India.

For four days they steamed across the

Indian Ocean in third class, eating curry

for breakfast, lunch and dinner. Monica

says, “It was very tough indeed.” Nicolai

managed to entertain himself with a

grand piano that they found ludicrously

out of place on the old ship. Arriving in

what was then Madras, they met up with

another 24-hour delay at Customs. It

was here that they first undertook repairs

to the fuel pump, a problem that would

plague them for most of the remainder of

the trip until it was eventually identified

and solved by the group themselves after

countless mechanics along the way had

failed to do so.

One of the official aims of the trip

was to spread the word about the

UWC movement. To aid in this goal,

the sides of the Land Rover had been

painted with ‘United World College of

South East Asia’ and the group met up

with representatives from some of the

National Committees along the way. A

further goal of the trip was to provide

a challenging and unique educational

experience that included fundraising,

planning, organising, as well as lessons

in teamwork and group welfare. It would

also introduce the students first-hand to

a huge area of the world that they might

not otherwise see.

When the group landed in Madras, the

dirt and the street beggars were their first

introduction to the extreme poverty of

so many in that area. From Madras, they

travelled through agricultural country

where they found that life appeared to go

on as it had for thousands of years, the

people working to provide just enough

food to eat, clothes to wear and a roof

over their heads. Up into the hills the

air got colder, and it rained to the point

where the group couldn’t get dry in the

cramped quarters of the Land Rover.

In Bombay they saw big city life, in

Bangalore they admired the interesting

architecture and in Goa they experienced

a place completely unlike the rest of

India. After driving through the night

to reach Agra and see the Taj Mahal,

looking forward to some rest when they

arrived, they were discouraged to find

that the road they were travelling came

to an abrupt end at a river over which the

bridge had been washed out by torrential

flooding. They camped there that night

along with crowds of other people, cars,

cows and chickens until a temporary

ferry arrived in the morning to take them

across to the other side. At this point, it

was the 18th of July. By the 20th they

were in Delhi, collecting visas for the rest

of the trip.

Having to skip Kashmir because of

the delays in the schedule, they drove

through the Punjab into Pakistan

8 OneºNorth June 2013

where they found not just the scenery

to be incredible but also the friendliness

of the people—with endless cups of

tea and conversations about the group,

the trip and UWC. Tony wrote, “It was

an interesting exercise in communication

for although we had a variety of

languages within the group, Urdu

wasn’t one of them.”

From there, it was into the Khyber

Pass and Afghanistan on the heels of a

revolution. The scenery of the Khyber

Pass was spectacular. They saw numerous

nomad settlements surrounded by

donkeys and camels, and it was here that

they were ambushed by children in search

of cigarettes and had to avoid a flight of

rocks when they didn’t comply. In Kabul,

they found the people very friendly and

felt that they made many friends there.

Although there was an ever-present

threat of violence with soldiers and tanks

in the city along with a curfew, Tony says,

“Everyone enjoyed Afghanistan.” They

crossed the Kandahar desert next and

entered the outskirts of Herat, pushing

the Land Rover. Hans says, “We had

run out of fuel because the fuel station

marked on the map in the extremely hot

Kandahar desert had been closed down!

We bought a few litres from a boy by the

roadside and were then able to drive into

town.” After another day’s delay while

Customs performed a thorough drug

search, they crossed the border the next

morning into Iran.

In Iran, they found that while people in

the desert lived in fortressed villages, in

the towns, especially Tehran, everything

was modern and busy. On the 10th

of August, they crossed into Turkey to

another change in diet as well as scenery;

from mountains and desert to lush

greenery. Crossing the Bosphorus into

Istanbul and European Turkey had proved

to feel like a home-coming of sorts

with its more familiar European culture.

Although Istanbul was a highlight, they

were soon headed into Greece due to the

tight schedule. It was now 19 August.

They had to hurry through Greece,

stopping in Thessalonika for the fourth

fuel pump of the trip and in Athens to

pick up Paul who had left the group a

little earlier to meet his parents who

were holidaying there. Paul’s trip after

leaving the vehicle to head to Athens,

was an adventure in itself—but that’s

another story!

It was here that the group found and fixed

their recurring mechanical problem.

From there it was another ship to Bari,

Italy and a short drive to Rome where

they received a huge welcome from the

Conti and Lugato families and a donation

from the Italian National Committee.

Paul unfortunately had to leave the

group and end his journey here due to

severe illness.

On the way to Trieste, which was the

proposed home for what was to be

the new UWC of the Adriatic, they ran

into different mechanical problems

and never quite made it. They did

however subsequently make it to

Geneva, Paris and London where they

had a champagne reception at UWC’s

London House. The next day, on the 1st

of September, they arrived at Atlantic

College, right on schedule. One of the

biggest disappointments of the trip was

that there was almost no one there to

greet them after such a long and arduous

journey, but they were happy to have

made it nonetheless, with no doubt a

great sense of accomplishment and a

wealth of memories from an unbelievably

amazing experience.

To read Tony Dilley’s full Mengembara

article, The Overlanders, or the 1978

Harlequin newspaper article, and/

or to view more photos of the trip,

compliments of Nicolai Foong,

Giorgio Conti and Tony Dilley,

visit the following URL: http://alumni.

uwcsea.edu.sg/?page=Overland_trip

“… a challenging and

unique educational

experience.”

OneºNorth June 2013 9

Here is a brief update about the

participants of the trip and a comment

from each as they were asked to reflect on

their incredible experience 35 years on.

Monica Lugato (UWCSEA 1976–1978),

Italian scholar. Monica is a Professor of

International Law at the School of Law,

and Coordinator of the International

Program in Law at Lumsa University,

Rome, having achieved her PhD at the

University of Rome La Sapienza.

“The trip was a most amazing and

enriching experience in all respects—

what we saw, the people we met, the

day-by-day getting along of the group,

the constant challenge of being in

unknown places, facing unknown

languages and cultures. It had a deep

impact on the shaping of my personality,

my vision of life, my personal heritage—

who I am. The interesting thing is that I

have just come to realise that recently.”

Nicolai Foong (UWCSEA 1971–1978)

studied economics at Stanford and

medicine at the University of Chicago and

UCLA in California. He is an obstetrician/

gynaecologist in California with two

private practices. In addition, he has also

been the pro bono medical director of

the Los Angeles Chinatown Free Clinic

since 1998. Nicolai further volunteers

his time each year to travel with a group

of doctors to other parts of the world to

lecture at local hospitals.

About the trip, Nic says, “I volunteered to

go because I was always an avid traveller,

and did not want to miss an opportunity

of a lifetime—which it was. I am so glad

that I made the trip.

It was a life-changing experience. It

allowed me the rare opportunity to learn

about the life and cultures of countries

that are no longer safely available to

young tourists; places like Afghanistan,

Pakistan and Iran. The trip instilled in me

an everlasting interest in global affairs.

I can only hope that in this new, turbulent

world, my two sons will be able to have

a wonderful experience similar to the

one I had.”

Paul Cummins (UWCSEA 1976–1978),

Australian scholar. Paul went on to obtain

a B.Ec.(Hons) at Australian National

University (ANU) and worked for 25

years in the banking industry. His last role

was to set up and run the compliance

department for the Bank of China in

Australia. Interestingly, his job on the trip

was to look after the group’s finances!

Since retiring, Paul has continued to do

consultancy work. He has been together

with his partner, Kevin, for over 20 years.

Paul says, “We were incredibly lucky

to do the trip when we did—before

Afghanistan was invaded by the Russians

in 1980 and before the Shah of Iran was

toppled in 1979. Either of these events

would have made our passage difficult,

if not impossible. The thing that stays in

my mind most is traversing the Khyber

Pass, something you would be unable to

safely do today. It was the most rugged

but breathtakingly beautiful landscape

I have ever seen. It was the sort of trip

that you would only think of when

you are 18 and indestructible. It was a

fantastic experience.”

Hans Kleppa (UWCSEA 1977–1979)

pursued pilot training in the Royal

Norwegian Air Force. He currently

works on the ground for Scandinavian

Airlines Systems (SAS) and has his

own consultancy, Kleppa and Co, that

recently project-managed Scandinavia’s

largest marina expansion project. With

a number of patents to his name, he was

a driving force in the development of

a new IT system for check-in and gate/

boarding control systems for SAS. Hans

lives with his girlfriend outside Oslo and

volunteers as a Common Law judge in

the Appeals courts.

About the trip, Hans says, “It is incredible

how people across different countries

seem kind and generous, regardless of

their often modest or poor lot in life.

Poverty was often rampant and often it

was sad to see how religion and tradition

both ‘usefully guide’ and ‘uselessly

repress’ so many poor people. However,

to personally ‘smell,’ experience and see

up close, everyday lives that we otherwise

fly over at 30,000 feet, was awesome.

And the biggest lesson learned? Basic

education, more respect for the needs of

the poor and a much better spread of the

world’s wealth with healthy capitalism

bridled by healthy socialism, seem so

important for greater world congeniality.”

Giorgio Conti (UWCSEA 1972–1974)

was one of the first Italian scholarship

students at UWCSEA. After leaving, he

pursued European Studies at Lancaster

University and is now CEO of Eurolib Srl,

an Italian services company that works

primarily with scientific research centres,

hospitals, schools and universities. He

has been involved with Libya over the

years, most recently there to help with

the repair of the hospitals, supplying

equipment and technicians.

Giorgio says, “I was invited on the

Overland trip while I was the alumni

representative on the International Board

of Directors. I accepted whole-heartedly

this opportunity. It gave me more reason

to try and get a feeling of a region of the

world that I had never visited. I cannot

but be grateful to UWCSEA for the

experiences it gave me which have helped

in my work, especially in countries such as

Nigeria and Libya.”

Tony Dilley taught biology at UWCSEA

from 1976 to 1981 and was Head of

Biology at the time of the Overland trip.

After the trip, he returned to Singapore

and in 1981 married and returned to the

UK. He read for a further degree at Balliol

College, Oxford and set up an Oxford-

based educational trekking company

taking trips to the Western Himalayas.

After being Science Department Chair at

Jakarta International School from ’84 to

’91 he returned again to the UK where he

is now retired and writing.

Recalling the experience of 35 years

ago he says, “I was recruited at the last

minute when the school required that

a teacher accompany the group. This is

the 35th anniversary of the first serious

adventure undertaken by any UWC! The

trip turned out to be more difficult than

ever expected. Had we known then … !”

And where are they now?

10 OneºNorth June 2013

Graduation 2013

On Saturday, 25 May, we celebrated

the achievements of the Class of 2013.

Three hundred and twenty-four students

graduated from UWCSEA’s Dover Campus

this year with 62 nationalities represented,

our most diverse group of graduates yet.

We were delighted to welcome Heron

Holloway as our guest speaker. Heron

was a boarder at UWCSEA from 1993 to

2000, subsequently going on to achieve

an undergraduate degree in Sociology and

Anthropology and a Master’s degree in

International Relations. She has worked at

the British Red Cross, was twice seconded

to the International Federation of the Red

Cross and currently works for Habitat for

Humanity, improving media relations and

disaster communications activity across

Asia Pacific.

Heron’s two main messages to the

graduates were one, the reassurance that

everything will be okay and two, to make

the decision to not just be a global citizen

but an active global citizen.

Heron was followed by the student

speaker, Kris Ferrin, a former member of

the Alumni Council, who gave an inspiring

message about enduring friendships and

the need to remain connected.

This was a more than special graduation

ceremony as it was the last one to be

presided over by Di Smart, the Principal

of High School. After more than 20 years,

Di will be leaving UWCSEA this year. The

graduates expressed their respect and

love for Di with big hugs as they walked

across the stage to accept their diplomas

and a standing ovation after her warm

and inspirational closing speech.

For more reunion photos, see the event

calendar/past events on the alumni site:

http://alumni.uwcsea.edu.sg

OneºNorth June 2013 11

12 OneºNorth June 2013

Mr. Rambo, I presume ...

By Sebastian Brack

UWCSEA 1991–1994

Class of 1994

In the 2005 satire Thank you for smoking,

Nick Naylor, a cynical spokesman for the

tobacco industry, is asked by a journalist

why he does it. Besides paying down his

mortgage, he answers that he likes the

challenge, and adds, “If I wanted an easy

job, I would go work for the Red Cross.”

Having been a delegate of the

International Committee of the Red Cross

(ICRC) in a number of crises and conflicts

in the Near East, Sub-Saharan Africa and

South Asia, I would have to disagree with

Nick Naylor’s assessment. Over my nine-

year career with the organisation, I was

shot at, kidnapped, caught malaria and

hauled over the coals by a government

minister. Of the many adjectives I would

use to describe my former job, easy would

not be one of them.

Why on Earth would someone willingly

expose himself to such dangers? I too

would sometimes ask myself that logical

question. I remember distinctly when I

ceased to be able to find a convincing

answer. It was in Côte d’Ivoire in 2011.

I was in the first humanitarian convoy of

relief into Abobo, a neighbourhood of the

capital which had just seen fighting as the

rebels closed in on President Gbagbo’s

regime. Driving past corpses and

negotiating our way through checkpoints

manned by armed and dangerously

unpredictable feral youth, I decided

I had had enough of this lifestyle.

The ICRC is a unique organisation.

Founded 150 years ago, it is one of the

oldest humanitarian organisations in

the world, specialised in protecting and

assisting the victims of armed conflicts

and ‘other situations of violence.’ It is the

guardian of the Geneva Conventions, the

backbone of International Humanitarian

Law (IHL), on which its work is predicated.

Much as one is wont to rewrite the past

to fit into a convenient self-flattering

narrative, I have to admit that altruism

was not the main reason I joined the

ICRC. As my Oxford contemporaries

entered the ranks of banking and

consulting in London, I knew I wanted a

more adventurous life.

My stint at UWCSEA no doubt influenced

me, but so did my childhood readings

of Tintin and Corto Maltese! The idea of

going to exotic locations, in the midst of

war, to bring relief to innocent victims

was wildly romantic to me. It suited me

down to the ground. Or so I thought.

My first head of delegation took a

different view. He had asked Geneva for

an old hand, who ideally spoke Arabic,

for what was then one of the toughest

assignments in the Occupied Territories:

Jenin during the Second Intifada. It was

a hotbed of militancy, and there were

regular Israeli military raids.

The only Arabic word I knew was kebab

and, while I fancied myself as something

of an expert on conflict, having studied

international relations and diplomacy,

I quickly realised that my knowledge

Sebastian visiting Bedouin in the Jordan Valley

after their camp had been raised by the Israeli

army. He was there to get the details and

deliver some emergency assistance.

was entirely theoretical. The Diplomatic

Academy of Vienna had taught me about

the Napoleonic wars, the Congress of

Vienna and how to dance the Waltz,

not how to handle angry armed men

at a check-point. My boss almost sent

me back to Geneva forthwith, but he

was short of delegates, and I had been

considered a promising recruit at the

ICRC’s training school, so he gave me

a chance.

I initially thought he had done me a

favour, but after several sleepless nights

cowing in the ‘safe room’ of our house,

the sound of jets and helicopter gunships

overhead, I was not so sure anymore.

What aid we could afford the victims of

the fighting, in the form of tarpaulins,

buckets, food and the like, seemed pretty

derisory set against the wreckage of

people’s houses or the corpses of their

loved ones. What’s more, we had to

work with unsavoury local powerbrokers

who were constantly trying to manipulate

our assistance and interventions for their

own ends.

Our ‘humanitarian diplomacy’ with

the people involved in the fighting on

both sides on behalf of the victims and

international humanitarian law proved

equally frustrating. We were well

received, served litres of tasty coffee

and sickly-sweet tea but, ultimately, we

were powerless to change matters. In the

Occupied Territories, I quickly understood

the limits of ‘humanitarian action.’

As mission followed mission, and

I changed continents, those basic

limitations did not change. Everywhere I

worked, I was acutely conscious that we

were bit players in a much larger political

game on which we had little purchase.

That is not to say we did not make a

difference. On the contrary, we saved

countless lives, gave the many prisoners

we visited protection, hope and medicine

they would not otherwise have had, and

maybe even prevented some atrocities.

But it was a far cry from the heroic

humanitarian role I had imagined. We

did good, but we could not do better.

Trying to convince soldiers and rebels,

many of whom were suspected of war

crimes, to respect the laws of war led to

some of the most surreal situations of

my life. I will never forget one particular

talk I gave to some (heavily armed)

rebel commanders at their camp in the

middle of the Congolese jungle. After

I had explained the practical benefits

of respecting the Geneva Conventions,

one of them, who went by the name

of Rambo (sic.), asked me what was

the penalty foreseen in the Geneva

Conventions for killing an ICRC delegate.

After a few uncomfortable seconds

spent calculating whether I could reach

my jeep before they shot me, the group

burst out laughing. Who says warmongers

don’t have a sense of humour? We later

drank home-made palm wine together

from the same (foul) jerry-can to seal

our ‘friendship.’

The biggest reward of those many years

‘in the field’ was certainly the human

experience. I don’t know how many

people’s lives I actually ‘saved,’ but I

certainly learnt more about the world,

about life and about myself than I had

ever imagined when I joined the ICRC. I

had applied for a job; I got a life-changing

formative experience. I had set out to

change the world, but of course it was the

world that changed me.

War, and the suffering that comes

with it, brings out both the best and the

worst in people. It is in those extreme

conditions that our humanity is put to

the test. I discovered that people are

never black or white, but infinite shades

of grey, and that you can always find

common ground, even with warlords

and “terrorists”. At the end of the day,

people almost always think they are

decent human beings. They always

have (or invent) some rationale for their

actions, as heinous as they may be. But

that means that if you have understood

their narrative, you can often get them to

support your humanitarian endeavour.

I also learned that a country without

a state or the rule of law leads to

Hobbesian conditions where man

becomes a wolf for man. But I also came

to question the ability of outsiders to

help create that state. I have become

convinced that “development” has to

be an endogenous process. Foreigners

can help (or sometimes jeopardise) the

process, but it is up to those countries

themselves to fashion their own future.

Brenda asked me to conclude with a tip

for current students and young alumni

wondering what to do with their lives. If

you want a challenging life experience,

don’t listen to Nick Naylor: go work for

the ICRC.

Sebastian Brack with Kofi Annan and President

Francois Hollande, May 2013.

Sebastian left the ICRC early last year

to run a French electoral campaign.

His candidate won, and now sits in the

French Parliament, but instead of moving

to Paris, he went to work for Kofi Annan,

joining the small team that assists him

in conflict prevention and mediation.

He is based in Geneva.

“It is in those extreme

conditions that our humanity

is put to the test.”

14 OneºNorth June 2013

By Jonathan Parr

really well thought out and articulated

proposals, but we liked the fact that this

idea would tackle environmental issues

and potentially bring about a permanent

change in waste management that had

the potential to impact a large part of the

UWCSEA community.”

In January 2013, the group behind the

winning proposal set about putting their

plans into place and began working with

the Facilities team on Dover Campus

to source the ideal location and make

the necessary preparation for their

composting facility. Keen to make

the best use of resources available,

they scoured the Mathematics Block

refurbishment site for suitable rubble,

also known as ‘hardcore’ and collected

old bits of wood that would eventually

form the base of their vegetable planter

boxes. Giving up their Saturdays and

after-school time, the ‘hands-on’

group were determined to build a

community area that mattered and

would leave a lasting legacy for the

whole College community.

On 26 February, with the composting

bins built and ready for service, the

group began collecting vegetable and

fruit peelings from the school caterer,

Sodexo, and 50kg of peelings later, the

composting programme was born.

With stage one completed, the group

then set about preparing their first

planter box. Having been inspired by the

Community Garden on East Campus, the

box will feature chilli, basil and mint and

be open to the whole community to make

use of in exchange for a small donation.

When asked why the group chose to focus

on composting, William Sandlund (Billy)

explained, “We saw the Budden Initiative

as a fantastic opportunity to put what

we have learned at UWCSEA into action

and begin addressing a real concern—

the amount of waste we produce.

We are passionate about protecting

the environment and promoting

sustainability. This project allows us to

educate others about where food comes

from and make much better use of the

waste we produce so that it reaps benefits

for our community.”

Alexander Smit (Xander) agrees,

“It was our chance to be the change we

want to see in the world and, thanks

to the Budden Initiative, we are making

a difference. We hope this will be the

start of something special and, over

time, transform students’ attitudes to

food waste.”

Andy and Mei Budden have been

delighted with the progress of the

composting programme and that their

initiative received such an enthusiastic

response from the students. Andy says,

“Mei and I are firm believers in the

UWCSEA mission, and we also love

the diversity in the College community.

Our aim with the Initiative is simply

to demonstrate what can be achieved

when a diverse group of students

comes together to share a common

purpose that can enrich the broader

UWCSEA community.”

Looking to the future, the group will be

spreading the word about their project

and building more planter boxes. Based

on the response they have received so far

and the connections they have made with

environmental Global Concern groups,

they are confident that composting will

be here to stay at Dover.

The Budden Initiative

Set up by Andy and Mei Budden, current

parents and long-time supporters of

UWCSEA, the Budden Initiative is a

programme that sponsors senior student-

led projects that put UWCSEA’s mission

and ethos into practice and make a

difference to the College and/or the wider

community.

Having received proposals that ranged

from addressing sanitation issues in a

slum in India and using art to connect

Singaporean and Malaysian communities,

to promoting children’s literacy issues

in Sri Lanka, the Buddens selected a

composting programme for the Dover

Campus as the first project to benefit

from their funding.

Put together by six Grade 11 students, the

idea to build a composting area within the

school grounds struck a chord with Andy

Budden. He explained, “We had some

OneºNorth June 2013 15

Physical upgrades

at Dover Campus

By Frazer Cairns

Head of Dover Campus

Dover has seen a considerable amount

of change over the past few years. If you

come on campus, the most noticeable

change that will greet you will be the new

Middle School block. This has provided

the campus with additional much-needed

classrooms as well as a multipurpose hall,

a purpose-built gymnastics gymnasium

and a base for the Middle School. The

humanities block has been refurbished

(discovering once more the arched

ceilings of the original design) and, since

December, work has also been going on

to refurbish the old mathematics block.

It is not always clear what you will find

when you strip out a building but, perhaps

in fitting with what was a British Army

school building, all fixtures and fittings

in the maths block seem to be from the

UK. In fact, the building was happily

using most of the original underlying

infrastructure—the electrical main

board and wiring, for example, were

manufactured using Bakelite in 1958 (and

still very compliant to modern code).

Perhaps most surprisingly, the two main

air conditioning units still running the

whole block were found to be made by a

company called Andrews Air-conditioning

in Stockport (a town in the north of

England), which went out of business in

1963. Until a few weeks ago, the units

were still running using their original parts

including the original belt driven motor!

The bricks in the building’s construction

are stamped with ‘Alexandra,’ which

shows that they were sourced locally

from the Alexandra brickworks in Pasir

Panjang. The brick works closed in the

early 1970s and became the current PSA

warehouse. However, when in operation,

the bricks were made from a combination

of Jurong clay and material extracted

from the hills of Pasir Panjang.

Update from

East Campus

By James Dalziel

Head of East Campus

Greetings from the UWCSEA East

Campus in Tampines. As many of you

may be aware, we have a current student

body of almost 2,000 students ranging

from Kindergarten through Grade 11.

In the 2013/2014 academic year, we

will be celebrating our first cohort of

160 graduates from our IB Diploma

programme. Over the following two

years, we will expand to full capacity

and see our student numbers grow

to over 2,500 students and over 300

teaching staff. As you well know, success

is not about numbers, it is about the

unique learning that goes on within the

UWCs and the long term impact that

has on our lives. While we are pleased

with the interest in our campus and

subsequent growth, we are most proud

of our East Campus community of

students, teachers and parents, and their

commitment to the mission and values

of the UWC movement.

Thank you to those of you who have

visited the campus for an event or just

dropped in to say hello and walk around.

Please know that you are always welcome.

An old security coordination room

was found behind the old college

shop, still with posters and emergency

contact numbers (and a few familiar

names) from the 1990s on the wall.

An old Head’s office door was found

upstairs leading to what was a computer

lab (though thankfully there was no sign

of an old Head).

We will be salvaging some of the bricks

and also the large slabs of hardwood that

made up the staircase railings and hopefully

we will find a way to incorporate them

back into the campus. The ‘fins’ on the

outside of the building are being retained

to try to keep a similar architectural look to

the building. Inside, however, will be very

different with interactive whiteboards in

each classroom and ‘operable walls’ that

will allow two classrooms to be joined

together into one multipurpose space for

exhibitions or lectures.

If you are interested in seeing the

improvements in action please do feel

free to contact us and we will arrange a

tour of the building.

16 OneºNorth June 2013

By Linda de Flavis

Mike Ogutu

UWCSEA 2006–2008

Class of 2008

Have you ever wondered whether

National Committee scholarships really

benefit the scholars’ communities?

Mike Ogutu is living proof of the

difference they can make. Now a Senior

Associate at a Boston-based financial

securities firm, Mike has travelled far

from his roots in rural Kenya. As a boy,

walking 14 kilometers each day to an

under-resourced school with poor results,

Mike longed for a better education. His

grades had qualified him for the best

government school in his district, but he

had to settle for the cheapest, at $125 a

year. “And even then, I was turned away

when I couldn’t pay—sometimes missing

weeks of school until my parents could

scrape together the money and I was

allowed to return.”

Despite the obstacles, Mike’s dreams

came true when he set a school record in

his national exams and won a scholarship

to UWCSEA that transformed his life.

He went on to study Economics at

Middlebury, an elite liberal arts college

in Vermont, thanks to the generosity of

Shelby Davis (the American philanthropist

whose UWC-Davis Scholars Program has

already sponsored more than 4,200 UWC

graduates at 94 US universities).

But the story of transformation is not

merely personal. Inspired by Shelby Davis’

principle of ‘Learn, earn and return,’

Mike, at 24, is a philanthropist in his own

right, launching the Ungana Scholarship

programme to enable impoverished

students from his district to attend

school. The fund currently supports

25 scholars, with a special commitment

to girls.

I caught up with Mike recently and asked

him about Ungana and his experiences

that led up to its founding:

How did Ungana begin?

It began informally in my first year at

Middlebury, as a way of giving back.

People in my community had been so

generous to me, chipping in the little they

had to help with school fees whenever

my parents ran out of money. From

UWCSEA onwards, the world opened up

to me and so many people believed in and

encouraged me. I went to university on

a full scholarship. I’m indebted to all the

people who helped me go through my

own education.

At Middlebury, I worked several campus

jobs to raise $250 so I could sponsor

two scholars. In my final year, buoyed

up by the stronger performances of

the students I’d sponsored, I decided to

help many more and let the world know

that there is great potential in students

from rural areas. They are smart, creative

and potential leaders in various fields.

They simply lack $125 to be in school

learning uninterruptedly.

I like being resourceful to people who

are less fortunate, and I believe that

the students I sponsor will be great one

day. It’s just a matter of giving them the

opportunity and they’ll be the leaders our

societies need. UWCSEA also developed

my innate desire to give back, through

service and Global Concerns. I’m a living

witness and testimony, having been a

beneficiary and now a benefactor, to how

small changes can change the world.

Tell us about your home

life prior to UWCSEA

I was born and raised in rural Kenya. I

relied on a small portable radio for news

and used to listen to the BBC—at least,

when I had batteries. Getting hold of daily

newspapers was not something I could

even imagine, so we had little exposure to

the world outside, even in school. We had

no electricity and relied on small lanterns

to do our homework at night. On days

when there was no paraffin, there was no

studying.

Why were your parents so supportive

of your educational goals?

My Dad is a Grade 5 drop out. I don’t

know my Mum’s level of education. She

dropped out even earlier and never talks

about it. As ‘failures,’ my parents always

wanted their children to get the best

education in Kenya. They did their very

best to make this possible. Mum got up

at 3am every morning to wake me and

make sure I studied before starting the

long morning walk. She also prepared

breakfast so I would have energy for the

long day and journey home.

From beneficiary to benefactor

OneºNorth June 2013 17

What were some of the challenges

you faced at your school in Kenya?

We lacked the resources that other

schools enjoyed—books, lab equipment,

even teachers. Learning was a struggle.

Some teachers were really good but

others would show up only 10 minutes

before the end of class. In my final year,

our Biology class had not even finished

the previous year’s syllabus. I took it as a

challenge and taught my fellow students

the concepts we needed to know.

How did you learn about

the UWC scholarships?

My friend heard about the scholarship

competition on the radio and encouraged

me to try it out. I had never heard of

UWCSEA or even Singapore back then. I

applied with my national exam results—

you needed at least an A- aggregate

grade—and was called for an interview.

I found myself competing with people

from high-performing national schools

that had exposure to such opportunities.

The competition was very stiff and, on

top of that, there were so many stressful

challenges involved in travelling to the

interview day, that I have never quite

stopped wondering how it turned out in

my favour!

I believe you also faced some

challenges in joining us at UWCSEA?

Yes, many challenges! When I boarded an

Emirates Airbus in Nairobi, the first flight

of my entire life, I didn’t even know where

Singapore was. I’d spent the previous

month going back and forth every two

days to try and collect my passport from

the Immigration Office in Kisumu. The

officers wanted a bribe but I don’t do

that, so I just kept showing up.

While I was still chasing a passport to fly

to Singapore, school had already started.

My family didn’t want me to go away so it

was a lone battle for me. Finally I went to

the Nairobi Immigration Office, and the

Kenya UWC chairperson contacted some

people there. I got my passport and flew

out the next day. By then it was three

weeks into the semester at UWCSEA.

Weren’t you tempted to give in

and bribe the immigration official?

After all, you were already three

weeks late for school …

I believe in personal integrity. I change

what’s bad and try the best I can to

prevent any escalation of a vice. No

matter the situation I am in, I choose to

not do bad to get to a better place.

What was it like flying for the first

time, alone, to a foreign country?

I didn’t enjoy it. I was tired. I just kept

telling myself whenever I get there,

I’ll be happy. I reached Changi around

9pm but there was nobody to meet me,

due to a communication glitch. I even

wondered if UWCSEA had written me off

by then! Since I had only $10 and a small

suitcase, I decided to stay at the airport

until 6am. In the morning I took a taxi to

Senior House. The first person I met was

a cleaner who lent me my cab fare and

called the boarding house director for me.

That cleaner’s kindness is one reason I

want to come back to Singapore!

She may not recognise you as the

shy boy she helped that day! Tell us

about your career—how does it help

you with your NGO work?

I’m in the Professional Development

Program at State Street Corporation.

I deal with figures, learn about the

regulations, investment opportunities

and market trends every day at work.

With this, I’ve learned to appreciate and

account for every penny that donors

or I contribute to the NGO. From the

knowledge I’ve gathered at work, I’ve

also learnt how to present our NGO

financials to our supporters and Board

of Advisors. It gives me ideas about

business opportunities we could one day

pursue as an NGO for its sustainability.

All this has ensured transparency and

easy management.

How much has your NGO grown?

We’ve already sponsored several very

smart, creative students, who possessed

leadership qualities but lacked funds.

Some are orphans. They’ve continued

to outperform other students, which we

attribute to being able to spend more

time in school studying. We just selected

23 more students for the 2013 academic

year. We work with local schools and have

volunteers in our Independent Committee

who vet applications and choose the

most deserving candidates.

“I’m a living witness and

testimony, having been

a beneficiary and now a

benefactor, to how small

changes can change the world.”

18 OneºNorth June 2013

What are the biggest

challenges you face?

Raising money is always a challenge,

and in most cases I have used personal

savings to fund the project. We hope to

overcome this challenge since we’re now

a registered legal entity and can appeal

for donations. Volunteers on the ground

can be a headache; things may not get

done on time. We have so far solved

this by incorporating the Independent

Committee, comprising mainly the

teachers, within the six schools we

sponsor. This committee mentors our

students in addition to selecting the

new scholars.

Which of your experiences helped

you to realise the practical and

visionary aspects of your NGO?

I learned management and networking

skills while I was student manager for the

calling programme at Middlebury. I also

drew on the expertise of people like Thea

and Anthony Skillicorn, Peter Dalgliesh,

Charles McCormick (President Emeritus

of Save the Children), and the Middlebury

Center of Social Entrepreneurs which

guides aspiring social entrepreneurs in

their quest.

My Initiative for Peace experience at

UWCSEA and my professional experience

at State Street helped shape my vision

in sustainability issues. I also believe in

empowering students and getting them

involved in the project so as to create

more opportunities for others. My team

and I are discussing potential business

opportunities that would make the

project self-sustaining in future.

What are your long-term

goals for Ungana?

We need to create more awareness.

Then many generous people can join

us in creating opportunities. We also

need funding for the immediate projects

(the scholarship programme, setting

up regional arms of the project). Our

target is to continue sponsoring at least

20 students every year and to add more

schools in rural areas. As our students

graduate from High School, we are under

pressure to help them continue their

education … so I am in touch with a

couple of learning institutions in the US,

and will be reaching out to others like the

African Leadership Academy, the Nobel

Foundation, etc.

Longer term, I want to expand this project

to cover all the rural areas in Kenya and

even reach out to students in other

African countries who need help. We

have the brains and great potential, but

if we don’t elicit these in the world, we

are probably doomed. I want to start a

student academy and make it a learning

hub for older people as well (such as

my parents, who wish they could speak

English). Some of the technical skills we

are looking into include masonry, nursing,

soft-skill engineering, social work, as

well as providing an environment where

international curricula (IB, IGCSE) could

be taught.

What advice would you

give a UWCSEA student

hoping to start an NGO?

If something in society is not done in the

way you think it should be, don’t wait.

Just assume that nobody will correct

the anomaly other than yourself, and

the sooner you start the better, as you’ll

learn a lot in the process and become

empowered. Be the change you want for

the world.

Thanks Mike, it’s inspiring to know

that we can all be philanthropists to

somebody somewhere, even if we haven’t

made our fortunes yet!

For more information, see

www.unganascholars.org

OneºNorth June 2013 19

By Louise Okatch

UWCSEA 2012–2014

Class of 2014

In many societies around the globe

there are a variety of passage rites that

children are expected to go through in

order to cement their new identities as

adults. These rites are often undertaken

roughly around the age of 16 and could be

anything from the removal of lower teeth

as is in my community, to the shooting

of game by sons to prove their manhood.

My Project Week experience served the

same purpose for me because I came out

with a renewed and reinforced sense of

awareness of the world around me and

consequently, my responsibilities to it.

Each of my group members was of a

different nationality, hence none of us

had the comfort of shared customs.

Neither did we visit our home countries,

hence the idea of comfort was not one

we anticipated right from the start.

We chose to participate in the Bayani

Challenge which is an annual building

challenge in the Philippines organised

by Gawad Kalinga. The idea that I even

attempted to mix cement or think of

myself as a builder is one people cannot

believe, because I generally tend to

stay away from activities that demand

physical involvement. That is what

made this experience so unique, it was

something I had never in my wildest

dreams thought I would do.

Each team that registered for the

challenge had to stay on site and was

tasked to finish a house by the end of

the week. Staying on site did not sound

quite as scary until we were faced with a

half finished house and no beds to sleep

in; just the cold floor and bare walls for

comfort. However, it is sobering to be

in such an environment because it is

someone else’s existence each and every

day, and they do not have the luxury to

run back to the warmth of a boarding

house. I believe it resonated even

more strongly for me because for the

first time since I came from Kenya,

I felt a sense of home in the environment

around me. There was a certain

inexplicable warmth that flooded my

heart, with the willingness of a people

to rise above their current circumstance

and strive for a better future; an attribute

that could be traced in their smiles and

felt in their hugs.

The community rallied around us in such

a special way that many times it forced

us to rethink our definition of poverty.

Their inability to furnish our stay with

fancy meals did not matter one bit. One

of the media crew that interviewed us as

we worked, later stopped by our ‘house’

bearing a parcel of pandesal, a local

bread. That is what made the Filipinos

so special to me—the readiness to give

and the gratitude that someone else

had given their time to come to partner

with them. As we laid the bricks that

week, it was not just bricks we laid. The

bricks embodied the trust, patience and

perseverance of a people with hope for

the future.

The trip forced me to search deep within

and finally call myself an adult, not

because of age but because of the change

in my heart.

I thank UWCSEA immensely for the

platform to do such fulfilling projects

that have rightfully so changed my point

of view.

I feel these words embody my experience

as a whole and I believe that of my group

as well:

Coming of age

A UWCSEA Project

Week experience

SOMEDAY

Someday on this side of heaven

the rainbow will stay one minute

longer to keep the next storm even

further away,

Someday whence my heart will beat

twice, once for me to survive and

twice for me to ensure someone

else’s survival,

Someday I will not long to be fire

proof but to be the firefighter so

that my fulfilment will not be

from staying safe from the fire

but from pulling out one last soul

that needs saving,

Someday I’ll have two palms more to

find my handkerchief, lend it to the

widow and wipe my own tears for the

sorrow of one denied the love of a

father by too untimely a death,

Someday I look up and see an

abundance of stars because it will

be a sign that even nature thinks the

future is one of promise and hope,

Someday I’ll look inward, search

my heart and find that I had all these

all along.

20 OneºNorth June 2013

Reading Rocks

The annual Book Week events on our

campuses celebrate reading through

fun and educational activities. This

year’s Book Week brought the entire

community together in new ways

as parents and older students were

involved in sharing the joy of reading

and celebrating their mother languages.

G2 trip to zoo

The Outdoor Education programme

is a powerful part of the UWCSEA

educational experience. The Grade 2

overnight trip to the zoo reflects a

progression in the programme, moving

students from the classroom to a new

location.

Events and activities at UWCSEA

This is just a sample of some of the activities and events taking place at UWCSEA during the year. Thanks to Hector, Devora and

Rose, Grade 11 students and members of the Alumni Council, for pulling out some of the highlights from the College calendar.

By Hector Poveda Morales,

Devora Khafi and Rose Benjamin

Middle School masterpieces

The visual art programme in Middle

School seeks to develop students’

abilities both practically and

aesthetically. These projects that

combine art history, theory and

practice are producing remarkable

works and provide skills and techniques

in the creation of art.

SEASAC Arts Convention

In February, 17 UWCSEA East

students attended the 2013 SEASAC

Arts Convention at the Canadian

International School of Hong Kong.

Students participated in workshop

sessions facilitated by teaching

professionals in the arts including

music, drama, dance and visual arts.

Opus 2013

The annual Opus concert at the

Esplanade Concert Hall involved

months of practice and planning

in order to provide an unparalleled

opportunity for students to perform in

a world class venue. This year’s Opus

saw many students on stage not for the

first time but for the third, fourth and

even fifth time.

Professional development

fosters cross-campus

collaboration

East Campus hosted the first

UWCSEA cross-campus teacher

professional development day,

8 February. Both campuses were

closed to students. Discussions covered

current initiatives such as iLearn and

the K-12 learning programme.

Game changers

Minecraft is a combination of

frustration, excitement and pure

adrenaline. Through games, students

explore and refine problem-solving and

decision-making skills through logical

thinking, sequencing and strategy-

making. Minecraft promotes critical

thinking, problem solving, creation

and innovation.