Reviews
& Press : : Fatimah's
Kampung
bibliobibuli,
Sunday, January 25, 2009
When
Fatimah Lost her Kampung

A
few days ago I wrote about the launch of a children's book called
Fatimah's Kampung by Iain Buchanan at Badan Warisan. I ended up
being pretty late because I had decided to walk to Jalan Stonor
from KLCC, along what I thought was a familiar route. I ended
up getting lost, completely thrown by the way the area has changed
since I was last there, with huge high-rises and building sites
beginning to dominate this formerly green and peaceful enclave
with its colonial bungalows.
I
realise now, after reading the book, that there's a certain irony
to all this - for Fatimah's Kampung is the story about
how a landscape changes as the city encroaches, and how what is
best about a place will be sacrificed to commercial interest.
In
the introduction to the book Buchanan talks about how the book
came to be written. He says he came to Malaysia first to teach
shortly after Independence and that he took away with him a memory
of the landscape which became part of him.
He
continued to teach geography in a university in the East Midlands,
and one day he had a call from one of his former students, Maznoor,
now a college lecturer herself, coming to the UK to do a diploma
in TEFL. They later married and Buchanan found himself part of
a :
... large, lively, and very loving Malaysian family ..
But
revisiting the landscape he had fallen in love with, he found
that there was good reason to mourn :
... there was painted concrete, dead laterite and a gaudy brittle
sameness ...
After
taking early retirement, and wanting to communicate the ideas
that he has lectured on in a way that was more vivid and exciting
to young people, he began work on Fatimah's Kampung, a labour
of love which took him eight years to complete, while Maznoor
went out to work in a British factory to pay the bills. It was
a true labour of love.

The
book tells the story of a girl growing up in Kampong Hidayah.
The family home was built by her great-grandfather with materials
taken from the forest. When most of the other kampungs disappeared
because of the expansion of the city it was allowed to remain
untouched by the Sultan who owned the land.
Fatimah
grows up amidst fruit trees, and forest (where she believes Pak
Belang the tiger still might be hiding), and near to the frangipani
filled graveyard where her relatives were laid to rest, and the
keramat once home to a holy man who knew the ways of the forest
in the way no others did.
The
rhythms of kampong life of are recorded - her grandmother gathering
herbs to cure ailments, the children's games, the visits by hawkers,
Ramadan and the bustle of Hari Raya at the end of it, the monsoon
floods.
But
then the bulldozers move in and Fatimah and her family are forced
to relocate to a high rise near by where they can see the final
destruction of their kampung, and the forest around it.
There
is one small mercy - the kampong house itself is to be saved and
taken to be part of a new theme park which Fatimah gets the chance
to visit.
Labelling
books can sometimes do them a disservice, and whilst the book
will undoubtedly appeal to older children (many of whom may have
lived the story!), it will strike a chord with every Malaysian
who cares about the environment and heritage, regardless of age,
and will probably travel very well beyond these shores as the
issues it raises are universal ones. I'm not ashamed to say that
the story moved me to tears - especially the part where Fatimah
finally does come face to face with her tiger.
But
it is the stunning illustrations, with every detail of tree and
leaf and kampung lovingly recorded, which make this book an absolute
joy to own. (I have had to pries my copy out of the hands of visitors
to the house who haven't wanted to put it down and talk to me!)
I
wonder if Fatimah's Kampung might not be better described
as a graphic novel and one that could easily become a classic
of the genre?
The
book is published by the Consumers Association of Penang, and
this surprises on two counts. First of all, the organisation is
known for its pamphlets on consumer and environmental issues and
they have not, to my knowledge, ever undertaken a project like
this before. Secondly, that they have made such a great job of
it - this is a beautifully produced book that you could put beside
any produced overseas and feel proud of.
Have
I raved? Sorry. But I sincerely mean every word of praise I have
heaped on this book.
But
why not see for yourself? Iain will be appearing at Readings@Seksan
this coming Saturday and a limited number of his books will be
on sale.
