The 1961 Kampong Bukit Ho Swee Fire - Murdoch UniversityThe 1961 Kampong Bukit Ho Swee Fire and the...
Transcript of The 1961 Kampong Bukit Ho Swee Fire - Murdoch UniversityThe 1961 Kampong Bukit Ho Swee Fire and the...
The 1961 Kampong Bukit Ho Swee Fire
and the Making of Modern Singapore
Loh Kah Seng
B.A.(Hons), M.A. (NUS)
This thesis is presented for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy of Murdoch University
2008
I declare that this thesis is my own account of my research and contains as its main content work which has not previously been submitted for a degree at any tertiary education institution.
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Loh Kah Seng
The 1961 Kampong Bukit Ho Swee fire (Courtesy of National Archives of Singapore)
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Burn, burn! Burn, burn, burn, burn… The scorching rays of the sun Accompany the howling wind--- Ah! Rows of attap roofs suddenly dissolve in a sea of fire! Thick clouds of smoke, like a ferocious dinosaur, Engulf the skies! Pi bo pi bo… Balls of fire and burning flames Extend themselves from the source of the fire in four directions With great force and power, Flashing brightly, and dancing through the air. Ah! One by one, on the attap roofs, The wicked fire demon madly spins and leaps about! Countless columns of water Strike and spray on the fire demon like a silver whip; However, With ease, the heartless fire demon roars in laughter! Hua la la la… Walls crumble; Coconut trees fall… A sudden loud, deafening sound! What has exploded in the fire site? ----Terrifying! Oh dear! Even that factory has caught fire, That school has turned into a plot of scorched earth, And those shops, markets and gardens Have all been engulfed by the brutal flames! The fire displays its prowess And demonstrates its impenetrable force of destruction; A sea of humanity, The woeful cries of fleeing people resemble those of wailing spirits! Amidst all this confusion, Men, women, old, and young, Their faces are a sheet of pale: Some mourn the loss of decades of savings and property; Others weep by the streets, Uncertain of the whereabouts of separated family members! Whether natural disaster Or human calamity, The hearts of thousands of fire victims Have been shattered by the cruel inferno. ‘Fiery Plunder’ by Tian Liu. Sin Chew Jit Poh, 2 June 1961.
Abstract
By 1970, Singapore’s urban landscape was dominated by high-rise blocks of
planned public housing built by the People’s Action Party government, signifying
the establishment of a high modernist nation-state. A decade earlier, the margins of
the City had been dominated by kampongs, home to semi-autonomous communities
of low-income Chinese families which freely built, and rebuilt, unauthorised
wooden houses. This change was not merely one of housing but belied a more
fundamental realignment of state-society relations in the 1960s. Relocated in
Housing and Development Board flats, urban kampong families were progressively
integrated into the social fabric of the emergent nation-state. This study examines
the pivotal role of an event, the great Kampong Bukit Ho Swee fire of 1961, in
bringing about this transformation. The redevelopment of the fire site in the
aftermath of the calamity brought to completion the British colonial regime’s
‘emergency’ programmes of resettling urban kampong dwellers in planned
accommodation, in particular, of building emergency public housing on the sites of
major fires in the 1950s. The PAP’s far greater political resolve, and the timing of
and state of emergency occasioned by the scale of the 1961 disaster, enabled the
government to rehouse the Bukit Ho Swee fire victims in emergency housing in
record time. This in turn provided the HDB with a strategic platform for clearing
other kampongs and for transforming their residents into model citizens of the
nation-state. The 1961 fire’s symbolic usefulness extended into the 1980s and
beyond, in sanctioning the PAP’s new housing redevelopment schemes. The official
account of the inferno has also become politically useful for the government of
today for disciplining a new generation of Singaporeans against taking the nation’s
progress for granted. Against these exalted claims of the fire’s role in the Singapore
Story, this study also examines the degree of actual change and continuity in the
social and economic lives of the people of Bukit Ho Swee after the inferno. In some
crucial ways, the residents continued to occupy a marginal place in society while
pondering, too, over the unresolved question of the cause of the fire. These
continuities of everyday life reflect the ambivalence with which the citizenry
regarded the high modernist state in contemporary Singapore.
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Acknowledgments Among the early responses to my PhD research outside of the Asia Research Centre, where I was based, was a common feeling that ‘the Bukit Ho Swee fire had nothing to do with the making of modern Singapore’. Upon the completion of this study, I am pleased to say that, in addition to having made a cogent argument for my thesis, even the sceptics have made some form of contribution towards my work. I would first like to thank Jim Warren, my supervisor, who has been both mentor and friend. I am grateful for his untiring support for my research and writing, for alerting me to a variety of ways in which I could further develop as a scholar and teacher, and most crucially, for helping me consider what it means to be an academic and public intellectual. I am also thankful to other staff of the Asia Research Centre, Murdoch University, for their ideas and support, particularly Garry Rodan, Kanishka Jayasuriya, Carol Warren, Ian Wilson, and Tamara Dent. Tracie Pollin, Sit-ling Tull and Grant Stone, librarians at Murdoch, were extremely helpful. I wish to acknowledge, too, the Division of Arts and the School of Humanities and Social Sciences at Murdoch for the award of three research bursaries and scholarships which substantially aided my fieldwork in Singapore in 2006-2007. I would like to thank the Asia Research Institute, National University of Singapore, for having me as a Visiting Scholar during my fieldwork. I benefited from discussions with a number of staff at NUS, particularly Chua Beng Huat, Brenda Yeoh, Ann Wee, Khairudin Aljunied, Kwa Chong Guan, Hong Lysa, Greg Clancey, Paul Kratoska, Natalie Oswin, Ngiam Tee Liang, Lai Chee Kian, Lai Ah Eng, Albert Lau, Huang Jianli, and Tim Yap Fuan. In my research, I am also grateful to Erik Holmberg, Joey Long, Mok Ly Yng, Lim Chen Sian, Stephen Dobbs, Michael Pinches, Richard Harris, Nancy Kwak, Alvin Tan, Edwin Lee, Tan Siok Sun, Sunil Amrith, Raymond Goh, Riaz Hassan, and Alan Smart. I also wish to acknowledge members of the Tangent, particularly Quah Sy Ren and Chan Cheow Thia, for agreeing to publish a special issue in their journal on my research on the Bukit Ho Swee fire. My archival research benefited from the assistance of a number of institutions and their staff: Pitt Kwan Wah, Elaine Goh, Yvonne Chan, Rahmah Saini, Yap-Wong Hwai Fey, Ng Yoke Lin, and Jason Lim of the National Archives of Singapore; Yeong Yoon Ying and Tan Lai Kheng of the Prime Minister’s Office; Aline Wong, Tony Tan, Lau Chay Yean, and Albert Sim of the Housing and Development Board; Ang Bee Lian, Rao Ker Ee and Khor Su Min of the Ministry of Community Development, Youth and Sports; Ng Ching Huei and Iskander Mydin of the National Museum of Singapore; Othman Wok; J. M. Jumabhoy; and the Ministry of Home Affairs, Internal Security Department, Singapore Civil Defence Force, Ministry of Education, Subordinate Courts, Ministry of National Development, Public Works Department, National Council of Social Service, and MediaCorp.
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I owe a special thanks to my Member of Parliament, Maliki Osman, for helping me with access to the official archives.
Finding and speaking to former kampong dwellers was an entirely different sort of challenge, and my social and intellectual debts here are owed to another group of individuals and institutions: Lily Neo, Member of Parliament for Bukit Ho Swee-Kim Seng constituency; Lee Wai Ying of Bukit Ho Swee Court Residents’ Committee; Gerard Ee and his staff, past and present, of Beyond Social Services; Michael of Thye Hua Kwan Moral Society; Sister Molly Lim of the Franciscan Missionaries of Mary; Oak3 Films; Yesterday.sg; and Michael Fernandez, Tan Jing Quee, Linz Lim, Nurul Asyikin Mohd Yunus, Mohd Kamal Jauhari Bin Zaini, Bob Sim, Jack Chia, Melissa Sim, Ho Chi Tim, Ernest Koh, Victor Yue, P. Chitty, Lim Chin Joo, Wui Swee Huan, Seng Yu Jin, Ten Leu-Jiun, Peter Lim Heng Loong, Javier Li, Elena Chia, Wil-kie Tan, Koh Soo Hoon, Eng Yee Peng, Chan Weng Kin, Edward Wan, Koo H. P., Qi Qian, Fiona Chen, and Seng Guo Quan.
My thanks in particular to Lily Neo and Lee Wai Ying for allowing me to
place an open letter in Bukit Ho Swee Estate welcoming the residents to participate in my research.
I wish also to record my appreciation of working with Jane Jacobs and
Stephen Cairns, of Edinburgh University, in their interviews with residents of Block 22 in July 2007.
Friends and former students assisted me considerably by transcribing some
of my interviews, particularly Melissa Sim, Su Yuhan, Neo Xiao Yun, Jack Chia, Cindy Lim, Jacyln Tan, Lim Gui Hui, Gina Phang, and Fang Shihan.
I am deeply indebted to my family, to Si Wei and Mr Brown, and to friends
who fed me and showed other forms of encouragement, both tangible and otherwise, throughout my journey of discovery and recovery of the past: Stephii Chok (who also proofread my thesis), Elaine Llarena, Lynn Seah, Tan Teng Phee, Henry Chen, Carolin Liss, Brian Tai, Yasuko Kobayashi, Luky Djani, Jay Ram Adhikari, Lim Cheng Tju, Kay Gillis, Kurt Stenross, Ang Cheng Guan, and Ng Eng Ping.
Finally, this study would not have been possible without the memories,
reflections and social contacts of my interviewees, many of whom treated me with both seriousness and kindness in remembering a momentous event in their personal pasts. By detailing their life stories with empathy and imagination, I hope to acknowledge their important role in this research, and in the making of modern Singapore.
LKS April 2008
Contents Abstract iii Acknowledgments iv Tables ix Maps x Photographs xi Abbreviations xv Glossary of Terms and Phrases xvii Introduction 1 Fires in History 3 Documents and Memories 11 Chapter 1 Movement into the Margin 17 Between Staying and Moving 21 Increase in Family Life 25 Exodus from ‘Pigeon Cages’ 34 Negotiating Family and Workplace 39 Direct Arrivals 48 Mobile Families and ‘Unscrupulous Racketeers’ 53 Chapter 2 ‘Black Area’ 59 Origins 61 Fire, Bombs and Sentries 64 The Shadow Economy 70 Community of the Living, the Dead and the Pigs 89 The Pai Kia and the Children 99 Chapter 3 A Roar from the Oppressed People 113 Transforming ‘Old Singapore’ 114 Representations 118 Sanitation and Surveillance 126 Demolition and Dishousing: The Work of the Municipal Commission and the City Council 131
Clearance and Resettlement: the SIT Response 136 Planning and Zoning 144 Resistance and Mobilisation 153 Bukit Ho Swee and Hong Lim Pa Sat 166 Chapter 4 With Wood and Attap Came Fire 173 The Kindling Kampongs 174 Million Dollar Fire: Kampong Bugis, 1951 183 Scene of Indescribable Confusion: Geylang Lorong 3, 1953 185 No to Non-combustible Attap Roofing: Aljunied Road, 1953 186 Mooncake Festival Fire: Kampong Tiong Bahru, 1955 188 Six Dead: Kampong Koo Chye, 1958 189 The Voluntary Kampong Fire-fighting Squads 190 Friday 13: Kampong Tiong Bahru, 1959 194
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Living with Fire 197 Chapter 5 Fire Emergency 205‘Not prepared to live far from their work’, Kampong Bugis, 1951 206‘14-day wonder’, Geylang Lorong 3, 1953 210‘Units of this type should in future be built only in rural areas’, Aljunied Road, 1953 213
‘Permitted to rebuild accommodation themselves within the fire area’, Kampong Tiong Bahru, 1955 217
‘Happy to return to their former neighbourhood’, Kampong Koo Chye, 1958 220
‘The opportunity to clean up the area must not be lost’, Kampong Tiong Bahru, 1959 230
Chapter 6 The Unprecedented Inferno 251174-A Kampong Tiong Bahru, about 3 pm 251Beo Lane-Bukit Ho Swee [Road], from 3.30 pm 260Or Kio Tau-Havelock Road, from Roughly 4.30 pm 275Delta Estate, about 5.30 pm 284Arc of Destruction 286 Chapter 7 State of Emergency 295Fire Site 295A Maelstrom of Activity at the Relief Centre 299Operation Shift 318The Big Singapore Debate 324The Anger and the Rumours 329 Chapter 8 Nine Months 343‘A war on the all too familiar ogres and giants’: The PAP’s Public Housing Policy, 1960 343
‘You cannot make an omelette without breaking eggs’: The HDB’s Managers and Architects 353
‘A God-sent opportunity’: Emergence of Bukit Ho Swee Estate 358End of a Fatal Experiment: The Emergency Housing of Bukit Ho Swee 378‘A planned new city will be built’: The Making of Modern Singapore 386 Chapter 9 Change and Continuity: 1962-2008 401The Flats: Revitalisation and Modernity 402Becoming Good and Loyal Citizens 417‘Tong Kor’: Work and Resignation to Poverty 424The Estate beyond the Law 434The Gangs and the Socially Detached Youth 443 Chapter 10 Memory, Myth and Identity 457The Making of a Myth 459Romancing the Kampong, Rebooting the Estate 477Undying Rumours 485 Conclusion 491
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Appendix Localities and Residents of Kampong Bukit Ho Swee 497 Bibliography 507
Tables
Table 1.1: Components of Population Growth, 1881-1931 22
Table 1.2: Components of Singapore’s Population Growth, 1931-1970 28
Table 1.3: Migration Statistics in Singapore, 1947-1953 29
Table 1.4: Population and Economic Characteristics of Urban Kampong Dwellers 46
Table 3.1: Kampong Inspection by the City Council, 1949-1960 128
Table 3.2: Number of Dwellings in Urban Kampongs in 1948 & 1958 130
Table 3.3: Distribution of Population under the Master Plan between 1953 and 1972 149
Table 3.4: Redistribution of Attap Population under the Master Plan 150
Table 3.5: Tolerated Attap Areas 150
Table 3.6: Selected Clearance Areas 151
Table 3.7: Urban Planning Districts in the Master Plan, 1955 152
Table 3.8: Clearance Areas by Priority, 1955 153
Table 4.1: Number of Fires, Fire Risk & Fire Damage in Singapore, 1930-1965 175
Table 4.2: List of Kampongs in the City Area in Order of Fire Risk, 1954 177
Table 4.3: Main Causes of Fires in Singapore, 1949-1970 182
Table 4.4: Fire-Fighting Squads in Urban and Rural Kampongs 191
Table 5.1: Possible Housing Sites for Emergency Housing, 1958 229
Table 8.1: Type and Pace of Construction of Bukit Ho Swee Estate, 1961-1965 369
Table 8.2: Demand for Bukit Ho Swee Phase II Contract I Flats, 1962 383
Table 8.3: Demand for 1-Room Communal Flats, 1962 384
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Maps
Map 1.1: Urban Kampongs in Singapore c. 1955 18
Map 1.2: Percentage Increase in the Population of Singapore Municipality, 1936-1947 34
Map 2.1: Localities of Kampong Bukit Ho Swee, 1960 60
Map 6.1 Path of the 1961 Kampong Bukit Ho Swee Fire 261
Map 8.1 The Building Phases & Housing Blocks of Bukit Ho Swee Estate 370
Appendix Map 1: The Beo Lane-Bukit Ho Swee [Road] Locality, 1949 497
Appendix Map 2: Si Kah Teng, 1949 499
Appendix Map 3: Or Kio Tau, 1949 501
Appendix Map 4: Havelock Road below Ma Kau Thiong, 1949 502
Appendix Map 5: Hong Lim Pa Sat, 1949 504
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Photographs
Plate 1.1: Wooden houses built over a river in Singapore 20
Plate 1.2: Raised wooden houses in an urban kampong in Singapore, c. 1960s 20
Plate 1.3: The children of Kampong Bukit Ho Swee, c. 1960 33
Plate 1.4: Children and youths at the Malayan Chinese Association shophouse 33
Plate 1.5: Ah Kong and Tua Pui Mah, with my parents, c. 1969 38
Plate 2.1: Tay Ho Swee 62
Plate 2.2: Kampong Bukit Ho Swee, 1948 72
Plate 2.3: Kampong Bukit Ho Swee, 1958 73
Plate 2.4: Bicycles and cars on the one-way Havelock Road 77
Plate 2.5: A provisions shop located on the ground floor of the MCA shophouse, c. 1950s
77
Plate 2.6: The empty space behind the MCA shophouse, c. 1950s 78
Plate 2.7: Large pig feeding at an interior road in Kampong Bukit Ho Swee, c. 1960
84
Plate 2.13: A dilapidated toilet constructed of bricks and plank in the Bukit Ho Swee area
92
Plate 2.14: A pig waits near a toilet in the Bukit Ho Swee area 92
Plate 2.15: Young men at the MCA shophouse, c. 1950s 107
Plate 2.16: Young men outside a provisions shop at the MCA shophouse, c. 1950s
107
Plate 3.1: A dilapidated wooden house with attap roof in the Bukit Ho Swee area
124
Plate 3.2: Discarded household items lie in open space in the Bukit Ho Swee area, 1947
125
Plate 3.3: Uncleared rubbish in the Bukit Ho Swee area 125
Plate 3.4: An uncovered drain with stagnant water in the Bukit Ho Swee area
126
Plate 3.5: Free-ranging pigs feed among the wooden houses in the Bukit Ho Swee area, c. 1930s
126
Plate 4.1: Ho Kok Hoe’s impression of the 1959 Kampong Tiong Bahru fire
196
Plate 5.1: Prototype emergency housing at Kolam Ayer 212
Plate 5.2: The Kampong Koo Chye Fire Rehousing Scheme 228
Plate 5.3: The 3-room terrace houses of the Kampong Tiong Bahru Fire Site Phase I
244
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Plate 5.4: The 1-room emergency and 2-room flats of the Kampong Tiong Bahru Fire Site Phase II
244
Plate 5.5: The completed SIT emergency housing of the Tiong Bahru Fire Site Scheme, October 1960
245
Plate 5.5: Ongoing construction at the Tiong Bahru Cemetery Scheme (Ma Kau Thiong), October 1960
245
Plate 6.1: A family fleeing from the fire at Tiong Bahru Road 256
Plate 6.2: A fire engine is immobilised on the side of the road amid the surging crowd
259
Plate 6.3: The inferno rages in the distance as onlookers observe the dark clouds of billowing smoke
262
Plate 6.4: Sweat-drenched men attempt to establish a fire break by demolishing a wooden house
264
Plate 6.5: Residents move their belongings as the flames, visible in the background, approach
269
Plate 6.6: Men carry bulky furniture up the hill, while others rush in the opposite direction to render assistance
270
Plate 6.7: Another group of young men, carrying a heavy cupboard, reach the foot of Ma Kau Thiong
270
Plate 6.8: Onlookers are clearly visible inside the partially-completed block of emergency flats at Ma Kau Thiong
272
Plate 6.9: Fire victims guard their families’ possessions at the foot of Ma Kau Thiong
272
Plate 6.10: The flames and towering clouds of smoke are visible from the foot of Ma Kau Thiong
273
Plate 6.11: An aerial view of the fire as it heads north towards Havelock Road
273
Plate 6.12: The fire, driven by a strong wind, changes direction and moves northwest from Beo Lane towards Delta Estate
274
Plate 6.13: Beo Lane after the fire 274
Plate 6.14: Fire-fighters and policemen attempt to control the fire-fighting effort
277
Plate 6.15: A shop on the ground floor of the MCA shophouse gutted by the flames
278
Plate 6.16: Inspecting the damage to the shop 278
Plate 6.17: A lorry belonging to ‘广源兴’ soy sauce company in Bukit Ho Swee drives away the family’s possessions along Zion Road
283
Plate 6.18: The fire has reached Delta Estate 285
Plate 6.19: Safe from the fire but heart-broken 287
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Plate 6.20: Koeh Sia Yong depicts a family’s grief in ‘失去家园’ (‘Lost Homes’)
288
Plate 6.21: Artist Liu Kang’s painting on the sorrow of Chinese families who had lost their homes in the inferno
288
Plate 7.1: Fire victims search through the debris at the fire site 297
Plate 7.2: Families with buckets search in the charred ruins 297
Plate 7.3: Tan Geok Hak’s Singer sewing machine, still being used, in her flat in Bukit Ho Swee, 2006
298
Plate 7.4: Fire victims at the relief centre 302
Plate 7.5: Boys and girls bathe at the standpipes installed in the relief centre
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Plate 7.6: A British army blanket, held by Jack Chia, still in the possession of Tan Geok Hak, 2006
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Plate 7.7: Relatives and friends wait in queue at the gate of the relief centre while the fire victims wait within the school compounds
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Plate 7.8: Registration at the relief centre 307
Plate 7.9. The Pepsi-Cola Factory at Havelock Road and the PAP Delta Branch jointly set up a drinks stall at the relief centre to raise funds
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Plate 7.10: Nestle Company provides hot drinks for the fire victims 312
Plate 7.11: Lee Ah Gar’s relief card issued by the Social Welfare Department
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Plate 7.12: A woman with toddler recalls her tragedy and reviews the uncertainty of life in the future
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Plate 7.13: Operation Shift 321
Plate 7.14: A family of five, assisted by two students of River Valley Middle School, prepare to enter their temporary HDB flat
321
Plate 8.1: Artist Tan Choo Kuan’s impression of the rapid rebuilding of the fire site
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Plate 8.2: Roy Chan with author at Jalan Bukit Ho Swee, 2007 366
Plate 8.3: The official opening of the newly-completed modern emergency housing at Ma Kau Thiong
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Plate 8.4: The emergence of Bukit Ho Swee Estate, November 1962 371
Plate 8.5: The southern half of Bukit Ho Swee Estate, April 1963 372
Plate 8.6: A picture of Bukit Ho Swee Estate taken from the direction of Delta Estate
372
Plate 8.7: The 6-storey 1-room emergency flats of Block 3 along Jalan Bukit Ho Swee
383
Plate 9.1: Png Pong Tee with author at her home, 2008 404
Plate 9.2: The proximate spot where the 1961 inferno started, 2006 413
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Plate 9.3: A mix of unchanged private and redeveloped public architecture, 2006
414
Plate 9.4: Block 34 along Jalan Bukit Ho Swee, 2006 414
Plate 9.5: Flats in Taman Ho Swee selected for en bloc redevelopment, 2006
415
Plate 9.6: Ongoing construction of new HDB flats for residents in the locality affected by the SERS, 2008
415
Plate 9.7: The unrelenting pursuit of architectural modernity in Singapore, 2007
416
Plate 9.8: The massive Tiong Bahru Plaza, a multi-purpose ‘one-stop’ shopping mall, 2007
416
Plate 9.9: Ong Chye Ho’s ‘pillar space’ at Block 79, Indus Road, 2006 418
Plate 9.10: HDB flats along Jalan Bukit Ho Swee, built after the 1961 fire, 2007
419
Plate 9.11: Mothers and their children socialising in the day in the open space behind Block 48, Beo Crescent, c. 1980
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Plate 9.12: The 1-room flats of Block 33, facing each other across a common corridor, 2006
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Plate 9.13: Block 48, Beo Crescent, at the edge of Bukit Ho Swee Estate
437
Plate 9.14: Jalan Bukit Ho Swee 437
Plate 9.15: The children of ‘NC’ at Block 44, Beo Crescent, c. 1980 451
Plate 9.16: In the foreground, walking away from ‘NC’, are the ‘street children’ of Bukit Ho Swee Estate, c. 1980
451
Plate 9.17: Author on a swing at Taman Ho Swee, c. 1970s 455
Plate 9.18: Author at a playground just outside Block 28, Jalan Membina, c. 1970s
455
Plate 10.1: Ng Hoot Seng, 2006 457
Plate 10.2: 1-room flats along Jalan Bukit Ho Swee 462
Plate 10.3: The Bukit Ho Swee fire exhibit at the Civil Defence Heritage Gallery, Central Fire Station, 2006
472
Plate 10.4: The Bukit Ho Swee fire exhibit at the HDB Gallery, HDB Hub, 2006
473
Plate 10.5: The intersection of historical event, education and social memory
473
Appendix Plate 1: The Beo Lane-Bukit Ho Swee locality, 1958 498
Appendix Plate 2: Si Kah Teng, 1958 500
Appendix Plate 3: The Or Kio Tau locality up to Ganges Avenue, 1958 501
Appendix Plate 4: Havelock Road below Ma Kau Thiong, 1958 503
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Appendix Plate 5: Hong Lim Pa Sat, 1958 505
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Abbreviations
ARP Air Raid Precaution
BH Berita Harian
BHSFNRF Bukit Ho Swee Fire National Relief Fund
BHSSSC Bukit Ho Swee Social Service Centre
BMA British Military Administration
CC City Council
CC ABSD City Council Architect and Building Surveyor’s Department
CC ED City Council Engineer’s Department
CC HD City Council Health Department
CEO Chief Executive Officer
CID Criminal Investigations Department
CO Colonial Office
DOE Department of Education
EDB Economic Development Board
FD Fire Department
FMS Federated Malay States
FO Foreign Office
gpm gallons per minute
GRC Group Representation Constituency
HB/HDB Housing and Development Board
MC Ministry of Culture
MCA Malayan Chinese Association
MCP Malayan Communist Party
MD Medical Department
ME/MOE Ministry of Education
MOF Ministry of Finance
MLW Ministry of Labour and Welfare
MLGLH Ministry of Lands, Local Government and Housing
MND Ministry of National Development
MP Member of Parliament
MRCA Monthly Review of Chinese Affairs
MT Malaya Tribune
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MUP Main Upgrading Programme
NAS National Archives of Singapore
NC Nazareth Centre
NFWP Nanfang Wan Pau
NYSP Nanyang Siang Pau
OHC Oral History Centre
PA People’s Association
PAP People’s Action Party
PRO Public Relations Office
PS Permanent Secretary
RCS Radio Corporation of Singapore
RG Record Group
SADA Singapore Attap Dwellers’ Association
SBC Singapore Broadcasting Corporation
SCJP Sin Chew Jit Poh
SCPA Singapore Country People’s Association
SCSS Singapore Council of Social Service
SERS Selective En Bloc Redevelopment Scheme
SFA Singapore Farmers’ Association
SFB Singapore Fire Brigade
SFP Singapore Free Press
SIT Singapore Improvement Trust
SJRO Singapore Joint Relief Organisation
SLAD Singapore Legislative Assembly Debates
SM Singapore Monitor
SPD Singapore Parliamentary Debates SPF Singapore Police Force
SRRA Singapore Rural Residents’ Association
SS Singapore Standard
ST Straits Times
SWD Social Welfare Department
SWHDA Singapore Wooden House Dwellers’ Association
TOL Temporary Occupation Licence
UMSU University of Malaya Students’ Union
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Glossary of Terms and Phrases
本性不坏 ‘Their nature was good’ in Mandarin
半天 ‘Halfway into the sky’ in Mandarin
趁火打劫 ‘Taking opportunity of a fire to rob’ in Mandarin
吃什么头路? ‘What is your livelihood?’ in Mandarin
顶呱呱 ‘Very good’ in Mandarin
河水山 Bukit Ho Swee in Mandarin
黑区 ‘Black area’ in Mandarin
很自由, 很自在 ‘Very free, very carefree’ in Mandarin
轰轰的 ‘Hot’ in Mandarin
火不会认识你跟我 ‘The fire would not distinguish between you and me’ in Mandarin
见惯不怪 ‘You grow accustomed to what you frequently see’ in Mandarin
空前大火 ‘The unprecedented inferno’ in Mandarin
你们灾民住屋子一定是不必付屋租吗?
‘Are you fire victims living in the flats sure that you don’t have to pay rent?’ in Mandarin
上上下下 ‘Regulars’ in Mandarin
失去家园 ‘Lost homes’ in Mandarin
天阴之别 ‘Vast difference’ in Mandarin
我们没有路可以走了
‘We had no other roads to walk’ in Mandarin
乡村 Village in Mandarin
又是好象河水山 ‘Just like another Bukit Ho Swee’ in Mandarin
这种话你不可以说 ‘This sort of things you cannot say’ in Mandarin
终身注定 ‘Life is fated’ in Mandarin
最有人情味 ‘A warm place to live in’ in Mandarin
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ah long ‘Loan shark’ in Hokkien, an unlicensed moneylender who makes unsecured loans at high interest rates
amah Female domestic servant
ang chia ‘Red car’ in Hokkien, referring to the riot truck
attap Thatched roof usually made of dried nipah leaves
bang kali Hokkien corruption of ‘Bengali’
bee hoon Rice vermicelli
beo Temple in Hokkien
bo bian ‘Hopeless’ or ‘no choice’ in Hokkien
bo lang, bo lang, kin ‘No one here, no one, quick!’ in Hokkien
bodoh ‘Stupid’ in Malay
bo cheng hu ‘There was no government’ in Hokkien
bo ho sor chai ‘Bad place’ in Hokkien
bukit Hill in Malay
chai tow kway Local light dish, rice flour stir fried with eggs and radish, also known as carrot cake
chap ji ki Twelve-digit Chinese lottery
chap lak lau ‘16 storeys’ in Hokkien, referring to a 16-storey building
che lor ‘Find a road’ in Hokkien
chee cheong fun Local light dish, rice noodle roll
cheng tng Local dessert, fruits and seeds in a sweet syrup
chin chai ‘Easygoing’ in Hokkien
curry puff Local snack, fried pie with curry, chicken and potatoes
di siao siao ‘Mischievous’ or ‘deviant’ in Hokkien
For Seng ‘Fire City’ in Cantonese, referring to the City Gas Works at Kallang and more generally to the locality
char bee hoon Fried rice vermicelli
char kway teow Thick, flat rice noodles stir-fried in dark soy sauce with fish cake, cockles, and Chinese sausage or beef
gado gado Local vegetable salad served with peanut sauce dressing
gong ‘Stunned’ in Hokkien
goo li Coolie or labourer in Hokkien
gu ni te ‘Milk pigs’ in Hokkien
gua ‘Evict’ in Hokkien
Guanyin The Goddess of Mercy in Mandarin
Ho Chui Sua Bukit Ho Swee in Hokkien
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hock chap ‘Complicated’ in Hokkien
Hong Lim Pa Sat ‘Hong Lim Market’ in Hokkien, referring to Covent Garden
hong kau ‘Christian’ in Hokkien
Hungry Ghosts Festival
Chinese festival on the fourteenth day of the seventh lunar month celebrating the spirits and ghosts leaving the lower world to visit the living
hwei Local informal system of rotating credit, also called tontine
ikan bilis Deep fried anchovies
jaga Indian watchman
jalan ‘Walk’ in Malay
jin cham ‘Very difficult’ in Hokkien
jit bang bua tia ‘One bedroom and half a living room’ in Hokkien, referring to an improved 1-room HDB flat
kampong Village in Malay
kangkong Local species of leafy green vegetables
karang guni Local rag and bone collectors who visit residences door-to-door
killer litter Litter thrown from a high-rise flat
kong ‘Panicked’ in Hokkien
kua tau lui ‘Protection money’ in Hokkien, fee which secret societies extorted from businesses
kua liao du lan ‘If I see them, I get very angry’ in Hokkien
kway Generic term for local light dish or snack
lah Local colloquial term added at the end of sentence for emphasis
laksa Rice noodles cooked in coconut curry gravy, frequently with shrimp and cockles
long sai Cantonese corruption of ‘alongside’, referring to shipyard cleaner
longkang Drain in Hokkien
lua hiong ‘Very impressive’ in Hokkien
luan kong ‘Wild talk’ in Hokkien
Ma Kau Thiong ‘Macau Cemetery’ in Hokkien, referring to Tiong Bahru Cemetery, formally known in Mandarin as Lu Ye Ting and in Hokkien as Loke Yah Teng
Merdeka ‘Independence’ in Malaya
Mid-Autumn Festival Chinese festival on the fifteenth day of the eighth lunar month celebrating family reunion. Also known as the
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Mooncake Festival
Mukim Malay term referring to subdivision of a district
Nanyang ‘The South Seas’ in Mandarin, referring to the Southeast Asian region
ohayo gozaimasu ‘Good morning’ in Japanese
Or Kio Tau ‘At the head of the black-painted bridge’ in Hokkien, referring to the part of Havelock Road before the Delta Circus
otah Local snack, spicy fish cake grilled in banana leaf
pah chiu chia ‘Robbery vehicle’ in Hokkien
pai kia ‘Bad kids’ in Hokkien, referring to delinquent youth or gangsters
pai mia ‘Has a hard life’ in Hokkien
pang keng ‘Sleeping quarters’ in Hokkien, referring to common rooms shared by low-income Chinese workers in the Central Area
parang Malay equivalent of the machete
Po Tui ‘Town area’ in Hokkien, referring to the Central Area or Chinatown
Qing Ming Festival Chinese festival to remember and honour one’s ancestors, which involves, among other things, the burning of joss sticks and paper. Also known as All Souls Day.
rojak Local fruit and vegetable salad served in thick dark prawn paste
samseng ‘Gangster’ in Hokkien
si ‘Die’ in Hokkien
Si Kah Teng ‘Four-legged pavilion’ in Hokkien, local term for Kampong Tiong Bahru
Sio Po ‘Small Town’ in Hokkien, referring to the part of the Central Area north of the Singapore River
soon kueh Local light dish, vegetable dumpling
taman ‘Garden’ in Malay
tau suan Local dessert, soft soya bean curd in sweet syrup
tey gu ‘Earth bulls’ in Hokkien, local term for the Ministry of Health’s Hawker Inspectors
Ti Kong The Heavenly God in Hokkien
Ti Kong Tua Temple of the Heavenly God
ti lam Mattress in Hokkien
tikam tikam Local gambling game commonly played by children and youths
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tiao lau ‘Jumping off a building’ in Hokkien, referring to high-rise suicide
toh poon Swill collection in Hokkien
tong kor ‘Painful bitterness’ in Hokkien
tongkang Local cargo carrying craft
towgay Bean sprouts in Hokkien
towkay Employer in Hokkien
tu tu Local snack, rice flour with ground peanut or shredded coconut filling
Tua Po ‘Big Town’ in Hokkien, referring to the part of the Central Area south of the Singapore River
Tua Pui Mah ‘Fat Grandma’ in Hokkien
twakow Light local craft for loading and unloading goods along the Singapore River
ultra vires ‘Outside one’s jurisdiction’ in Latin.
Wa m chai ‘I don’t know’ in Hokkien
Wah Local term added at the end of sentence for emphasis
yong tau foo Chinese soup dish with stuffed bean curd and other vegetables