8.04.2023

Matriach

 

                                                        Matriarch

1960

Before leaving the classroom, Salmah glanced furtively at her schoolbag on the floor beside her empty seat – she was forbidden from taking it with her- and headed straight for the school gates.  Her pinafore was still hardly creased, her rubber shoes chalk white as she had not had time to play before school started.  It was the first class period of the afternoon school session; the class teacher had started collecting school fees, which was less than 2 ringgit then.  Sal,her nickname, did not have the money and was told to go home right away and come back with it as soon as possible. 

Dashing past the school gates, eyes downcast, she walked as fast as her feet in the tight, sole-beaten shoes, could carry her – from Jalan Yahya Awal, up the hilly road to Jalan Abdul Rahman Andak (past SIGS secondary school), left and down to Jalan Ngee Heng and up a cut-through back road to  Jalan Tebrau that opens out to the heart of Johore Bahru town. 

Raising her head to look left or right only when crossing a road, her mind was, all the way, foggy and her heart skipped a beat now and then.   After what seemed like hours, her house came into view at the sloping end of Jalan Tebrau, and  only then did she feel the scorching heat of the sun stinging her head and searing her eyes  as the tears welled - her steps quickening on the path to the short staircase and breaking into a run as she saw her mother on the verandah.  Mother hugged her and let her sobs gush and subside, stroking her head silently as she thought of what to do…she knew why Sal was back from school too soon, this was not the first time.       

Telling Sal to keep an eye on the little ones playing on the floor, mother went down to the workshop adjacent to the house where her father worked as a carpenter.  Sal usually played along with her sisters and brothers at whatever game they cooked up with the scant toys and scraps they could gather, but today her mind was clouded with the image of handing the dreaded 2 ringgit to Cik Saleha…will it be possible now, how long will she have to wait?  School had just started and her bag was still there.  Oblivious to their shrieks of delight, she kept her gaze on the corner where her mother disappeared.

About 20 minutes later, mother appeared with Pakcik Man, who worked with her father in the workshop.  Mother handed her the 2 ringgit, told her to keep the change carefully in her pocket later and thanked Pakcik Man as he took Sal’s hand and hurried her down to the shed at the side of the house, where his bicycle was parked.  At the bottom of the stairs, Sal turned her head sideways and met her mother’s eyes…a look that has graced her memories of her till today.

Pakcik Man helped her up to perch sideways on the bicycle “palang” between his seat and the handle bars and told her to hold tight on the centre part of the bars.  She held on convincingly, feeling  only the warm calm breeze caressing her face and gently blowing back her hair as Pakcik peddled stealthily uphill and downhill – closely retracking  her 6 km homebound route; now she could look coolly at cars and buses passing by, longingly at the fruit-laden rambutan and mango trees at the houses along the road, at other cyclists and finally the sundry shop in front of the school.   

As Pakcik stopped in front of the school gates, Sal hopped down, thanked him several times and ran into class.  It was now nearing the end of the second class period; Sal took out the money from her pocket and without a word, handed it to Cik Saleha who took it silently with just as much as a perfunctory nod, and opened her record book while Sal waited for the change.

Everyone was too eager to leave the class for the 30-minute recess; no one asked her anything – perhaps they knew and understood.  Together they walked noisily to the school canteen.

1973

Sal met me at the foyer of University Malaya’s 1st College where she had been a resident since her first year at the university.  I was studying in UiTM in Shah Alam.  We were both in our final year of study.  I was on the verge of breaking up with the first love of my life- by then in the fourth year of courtship.  It was inevitable; the distance between us was growing wider as our adolescence faded into our adult years, giving us new perspectives of life.  In the comfort of Sal’s neatly kept room, we talked for hours well into the night.  Sal had met her beau by then and was glowing.  She introduced me to him before I left.  His smile matched hers; I knew they were meant for each other.

2011

I was right.  They looked perfect together when I met them briefly at my daughter’s wedding, by then pursuing their own careers, holding senior positions in government service, and raising 5  boys. 

2016

I cried for Sal as I read news, in her Facebook, of the sudden demise of her youngest son in Canada – just after completing his studies.  I wrote in my condolences, sharing her grief silently.  Even when I saw, just months later, her normal cheerful exchanges of news with family and friends on Facebook, and marvelled at her inner strength, I could not disengage myself from the inherent sadness – I think I never will whenever I think of her.  My youngest son is about the same age as hers.  I am not habitually active on Facebook; I only open it when my heart wills me to.

July 2023

Greeting each other on the newly formed Whatsapp group of our primary and secondary school fraternity, Sal and I felt the urge to meet and catch up on all the years we had been apart.

I carefully choose my outfit to meet her, eager for her approval.  I wait patiently with another friend for her to arrive on the train.  Soon she is by my side, still about 3 inches taller than me in her slightly high- heeled pumps ( I am in flat sandals).  We embrace, dissipating the years that set us apart.

We have both been home-makers (though unlike me, she took early retirement)), holding the fort to nurture our loved ones and enable them to pursue their dreams and vocation.  Her husband, a renowned surgeon, continues to offer his expertise to the medical world while her four sons are professionals in their own fields.  She is in good health, has travelled widely and performed Haj.  With the multiple hats she is wearing in assuming responsibilities for the welfare of younger members of her extended and combined families ( hers and her husband’s), it seems like she is destined to be the matriarch of the clan.

This reminds me of a line from Murakami’s “Birthday Girl”: 

“No matter what they wish for, no matter how far they go, people can never be anything but themselves.”

From a young age Sal had always helped care for her younger siblings, including sewing clothes for them and assisting them in school work; later on, she assumed the big sister role for her husband’s  siblings as well. 

Being good with her hands, she had led art and craft projects for school exhibitions, always ready with her creative suggestions when we needed to produce some artistic displays or other.  For an English project, she drew a ballerina, and painted a sunset for my poems.  Not only did she do these with a quiet presence and cheerful demeanour, she also socialized very well with the girls in school in a most unobtrusive manner – a fact that I was oblivious to at the time, but which I now conclude on, after seeing how far she surpassed all of us in the SIGS Whatsapp group in remembering our school mates (not only their names and the classes they were in, but also where they lived, how they came to school, and other related matters).

No, far from depicting the archtype of the busybody – because I knew her to be the humble, polite and obliging girl who laughed easily – she has always been a free spirit who truly enjoys the company of others.  I remember her at campfires although she was not a member of the Girl Guides, picnics at Lido Beach with girls from other classes, at butterfly catching romps at Happy Valley with the  boys who did not interest her in the way they did the other girls…though she would giggle in gossips about our crushes and tease our blushes, would even convey my timorous greetings to the boy next door (her door). 

She had such a cheerful disposition that I did not suspect ,when I had caught her, a few times in class, crying silently with her head in her hands on the desk – thinking she was feeling unwell or had a fight with her siblings – that it was due to hunger, a truth she never admitted at the time but revealed to me recently while we were reminiscing times in school.  There was simply not enough food at home or it could not be prepared in time before school.  There were several times when I too cried while walking to school because I could not bring the money for a book or school fees when it was due, but I had never cried because of food.  My house was just a 15-minute walk from school, so I had more time to wait for breakfast or lunch and could  dash home after school when the hunger pangs hit me. 

Sal had 6 km to tread in the sweltering heat or rain to and from school (though her strides did grow steadily since the days of Cik Saleha the school fees superintendant).  Like “The Loneliest Runner” whose daily ordeals were prescient sprints into the Olympics, Sal’s daily walk (and run) were precedented drills for the star player that she became on the school hockey team.  Her family stayed in the house at the end of Jalan Tebrau throughout her school years.  Except for the lone walk at odd hours when she was forced to return home to get the school fees, she did have a companion or two for part of the daily journey on most days, usually arriving home well after sundown, unless she was offered a car ride by a school mate living in the adjacent residential area- with whom she still keeps in contact today.         

So there – like the incandescent North Star that lit her journey to school at daybreak, and back home at dawn, Salmah continues, in our twilight time, to shine and light up the sea of our memories – of our glorious days in SIGS. 

You left lasting strokes and permanent colours in our metamorphosis, Sal, and they are securely framed in our hearts and in our minds.  May Allah bless you always and may you live to be a hundred!

 

 

           

 

     

 

            

 

 

 

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