Page 65 - Stories from our Grandparents
P. 65

y grandmother is eighty-four
 am Goh Guek Eng and I was
 Mdm Goh Guek Eng
 Born 1949  I   Min East Java, Indonesia.
                    years old. She was born in
 born on 23 October 1949.
 My father was from China
                    1934 of a Baweanese dialect
 By Ella Tan Jin Woon
 and he came to Singapore.
 Bukit Batok Secondary School
 My mother is a Singaporean   She is affectionately known as Mak   Mdm Maah Binti
 and I was born in Singapore.  Ah in our family circles. Her parents   Mohamad nadir
          migrated to Singapore soon after
 My parents and I lived in a small town in Singapore. We reared   she was born. However, her growing   By Dhaniya Atikah Bte Mohamed Ali   Born 1934
 some chickens at our backyard. I would catch some earthworms   up years was short-lived when the   ITE College Central
 with my bare hands and feed the chickens, as I was not bothered by   Japanese invaded Singapore in 1942.
 the dirt. I still remember when Singapore had floods, my home toilet
 would get clogged up and it was very troublesome.  “She recalled the harrowing experienced of how her parents

 During Chinese New Year, my family would put up small firecrackers   has to move and hide from one place to another even in
 and that was my favourite scene while I was young. It was a joyous   the most unconventional place like the cemetery in order
 occasion. My neighbours and I would be there cheering and fooling   survive from being seen by the Japanese. In the midst of all
 around. Those were some unforgettable moments.  uncertainties and chaos, my grandmother was separated from

 I studied in Nanyang Secondary School   her parents.”
 and was Chinese educated. My teachers   “When I grew older,
 wore a qipao and heels, and had a hair   based on my friend’s   This was the turning point in her life as she became so called ‘orphan’
              and alone. Fortunately, she was adopted by a family and raised her.
 length above shoulders, just like how   recommendation, I took
 you would picture a typical Shanghai   up a job in a factory that   She vaguely remembered her growing up years with the adopted
 lady. Back then, I would only get $0.30   family in Nassim Road. In her adult years, she vividly recalled the
 as my pocket money and I would spend   manufactured 3D pop up   momentous event from the radio when Singapore separated from
              Malaysia in 1965. She felt an air of uncertainty but was hopeful.
 $0.20 on a bowl of noodles.  books. I was a supervisor
 and I supervised people   She believed that hope has brought success to Singapore now. She cited
 Now, Singapore is a prosperous country
 with a fast growing economy. Thus, the   pasting the cartoons on the   a few examples of how our housing and public transport has improved
 living conditions for Singapore is high   book. After that, we would   by leap and bounds. She look backed when buses were the main mode of
 and working may be stressful. I hope   make a hard bound for    transport in Singapore. She believed that all these changes and developments
          are for the good of Singapore. She noticed how Singapore has become
 that one day, Singapore would establish   the book. I earned $70
 more charity organisations and may   per month.”  technologically advanced. She gave examples of how we can communicate
 there be no poverty in Singapore.  via mobile phones and don’t have to meet in person. She is thankful of what
          Singapore has achieved so far and hope that the young people are able to
          embrace new technology in the future. She ended by stating that the young
          generations needs also to value the family as a bedrock of Singapore success.





 6  Grandma Stories
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