Page 52 - Stories from our Grandparents
P. 52

Mr Johnny Fung                  BORN 1943
                                                                                                    am originally from Singapore
       By Rebecca Louise Yong                                                                    I
                                                                                                    and used to stay in Geylang
       Paya Lebar Methodist Girls’ School
                                                                                                    Serai. In 1977, I moved
                             I                                                                    One of the most memorable
                                                                                                    to Bedok.
                                 was born in Singapore in 1943 during the Japanese
                                 Occupation. My parents were servants, and I grew
                                 up in the servants’ rooms of their employer’s house,
                                                                                                  experiences during my childhood
                                 surviving the Japanese Occupation with barely
                               sufficient amounts of food and water drawn from a                  days was the encounter with a flood
                               well. The bedrooms of the servants’ rooms had no                   during Hari Raya in the 1960s.
                               flooring, and I remember sleeping on the bare floor, dirt          I happily swam in the water
                               staining my clothes and shivers running up my spine.               with my siblings and friends.

                I started school when I was 9 years old at Sembawang School and                   Despite the difficulties we faced    Telecommunications Officer. Then,
                then went on to study at Raffles Institution, playing rugby, hockey               that year, we were still able to     there was a van that took my
                and soccer for the country. During those early years of pre-                      celebrate Hari Raya with my family   colleagues and me to the field.
                independence, the prominent languages were English and Chinese,                   members after the flood cleared.     There, we dug the ground to put
                and seeing people defecating on the streets due to the lack of                                                         up the pole and run the wire. Part
                proper sanitation was not an uncommon sight.                                      I remember the lack of public        of our responsibilities also included
                                                                                                  transportation in the early years    repairing the phones.
            I distinctly remember the term “night soil” being used as a                           of independence for Singapore.
            euphemism for the method of human waste disposal at that                              I came from a poor family. My        These days, I think that Singapore
            time, which was collecting excrement in buckets.                                      siblings and I had to walk two to    is too crowded because the
                                                                                                                                       highways are always full of cars
                                                                                                  three miles to school every day.
                    Post-war Singapore was constantly changing around me. I                       Our mother would give us ten         and the shopping centres are
                     transitioned from being a British citizen to a Malaysian citizen             cents per day or no money would      packed with people. I also miss the
                        when I moved to Kuala Lumpur in 1965 for work, taking on jobs             be given when the family was on a    warmth and friendliness between
                        as a clerk, typist and an insurance assistant to provide support          tighter budget. I had to drink the   neighbours. People are always
                        for my family. I earned about $300 monthly, sending most                  public tap water on the days when    too busy these days. My hope for
                        of it home to my mother in Singapore and using the rest to                I was not given a daily allowance.   the future generation is that they
                        pay my rent. In that year, Singapore separated from Malaysia              My current occupation is a           contribute meaningfully to make
                        and became an independent state and I moved back home,                    Taxi Driver. I used to work as a     this world a better place.
                        becoming a Singaporean citizen.
            Nowadays, Singapore is so much more different compared to the 1950s, the
            drastic change evident in Singaporeans’ modern way of living. In a multicultural
            society where technology is ever-evolving, I have one piece of advice for the
                                                                                                                                              Mr Sulaiman Bin Sarip           BORN 1952
            next generation of Singaporeans: always be prepared for change.
                                                                                                                                               By Nur Riqqah Aqilah Binte Muhammad Noh
           52    Grandpa Stories
                                                                                                                                               Ping Yi Secondary School
   47   48   49   50   51   52   53   54   55   56   57