Paws & Pastries: A Tea of Hope — How QIUstudents turned a high tea into a show of compassionfor Ipoh’s strays

by Daniel Fadzlan Abdullah

On a gentle Saturday afternoon at D’Pets Kingdom in Greentown, Quest International University students transformed a cosy high-tea pop-up into a community moment that blended pastry, pets and purpose.

The event, Paws & Pastries: A Tea of Hope, drew local animal lovers, families and volunteers to raise awareness and support for rescued animals from Ipoh’s Papan dumpsite, turning a social gathering into practical help for a community in need of solutions to Malaysia’s burgeoning stray animal crisis.

From setup to send-off, the hallmarks of the event were collaboration and pure grit. QIU student groups from the event management, public issues and campaign subjects handled logistics, promotions and on-site coordination, working alongside PapanSouls volunteers and staff from the venue to create an experience that was both intimate and effective. Students managed ticketing, coordinated door gifts and organised a lucky draw; behind the scenes, they also raised and channelled merchandise proceeds to support neutering
and ongoing care for the rescued animals.

The visible teamwork was confidently demonstrated by students guiding attendees, volunteers handling animals gently, and local vendors contributing samples, giving the afternoon a quietly professional air and a clear sense of mission and direction.

Organisers credited a combination of grassroots efforts and institutional support for enabling the event to achieve its aims. The result was a well-staged community fundraiser that balanced awareness with tangible outcomes: merchandise sales and donations directed to PapanSouls’ neutering campaigns and day-to-day care. The partnership between students, civil society and sympathetic public figures made the event feel like a small but tangible form of civic action towards a greater good.


The event’s central message of supporting humane, sustainable population control for stray animals aligns with a growing body of local and international evidence supporting Trap-Neuter-Return (TNR) programmes. Academic reviews and animal welfare organisations point to TNR’s role in reducing the population of stray animals, improving welfare, and lowering conflict between people and animals when combined with community education.

By directing funds to neutering campaigns and the long-term sustainable care of stray animals, organisers anchored a feel-good afternoon to a practice proven to produce long-term benefits for animals and communities alike.

Beyond immediate fundraising, Paws & Pastries: A Tea of Hope served a broader cultural purpose: to strengthen ties between campus and community and provide students with applied experience in event planning, media outreach and stakeholder collaboration. For many student volunteers, the event offered a first-hand lesson in civic organising—an invaluable experience for future leaders—through negotiating vendor partnerships, communicating with partner NGOs and creating messaging that emphasised compassion
rather than spectacle.

Local coverage and social media highlights helped amplify the message, with posts from organisers and supporters notably spreading images of relaxed animals, beautifully dressed pets, and a steady rhythm of conversation on the importance of caring for strays that underlined the event’s human scale.

Organisers say this is only the beginning. With the initial success and community interest, students and NGO partners are already discussing follow-up initiatives, including neutering drives, targeted educational outreach in neighbourhoods built around the dumpsite, and regular volunteer days to support ongoing rescue work.


Taken in its entirety, Paws & Pastries: A Tea of Hope was more than a fundraiser; it was an exercise in civic empathy and practical problem-solving. By combining a light, welcoming format with a focused conservation objective, QIU students demonstrated how small, well-run events can create meaningful momentum — not only for the animals that need care today but also for the communities affected and the people committed towards creating a better tomorrow.

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