Reviews
& Press : : Fatimah's
Kampung
Time
Out Kuala Lumpur, March 2009
Fatimah's
Kampung
by SH Lim
The
drawings in this book are beautiful. Gorgeous. For their fine
details captured in a tidy simplicity. Clean lines. Rich colours.
For the vistas of a rural Malaysian landscape we dont see
too often slapping our soles on KLs sidewalks or in its
malls. Or sitting in traffic staring in a stupor at the snaking
line of cars ahead. Englishman Iain Buchanans Fatimahs
Kampung offers, beyond its message, views of the green horizon
which Emerson thinks necessary for tired urban eyes and spirit.
Its both a storybook and a coffee-table collection.

The
former university professor, a tall man with concerned blue eyes,
had taught geography (which included ecology and economics) for
roughly 35 years when he took early retirement. Then spent eight
years no short stint to put together this labour
of love. He writes, The signs of global crisis were everywhere,
and our journeys around Malaysia were bringing home, at a very
personal level, just how severe were the changes we [human beings]
were unleashing.
Buchanan
was clear what his message would be. His first obstacle was how
to find the right medium. He started with the landscape since
we all live in a landscape, although, he points out, we tend to
take it for granted. I drew a map, and then the setting
of Kampung Hidayah and its surroundings; then Fatimah and her
family moved in; and slowly and haphazardly a story of sorts developed
he writes. He knew he couldnt use words alone tell his story.
They wouldnt be able to bring his message to life. He needed
pictures. I wanted to capture the drama of the change, what
it meant to the landscape and the people who lived in it.
It had to be done visually.
But
to draw, the geography professor had to undergo a complete
re-education. He reveals, Id no art training
of any kind. The medium pen and translucent ink on
paper arose fortuitously. Buchanans friend, an aging
artist, was going to toss out a considerable amount of ink. Being
at the right place at the right time, he inherited the ink and
from then practiced and experimented, drawing cartoons. He says,
Translucent ink was perfect because it allowed for layering
which was necessary for the details. Watercolor would have been
a problem. He didnt think he could or would work with
oils.
The
pictures had to show the landscape with all its beauty,
Buchanan says. Because of that he had to draw his pictures several
times larger than the final scale used in the book A4 landscape.
Some of the original drawings were about three feet by eight feet
so that when the leaves, flowers, texture of bark, ants on a leaf,
the fretwork on the balconies were reduced, none of the details
were lost.
Then
from the drawings the story evolved.
While
Buchanan did not undertake any formal research, he had a bank
of experiences living as a child for a while in Africa, as a geography
teacher in Malaysia, and then India. He also has a Malay extended
family and because of that he makes regular visits to our country.
He reveals that while the writing was more difficult, it fell
into place as he fished from his memory the stories that his wife
and his relatives told him. Nothing in the book concocted out
of sheer fancy. The segment about the kerengga (large red ants
found on fruit trees) in the book has its inspiration in a personal
experience when Buchanan swallowed two red ants that fell into
his mouth when he was under a mango tree trying to get the fruit.
The story about Pak Belang (tiger) was something he picked up
from the relatives and used in the story as a metaphor for the
changing landscape.
The
man with the concerned blue eyes that match his blue striped shirt
is certain that we not just Malaysians must look
more closely at how we live. Perhaps we are expecting a way of
life that is not sustainable. Perhaps were too pampered.
Perhaps we need to scale down. But he has greater hope and faith
in us because we have not reached the level of degradation of
the developed countries. Britain is too old to learn; Malaysia
isnt, he underscores.
But
the message will not go across fast or easily in a materialistic
culture, Buchanan says. Then again neither did it find much acceptance
when he was lecturing in the universities for so many years. Regardless
we must keep trying to get the message through, he points out.
He wants us, especially the younger ones, to care about our landscape,
the environment we live in, to picture how the world can
be or how barren we can let it become.
Fatimahs
Kampung is published by Consumers Association of Penang. RM65