Page 87 - Stories from our Grandparents
P. 87

Mdm renuka Devi
 Mdm Tay Geok Choo  Born 1932                  By Nur Inshirah bte Mohd Raffee  Born 1943


 By Deshawn Liu                                Millennia Institute
 Millennia Institute

                  uring her childhood days, she used to play five stones with her
 y childhood days were very enjoyable and things were simple.   mother. One of her most memorable experiences was going out
 We did not have sophisticated technological device such as   with her father to the movies. She does not recall any experience
 mobile phones, laptops or tablets. Instead, all we had were   Din WWII since she was only 2-3 years old at the time. During
 Mmarbles, strings and stones and even so, we could still make   the post-war period, she stayed with her extended family in Siglap. They
 a game out of them! I was originally from Fujian, China but since the   were well-off, so she didn’t face any hardships back then. She wasn’t
 age of five, I had already been living in Singapore with my parents.   affected as much by Singapore’s pre-independence days. During the
          early days of independent Singapore, she travelled by car and bought
 What I can remember from my childhood was the fun we (my friends and I)
 all had in our kampong. My friends would usually come over to our house   her food from push cart vendors as they came to the house every day.
 to play all sorts of games and we would play till we became tired. Yes, I did
 live through WW2. I was only 10 years old when the Japanese occupied   She recalled “In the old days there were bus conductors who
 Singapore. Since February 1942, we began seeing many Japanese soldiers   gave tickets. Usually you would board the bus until the bus
 on the streets and because of that, my parents and I were more afraid to   was full, then they would start going around collecting your
 go out, especially at night. During that few years, life was really tough. For   bus fare and giving a ticket in return. The best thing about
 example, food was rationed during the Japanese Occupation and due to the   it was that even though the bus was fully packed, they were
 scarcity, our parents would usually prohibit me and my four other siblings
 from eating extras. In my opinion, those were the darkest days of Singapore.  able to squeeze their way through the bus and remember
           who had given the bus fare and who had not.”
 Transportation and sanitary conditions were very
 poor. Buses were not air-conditioned and I felt rather   She added that people today are very fortunate
 uncomfortable. However, I was also grateful that I was   to have luxuries such as air-conditioned buses
 able to afford the bus fares, unlike some other people.   since the old buses had open windows only. She
              had a love for baking and she would bake bread
 “Additionally, we had to share common   for the family as well as for her neighbours who all
 toilets with our neighbours. They would be   loved her delicacies.
 cleared by the ‘night soil’ collectors who drove   During her late thirties, she opened a family bakery
 what is known as the ‘thirty-two container’.”  (along with my grandfather) and still remembers the day when she would
          go around the neighbourhood selling bread. My grandmother would not
 Singapore is very advanced now and is completely different from   like for her identity to be known, but her words to the next generation of
 what it used to be almost fifty years ago. Work hard for your future   Singaporeans are “you should all be happy with what you have since you all
 and I believe you will be successful!  did not live in the days where food on the table was hard to come by.” She
          hopes that we will create a better future for those around us and for those
          yet to come.

 28  Grandma Stories                                          Grandma Stories  29
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