Text written on 11 May 1988
For my father,
. This was his first trip to China, in fact his first trip anywhere outside Singapore since he left his poverty stricken village some sixty years ago. Today he is seventy-eight, and had been totally blind for the last thirty years.
My father’s village is Guzhen 古镇 in Zhongshan county 中山县 some eighty kilometres southwest of
When I first stepped onto Chinese soil I was almost overcome with emotion, something which took me quite by surprise. I was more concerned with putting up with the inconvenience of looking after my father, the standard of hygiene and the acceptability of the food to realise that in a way I have come searching for my deeper roots.
To go to Guzhen we took the hydrofoil from Hong Kong to Zhuhai, one of
My father has an amazing memory. As he could not see, we had to tell him the area we were passing thr
ough or in, and he would recall them with crystal clarity. Of course, things don’t change very much in
Being illiterate my father never wrote, and when it was absolutely necessary,
through a letter-writer somewhere in
One burden was to be lifted from his shoulders after all these years. He finally know for sure that his mother did not die of hunger during the Japanese occupation. He had always thought so, and had suffered guilt for it, but according to relatives she died after a bout of fever – malnutrition related, I presumed nevertheless.
Guzhen is not as bad as I had expected. I recalled that during my childhood
days, letters from
buy a can of Coke and a roll of Kodak film. I was warned however not to expect the same in other parts of
Because of its proximity to
We changed our money on the black market. One hundred
During my stay I was shown the river where my father boarded the barge to Macau from whence he transferred onto a steamer to colonial 
I also visited some of the most scenic countryside there is. The area is generally low-lying and very prone to floods. Fish-rearing ponds dot the area, and canals are important thoroughfares. Dikes, flanked by swaying palm fronds, doubled as roads.
During my father’s time the principal farming activity was rearing silkworms. Today it is replaced by fish-farming. That’s where the mo
ney is. Some of my relatives are involved in it, and they do it now as a private undertaking. Rice fields abound. I was there at the time of spring transplanting and large families were out in full force. Most were bent in knee-deep water but some do it in style – by boat.
On the subject of large families, although the official policy restrict the Chinese to one child per family it is not uncommon to see families with two or more children in Guzhen. Officials are quite forgiving, particularly if the couple have a string of daughters. Quite a few of my relatives have had to flee from the authorities after the birth of their second child, otherwise they would be ‘arrested’ and made to undergo enforced sterilisation. They return only when the heat is off. Many expressed surprise at my stop at one policy – and a daughter at that too!
Greedy relatives are often the bane of many a returning overseas Chinese. I have heard stories of returnees being stripped of everything except the clothes they’re wearing. Fortunately it did not happen to us, partly because the closest relatives we have are my father’s sister’s grandchildren, and they’re doing not too badly.
Two events were to remind me distinctly of my childhood. One morning I was awakened by a very loud ferocious voice. Looking down from my fourth storey hotel window I saw a farmer verbally abusing his ten-year old son in the Guzhen dialect. For a brief moment, I could see myself as a ten-year old standing before my father with his saliva spray all over me, the object of his anger.
The other occasion was when I brought him for his first meeting with our relatives in their home. The environment was so much like thirty years ago when I led him to his friends’ home. There was the inevitable Chinese calendar, the faded photographs of family members which took pride of place, and the family bamboo pipe for smoking. Above all I remembered them conversing in their own dialect which I only half understood.
The most trying time for me had to be mealtimes with my relatives. Although I keep reminding myself that what they had to offer is the best they have, I hardly ate. It is more their table manners, or the lack of it, that puts me off.. Their living room floor deserved a lot more respect. Spitting was commonplace. Chewed bones invariably made their way from mouth to floor. For them it was the most natural thing to do. Honestly, there were times when, heaven forbid if my ancestors were to find out, I actually longed for a hamburger at MacDonald’s!
I was rather relieved when time came for us to leave. I had not eaten nor slept well – the mosquitoes made sure of that. Neither did I exercise my bowels all the five days I was there. The state of the toilets were sho
cking, even those of the hotel we were in. At the same time I could not help feeling a tinge of sadness in leaving behind relatives who, by our standards, are so deprived of many things. I couldn’t help thinking that I could be one of them if my father hadn’t made the move back then. It involuntarily came forth from my lips when we finally boarded the bus: “Pa, we’re going home!”
Text written on 11 May 1988

1 comment:
Thanks for your story. Your post reminds me of my recent desire too to visit Kuching and Sibu from where my grandparents came.
Roots search?
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