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Paper Sons and Daughters

Page 17

by Ufrieda Ho


  they did not make phone calls from jail or end up being in rehab, and this

  paved the way for Unisda and me. But we still grew up not really asking to

  go out much. We knew our parents did not approve and we took it mostly

  as just the way things were done in our house.

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  UFRIEDA HO

  Birthdays were not about invites, jumping castles and party packs. Our

  birthdays were spent with our family as Ah Goung and Por Por came by

  either on the weekend before or after our birthday. Sometimes we got to

  take a cake or two to class to share with our homeroom teacher and our

  classmates on our actual birthday.

  To celebrate, my mother bought a cake and set it up with candles

  and then she fried up a tray or two of noodles. She finally sliced cabbage

  and carrots with strips of chicken or pork cooked quickly in a hot wok

  fragranced with a knob of ginger and crushed cloves of garlic. These

  became the accompaniment to the noodles. Sometimes it was a simpler

  version of the noodles with spring onions, ginger and garlic, just as good

  to eat. Noodles at birthdays are a must; they signify long life in Chinese

  symbolism. Sometimes as a treat she hauled out the mini-rotisserie oven

  that my dad had given her. She skewered in a chicken dunked in her own

  marinade and set the bird into the TV-like oven to cook slowly. The chicken

  completed each revolution with a plonk and wobble on the uncertain

  rotisserie rods until it crisped up into golden deliciousness.

  Before eating, the food and cake were arranged on a tray and taken

  to the various altars in the house. One for my ancestors, the joe sien, and

  the other for the gods of the home, placed at the entrance of the house.

  My mother lit candles and incense at the altars to invite the ancestors to

  the celebrations. She whispered a few words over the food, a blessing and

  a prayer, and then clasped her hands together. Then she lifted the tray to

  offer the food and poured a bit of the tea and sometimes whisky on to the

  floor or the side of the tray. This symbolised sharing with the ancestors.

  The birthday girl or boy did the same and we would mimic the ritual and

  think a little about our granny and grandad whom we never got to meet.

  Only then would we sing happy birthday, in English, around our feast,

  bringing out the old Kodak to snap a few shots and then cut the cake and

  make a wish in the Western way of blowing out candles to make a secret

  dream come true.

  If we were not celebrating over a weekend, it would likely be something

  after school. We would save a slice of cake and some noodles for my dad,

  who arrived home much later. If it was a weekend he would try to come

  home early, or at least take a few hours to be home to cut the cake with

  us. But if he came home after the cake cutting we would flood him with

  the stories of our family party as he sat down at the dinner table. I would

  take him my gift of a teddy bear or doll or dress to show him my newest

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  object of delight and to thank him, even though I knew my mother chose

  and bought our presents. He would put a forkful or two of cake in his

  mouth and indulge my excited stories. Like my mom, he was not big on

  sweet stuff, but he ate some of my birthday cake and fussed a little over my

  present as I twisted the doll’s leg to show him what it could do or kissed

  my new teddy, showering it with the love that is set aside especially for

  new toys.

  The last day of school was always a highlight. To begin with, it was a

  civvies day. For weeks we would plan what we were going to wear on

  that last day when we could leave our school uniforms on their hangers at

  home. That top with that skirt, what chunky earrings we could team up

  with our shoes or what cardigans would be fashionably stylish enough to

  drape over our shoulders. My mother hated us tying jerseys around our

  waists, she said it looked tacky and cheap.

  The last day of school was also about sanding off the graffiti from

  our tables, giving our classrooms the big once-over, doing the windows,

  dusting shelves and polishing them up for the new year and cleaning the

  school grounds completely. We came to school with dust rags and Mr Min

  wood polish and went aerosol wild. We lined up for a final assembly and

  then we were off with screaming and clapping as the last bell of the year

  sounded and we went to have the big outing of the year.

  Just about everybody in the school went to the movies in the old Ster

  Kinekor cinema in the centre of town. I went with my group of friends and

  we wandered through the Carlton Centre a little, looked around a shop or

  two before having a burger and milkshake at a Wimpy and then crowning

  off our day with a movie. The other favourite was to go ice skating at the

  Carlton ice rink. We would re-familiarise ourselves with being on the ice

  after a year’s absence, then we would go round and round as lights flashed

  across the frozen arena and songs by Aha and Depeche Mode filled the

  cooled space.

  By the late 1980s, Chinese children were allowed access to these

  public places so the world seemed fine to me. There were Slush Puppies

  to slurp and songs from Erasure and OMD to hum along to. The world

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  of apartheid seemed far away. We knew that the world was split between

  black and white. We Chinese were the small wedge that fitted somewhere

  in-between, but even this striated racial madness seemed to be the

  ordinary order of things. I did not know that we were considered second-

  class citizens, or more accurately, that we were in no-man’s-land for the

  apartheid government – too white to be black, but too black to be white.

  I trusted completely that the adults knew what they were doing. It was

  my job to bring home a good improvement certificate at the very least and

  not to smoke or get pregnant before I could drive. Their job as the grown-

  ups was to keep the world in the serene balance of my childhood fantasy.

  Our Afrikaans teacher, a wise, no-nonsense woman whom you respected

  and feared simultaneously, had been with the school for decades. One of

  her earlier memories with the school was being asked to leave a theatre

  when as a white woman she had taken a group of senior pupils from our

  Chinese school to watch a play.

  When she told the story I was scared that it could happen to us, even

  though the 1990s were already on the horizon. My teenage self was

  mortified at the idea of how embarrassing it would be if we had to be

  humiliated by being turned away from a play or festival event. I imagined

  the white children who would be lined up with their tickets, pointing and

  snickering at us as we had to make our way back to a bus.

  That never happened to us but racial cleavages were still keeping the

  country apart and the 1980s were nervous days. At school, the safety drills

  of the mid-1980s were part of the anxious everyday. Every few months the

  siren went off and a crackling message came through the school intercom

  telling us to observe the siren as a drill. During these dril
ls we were

  supposed to discern whether it was for a fire, for stones and bombs being

  thrown through the windows, or if it was a hurricane about to hit us. We

  were to leave the windows open or closed, depending on the drill. Then

  we had to push our desks against the walls and take cover under them. We

  were also supposed to have taken careful notice of posters of mines and

  bombs that were put up on noticeboards throughout the school. If we were

  good children we would have examined carefully the 3-D posters of limpet

  mines and other explosives and been on the lookout for these strange

  objects throughout the school. They looked frightening enough, but I

  did not appreciate their capacity for evil. I was too young to understand

  apartheid and all its devices of destruction. I was more concerned about

  the possibility of a hurricane in Bramley Park.

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  Still, we all did the drills; we took them seriously and naively anticipated

  the day we would get to see if pushing our desks against the walls and

  crawling under them did stop flying Molotov cocktails.

  At the same time, our parents made us cautious of dustbins in town; it

  was about the only inkling I had that things were not exactly as they should

  be. The Zibi bins, named after a no-litter campaign mascot at the time,

  were dangerous, we were warned. Each dustbin was a possible receptacle

  for a bomb, my mother reminded us, as we returned a Nancy Drew

  or Tintin book to the central library that we visited on many Saturday

  mornings.

  ‘Do not stand anywhere near the dustbins. Stay inside the library and

  get to the bus stop just in time so you are not waiting there for too long,’

  my mom told us.

  The world may have been a dangerous place but I did not connect

  it with politics or the leaders that we saw on TV. My world remained

  carefully insulated at school and at home.

  Government schools were not allowed to talk politics and politics was

  not part of our home either. High school came with other crises for me.

  There were pimples to zap, hair to perm, or not, boys to talk about and the

  weekly Pop Shop videos to watch. On our bedroom doors and walls were

  the pictures of the dream boys of the 1980s: Johnny Depp, hot from his

  21 Jump Street days, River Phoenix, before he dropped dead from a drug

  overdose, and George Michael, before we knew what being gay meant.

  I hated my teeth more than politics or racial segregation and uprisings.

  My teens came with the catastrophe of bone and enamel gone wild in my

  mouth. I never showed my teeth in photos or my hand was always cupped

  over my mouth. My lips remained steadfast guards against the skew and

  crowded teeth. I dreamt of braces, the miracle wires that could straighten

  my teeth, like some children had. But we could not afford braces and I

  never asked for them.

  But there was a stroke of luck. As we were in a government school

  we had annual medical check-ups. A nurse arrived and she set up her

  makeshift rooms in the science laboratory. She weighed us, measured our

  height, checked our eyesight and told us to say hello to ‘the mouse’ in

  her special box every time we heard it squeak softer and softer. She also

  checked our teeth, gave us pink fluoride tablets and sometimes there would

  be a dreaded injection for some or other inoculation.

  It was at one of these annual check-ups that she must have felt sorry

  for me or been horrified by my unruly teeth. She put in the paperwork so

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  that my teeth would be looked at by an orthodontist at the University of

  the Witwatersrand dental school.

  Essentially, her signed documents meant I got to be a guinea pig with

  ugly teeth for postgraduates at the dental school to sort out. I was probed

  and examined as doctors selected their cases. The weirder the better, I

  guess, and my teeth made the grade. My doctor was an Indian man whose

  friendly eyes seemed extra-large as they peered out above his surgical mask

  for the years I said aaaaah in front of him. He was the only non-white

  doctor in the department and I realised that sometimes he was treated

  a little differently from his white colleagues. I picked up small things,

  like him coming in only at the tail end of a joke and being greeted as an

  afterthought as someone sailed past the room with its four or five dentists’

  chairs. I could not know for sure what went on, but there was something

  uneasy and a deliberate distance that even I as a teenager could pick up

  on.

  As my doctor he did all the right things. He tut-tutted at me for

  not wearing the painful elastics that bound my teeth like unforgiving

  harnesses. And he felt sorry for my near-raw gums, scraped by the wires

  that sometimes worked themselves loose in between my visits.

  It was on one of these many visits that I realised that being Chinese

  also meant people treated you differently, a little like how my doctor was

  treated. Every few months I took a few hours off school for an orthodontist

  visit. My mother drove me to the dental school first thing in the morning,

  waited for me and dropped me off back at school.

  On one of our first visits to the university, we were shunted from

  administrative person to administrative person. We eventually ended up at

  the receptionist who was supposed to attend to us and all other patients.

  The woman saw us enter the room but ignored us. We patiently took

  some seats near her and waited for her to be ready for us. Eventually

  my mother got irritated, but not wanting to upset this white woman she

  simply cleared her throat in an exaggerated way.

  Suddenly the receptionist sparked to life. Not to finally give us some

  assistance but instead she turned to a colleague and said loudly, ‘Oh, this

  woman has something stuck in her throat.’

  I was about fourteen at the time and I was shocked that my mother,

  trying to be unobtrusive even after a really long wait, was being dealt

  with so rudely. I understood the sarcasm right away and was sad that my

  mother still had to do the whole ‘Excuse me, please lady’ routine to this

  ineffectual and rude receptionist.

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  PAPER SONS AND DAUGHTERS

  Chinese were officially classified as coloured under apartheid. We were

  never honorary whites as some people believed, confusing Chinese racial

  status with that of Japanese in South Africa. In Yap and Leong Man’s book

  Colour, Confusion and Concessions, the authors included an anecdote that

  brings into clear focus the insanely degrading and even oxymoronic busi-

  ness of being ‘honorary white’.

  They write about how a bus driver refused to pick up a Japanese man

  he thought was Chinese. The man turned out to be a Japanese consul staff

  member and the incident erupted into a diplomatic furore. The Japanese

  consulate demanded an apology, the bus driver and the city transport had

  to say sorry, but still the drivers could not tell the difference between a

  Chinese person and a Japanese person.

  The authors went on to quote the Rand Daily Mail of Febru
ary 1962,

  which reported at the time:

  So once again we have this queer logic: the Japanese must be allowed

  to swim with Whites because they are important commercial allies.

  The Chinese must be admitted because it is hard to tell the difference

  between them. And apartheid, they say, is a matter of principle.

  But the Chinese did get more concessions than other non-white groups.

  By the late 1970s and 80s, Chinese were allowed into white Catholic

  schools, Chinese were for some time allowed into universities under a

  quota for coloureds and they could even stay in whites-only suburbs if

  their neighbours did not object.

  My Uncle Johnny, my mother’s cousin, who I call Mmm Kou Foo, for

  the fifth uncle, was the first and only one of his six brothers and sister to

  go to university and graduate. He still has the documents and letters from

  the neighbours who had to give their consent to allow his family to live in

  their home that was not in a so-called grey area. He had to ask ten would-

  be neighbours to the left of him, ten to the right and those in front and

  behind him if they minded that he, my aunt and their three young sons

  would live there. I have heard similar stories from other Chinese families

  who had to go through the same exercise in humiliation.

  In primary school I did not appreciate the complexity of this situation; I

  simply thought Mmm Kou Foo’s house was big and fancy when he hosted

  family parties. The thatch roof was a novelty with the grass all tightly

  bunched up under the wooden rafters. There was also a perfect green lawn

  and the pool was like the icing on a cake.

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  UFRIEDA HO

  Even when I had left school I thought the Chinese were lucky to have

  a concession like being able to live in a nice white suburb, as Mmm Kou

  Foo did, and I thought we should not complain too much. I also thought

  we did not have the vote because no Chinese boys had to go off to do

  their military service, which was a fair enough exchange, I figured. I knew

  others suffered more severely than the Chinese.

  It took an outsider, the American researcher Dr Yoon Park, who worked

  extensively interviewing and writing about the Chinese community in

  South Africa, to set me straight some years later.

  ‘No, Ufrieda. How demeaning do you think it must have been for people

 

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