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Paper Sons and Daughters

Page 15

by Ufrieda Ho


  under stacks of other things I was hoarding. My stash of Christmas cards

  grew with letters from the pen pals I picked up in Botswana and the United

  Kingdom, a girl in Cape Town and a dear, dear friend who left our school

  in Standard Three. Candy was the only white child in our school where

  her mom was the English teacher for the seniors. But when her mom left

  her teaching post at the Chinese school, Candy left, too. It was the end

  of Standard Three, we were nine years old and in our group of four, with

  my friends Pamela and Christmas, we gave ourselves code names – Small

  Mouse, Medium Mouse, Tall Mouse and Big Mouse. Candy was Big

  Mouse, not because she was big, but even with Pamela as Tall Mouse,

  Candy still towered over us, her short-by-comparison Chinese friends.

  When Candy left the school, she ended up being a pen pal even though she

  lived in the same city we did.

  In my diary I would write about the one or two boys I thought I was

  in love with. I would muse over their passing comments or some other

  fantasy I could nurture in my head, and in my diary.

  On the lined pages I raged against my mother for not understanding me.

  I wished her dead, then I would beg for forgiveness, then wish that I were

  dead. My parents were just not cool enough, they did not understand, they

  were old-fashioned and so strict about everything.

  In our garage there was an array of second-hand cars over the years.

  There was a tank of a BMW, so old it still had a speedometer with a

  needle that ran from west to east and headlights the size of footballs. I was

  embarrassed by the monster, especially when it had to be fired up to chase

  down the school bus. On days that we missed the school bus my mom,

  and sometimes my dad, would drive from stop to stop to try to catch up

  with it as it left the eastern suburbs along Louis Botha Avenue to Bramley

  where the Chinese school was. It was teenage humiliation personified for

  us. Dad would manoeuvre to cut off the bus, hooting and waving. When

  the driver saw him, or maybe his pyjamas with their fleur-de-lys patterns

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  or some other repeated logo across the cotton two-piece, he would stop.

  Of course, by then everyone would be peering out the window and the old

  BMW would be heaving as it came to an exhausted idle and we made our

  shuffled exits.

  For many years there was also our much-loved blue Mini that my father

  bought for my mother a few years after she finally learnt to drive. The

  little car had two doors and back windows that only pushed open a few

  centimetres. It was the car we would rush to, knowing it meant my mom

  had arrived to fetch us from the bus stop when it rained. Highveld storms

  saved us from the weekday uphill walk home. From the school bus we

  would make a dash for the tiny car, pull its passenger seat up and over and

  tumble into the car that is called ‘mini’ for a reason. Unisda, Kelvin and I

  took the back seat, Yolanda as the eldest got the front seat. The Mini only

  had one windscreen wiper, the windscreen was so small. I loved that little

  car that took us everywhere while we were growing up.

  The Mini also took us to a roadhouse at the edge of Hillbrow or to the

  local Wimpy when we were due a treat, or when my mom decided to splash

  out. Mom was a dedicated mother, cooking up noodles on birthdays and

  turning slabs of pork into slow-roasted crackling and glories of fat and

  flesh. She also simmered clear soups for clarifying some or other ailment

  and seeped bitter teas to lower our fire or breath, to har hei, when we

  were ill, like those chrysanthemum teas. It was all about tweaking the

  balance and equilibrium for a healthy body. But my mom also liked treats

  sometimes, even the Western ones.

  So every now and again we had the enchantment of something like the

  roadhouse’s banana split. A strange little bowl, like a glass nest, would

  hold scoops of ice cream wedged between the fruit as chocolate sauce

  made marbled swirls across the glass. Toasted sandwiches with cheese

  turned into dripping goo would also be on our roadhouse menu of Western

  food.

  In our house we also acquired a quintessentially Western invention – a

  plastic Christmas tree. We anointed the green spikes each year with tinsel,

  miniature reindeer and smiling snowmen. Every year my mother would

  buy each of us a new decoration. One of my favourites was a little white

  mouse with big eyes, a red cape and a plastic violin. Even as an adult I

  look for the little mouse each Christmas and place him on his bit of fake

  evergreen among the tinsel that has survived from when we were children.

  We learnt to sing Christmas carols and strung Christmas cards across our

  mantelpiece.

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  But we were a home that also prepared for Chinese new year with a

  spring clean; the pantry was restocked, the incense at the altars was relit

  and dishes were cooked that had lucky-sounding names. Dishes like faat

  choi, the fine, black strands of seaweed whose name is meant to bring

  good luck. Some of the dishes included prawns fried in chilli and garlic.

  Prawns were cooked because they are called har in Chinese, for joy and

  laughter, as in ha ha, hee hee.

  There was also the celebration of the moon festival and of the mid-

  autumn harvest that dominates the lunar calendar, edged into second

  place only by new year’s. We ate the rich, sweet moon cakes heavy with

  their crumbling dense pastry, embossed with writing and their lotus-paste

  fillings with a preserved, slightly salted egg yolk at its centre to represent

  the celestial orb as it grew heavy and full, a reminder to give thanks for

  the autumnal bounty. Even though we were so far flung south, we stayed

  linked to these festivals and commemorations of another hemisphere’s

  seasons and calendars. Our remembrances were made with dumplings

  wrapped in banana leaves for a sacrificed sage, a hero drawn from a distant

  history of emperors and dynasties. We also had a Confucius Day at school,

  meant to show respect for the wise teacher and those who followed in his

  footsteps. It was Confucius’s teachings that were hallowed, but the day

  was also supposed to be about showing respect for elders, teachers and

  life’s lessons.

  On this day, which we celebrated at the end of every September, some

  rich man on the PTA would pass out lei see, the red lucky packets, to all the

  schoolchildren. We all got R1 each from this man to splurge on Fizzy Bites

  sweets that went for 10 cents a roll or a packet of crisps for 40 cents.

  We loved the lei see but as the saying goes ‘there’s no free lunch’. Our

  Confucius Day lei see came with the price of having to sit through a special

  assembly that included the PTA honcho making a very long speech.

  As he walked to the podium to deliver his speech in Chinese, followed by a

  few words in shaky English, the older children would set their stopwatches.

  Peep-peep, peep-peep the watches would fire off in synchronicity, setting

  off snickers in the lofty school hall that was overseen by a picture of
Chiang

  Kai-shek in the front and Sun Yat Sen in the back. First came the muffled

  laughs, then the vicious glares from the teachers who could not pinpoint

  the culprits among the cross-legged mass seated on the floor.

  These worlds blended easily for us as children – moon cakes next to the

  custard slices with French names and spongy cakes representing a tower in

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  Portugal next to steamed Chinese baos. The Portuguese cakes came from

  a bakery that my father liked to shop at in Bertrams where there was a big

  Portuguese community. It was also the merging of the world of the lei see

  packets in bright red with gold writing along with Rudolph the red-nosed

  reindeer at Christmas and chocolate Easter bunnies. We were told these

  were hollow to remember the empty tomb of a resurrected Jesus Christ;

  we thought it was rude that the manufacturers had cheated us out of all

  the chocolate that could have been in the middle.

  To be one of four siblings was a good number as we grew up. We were like

  a readymade cricket team, Ho-style. We made up our own rules; if you hit

  the ball on to the roof it was a four, if you hit it into the veggie patch it was

  a six. Six because by the time you had lifted the spinach plants searching

  for the tennis ball or crunched through the vines that spread out with

  winter melon buds, the batsman would have run up a victory.

  There were enough of us to play hide-and-seek or whatever made-up

  games we concocted. We played our version of fun Olympics; we scooped

  water from one section of the yard with a lunchbox or old tea tin and

  carried it to the other end and then we saw who had managed to spill the

  least. Kelvin built makeshift ramps for us to fly our bikes over. We had

  two bikes between the four of us. And we balanced across beams that

  we would set up between two chairs to get crowned the Ho champion of

  whatever school holiday.

  Before we had the backyard of the Millbourn Road house, we used the

  stoep of the Bertrams house to play games of balancing on the rounded

  edge that marked the end of the front passage and the start of the tiny split

  garden. We would distract each other to see who would topple first. We

  also dangled yo-yos here and Unisda and I tried to mimic Kelvin’s tricks

  like ‘walking the dog’ or ‘around the world’, and we sent tops spinning

  across the fine cracks that lined the red floor. The stoep was polished a

  shiny red after years and years of Cobra polish filled up old cracks that

  pooled with water when it rained.

  This stoep was also where my mother’s love for plants flourished in

  a mish-mash of old cans, faded biscuit tins and plastic pots balanced on

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  chipped teacup saucers and lids of old lunchboxes. This place was home

  to flowers sprouted from shared clippings, nicked nodes from neighbours’

  gardens and the feisty propagation of spring onions that needed little more

  than a bit of soil to grow. Many Chinese also believe that a good dousing

  of human urine collected in night buckets makes the spring onions grow

  thicker and stronger. We were not children of the village, and even though

  my mom persists with the practice to this day, it grossed us out and we

  always pulled up our faces in the determined, dramatic way that children

  do so well.

  The urine sprinkled on the ground around the spring onions, like the

  miscellany of mismatched pots used for her plants, was characteristic of

  my mother – practical and intuitive rather than scientific and determined.

  She was sensible and frugal and her unsentimentality was hard-boiled,

  impenetrable.

  My school pinafore dangled way below my knees as I started Grade

  One as a five-year-old with the 1970s coming to an end. Mom said it was

  so I could grow into the pinafore and be spared the unsightly telltale signs

  of a released hem that would divide the faded fabric from the released hems

  of virgin pinafore. I remained convinced that I looked like a geek kid with

  no knees and it did not help that my school blazer was Yolanda’s hand-

  me-down or that my home-done haircut left me with an uneven fringe. In

  primary school I was teased by a few girls who told me only boys wore

  trousers when mom decided it was ridiculous to keep replacing ripped

  stockings for a child over the entire winter season. She said I would wear

  trousers – they were warmer anyway, she would say with brisk dismissal

  as I began to protest.

  I also survived hand-knitted jumpers, when everyone else has the finely

  machine-knitted ones bought in the uniform Mecca of Burgers Brothers in

  Mayfair. This was where all schoolchildren in the province went to buy

  their school uniforms. When we did have to buy something that my mom

  could not make, we undertook an annual trip to the store in the days

  before the new school term. We children would run through the racks and

  racks of school uniforms, poking fun at some schools’ regulation hats and

  coveting the pink-tasselled sashes of others.

  The shop attendant folded the blazers and uniforms in brown paper

  before slipping them into plastic bags. Mom or dad counted a wad of

  notes and left with not much change. I knew how much it dented my

  parents’ budget, but there was also delight knowing that I had my own

  new blazer.

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  I even made it through the carefully Tippexed-out mistakes on my book

  labels as my mother wrapped our books and put labels on the top right-

  hand corners at the beginning of each new year. Even as I begged her to

  replace the labels, she said something like: ‘It is a waste of a label and no

  one will notice.’ I would sulk and be cross that she had made the mistake in

  the first place. But how could her neat, clear script of the English language

  make allowances for what was little more than her making outlines of

  long and odd words – like ‘Comprehension’ or ‘Science’.

  My mother was the hands-on parent. She attended PTA meetings and my

  father went to work. My parents did not care too much about getting

  involved at school the way some parents did, like ‘Mr Red Lucky Packet’,

  who was out to impress others and smooth the way for his children. But

  my mother always did her bit. She made us cakes for fund-raising and she

  came to the library days when parents were asked to buy extra books to

  bolster the shelves of books and encyclopaedias.

  After one of these events the media centre teacher told me she was

  truly pleased my mother had bought a set of educational finger puppets.

  Parents overlooked the sewn-up felt faces, choosing something with spines

  and small print over and over again. At first I was a little embarrassed that

  everybody else’s parents went for the safe option of no-nonsense educational

  literature. But as it sank in, I realised my mother, in her own way, always

  knew there were more ways to learn than just through books.

  It was my mom who woke us up in time for school and packed our

  lunches. She cooked dinner and ate our meals with us in the hours before


  my father finally returned home. She was the one who ticked off the list of

  erasers, coloured pens and crayons that we needed to be educated in this

  Western world.

  Polishing everyone’s school shoes was my task each week and I

  sometimes had to be nagged to get around to it. But I developed my own

  method of just how much polish to apply, how long to wait for the waxy

  goodness to work its magic as it baked in the sun and how to work the

  polishing strokes quickly enough to get a sparkly shine afterwards.

  Mom shouted at us when we forgot to offload our lunchboxes in the

  kitchen sink on a Friday afternoon. Left in our schoolbags until Sunday

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  night, the lunchboxes would grow wild and stinky, full of strange moulds

  and furry spores that she would have to clean out.

  We lost our lunchboxes often and it forced mom to go to the extreme

  of etching our names into the boxes, in Chinese and English, with a sharp

  knife. While other children had printed labels on their jerseys and gym

  shorts, my mother painstakingly sewed our names on to the tags with her

  neat stitching.

  We attended the Chinese school in Johannesburg. It started off in

  End Street in Doornfontein, with the motorway arching overhead like a

  constant concrete cloud. It was a spooky, grey building without a blade

  of grass anywhere. I started nursery school and Grade One at this school,

  until the community secured better premises in Bramley.

  The community was so small that when I started Grade One I had

  just seven classmates. We learnt the English alphabet with its vowels,

  consonants and capital letters, as well as that each has a baby letter, too.

  We also tested out our sharpened HB pencils on the sequenced strokes

  that made up our Chinese names. Chinese names start with the surnames

  first, followed usually by two other characters that complete most Chinese

  names. Interestingly, the first thing I ever published was written in Chinese

  and submitted to the local Chinese newspaper. It was a simple piece I

  wrote in high school that started with ‘My name is . . .’ and included who

  my parents were, my hobbies and the pets I loved.

  The school had moved to its Bramley Park location by the time I started

  Grade Two. I found out a few years later that the school that used to be at

 

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