Finding a tour mid-stream is a bit of a needle in a haystack, and the few phone numbers I had were not connecting: But another friend of Bukit Brown knew some other numbers and soon I was at the "Naked Angel" tomb.
The usual suspects were waxing lyrical and the participants spell bound: Irena (reporting for the Economist) was whirring a video camera: I sketched.
Sort of.
But it never is at Bukit Brown, is it!
Raymond Goh had a tip off from one of the tomb keepers. Mr Chua, aged 90, had pointed out the place where mass graves were dug. He was 9 and it left a deep impression. He was warned repeatedly by the family elders not to play there because it was "dirty" (i.e. with dark spiritual forces) He had witnessed as a 9 year old, during the second word war 1942-1945, the use of a mass grave for civilian bodies. Some 3,000 of them. He was sure of the location and had marked for us with a strip of plastic. Raymond drove us (Ai Lin, Claire Leow, Keng Keat and me). As Raymond got to the spot and parked the car we could see our destination. It was across the valley, beyond the stream, just next to a clump of bright green ferns, pegged and flagged for us.
It looks smack in the middle of the planned 8 lane highway. It may possibly be bridged over. But the bridge will need support and the support my be supported by 3000 bodies???
This sketch map attempts to portray the location of the boggy mass grave Block 2 division 6, in relation to stream and to steps next to tomb 153.
A group member wanted to visit Great Great Grand Father. Some one had located the tomb for her. Raymond managed to bring us there. It was a poignant pause and a quiet contemplative moment as there was reconnected to Great Great Grand Father. I was privileged to witness the family reunification.
In the end I did not get to light any candles, but my growing portfolio of sketches continue to bring tribute and honor to the heritage habitat and history of Bukit Brown Heritage Park.
Great report! I was somewhere on the other hill. (^^)
ReplyDeleteI think you should sketch in Chinatownboy and the one they call the dowager who were over the other hill but were with you in "spirit"
ReplyDeleteover the hill - idiom-
ReplyDelete1. Fig. Inf. escaped from prison or the military. (*Typically: be ~; go ~.) Two privates went over the hill last night. They broke out of jail and went over the hill.
2. Fig. too old (for something). (*Typically: be ~; go ~.) You're only fifty! You're not over-the-hillyet. Some people seem over-the-hill at thirty.
*faints*!