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Saturday, January 22, 2022

Ultra Lebai's should read this, where divine and human love-compassion cross religious boundaries



For Malay mother of Thaipusam baby, a ‘thundu’ of thanksgiving


Lidawati Zakaria and Ismaidi with their baby girl who was born with the help of Thaipusam devotees outside Batu Caves.


KLANG: Folded neatly in Lidawati Zakaria’s room is a ‘thundu’ (towel) that has been with her for only five days, but is now something she cannot imagine parting with.

The once blood-stained white and gold garment is a beautiful reminder of the strangers who helped her deliver her daughter five days ago in the back of her husband, Ismaidi’s pickup truck outside Batu Caves.

On Tuesday, Lidawati, 39, gave birth with the help of a few Thaipusam devotees, including Marie Puspan and her daughter Naroshini Annaselam, who used their garments to cover the windows of Ismaidi’s truck, protecting mother and child from the searing heat.

The account of the incident went viral, with social media users saying the devotees’ actions were reflective of the harmony and unity among Malaysia’s diverse people.


Marie Puspan (right) and her daughter Naroshini Annaselam helped Lidawati Zakaria after she went into labour in the car.


“I am holding on to the thundu used by the aunty and her daughter to help me deliver my baby,” Lidawati told FMT, saying she would never forget what happened that morning.

Lidawati and Ismaidi were on their way to a hospital in Gombak when she went into labour.

“My husband was panicking and driving fast. According to Waze, it would take us just five minutes to reach the hospital but the roads were so jammed that my husband had to stop the car (just outside the Sri Subramaniar Temple in Batu Caves).

“Then an Indian aunty and another lady knocked on our car window to ask if I was okay. I told them I was delivering a baby and they asked me to open the door. I did not want to disrupt their celebrations but they insisted and helped me deliver my baby,” she said.


Some of the devotees covering the windows of the pickup truck with a cloth to block out the searing heat. (LK Savantharaja pic)


Lidawati said she was touched that the ladies used their own garments to cover her, getting the items bloodied in the process.

“At that moment, I did not feel that we were of different faiths. They were happy after the baby was delivered. I was speechless.”


This is the once blood-stained white and gold garment, the ‘thundu’, which the couple is keeping as a beautiful reminder of the strangers who helped her deliver her baby.


Ismaidi said he was thankful to everyone who helped him and his wife. He said he was touched by the devotees’ selflessness.

“This is our first daughter and her birth in our car was unexpected,” he said, adding the couple have yet to decide on a name for their five-day-old baby.


1 comment:

  1. What a heart warming story...but then some arsehole will preach that it was sinful for the muslim couple to use the thundu in the delivery of the baby.

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