Friday, December 29, 2017

Super Chrissy


St. Kilda Beach in Melbourne trashed over Christmas by revellers, clean-up bill running into thousands of dollars. In the media photographs close counterparts of the dark faces commonly employed here keeping this famed republic on the equator famously squeaky clean. In Sydney it was a similar story, 16 tons deposited on Coogee Beach by a 10,000 strong congregation. Here in the Straits Times today there was another iteration again reported at Kuta in Bali, where the partygoers could be safely assumed to have a large proportion of Australians, difference being in this instance the clean-up turning into colourful theatre with Superhero costuming — Supermen, Batmen & Daddy Christmases all in festive spirits on the ends of the rakes. Garbage swept away to restore the site for NY partying, Disney, Warner Bros. and the others giving the affair gloss.
         In Geylang Serai we celebrated with ginger tea while receiving numerous greetings on the occasion, the matter of the Orthodox calendar mostly let pass.

Tuesday, December 26, 2017

Publication News: “On the Horn,” published by Pendulum Papers


An Australian literary journal called Pendulum Papers has recently published a piece of mine centred on one of my locales down in Melbourne, an East African cafe that I first wrote about in 2009. (Available in the archives of Wet Ink.)
In the current piece, titled “On the Horn,” there can be found Orthodox priests, Eritrean Muslims & Christians and suited former Dinka herdsmen. Something for everyone hopefully.
Pendulum is freely accessible, here is the link

http://www.pendulumpapers.com/current-issue/on-the-horn


Best
Pavle

http://www.pendulumpapers.com/current-issue/on-the-horn

Saturday, December 23, 2017

Christ Is Born


Reminders of purity from the lost distant past in the black unsweetened tea. (Teh o kosong.) Reading the T’ang poets again clean rivers, patches of burning flowers along waterways and green mountains in the north set the appropriate scene. With Christmas around the corner the younger owner at the Al Wadi counter thinks he knows the reason for the variation from the usual order: ginger and condensed milk put aside for the commemoration of Christ’s birth.
Hristos se rodi.” “Vaistinu se rodi,” the Serbian Orthodox will greet each other outside the churches in a fortnight. “Christ is born.” “Indeed - in an archaic old Slavonic - he is born.” (The Julian calendar marks 7th January as the day.)

NB. “Five T’ang Poets,” in a compelling translation by David Young.

Friday, December 22, 2017

Hammer of Thor



Osman from upstairs popping over again for another respectful “five minutes only,” this time with a magazine of a Malay “national” political party in hand. Based here in Singapore it must have been, though never a word heard previously. High gloss paper similar to the Workers’ Party Hammer; title in this case in Malay was missed. Osman wanted to draw attention to an item in a highlights column on the second page. Written in bahasa, a translation was required and duly provided by Osman. Article such-and-such of the Singaporean constitution perhaps in question—or else act of parliament promulgated some while ago—stated that the government must ensure, must devote all energies, always strive for.... the welfare of the Malay peoples in particular. Underlined, highlighted, carefully enunciated; and yet honoured more in the breach than the observance, was Osman’s point. A sorry state of affairs, Osman suggested. A foreigner ought not be drawn into such domestic matters and neither was that Osman’s intention. Yet this was something that needed to be brought to light; on this particular Sunday there was a need to unburden. Osman usually did not involve himself in politics and certainly not political disputation. This today was unlike the man. And when the matter of the new, recently elected—albeit in a walkover—Malay President was raised, Osman uncharacteristically continued with more misgivings still. Something about a political fix one had heard whispered, a strategic manipulation artfully conducted by the long-ruling, entrenched powers. Again, unusual indeed from Osman, a shopkeeper, comfortably middle-class; contented one would have said. Mostly concerned with matters of business climate and the education of his daughters. Regular outings with friends provided relief from the daily round. Something of a ladies man Osman, with a keen eye retained into his mid-seventies. The five minute sit the day prior had centred on that field of the human drama touching congress between the sexes. That afternoon Osman had brought a small plastic container for an opinion. To date Osman had never resorted to such-like pills himself; a friend had given him this newly launched line, one costing two hundred and something dollars for so many capsules. Soon after the political theme had run its course on the second afternoon—the Sunday—Osman had promptly switched back to the old stand-by. The usual parade on the weekend offered the young pretties in their finery beneath the rain trees on that last stretch of Geylang Road. Always reliably engrossing. What to do with political fixes after all? They had us over a barrel. It was not just Singapore of course; take a look at the great spread-eagled eagle if you will. It was all sterile and unproductive. Springing up suddenly like an acrobat, Osman launched himself from his chair. Who can take my Hammer of Thor? asked the neat and dapper, always shirted & dyed Osman, of the live and moving street by Al Wadi there near the hot-plate, the old hydrant and entrance to the eatery. Was there a candidate who might emerge from within that pageant? One lived in hope. Properly fortified the challenge might be met.



Wednesday, December 20, 2017

“The Biggest Name of Them All” - published by Aethlon (US)


“The Biggest Name of Them All,” a tale of a famous Yugoslav football star from the 1950s, was published in September by Aethlon, a US literary sports journal.





The pair of albino brothers aside, among the rest of the black faces there
was only this one other white. The man was vaguely guessed as Macedonian
perhaps. No, Montenegrin, he said. An Albanian—or more properly Shiptar—
from down in Ulcinj near the border. Not many eighty years olds were so
upright and firm. In fact at one time Chika Churovic had lived a couple of
streets away in our neighborhood. It soon turned out we knew fifty people in
common.

— I would say one hundred, Chika Churovic corrected, smiling broadly
like older men rarely smiled.

At first sight the man had appeared unapproachable and forbidding. Well
dressed and a strength of character one immediately felt. The fullness of feeling
in speaking of the past and about those who had been dear to him—his young
orphanhood, his mother, proven friends and relations—only confirmed the
impression later.

Such numbers of mutual acquaintance, now mostly dead. One was in
a wheelchair with his wife the same, their junkie son having OD-ed in his
twenties. This man had been the trener, the coach of Footscray JUST soccer club,
where for many years Mr. Churovic had been a stalwart.

As the conversations unfolded slowly dozens of other mutual friends and
acquaintances emerged.

Former club president Chika Ante who founded The Vineyard steakhouse
in Acland Street. Old Mr. Jankovic in our street who passed away only last year
at one hundred and three. (Chika Churovic had heard Mr. J. had had a German
wife.) Our tenant Vlajko killing himself on the road rushing to get his rifle
after being beaten up by Hasan the security man at a Gertrude Street bar. The
muscle Hasan was still around the traps, Chika Churovic revealed, even in his
mid-seventies a powerhouse.

There was much to wonder at and much to mourn.

Chika Churovic was close to all these men, regardless of race or creed. In
the 60s and 70s the Yugoslav ideal had reigned strongly and all had found a
place under the JUST tent.

Inevitably, the most famous name in Yugoslav football soon came up.

In youth Chika Churo had been a player himself; one of his sons had even
worn Australian colors. Back in the old country Chika Churo had been an avid
fan of Partizan, founded by the then Yugoslav general Franjo Tudjman, who
after the disaster of the breakup of the country became the first president of
independent Croatia. Chika Churo had caught trains and even planes to see
Partizan play.

With football such a large part of the life, by the second meeting the
brightest, most remarkable star was dealt like a joker from the pack at the café
table.

— One name stands above all others in our football, right Chika Churovic?

— …. Well, Sekularac.

Ah, yes indeed. None other. The incomparable.

The old stories from forty and more years ago were elicited. One could
never tire of them.

The events themselves featuring Seki were now sixty and more years past,
but those former tales continued to gush so many decades later. A pleasure to
have them recreated by another source.

At a match in Brazil between the respective national teams of the era Seki
had turned to tell the great Pele.

— You are the king of the blacks; I of the white race, Sekularac informed
the young star.

There was no record of the other’s response. Likely the Brazilian was as
flabbergasted as the rest of us.

Seki had won the right to speak like that to the great Pele. A famous story
that had been told by numerous Yugoslavs of the time, though the place of the
meeting had not been known previously.

Had Seki been English, German, anything but Yugoslav, there would have
been no end to the fanfare, many had held.

At that famous meeting of black and white grandmasters—not in Rio;
another Brazilian city; perhaps Sao Paolo—one hundred and sixty or seventy
thousand people had packed the stadium, Chika Churovic informed. The
number was still a world record. What was the MCG or any other global arena
by comparison?

Seki in a more famous game still, against the Russian national team.
Again, in the tellings of forty years ago it had never emerged where this famous
match had occurred. Somehow it had been assumed it was played in Belgrade
sometime in the fifties or early sixties, perhaps a decade or so since the brave
Yugoslavs had stared down the threat from Stalin and won for themselves a
measure of independence. The Third Way. The Non-Aligned Movement. In that
period Serbs, Croats and Shiptars cheered the same teams.

Numerous hearings of this famous tale of which one could never tire as
a youth, even a youth who had had no interest whatsoever in the round ball
game.

So many years later Chika Churovic’s authoritative manner sealed the
matter.

The 1956 Olympic football final, Melbourne. The decider for gold against
the Russians.

Sekularac takes the ball away from so many Soviet attackers in the Yugoslav
defensive half. A technical supremo showing great flair and control. Signature
dribble. Feints left and right. A scorching run across the ground leaving hapless
opponents floundering in his wake.

After the dazzling dance through the penalty box at the end Seki rolls the
ball to the defending goal-line, where the stadium was brought to a collective
drawing of breath as the man stopped dead.

Having beaten eight or nine men with such remarkable maneuvering, such
élan and grace, a moment’s deserved pause like at the completion of a favorite
aria at the opera.

Possibly Seki needed to catch his own breath too. The fullness of the
crowd’s appreciation raining down upon the audacious sprite.

A foot raised onto the ball like a ballerina, one had pictured the famous
moment.

Chika Churo revised that image by having the tearaway drop onto his
haunches to actually sit upon the leather. Something like a smoko playing to
the mass of fans across the tiered stands. Unscripted sporting vaudeville of the
most extravagant kind.

What did it matter that Seki failed to see the sly Ruski creeping up behind
like a thief, a contemptible pick-pocket? Swing of the leg. Goal to the Russians.
1:0.

(Did Seki land flat on his face when his seat was rudely kicked from
beneath him?)

Russian gold at the expense of the better team. The great star and brash,
arrogant showman to blame.

In none of the earlier reports was the outcome of the game revealed, much
less criticism of the villain. It was only the brilliant, reckless taunt that had
featured.

Gumption beyond all compare. Something from the children’s playground
enacted on this great stage.

Again in the initial telling of Chika Churo’s the same questions had hung
unasked. There had been no time or opportunity.

After the breathless moment, after that gargantuan gall, the ultimate
outcome had been inconsequential.

Olympic gold? Who gave a rat’s for that!

Forty and more years ago the story was first heard. Heard from fans and
also from men who had had no interest in football and never attended a match.

A German opponent had once asked Seki for a gift of his pair of boots. Why?
the star had responded. Well, it might bring some luck, some of the prowess, he
was answered. It’s not the boot that make the player. It’s.... Seki knocking his
temple like Chika Churo demonstrates at the African cafe in Footscray.

The disaster of knocking down the ref in the game at Nis, in southern
Serbia, remained. Inevitably that had to come too.

Seki was wild and reckless, right? Totally undisciplined?

There was no express agreement from Chika Churo, who would not add
his own word to the common reservation on Sekularac.

On the park at Nis a dispute had developed with the referee. First a hand
placed on the official, followed by a blow of some description.

Down the man went to the turf, with a name thereby forever immortalized
in the annals of sport.

Tumbas, Chika Churo pronounced. Pavle Tumbas. A nobody by this means
finding a place in the history of the world game.

Was it the end of the career? Was Seki the same player afterward? It needed
follow-up with Chika Churo.

A surprise that had not been previously revealed was the great Seki’s
ancestry.

The man belonged to none of the Yugolav ethnic or religious groups,
Chika Churo announced. The igrac sva vremena, player of all time, had been a
Macedonian gypsy.

Another remarkable layer to add to the myth.

No more perfectly apt lineage could be imagined for such a star, a kind of
Hollywood script having him hail from the caravans and gambling dens of the
Roma.

Something of the wild dance before the campfire in that genetic inheritance,
brawling and knife-fights over card games and beautiful women. In forest
clearings across the Balkans Seki’s ancestors had told stories and shared the
pickings of the day. A talent scout had spotted the boy kicking a bundle of rags
across a field perhaps, recruiting him to famous Red Star Belgrade.

(One could not trust Google for the less colorful record.)

Twilight years saw Seki playing in Latin America and the Bundesliga,
followed in the early ‘80s by one of his last involvements in the game as the
trener at Footscray JUST.

Not surprisingly, there was little noteworthy from that latter period. A
second wife and child; poker games in the JUST canteen after training; a man
of correct and dignified bearing, Chika Churovic noted.

How did the team fare under the former maestro? Had there been
championship honours? The Greek and Italian teams had dominated that era.
Even Maltese George Cross often figured more prominently than our JUST.

The thread was never taken up again, Ramadan intervening and an illness
in the family at Chika Churo’s.

Last report had Seki living in retirement in current day Serbia.



NB: In the official record Dragoslav Sekularac was surprisingly assigned a
Montenegrin paternity; his father had worked in Macedonia. Surprising news
for Chika Churo, and one would have thought of some interest. Not in fact the
case as it proved.


Monday, December 18, 2017

Publication News: Rambutan Literary - "Singapore 3" (Jungle Thicket)


Hello all
Rambutan Literary is a free online S-E Asian journal which in its 5th issue has included three of my pieces under the collective title, "Singapore 3":
Jungle Thicket
Mary Poppins on the Equator
and A Conversion Story

See how you fancy them ladies & gents.

Best
Pavle Radonić

P. S. After a decent interval I'll re-post them here.





 

SINGAPORE 3 (Jungle Thicket)

 

 

Mary Poppins on the Equator

 

 

The dutiful Filipina maid who sits with Madame mornings at the Haig Road stalls comes by round eleven usually, as she did today. Cloud cover and a nice breeze made it an easy passage right the way along. The pair, Ma’am and maid, are bound for either one of the HDBs above Joo Chiat Complex, or else a house in the streets off Changi. (In Singapore rarely do people walk more than two or three hundred meters.)
         Despite relatively mild conditions evidently gaps in the cloud, the maid having unfurled the large red umbrella and raised it on high.

         Ma’am being an unusually tall Chinese fetching close on 180cm, the Maid needs to lift the shield skyward. A flag, standard or banner was given this kind of elevation.
         As a Filipina the maid herself is tall—possibly chosen particularly. Nevertheless the young woman stands at least six inches shorter than her employer.
         Sitting at the morning table at the stalls the maid turns a soft, indulgent face one way and another as the conversation of the old gathered women flows. Every morning on every pass the same as the day before. The maid can offer nothing here; she sits patiently, attentively, phone bulging in her rear pocket. How much Hokkien or Cantonese does she have in any case?
         Three, four or more Chinese women each morning, sometimes the adjoining table taking the overflow. The Filipina is the only maid present. All the other women look as if they are more in need of maid than lucky Ma’am. But Ma’am alone is the one who can afford the expense, having more dutiful children perhaps.       
         Unmistakable indulgent softening of features one way and the other as required through the teas and cookies. Possibly the maid fetches the drinks for the table, relieving the Auntie at the stall. That is common. Serving when there is a maid present is contradictory. 
         The young woman in her mid-thirties dressed in cheap, featureless apparel, self-cut hair likely and bad skin. Coming past the author’s table Ma’am must not catch the quick-fire smile. Care always taken and sometimes the risk is too great. The game is a subtle one, adding another additional pain to the circumstance. 
         Holding the umbrella on the return home the maid's elbow stands raised above the horizontal plane; an effort and strain to keep it at that height.

         When there was not a whisper before, suddenly a strong gust of wind has been released as if from a bag. Soundlessly the Filipina maid lifted from her feet without a moment even for shriek, up above the pavement she is taken across the roadway and high into the sky above Geylang and Changi Roads, over the roof of the market and out toward the prison and the sea. In the water the tankers wait their turn at dock.

         Oh dear! a leaf picked from the ground taken away never to return.

         Bye-bye to the good dutiful creature. You have served your Madame well, girl, Madame will miss you. Where will she ever find herself another to compare.

 

 

 



 

 

 

Jungle Thicket

 

 

The man with the turned right eye was usually found on the Block 2 Void Deck either at one card-table or the other. Observing from the side usually without participating.    

         The usual striped red, blue & white polo as he cycled through the estate. Sometimes he was seated by the passage with a newspaper, legs up on the railing.

         Good mornings, Ni haos, Zhao uns and how are yous?

         This morning on the return from the teh and newspaper the same. Going out earlier there had been the same.

         After the second pass this morning a short wait was needed at the lift, where unexpectedly from around the corner the man suddenly appeared. 

         He did not live in D Block. He had never been encountered there. 

         — I give you mango. Abruptly thrusting a red plastic bag at the shnozz and pulling back the cover either side.

         — Verrrry nice! As if afraid he might be disbelieved and his offering rejected.

         After a momentary start it was clear the chap wasn't kidding. The man knew his fruit. 

         A hard, green specimen on the small size, yet the perfume emanating was difficult to credit. More than substantiating the man's claim. An exploding grenade of richest heady aroma. 

         Easy to tell this was not supermarket product and far from it. The fellow had access to a tree somewhere in deepest jungle thicket where trunks crowded each other and the foliage shredded the light. He knew where, as the old Montenegrin storytellers would have said.

         Like everyone else, the man had observed the fruit carried in hand day after day up to Doreen’s flat. Naked oranges, apples, bananas and the yellow Thai mangoes usually that gave only the most trifling scent. Sometimes it was a juggle without the bag.

         In his keeping this man had an appropriate gift for the stranger. 

         Even late night from the entryway returning housemates at Doreen’s remarked upon the powerful fragrance.

         How to return something fitting then became the question.

         A couple of days later when the man was thanked again for his gift and the fabulous bouquet underlined, chap was surprised it had not yet been tasted. The hardness made no never mind; the fruit was ripe, the man reassured. It was in fact fallen fruit, not picked. After two days it would be "spoiled ready."

         In season a fig they used to give as an offering to children, friends and passers-by on the Montenegrin coast between the wars. (And proverbially of course, one would not give the same for anything less than worthy). An apple, orange or almonds and walnuts too from the fortunate ones in possession. 

         Kampung folk were easily identifiable here over the void decks, sitting on the steel benches, under the care of the dark-skinned maids and pacing the aisles under the supermarket fluro, the old ways clearly retained in their open manner, in their gestures and greetings. 

 

 

 



 

 

 A Conversion Story

 

 

 

 

There have been a good number of conversion stories heard here on the broiling equator.

         The cabbie Cha's was the classic of a man searching in need of guidance.

         Born into a notional Buddhist practice, Cha examined the Bible, then the Koran. Read some of the Vedas; back to the Koran, Bible, the Hadith and more Koran. Eventually the conversion to Islam, which involves a simple declaration of faith before two witnesses.

         Being the earnest, studious type, Cha had pounded the books and commentaries, took beginners' classes at the Converts' Association and passed tests on knowledge and prayer with flying colours.

         Cha’s Chinese friend with whom he sat at the Mr. Teh Tarik tables mornings converted after a stroke six years ago. Similar to Cha: insufficiency in Buddhism; the Koran and quickly in his case on-board.

        A couple of years before Mabel at Joo Chiat reception had told her story of resistance overcome.

        Originally from Penang, Christian friends here had long encouraged Mabel. Church visits and reserved judgment. The enthusiasm witnessed at services Mable attended left her cold, until one day approaching the altar herself and feeling the force, the disbeliever fell from her feet in a dead faint. Mable staunch thereafter.

         Last night Nancy's friend Doris told her own story. An unlikely story; highly unlikely. The simplicity was striking.

         As in previous cases here, little hesitation at intrusive questions from a stranger. None in Doris's case. In these communities what would be considered intrusion and unmannerliness elsewhere was readily received; the interest in the personal story often welcome. 

         Seven or eight years of age was Doris down at the base of her HDB out in Ang Moh Kio. After school or weekend, mum upstairs in the flat and dad not around. 

         An auntie suddenly appears before young Doris.

         Upon some reflection "Auntie" was quickly revised downward—perhaps the woman in that childhood scene was still in her twenties. Doris now in her mid-thirties was a good deal older than the auntie who had converted her. It struck Doris now that she thought about it.

         Traditional communities elders were commonly either “auntie” or “uncle.” Teta so-and-so in Serbo-Croat; Cika or Striko male.

         A great deal of correspondence and reminding here on the equator.

         A younger Malay or Indonesian woman here will, upon an encounter with an unknown older woman, take the latter's hand and bowing, raise it to her forehead as a mark of respect. After almost four years one blinked no longer at the display. Standard ceremonies at the outdoor tables in the Malay quarter.

         Doris's young auntie approached and immediately upon the Hello, good morning little girl, young Doris, aged seven or eight, was asked a question.

         — Do you want Jesus to wash your sins away?

          Memorable. Doris could hardly have forgotten.

         On the edge of the bed Doris delivered her brief little smiling response immediately, just as she must have all those years before.

         Beside her Nancy fully out-stretched. Inquisitor in the swivel chair by the desk taking note.

         Nance has possibly never heard her best friend's conversion story; not of much interest to Nancy.

         Conversions were common on the equator, a rich, fertile ground. Numerous missionaries of one sort or another, as well as converts, encountered. There were a great number of factors at work. The Malays were mostly rock-solid in their belief and their practices. In the colonies the Christians had been their usual busy selves: conquests and conversions. The Hindus mostly held up pretty well; which left the Chinese with a less firm cosmology rather prone. Shopping, holidays, food adventures sometimes insufficient, especially living cheek-by-jowl with believers often inspired. 

         What to do? in the common expression here.

       Raising up at Auntie young Doris answers, Yes, she would like to have her sins washed away by Jesus. Yes.

         ....Smiling, affable young middle-aged mother of two still with a fine, open face.

         A prayer then for little Doris to accept Jesus. Repeat after me.

         The next Sunday Auntie came to collect Doris for church; Baptists out in Sembawang. The auntie had gone up to meet the mother briefly.

         An impressive service. Doris's mother did not accompany her daughter, either on the first occasion, or for a number of years later. 

         An only child, Doris attended at Sembawang, being collected in a Sunday-school bus that called into Ang Moh Kio for herself and also a little group of other children her own age that Auntie had likewise converted.

         The Sembawang attendance lasted a couple of years; another Baptist for a time following.

         During this period Doris's mother was eventually won over by another auntie who came calling. 

         Doris's mother had been losing her hair and the other aunt offered to pray for her. Some kind of hair treatment followed and soon noticeable improvement. 

         For a time Doris and mother attended church together. 

        At present Doris attended the Covenant Evangelical Free Church, her children going occasionally and husband mostly at Christmas and Easter. The children were not baptized; that was a decision for them when they were older, mother Doris decided now.

         Doris did no direct converting herself, preferring patient encouragement instead.

         A few weeks earlier Doris had taken her children on an outreach mission to the Philippines where slum dwellers were visited and various goods delivered. The eldest boy was appalled by Smoky Mountain in the Manila waste-dump and demanded the first plane out. 

         — I will live two years less now, the kid declared, turning angrily on his mother.

        Heaven and hell were definite elements in Doris's purview. How god decided was of course another matter. Doris refrained from condemnation.

         Still, accepting Jesus needed to be taken as decisive. Doris’s own father-in-law had been a confirmed atheist right up until his dying day. On his death-bed he had converted. There was always time.

 

 

Geylang Serai, Singapore 2011-25





Saturday, December 16, 2017

More Ancients Still


Yes, remarkable enough, the old guy this afternoon who stepped across to the table of the poets and sages. Guess how old?... Well. Ah…. Had there been afforded proper chance one may have guessed say, mid-eighties. In fact if the informant could be trusted, the man was one hundred and three.... Oh. OK. I see. One hundred and three and not a day less. The fellow could be told of the two meetings up in the village the first time round, a pair of centurions living in their old stone and thatched houses cared for by their kin. Not unfamiliar territory these aged; no big deal. There was old Mr. Vic across the road too…. Ah. I see. Where was that?... Melbourne. Well, there you go.... Chap was from Melbourne himself. Where were you from in Melbourne?... Oh, you are in city? He was from Dandenong himself. Endeavour Hills to be precise, outer-most suburban graveyard. Didn’t want to hear about Mr. Vic and his digging of his storm-water drain across his front lawn at one hundred and one. There was nothing wrong with Endeavour Hills too for an old Chinaman escaping his Singaporean pigeon-hole. Fellow would be there still were it not that his son had called him back to look after the grandchildren. (The wife tasked no doubt, leaving time for his own attendance at the library forecourt for these gatherings of the Hakka group. Doubtful this particular fellow would have anything to contribute to the poets and sages there. You would lay odds.) When the maid returned after an hour for the ancient, the reed-thin, steady and upright old survivor, the man was clasped wordlessly by the arm and promptly rising to his feet. Quiet and obedient. Earlier the man had spoken more than a little and had the audience ringing round listening carefully. A fine old man who would never give any trouble to his charge. His kids, the Sir and Madam, must offer a good position for the girl, decent and respectful, good pay and perhaps the four legislated free days a month. Perchance they might even be providing extra funds for her children’s schooling back in Indo or the Philippines. Such does occur occasionally here. Perhaps the son and daughter-in-law would take their turn with dad on the off-days. Firm hold on the bicep as the maid had been taught while the ancient hoisted himself. As the pair paced back toward the road the precautionary hold had been maintained. The woman only removed her hand briefly to return the old man’s cap right way round. Had the chap sat so long, the entire hour, with that teenage flip of the lid without being noticed? It must have been because of all the memories that had been raised that sent the mind spinning and the inner eye reeling.

Friday, December 15, 2017

Time-Piece


You doubt it. And there’s so much questionable news and commentary in all the media. But still. Still, you would not put it past the best creative minds; seasoned, canny and sharpest ad men. (Less so women.) Page 24 item today on the neighbouring politician Novanto and his (known) $10m scam. The story had been running on-off for months. On the page 10 banner prior highlight of the story ahead. Eventually trawling onward there on page 24 the poor drowned rat was pictured, hauled up before the KPK, by the looks of it finally cut loose by his Golkar party and reportedly suffering five days of diarrhea with the anxiety and prison diet. As well as the “at least US$7.3m (SG$10m) in kickbacks” there was also “a Richard Mille watch worth about US$135k for his role in....(the rort).” Well may your jaw have dropped at that point if not at the chief matter itself…. Here these horological items feature in advertising throughout the republic, no pretender to real social standing on this island and the wider region goes without something of the kind on his wrist. One has heard of Rolex of course; Cartier and maybe Heuer. The Rich. Mille was unknown to this former kampung boy at least. However, and here is the present matter: flip back to the full page ad on page 5. Was it got right first glance? Was it?... WOW-WEE! What do you see? Engineering to cream your jeans. Highest top-most precision and styling with encrusted jewels arranged in finest artistry. Mouth-watering truly. A co-incidence? (Never noted previously in the pages of the Straits Times. Not once; not the Rich. Mille. No two ways about it with that ingenious branding. RICH. Mille! Not likely that would have gotten by.)

NB. As for where the pilfered funds had been specifically routed by Novanto — in “some overseas bank accounts in Indonesia and overseas” — anybody’s guess.