Budak Sekolah Tunjuk Burit Apr 2026

They stopped at the junction where they parted ways – Li Qin turning left towards the rows of terrace houses, Aina turning right towards the flat where her family lived on the fourth floor. No lift. Her calves would burn by the time she reached the door.

Aina binti Mohamad, sixteen years old, sat cross-legged on the cool floor of the school's surau. Beside her, her best friend, Li Qin, was struggling to tie her tudung straight. Aina reached over and fixed the pin gently. Budak Sekolah Tunjuk Burit

Aina walked home with Li Qin. The rain had stopped. The sun was fierce now, drying the pavement in patches. They passed the mosque, the Chinese temple, the little Hindu shrine tucked between two shoplots. A familiar sound drifted from an open window – someone practicing the piano. Chopin. Aina recognized it from her own piano lessons, which she had quit three years ago because there was no time. They stopped at the junction where they parted

"See you. Don't forget – Add Maths tuition." Aina binti Mohamad, sixteen years old, sat cross-legged

"You'd burn water."

This, Aina thought, was the real syllabus. Not the textbooks, not the endless past-year SBP papers. It was learning to share a bench with someone who prayed differently, ate differently, spoke differently at home. It was learning that the boy who struggled in Bahasa Malaysia was a genius at badminton. It was learning that the girl who never spoke in English class could write poetry that made you cry.

"I don't know," Aina said finally. "I just want to finish this year first."