The Kinta Valley, Perak State, Malaysia
Sybil Kathigasu's Clinic: 74 Main Road, Old Papan
Photos by Julie
Photos by Adrian
Sybil
Daly, an Eurasian, was born in Medan. A devout Catholic and a vegetarian, she
spoke fluent Cantonese. As a non-Chinese midwife, she had some freedom of
movement to visit her patients living in the outlying areas. A group of mainly
English speakers, both in Papan and further afield, gravitated towards Sybil
for she had access to overseas news via a hidden short-wave radio, codenamed
'Josephine'. ...
It
was Thean Fook who approached Sybil and asked her to provide treatment and
medical supplies to the MPAJA (Malayan Peoples' Anti-Japanese Army) guerrillas.
Sybil, who had long anticipated a role in the resistance, realised that 'the
time has come.' She nicknamed her new assistant 'Moru' due to his fondness for
Indian sour milk. - Kinta Valley, Pioneering Malaysia's Modern Development.
The Japanese Occupation of Malaya lasted from December 1941 to August 1945. Sybil helped hundreds of people before she was arrested, detained and interrogated by the Japanese secret police for two years. In order to extract information, they tortured Sybil and dangled her daughter from a tree over a fire. With her iron will Sybil defied her tormentors.
The Japanese Occupation of Malaya lasted from December 1941 to August 1945. Sybil helped hundreds of people before she was arrested, detained and interrogated by the Japanese secret police for two years. In order to extract information, they tortured Sybil and dangled her daughter from a tree over a fire. With her iron will Sybil defied her tormentors.
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The
approach to Papan is strangely scenic -- giant rain trees growing along a
winding stream, limpid mining ponds, a hill slope dotted with Chinese graves, a
Kuan Yin Temple, then suddenly in the middle of nowhere, a brick and mortar
streetscape.
A
nineteenth century mining town petrified in time. Two seemingly desolate rows
of shophouses, some barely standing, along a street simply called 'Main Road'.
The remains of a boomtown that once stood in the midst of tin-fields as far as
the eye could see. Remarkably, Papan begins
to show signs of life towards sunset, when children come out to play and
residents get home from work. Old friends hang out and chatter in the town's
only two coffee-shops.
Just
off the Main Road is the house of Raja Bilah (died 1911), the headman of Papan.
The Sumatran nobleman's remarkable career as miner-trader-adventurer and leader
of his people has inspired a book Raja Bilah and the Mandailings of Perak:
1875-1911 described by an American historian as 'the most exciting book on
Malaysian history' she has ever read. The great house was restored by the
National Museum several years ago.
The
hills around Papan belong to the Hijau range. Once they were not so peaceful,
but reverberated with the sound of gunfire. Sinuous jungle trails, now popular
with nature-lovers, used to lead to guerrilla hide-outs. They were first used
by hill rat miners, then by the Papan armed resistance and finally by Communist
insurgents during the Malayan Emergency (1948-1960).
Half a century after her death, Sybil's clinic at 74 Main Road was turned into a gallery interpreting the story of Papan town. This was done through the private effort of Law Siak Hong, currently President of the Perak Heritage Society. At the back of the house, one finds, unexpectedly, a bright and beckoning stone-and-bamboo garden.Sybil's last wish was to have her clinic in Papan serve the poor even after her death, but state medical services have filled the need. Instead, Hong's history gallery, obviously put up with much thought, performs other important functions.
Half a century after her death, Sybil's clinic at 74 Main Road was turned into a gallery interpreting the story of Papan town. This was done through the private effort of Law Siak Hong, currently President of the Perak Heritage Society. At the back of the house, one finds, unexpectedly, a bright and beckoning stone-and-bamboo garden.Sybil's last wish was to have her clinic in Papan serve the poor even after her death, but state medical services have filled the need. Instead, Hong's history gallery, obviously put up with much thought, performs other important functions.
It
pays tribute to human integrity and courage in the face of adversity. It
strengthens Papan's appeal as a place of history and memory.
For visitors, 74 Main Road offers a quiet space to be touched by small town of old Malaya and, hopefully, to rethink its future.
For visitors, 74 Main Road offers a quiet space to be touched by small town of old Malaya and, hopefully, to rethink its future.
To visit Sybil Kathigasu's clinic,
or for tours of Papan and Ipoh, contact:
Law Siak Hong
hp (+6) 017- 5061875
siakhongstudio@yahoo.com
or for tours of Papan and Ipoh, contact:
Law Siak Hong
hp (+6) 017- 5061875
siakhongstudio@yahoo.com
References:
Sybil
Kathigasu, No Dram of Mercy with an introdcution by Sir Richard Winstedt,
London: Neville Spearman. 1954.
Sybil
Kathigasu, No Dram of Mercy, preface by Cheah Boon Kheng, Singapore: Oxford
University Press, 1983.
Sybil
Kathigasu, No Dram of Merch, The Story of a Woman's Courage during the Japanese
Occupation of Malaya, Kuala Lumpur: Promentheus Enterprise, 2006.
Faces
of courage: incorporating No Dram of Mercy, The Papan Guerillas and Mrs K by
Chin Peng and Exploring the Legend by Norma Miraflor & Ian Ward: a
revealing historical appreciation of colonial Malaya's legendary Kathigasu
family, Singapore: Media Masters, 2006.
Ho
Thean Fook, God of the Earth, Ipoh: Perak Academy. December, 2000.
Ho
Thean Fook, Tainted Glory, Kuala Lumpur: University of Malaya Press, 2000.
Khoo
Salma Nasution & Abdur-Razzaq Lubis, Kinta Valley: Pioneering Malaysia's
Modern Development, Perak Academy, 2005.
Abdur-Razzaq
Lubis & Khoo Salma Nasution, Raja Bilah and the Mandailings of Perak
(1875-1911), Malayan Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society (MBRAS), 2003.
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