
Bilkuin, Shima and Didi are three youths living on Omadal Island, situated off the coast of Sabah in Borneo, where a majority of the population consists of the stateless Bajau Laut (Sea Gypsies). After joining and excelling in a filmmaking workshop, they are selected to be junior directors or apprentices to be mentored by a professional film crew. 'Jom Kita Ke Laut' tells the specific story of their three lives as they try to document it on their own, which eventually gives us a view of how life is on the island for the Bajau Laut and the challenges they face by being stateless in their own land and not having access to basic human rights like education and healthcare.

The Grass is Greener on the Other Side

Surviving Beijing

Eco-Traveler Safari of Sarawak

Voices of Muslim Women from the US South

The Writer Who Hated the Swedish Language

Jordan River Anderson, The Messenger

Don't You Worry, It Will Probably Pass

Don't Look Away

Planet Food: Malaysia

Perhaps one day

M for Malaysia

The Skinny

Who's Afraid of Kathy Acker?

Yirrkala: Conversations with Dundiwuy Wanambi

Where are the African Gods?

We

Aka Dan

CodeSwitching

Slay the Gender

Little Girl