The Picha Project is a local social enterprise that serves up foreign, usually middle-eastern delicacies to local offices, all cooked by refugees fleeing war-torn countries.
Since refugees have limited (read: close to zero) employment opportunities once they reach Malaysia, Suzanne, along with her co-founders and fellow UCSI students Kim and Swee Lin, began the project in January 2016 to do something to help.
The three co-founders work on Picha Project full-time (assisted by a ever-changing roster of interns), and are actively looking for more full-timers to come on board.
Suzanne completed her studies at UCSI University in June last year, but only got the opportunity to attend the ceremony recently.
There, the 24-year-old was presented with the Chancellor’s Gold Medal Award, and gave a speech with a message that resonates deeply with us.
At the speech commemorating the attendees’ education and degrees, Suzanne also posed a question: how they’re going to actually make that qualification mean something.
We asked Suzanne if there is anything that she’d change from this whole journey, from balancing her studies and starting up a social enterprise.
“I think for me it is to dream bigger and be more bold to take risks. Throughout my time in uni I’ve been the type who always likes to play safe, setting goals that I know I can achieve.”
“But after I completed uni, I realised that I haven’t taken many risks and haven’t failed enough. It was Kim who was the risk taker, who kept pushing my boundaries and made me realise that we should be bold to take risks, and it’s ok to fail,” said Suzanne.
“Our journey in Picha has many failures but I’ve learnt to embrace it, get up and move on. And I wished I have done that when I was in uni.”
– Suzanne Ling
We really think that her speech is worth a read, and you can find it below:
“Dear graduates of 2017, congratulations for making it to this day, where we officially graduate from UCSI University. I believe that all of us have our special ones here who contributed to where we are today – our parents, lecturers, mentors, course mates, friends, and so on.
On behalf of all graduates of year 2017, I thank all of you for being part of our lives and making us who we are today.
To my parents, thank you for being ever-so-supportive and understanding towards everything that I do. Thank you for cleaning up my messy room and doing my laundry while I was busy rushing assignments, handling events and studying for exams.
To my lecturers, thank you for your guidance and your patience when I kept bugging you all with endless questions. To the university, thank you for the scholarship and for being a platform that I can develop myself and realise my own potential.
And to Ms Shannen, the head of UCSI Trust, thanks for the trust that you have in me, providing me with so many opportunities in U-Schos to grow and learn throughout my years in UCSI.
To my Psychology course mates, U-Schos teammates and Hands of Hope partners, thanks for the wonderful time hustling and working hard together. And most importantly, I would like to thank God and give all glory to Him.
For the past five years in UCSI, I believe that many of us share similar memories from our university life—those sleepless nights rushing for assignment deadlines (or partying hard for some of us), the frustration of doing referencing and avoiding plagiarism, the tears of having our hearts broken, the worries thinking about grades or ECA submission deadline, the hard work we put in survive each semester completing assignments and swallowing notes.
Today, as we hold this scroll in our hand, we can all say that we have conquered all the challenges that the university life has thrown to us, and we have made it to another phase of life.
Upon the completion of my studies last year, I started working full-time on my social enterprise with my two amazing business partners who are also UCSI students, Kim and Swee Lin.
We run a food delivery and catering business where all our cooks are refugees in Malaysia who have fled their war-torn countries. Around the world, there are more than 65 million refugees—which is the highest number since World War 2.
In Malaysia alone, there are 150,000 registered refugees who are highly deprived of basic rights. Refugees in Malaysia have to rent a place to stay because there are no refugee camps available, but at the same time, they are not allowed to work, their children cannot go to school, and they have limited access to healthcare.
Throughout the past year, we worked with refugees from Syria, Afghanistan, Palestine, Iraq and Myanmar, and they became our family.
From their stories, we learned about their daily struggle back in their countries—surviving explosions, seeing dead bodies everywhere, walking through the jungle for days, getting beaten up for building schools, being shot while walking on the street, and losing their loved ones to the war.
Hearing what they have gone through—it made me realise that whatever “struggles” that I have in life is nothing compared to theirs. I thought that I was strong to “survive” university life and I’ve overcome challenges to be where I am today—I was so so so so wrong.
You see, my friends, we share the same world with people whose eye bags are not caused by sleepless nights rushing assignments, but sleepless nights fearing when the next bomb is going to hit; where tears are not caused by a bad breakup, but seeing children dying in front of their eyes; where worries are not caused by bad grades, but whether they can live through another day; where the phrase “I survived ” is not used when the semester ends, but when explosions and shootings happen, and they survived.
These are not people living in another world. They are sharing the same earth as us. They are young adults like us, sons and daughters of loving parents, they are people with hopes and dreams, but what makes us different from them?
Have you done something right that earned yourself a spot to be born in this safe country, to receive education and have a roof over your head? The truth is, we have not.
Have they done something wrong to deserve a spot to be born in a war-torn country, to have their families taken away from them and deprived their basic rights daily? Similarly, they have not too.
The scroll you’re having in your hand right now is the dream of millions of mothers around the world for their children.
This is a gift that life has given to you. Yes, you worked hard for this, and I applaud you for that—but do you know that there are people out there working 100 times harder than you, but will never get to the place you’re in right now?
If we are able to receive education, why can’t we do a little something for those who can’t?
If we have a safe home, why can’t we do something for those who don’t?
If we can get water and electricity with no hassle, why can’t we help those who have never seen a running tap to get clean water?
If we can choose what to eat and what not to eat, why can’t we help those who starve daily to have a decent meal?
If we have so much, why can’t we do what we can to help those who have so little?
At this very important event, I would like to share with you an important story of a person who is very close to my heart.
His name is Zaza, and he’s a Syrian chef who joined The Picha Project a year ago. Zaza was an extremely hardworking man. Ever since he joined Picha, he would give his ALL to ensure that we serve our clients the best food ever.
He would also give us suggestions and ideas to grow the business and reach out to more refugee families. Last Christmas, we had an open house at his place, and he did not sleep for two nights just to prepare dinner because he said he wanted to make us proud. He loved us selflessly and was willing to do everything he could to grow Picha together.
Zaza loved us dearly, and we loved him very much too. With his amazing attitude and good food, he became the bestseller in Picha and he started settling down.
Zaza didn’t just give us great food, he also taught us great lessons too. He showed us how much he could give even when he had so little. Every time when there was an order, he would always cook extra to give it to the driver, the cleaners and the security guards.
When he had no money, he would still host homeless refugees at his house, and borrow money to buy them food. When we made mistakes in the orders, he would always find a solution and calm us down. He truly showed us the spirit of loving and giving, even when he had nothing.
Unfortunately, there is always a twist in life. In February this year, Zaza fell ill and got admitted to the hospital. 3 months later in May, we lost him. Losing him was extremely painful not just to his family, but to the Picha family. We didn’t just lose a chef, we lost a friend whom we loved dearly.
Two weeks before Zaza passed away, the doctor said that he was recovering and could be discharged soon. I was visiting him at the hospital one day and he said that he wanted to cook Mandi Rice and give it out for free to people around the mosque during the Ramadan period.
He also specifically mentioned that he wanted to do this under the name of Picha but not his own name. In my head I thought, gosh, even on his hospital bed, this man was thinking about others.
If someone like Zaza—who went through war in Syria, almost lost his son, got cheated, became homeless, suffered from poverty and ended up in the hospital when life seems to be going well—if someone like Zaza can do something for others when he didn’t have much, I believe that we can do so too.
As you leave this hall, my challenge to you today is this, how can you be YOU and make a change in this world?
How can you—with your knowledge in Business—build businesses that can create social change?
How can you—with your skills in IT—create technology that can end poverty?
How can you—with your experiences in pharmaceutical sciences—provide affordable medication and healthcare to those below the poverty line?
How can you—with the knowledge and skills gained help to make the world a better a place for everyone using creative forces like photography and poetry?
As hospitality and tourism professionals, can you change or improve existing practices and way of doing things to ensure the environment and society is taken care of as well?
Using your design skills and talent, can you find creative solutions for some of the global challenges we face today?
How can you—with your knowledge and skills in engineering and architecture—build things that matter and things that change lives?
How can you—with your skills and knowledge in music—play music that break boundaries and bring communities together?
Dear parents, how can you empower your child to make a change?
I understand that parents always think, “how can you take care of others when you can’t take care of yourself?”, “how can you earn a good living if you’re doing social work?”
Trust me, my parents reacted the same way when I told him that I want to work with refugees, but please rest assured that it’s possible to take care of ourselves while we take care of others too.
For your information, I’m drawing a decent salary from this refugee work too. We CAN make an impact in sustainable ways too.
Dear university lecturers, professors and faculty members, how can we go a step ahead, producing competent employees who are also world change makers?
How can we look beyond grades, assignments and presentations, and start looking at solving real-world problems?
Ultimately, the question is, how can we come together, do our part, and make a change in the world?
Let’s face it, there are terrible things happening in this world, and it’s not easy to turn things around.
But if three UCSI students can make such impact towards the refugee community within a year, imagine the power that we have, and the magic that we can make if all of us, the whole class of 2017, parents and university come together and start doing something for those around us.
If we just do a little more, care a little more for our family, our community and the others around us whom we share this space with, the world can be a much better place.
The world might seem to be spiraling downwards, but together, we can make it spiral upwards.
Once again, congratulations to all graduates! With this scroll, may we all start defining success not by the jobs we can get with this degree, but by the impact we have on others, and how many lives we can touch with the knowledge and skills that this degree has provided us.
Thank you.”
You can find the original copy of her speech here.
Feature Image Credit: The Picha Project