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Selfless domestic helper cleaning up your trail trash turns hobby into competition for Adventure Clean-up Challenge

Updated: Aug 2

Nuriatul Mu’alifah spends her Sundays on the trails and to the surprise of other hikers and friends she brings a pickup stick to fill bin bags with rubbish.


The Adventure Clean-up Challenge pits groups against each other, all assigned an area of Hong Kong and judged on their clean-up and educational efforts.


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Nuriatul Mu’alifah loves to hike in Hong Kong, but she says it is not enough to just enjoy the trails without looking after them. She spends many of her Sundays with a pickup stick and rubbish bin bag in hand, clearing up the trails.


“People are used to dropping rubbish. When I go hiking, and I collect the trash, I wonder ‘why do you do this?’” said Mu’alifah, adding that masks are prolific trash at the moment. “Never mind, because you drop it, and I’ll pick it up. They just don’t think and keep going. It is just a small thing for Hong Kong, because I’ve lived here for 20 years and it’s already my second home.”


Mu’alifah, who is from Indonesia and works as a domestic helper, sometimes encourages her friends to come with her. They are surprised to see she has brought a bin bag and is getting them to clean-up too. Other friends are first-time hikers and Mu’alifah is happy to be an inspiration for them to take up exercise.


“It’s addictive,” she said. “They are asking me, ‘when are we going, when are we going?’ Or they always ask me about new places.


The Adventure Clean-Up Challenge sees teams dedicated to specific areas. The winner is judged on a number of criteria, including the amount of trash, innovative ways they clean-up and educating people about issues of pollution. Photo: Daniel Murray
The Adventure Clean-Up Challenge sees teams dedicated to specific areas. The winner is judged on a number of criteria, including the amount of trash, innovative ways they clean-up and educating people about issues of pollution. Photo: Daniel Murray

“I’m always doing positive activities, like hiking, yoga, swimming,” Mu’alifah said. “When I collect the trash, people say ‘wow, you do this when hiking?’ People expect to see domestic helpers sitting in the park, or dancing. It’s also positive, but it’s very crowded and I hide from the crowded spaces.”


Mu’alifah is now turning her hobby to a competition. She and eight other domestic helpers are teaming up for the Adventure Clean-up Challenge. From April 24 to May 10, teams of outdoor enthusiasts will compete against the clock to see which team can create the greatest impact on-site, and in their communities by educating others about pollution.


Nuriatul Mu’alifah wants to show if she can clean up the trails, so can you. Photo: Handout
Nuriatul Mu’alifah wants to show if she can clean up the trails, so can you. Photo: Handout

They will be responsible for choosing a specific location and determining the best ways of collecting and properly disposing of the trash. Mu’alifah and her team have picked trails around Wong Nai Chung Gap Road.


Teams will also need to run community engagement and educational activities to inspire others to take sustained action.


Mu’alifah and her team face unique challenges, including only having Sundays free to dedicate to the task as domestic helpers are only given one day off a week. Also, many on the team are in the middle of Ramadan, making strenuous hikes even harder than normal.

The team, most of whom met through Splash, a charity that teaches domestic helpers to swim, want to set an example.


“For my friends, I speak out. When you hike, keep Hong Kong clean. If I can do these things, you can do them,” Mu’alifah said.


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