Wah knn, I think Jo Teo's emotional outburst also lose to this guy. He should be given Oscar. I wonder who wrote the script for him to come out such a tokong narrative about his son telling him the exact spot of where he grew up, and so happened all the reporters are there to witness the full kneeling spectacle, LOL.
https://www.asiaone.com/singapore/e...od-home-ng-kok-song-kowtows-and-kisses-ground
Presidential candidate Ng Kok Song was visibly emotional as he visited the site of the village where he grew up in Hougang.
PHOTO: AsiaOne
Presidential candidate Ng Kok Song was visibly emotional as he arrived at Block 475A Upper Serangoon Crescent today - the former site of the village where he was born in.
Earlier on Tuesday (Aug 22) morning,
he was nominated as a candidate for the upcoming Presidential Election, alongside former Senior Minister Tharman Shanmugaratnam and former NTUC chief executive officer Tan Kin Lian.
Upon reaching the void deck, the emotional Ng knelt to the ground and kissed the floor.
Sharing with reporters why that void deck was the "first place" that he came to after being nominated as a presidential candidate, Ng said: "My son told me just now that this is the exact spot where I lived with my five brothers and five sisters, in a hut with an attap roof... with no modern sanitation.
Ng, who is the second eldest in his family, went on: "My older brother and I had to go to the public water tap to carry home pails of water; that's why just now I was filled with emotion. I knelt down to kiss the ground where I was born and where I grew up."
Identifying himself as a "Kangkar person", Ng shared that as a boy, his mother used to tell him to be a "good person", and to "try to do good work".
"This area of Upper Serangoon is where I had the fortune of learning to be a good boy, and to be a good man." He also credited his education at Monfort School, where he studied for 13 years, for enabling him to break out of poverty.
Kangkar village was
formerly located at the end of Upper Serangoon Road, near the mouth of Serangoon River. The village was given its name by the Teochews, which means "river bank".
The former GIC investment chief officer then went on to share an anecdote from his childhood involving his mother.
Ng, said his mother went to their neighbours to borrow money to pay for his school books when he was 12.
"She came home with tears in her eyes and said, 'Kok Song, the neighbours have got no more money to lend us.' So she cried, and I felt very sad," recounted a teary Ng.
"That was the moment I resolved [to not make] my mother cry again. So I studied hard; I behaved myself. I worked hard and as a result I was able to lift my family out of poverty."
"My dream now is to see my mother cry again, not because of sadness but because of joy - because her son is standing to be the president of Singapore."
When asked by AsiaOne about the one thing he could say to his mother, Ng replied: "Thank you mum, you are my hero. You are my hero because you brought me up together with my five brothers and sisters single-handedly. Mum, you are the hero of my life."
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