A Hefty Price Tag For Attending An English School
My privilege of attending an English school carried with it a hefty price tag even though it was a government school.
The extortionate donation to the building fund to grease my admission aside, there was tuition at RM2.50 per month during primary school, double that at the secondary level.
Then there were sports, library, and “activity” fees which far exceeded the tuition, plus costs for books and uniforms. The biggest expense for me, however, was bus fare at RM7.50 a month.
Urban kids were, of course, spared that significant burden. In total, my father forked out about RM50 per month for me alone. Multiply that by three, for an older brother and sister; that consumed nearly a third of my father’s monthly income. Luckily my mother was also a teacher but being a female, her salary was about a third lower.
My parents also subscribed to The Straits Times, the daily national newspaper, to encourage us to read in English. In the beginning, I would just read the headlines or flip through the pages. That did not bother my parents as they continued with the expensive subscription.
Occasionally they would ask me about some pictures, and I began reading the captions. Whether that reflected their curiosity on the news item or a none-too-subtle nudge at me to encourage my reading the newspaper, I know not.
Soon I discovered that I would get the jokes more if I were to also read the scripts accompanying the cartoons. From there, I progressed to the headlines and the first few paragraphs. Before long, I was into the full op-ed pages as well as the titillating personal ads.
My favourite editorial columnist was one Vernon Bartlett. Here he was, a Britisher, that is, a colonialist, yet he was unafraid to criticise often in very strong language the colonial authorities running Malaysia at that time. In short, he was criticising his own kind. Some of his commentaries were translated into Malay and carried by Utusan Melayu. Thus my father could also read some of Bartlett’s views and was impressed.
To my father, it reflected the superiority and sophistication of the English culture that Bartlett was not constrained from criticising his own kind when he felt that they had done something wrong, as with colonising others. My father always reminded me to remember that central value. When it is wrong, it is wrong. That your own kind would perpetuate it against “others” does not make it right.
Again it reflects the noble British values that Bartlett was awarded a CBE, the highest-ranking Order of the British Empire, in 1956 while he was in Malaysia.
My parents also indulged us with English-language magazines. My first was Reader’s Digest; it remained my favourite right up to university. Then in my freshman English literature class, as we discussed Romeo and Juliet, my professor sneered that if Reader’s Digest were to abridge it, the title would be: “A Most Unusual Love Story!” I never read that magazine again; I was way past my literary pablum phase.
Hypocrisy among Malay leaders
The huge financial burden aside, plus the erratic bus service to contend with, the biggest obstacle to my attending English school was not either but social.
The early 1950s was a period of intense nationalism, anticipating independence. Malay school teachers were at the vanguard of this transformational movement.
Consequently, my parents were under intense social and peer pressure to enrol us in Malay schools. If Malay teachers did not support the system, who would?
Many succumbed to the pressure. My father, however, resisted. “We should not listen to what our leaders say,” he argued with his fellow villagers who fell for the nationalistic sway, “rather follow what they do.”
While those leaders were exhorting everyone to send their children to Malay schools, they sent theirs to English ones. The education minister at the time, Abdul Razak Hussein, went further; he sent all his children to England for their schooling.
Former education minister Abdul Razak Hussein (centre)Goaded by this overzealous nationalism, many Malay parents took their children out of English schools, thus freeing up many new slots. The MP of my district, one Samad Idris, later to become a minister, took that opportunity to transfer his two daughters into English school, all the while imploring the villagers to support Malay schools.
My father did not miss the hypocrisy. He was, however, among the very few. As is evident, the current blatant hypocrisy among Malay leaders has a long history. It is also still very much alive and well today.
Years later, I met one of my former classmates whose father, caught in the nationalistic frenzy of the time, had switched him back to Malay school. He was still stuck in the village; his Malay education did not take him far. On seeing me, now a surgeon, his only comment was, “Your father was wiser than mine”.
That was the sweetest tribute to my father.
The extraneous but necessary costs to my attending an English school in town was at least quantifiable and thus could be overcome, albeit with much sacrifice from my parents tightening their already stretched budget. The far greater obstacle was one imposed by the hypocrisy of Malay leaders. That still is the tragic reality today for Malays, in urban areas as well as in the kampungs.
There was also another price for me, also unquantifiable, for my attending English school in town. Straddling two worlds, I was left suspended in between.
Living far from school, I could not partake in afterschool activities and thus could not develop new friendships beyond my classmates. Meanwhile, at home, I had less and less in common with my fellow kampung friends. - FMT
This article is an excerpt from the book Cast From The Herd: Memories of Matriarchal Malaysia.
M BAKRI MUSA is a Malaysian-born and Canadian-trained surgeon in private practice in Silicon Valley, California. He writes at bakrimusa.blogspot.com
The views expressed here are those of the author/contributor and do not necessarily represent the views of MMKtT.
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