Ann Hui Ching
In a typical chu yi, my family would brave hours in traffic standstill at the border to travel from Singapore to Malaysia. First, we would have tuan yuan fun with my father’s 8 siblings and their families in Batu Pahat, a rapidly urbanising coastal town in Johore, the southernmost and largest state of Malaysia, where my father grew up. The next morning, we would once again brave the jams, along the smoothly paved highways parting through rolling hills of palm trees in grids up to Kuala Lumpur, the nation’s capital, where my mother grew up and fire crackers, illegal in Singapore, often jolt me up from sleep. For a trip enacted for kinship, this northward migration is not pleasant. Yet, not being able to perform this obligation this year, still feels wrong.
This year, I spent my Chinese new year (as it is colloquially referred to in Singapore) instead, oddly, mostly with my father. In joyless Singaporean fashion, I have medical school finals the week after chu yi, while my brother, an events manager, is too busy helping other people celebrate instead. Worst, my popo, my only remaining grandparent, contracted COVID-19 from a hospital admission related to her underlying cardiac failure. My mother made the journey we would have usually made as family, this time instead on a 30minute long flight. Thankfully, my popo has recovered well.
My family is not alone. There are almost 1 million Malaysians in Singapore, which has a population of 5 million. This figure excludes families like mine, who have given up Malaysian passports the colour of oxidised blood to become citizens of Singapore, a country of economic opportunity, our passports still red, just fresher.
Ann Hui Ching is a penultimate year medical student at the National University of Singapore, and an aspiring reconstructive surgeon-writer. She was a visiting student at Yale College in 2018. Previously, she won the Singapore Young Photographer Award (2017) and the Royal Commonwealth Society Photographic Awards (2011). She is the host of Third Spacing(@thirdspacing), a podcast that aims to connect social issues to the practice of medicine.