¡°If I hadn¡¯t gotten the Colombo Plan scholarship, I wouldn¡¯t have completed university,¡± says Tan Sri Datuk Siew Nam Oh from his home in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.
¡°The British colonial government came out with a bursary proposal for studying at the University of Malaya in Singapore.¡± While there, he covered all his expenses until the bursary was dispensed.?
It was 1957, the year of Malaysia¡¯s independence. Because Tan Sri Oh was Chinese Malaysian and not Malay, he lost his bursary due to the new government¡¯s change in policy.
¡°I was stuck in Singapore with no income and no resources,¡± he recalls. ¡°I thought I would have to leave if I didn¡¯t get a scholarship. I would¡¯ve had to give up.¡±
To make ends meet, he began walking to university to save the bus fare and gave haircuts to other students at his hostel for 90c each.? ¡°At that time, all the hairdressers were Indian. I was the only Chinese,¡± he says. ¡°I¡¯d get one or two cuts a day. People took pity on me and gave me a dollar and told me to keep the change.¡±
Despite these efforts, he was eating into his savings, as he also needed to support his family after his father¡¯s death.
Then he saw the Colombo Plan scholarship advertised in the newspaper. ¡°And,¡± he says, ¡°it changed everything.¡±
While in Christchurch, Tan Sri Oh discovered many of UC¡¯s Malaysian students weren¡¯t receiving scholarships but were instead being funded by their families.