Happy Mother's Day dear mum! |
When I was born my mother had a full-time career as a midwife with the Government hospital and as she returned to work after her maternity leave, I was entrusted to the care of Mei Cheh, a mah jie or helper from the traditional Chinese sisterhood of domestic maids. Years later after my younger brother was born, my mum had to leave her job to care for him because she could not engage a reliable helper.
Mei Cheh carrying Peggy with my sister Ruby [Left] and Pearly at the staff quarters at Jalan Dato Wilson in the compound of the JB GH compound |
Our first helper, Har Mui, was
a young Chinese woman who chose to change her career in rubber tapping to
become a domestic helper. She was in her
early twenties and it was the first time she was working in a home rather than
in the plantation. It was also the first
time my siblings and I had a helper who was young enough to play with and I
remember playing indoor hide-and-seek with her because there were so many
hiding places inside our bungalow!
When we had more time at home
during the school holidays, Har Mui introduced me to Mandarin pop music from
the songs that she listened to from her transistor radio. At that time, Mandarin was like a foreign
language but I soon learnt what wo ai ni
means and I remember trying to copy down song lyrics in Romanized English. She was Hakka and spoke to us in strangely
accented Cantonese but we often sang along to the pop songs in Mandarin that
became so familiar that I can still recognise the tunes today even if I cannot
recall any of the lyrics.
On a visit to Haw Par Villa theme park, Singapore in the 1960s with Har Mui [Right]; Peggy [Second from Left] next to mum [Left] |
A gift for mum on one Mother's Day |
I cannot
forget Sornam, Saroja’s younger sister who was probably inspired by her sister’s
success in working with our families and said that she too wanted to be a
domestic helper. So when my mother was
approached about giving her a job, we agreed that she could come to us more as a
companion because she was just a girl. The
poor girl, however, did not have the same personality and attitude as her
sister and it did not take long before she realised that this was not for her
and decided to quit.
Saroja [Far Right] at our house on Christmas Day in the late 1970s with some visiting family members |
Since
we the children do not speak any Hokkien, it turned out to be something like a
chicken-and-duck situation because we just could not communicate. I was probably just playful and mischievous
but I made no effort to cooperate with the poor woman who was also not quite
able to follow my mum’s instructions. Looking
back, I believe that my parents had already realised that she was not fitting
into our household but was still giving her opportunity after opportunity.
Things
came to a head one afternoon as we sat down for our usual afternoon tea when
our parents came home from work and she made us a pot of hot tea. Mum had given her a simple recipe to mix
caster sugar into black tea before serving and that day we had a huge shock at
the first sip of tea because it tasted salty!
This was easily explained because Khor Mui Eng mistook table salt for
caster sugar and she had put salt in our tea instead of sugar! Happy Mother’s Day!
A version of this article was published in The New Straits Times, Streets Johor on 2 May 2014
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