Wednesday, April 29, 2015

The Janissaries (Komala Vilas)


Tall dark Chindian long-sleeved office shirt, trousers, socks and shoes in his mid-twenties. Eating with cutlery. While the big fella had as usual stopped to chat, he came across for an additional order. (Unfamiliar with the routine at Komala Vilas.) 
         That afternoon Shanmugam carried a long horizontal kumkum at an odd angle low on his forehead. From the morning's temple visit, he explained. A recent trip back home where his wife was in the seventh month of her first labour was cut short by the short-staffing at the restaurant. Shanmugam could not remain for the birth of his child.
         The deep colour of the newcomer had struck immediately
         — Chindian. India - China mix.
         Shake of the head from Shanmug.
         — What? Is! See the colour...
         Same again.
         No authorial pacing here. Chap knew all by himself how to deliver a point of view, a considered unfolding.
         Silent, casual (not sharp or rude) appraisal continuing.
         Nodding finally...But not know.
         Which was effectively the same as non-being.
         Ah. Yes, interesting. That was always a possibility, certainly. We looked some more, casual like.
         In old Montenegro we well-knew the phenomenon. The kidnapped boys taken back to Stamboul and entered into the Sultan's service; later returning in adulthood, in their full strength, often in the higher ranks of the invader. The most notable became regional Pashas and Viziers, lording it over their own people. More brutal than the Turks themselves, it was said.
         Local reports suggested Chindian unions were on the rise here. No doubt Shanmugam had fixed on manner and behavior in the present case. Nothing there in common with the other diners.


Rolex & Flag





A second extension of the exhibition "In Memoriam: Lee Kuan Yue", with the addition now of an added item — the Singaporean flag that was used to drape the coffin. Long queues reported since the opening on March 25, over 80,000 visitors. Among other items on display are the red box in which the former PM kept his working documents; barrister’s wig from the time of his admission to the bar in Britain; and a Rolex Oyster Perpetual gifted by the former SG Union of Postal & Telecom. Workers after he won more than two years back pay for 1,000 clerks. A shadow perhaps of curatorial correction apparent in the curt telegram included that was wired to his family for dinner arrangements returning from an overseas trip: in order to save the government money. (1958)
         Soon a virtual rendition of the exhibition will be posted online for those unable to attend in person.

Straits Times, Home, B3, reporting on the same page 765 visits yesterday at the Natural History Museum for the opening of the Dinosaur exhibition. Wednesday 29 April 2015



Monday, April 27, 2015

Pencil Sketch



Uncertain at first whether the chap was a Deaf. No turned out, likely smoking had done for him; hole in the throat will lie not too far ahead. Grew up hereabouts "last time", he wants you to know. His country. Luckily for the man only removed to Eunos first stop up the road. (Forgetting for the moment all the rest.) Another case of growing realization concluding the bleeding obvious: the fellow could in fact pass most certainly as one of ours. Definitely a Eurasian element, gran or great-gran in the works. Even the comb-back suggestive, following unconsciously from a photograph on a house wall possibly. Stiff neck injury and hulking gait suggests the common bike-fall. Tried for the quick-draw for the drinks, failing which turned round the mouth of his bag of fries and pleading: One (at least). Sallow, almost olive skin. Suggestions of a simpleton were also mistaken; perfectly lucid in fact. Ran a pancake stall upstairs at the market, since given over to the wife and son. Vague face in the crowd previously; good English and superior enunciation confirming the belated insight.

Sunday, April 26, 2015

Quiet April



A quiet April on the blog has been anything but at the writing table, mostly situated up on the 8th floor of the National Library again on Victoria Street here in Singapore.
Chief focus has been a novella developed from the Jogja period of October – November for a competition in Australia. This is the reason why the posts of those months have been recently taken down. For all such competitions, and indeed higher-end journal submissions, the stipulation is of no previous publication in any form.
After extensive re-shaping and revisions a 20,000 word MS has been formed that is part travel odyssey, part cultural exploration, a kind of love story, and as they say, so much more…. Submitted end of last week.
Otherwise a spot of good news on the publication front: Ambit Magazine, London, where J G Ballard had a long association both as editor and contributor, and where the current Laureate edits the poetryfirst gay and first Scot so honouredwill be publishing a sequence of flash-fiction from the Singaporean writing. Due out in the northern summer.

Saturday, April 25, 2015

Lolly-water


Many a month the old Yemeni was mistaken for a simple jester who enjoyed the play-acting. Not a word of English and it was possible his Malay was far from extensive either. Someone had originally identified the chap as Pakistani. As always, for a newcomer particularly, it was not easy to pick the difference between either of these and some of the Malays. 

Light tone, beneath a cap and in the midst of the group easily merging. Focus a little more closely, pay more attention to feature and line, clearly an Arab that perfectly fitted within any of the rubble of the dusty streets, smoking bombs in back-drop, impassive countenance incapable of further shock in the newscasts,.

In the taxi stop beside Joo Chiat Hotel the man would often be found; otherwise one of the benches around the Complex. For the first two or three years he was almost never seen at the eateries or kopi shops; one needed to pay for those seats. In the last year he had been adopted by the two Chinese converts, the cabbie Cha and his mate; the third of the group Jafaar who drove an executive van was another support, buying food and drink. 

It was Chia who revealed the fellow had no one either here or back in Yemen; marooned now in older years and with a hard final passage presenting. Over the term he had deteriorated, adding weight and a stick. What had befallen him was uncertain; details had not been sought in this case.

Thumb at the mouth in the usual way. Mistaken so long. Hand at the parched throat to drive home the message was taken as more vaudeville. After a time the man had desisted with greetings and eventually turned a blind eye. An unfortunate misunderstanding.

There had seemed something familiar and known about the chap; as often some echo of the past in body size and proportion, in manner and bearing, the play-acting repertoire, twisting of the mouth and the rest as much as anything. 

A great deal of the dumb-show of the eateries, the theatre of the street, carried aspects of a human drama from a much older, classical script. It was a large part of the reason one had remained in that community near the market, where Malays and all manner of Muslims from across the island would congregate.

Finally the other day when the gathering at Har Yasin left little prospect for a late-comer, the man was offered a seat at the front table and bought a drink.

Once the chap could be understood he was bought. A Peek-a-Boo?...

It sounded neither Tamil nor Malay…KI KA POO?

Nodding and gesturing, the man indicated the chaps serving would know.

In the weeks previous the fellow had not been sighted at Har Yasin. Since the shut-down on Geylang Road corner, cabbie Chia and his crew drank their teas around in the unappealing, hidden-away food court behind J. C. Complex. The Yemeni was probably en route. A Yemeni likely meant Hadramaut, in the north-east, but not necessarily. Of course there was no pension from anywhere. What was he? mid/late seventies.

On the column out front the big wrestler, Zainuddin had called him, looked down on the table briefly without finding anything of interest. A Nigerian was the joke of a couple of the fellow's workmates. By colouration it certainly fitted, the same as size for Z.'s venture. Young chap was a perfect illustration of the reputed Tamil darkness for the kampung class working the fields the other side of the equator, down on the point of the Sub-Continent.

Exceedingly dark. Scratching his back on the sharp tiled corner of the column. Twelve hours on his feet beside the hot plate; thirteen and fourteen weekends at 100kg. An ignorant white guy might easily be fooled with the Nigerian gambit. One thought of the Atlantic trade and some errant winds.

Hailed in the end from an outlying suburb of KL. Most of the crew at Har Yas. were Malaysian Tamils, cheaper that way for the greedy old Dragon employer. Two or three of the lads were Tamil Nadu proper.

Constant tight squint from the Nigerian.

Like his tubby pal the other side of the plate— another Tamil— the Nigerian showed full pale palms in stride. Common for big ungainly men of all races. Thick, stubby curled fingers and the raised ridge of the palms. Given the visual bulk, one could easily over-estimate the fellow's age. Little more than thirty in reality.

The Kick-a-Boo was taking a time.

Taking the African as full-blown black, his workmate the tubby prata-maker was perhaps thirty percent along the colour spectrum. There was nothing obvious in the racial pairing. In fact one would have bet against it.

Twelve hour days together opposite each other, one day a month free. The amity, ease, good humour and buoyant spirits came very much against expectations. At so many places here it was the same: trying, difficult conditions, long hours in oppressive heat no pause, all the onerousness so very lightly borne.

There ought to have been an insurrection against wages and conditions, marches against the bosses. Flames and violence.

It was only the poor Chinese dishwasher outback at Har Yasin wearing the heaviness of the labour. Eight or nine months ago there had been another; now a single yellow sheep among the black, usually confined back-stage and only emerging from his lair in order to deliver his plates and cutlery.

Kick a Poo citrus flavoured, Atlanta U. S., under license in Malaysia.

The old Yemeni spilt half the first can, what with so much ice stacked in the cup. Passed urine, another Tamil joked at the other black sheep's expense as he mopped up.

Not a drop of liquor hereabouts—one often needed to recall passing the men at the eatery tables, at the checkerboards, up at the market, the benches and shaded nooks they sought out. Entirely dry throughout. Up at Haig Road they sold the fire-water at three or four of the Chinese stalls at the upper end. Perfect calm, ease and natural cheer reigning the lower. An outstanding feature all too easily forgotten.

 

 




Friday, April 24, 2015

Politics and Truth



Malaysian PM Najib under attack on numerous fronts for a range of deeply concerning matters has responded with libel actions against critics. (A common recourse in this region.) In a recent radio broadcast the PM warned the populace against “information democratization”….
         Here in Singapore a somewhat more sophisticated campaign of a not dissimilar kind: at the National Library for example two years or so prominent placards alerting to unfounded slurs and innuendo. S.U.R.ESource, Understand, Research, Evaluate Campaign. One cannot be too careful; much unfounded dangerous gossip in the air and ever increasing with the new technology. They are unused to criticism here.

         Yesterday a sixteen year old Blogger was remanded in custody overnight because of offensive online posting. Attacking Christians and the recently departed founding father of the Republic, Mr. LKY in this instance. Handsome reckless mop-topped young lad reportedly munching on a banana as he entered the courtroom.