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By Akshita Nanda
FROM 5am to 8pm most days, Mr Govindarajan Elangovan, 36, whips up pratas and curries at his food stall. Sundays though are for poetry.
That is when his stall in Bukit Batok Crescent is closed and he can write.
It is hard going, but the father of two's perseverance has paid off. He won second prize for Tamil poetry at the Singapore Press Holdings-National Arts Council Golden Point Award competition.
Twenty-three authors from all walks of life were feted at a ceremony at The Arts House Friday for their winning entries in the biennial writing contest.
Selected from 453 competitors, they included teachers, professionals and a polytechnic student, who at 17 was the youngest-ever winner since the award's inception in 1993.
Of the seven first prize winners, two are immigrants, now permanent residents here. Ms Perinbam Vasudevan, 35, from India, took the honours for the Tamil short story category, while Mr Li Qingsong, 32, from China, won the top award for Chinese prose.
Guest-of-honour at the event, Mr Zaqy Mohamad, a Member of Parliament for Hong Kah GRC, applauded the authors while noting that literature and literacy are under attack from new methods of communication such as text messaging.
'We have to advocate to our young that they speak proper English,' he said.
The Golden Point Award is co-organised by the arts council and The Arts House, and sponsored by SPH and the SPH Foundation. It is the only national writing competition with prizes for all four official languages - Chinese, English, Malay and Tamil.
Prizes are awarded for two categories in each language: prose and poetry. First-prize winners get $4,000 cash and a $6,000 enrichment grant that can be used to attend writing workshops. Those who come in second get $3,000 cash, and there is also a $2,000 third prize.
The top award for Malay poetry went to Muhammad Khairool Haque Abdul Kadir, 17, the youngest prize winner. The Ngee Ann Polytechnic student started writing two years ago. Like others who took first prizes this year, recognition from local newspapers encouraged him to keep writing. His poems have appeared in Berita Harian since 2007.
Similarly, Chinese teacher Chow Teck Seng, 35, who won first prize for Chinese poetry, has seen his poems printed in Lianhe Zaobao. The Chinese newspaper's literature section 'has nurtured a lot of Chinese writers', he said.
No first prize was awarded this year for the category of Tamil poetry, on the recommendation of the judges. Mr K.T.M. Iqbal, a veteran poet on the judging panel, said writers have not yet reached the expected standard. 'It may take some time, as in any field,' he said.
However, second prize was honour enough for Mr Elangovan. The engineering diploma holder from Tamil Nadu came to Singapore in 1999 to work for a mattress firm. Now a permanent resident here, he left the firm after 7-1/2 years to start an Indian food stall in the hopes that it would help him open a restaurant.
Most of his poems are on current affairs, but his winning entry was an ode to the dawn, which he sent in after gaining his wife's approval. 'She is always the first to comment and if she's okay with it, then I think it's okay,' he said.
Mr Elangovan hopes to publish a book of his poems. The award has given him hope. 'It encourages me to prove myself further,' he said.
Winners of SPH-NAC Golden Point Award
SHORT STORY
Chinese category
First: Li Qingsong
Second: Ang Li Wei
Third: Wang Zhenye
English category
First: Jeremy Jeyam Samuel
Second: Lee Yew Leong
Third: Ho Lin Lee
Malay category
First: Yazid Hussein
Second: Muhammad Jailani Abu Taib
Third: Roslie Buang Sidik
Tamil category
First: Perinbam Vasudevan
Second: Ismail Meera Syed Sulaiman
Third: Subramaniam Arjunan
POEM
Chinese category
First: Chow Teck Seng
Second: Lee Yit Seong
Third: Lee Chee Keng
English category
First: Eric Low Soon Liang
Second: Koh Xin Tian
Third: Liew Wai Yee Janet
Malay category
First: Muhammad Khairool Haque Abdul Kadir
Second: Hamed Ismail
Third: Muhamad Rafi Abu Bakar
Tamil category
No first prize awarded
Second: Govindarajan Elangovan
Third: Rajendran Neethipandi
This article was first published in The Straits Times.
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