Part 1 —
Women’s Stories
14
Indonesia
"Not
that I don't love... "
This
short story, written by a former political prisoner, has never been published
in its original Indonesian version. We cannot disclose the author's real name or
the various pseudonyms under which she has been publishing since her release. A
member of Gerwani
(a women's organisation
with alleged connections with the Indonesian Communist Party, banned since the
so-called coup of September 1965), the author seems to have started writing
fiction only after her detention. The experience colours
much of her writing. Most of her short stories are about the down and out, the
women whom poverty has driven to theft, begging and prostitution, the
"criminals" with whom the author shared her prison cells. Permission
to reprint granted by Inside Indonesia, a Melbourne- (Australia) based magazine. Translation
by Krishna Sen.
She
looked at the child in her lap with a maternal light in her eyes. Beautiful
music can be created, eternally enduring paintings have been based on the theme
of the mother with a child in her arms.
Bright
weather welcomed the birth of a child. But to Imah
none of the beauty was meant for her. Her young life had been shrouded in dark
clouds. Her eyes glistened as she looked into the clear eyes of the sweet baby
with its ruddy face. Without a word, I sat down next to her. We looked at the
large yard of this "hostel". As far as the eye could see, all around
in every direction, walls stood tall — separating us from freedom.
"What
name have you given the little one, Imah?"
"Prihatin!1 Because she was born in the
midst of distress without a father or a family!"
"Tell
me about it if you want to unburden your heart a little."
"Thank
you — if you really wish to listen to a bitter tale that will probably bore you."
She
heaved a deep sigh. Her lips trembled as she started. "As you know, I was
born in a village on the slopes of Mount Cerme. My
parents were poor peasants. The eldest of seven children, I was going on
thirteen at the time. Of course, the little bit of food divided among seven
mouths meant that we often went to bed with rumbling stomachs.
"Mother
was very weak from bringing up the children and helping in the fields, so that
she pushed me to take work as a servant in the city to add to our earnings so
my younger brothers and sisters would not go hungry. Thus I was taken by a neighbour to the city of Cirebon
and worked in a restaurant owned by Mistress Munah.
Sure enough there was never an end to the work at the restaurant: washing
dishes, shelling coconuts, serving the customers. There was hardly even time to
shower or rest. It was midnight before I went to bed,
15
to awaken before dawn
to boil the water. I had been used to hard work since childhood in the village.
At the time of Lebaran2
I visited my village. This really was a special joy for me. I brought new
clothes for my brothers and sisters, kain3 for mother and sarong for father. I was so very
happy!
"Years
went by and I was growing up, going on sixteen. Although I had no time to make
myself pretty, in the mirror on the wall of our little restaurant I saw the
reflection of a girl with a pretty nose, and wide eyes. I began to realise that the skinny dark village girl had changed. The
male customers of the restaurant started to stare at me when I was serving food
and drink. Sometimes they'd leave the change on the table: 'that's for you,
kid', they said. Not just the customers of the restaurant, but even Master Adi, the mistress' son who was studying in Jakarta, started
to pay attention to me. He was a headstrong youth, spoilt by Mistress Munah, the rich widow who owned the restaurant.
"Often
Master Adi came home and returned to Jakarta with
lots of money. The mistress merely shook her head.
"But
what could you say? He was a handsome youth, I a teenage girl and we were
attracted to each other. He was clever at persuasion, at flattery, and I bowed
to his wishes, even when he took away my virginity when the mistress was at a
party in a different area of the city.
"Deep
in my heart there were doubts: would the master keep his promise to marry me
legally? The distance was so great between the master and the domestic servant,
the poor kitchen maid. But I loved him, and all hesitation vanished in the
warmth of his embrace. There was no thought for the future, only the present
with its beauty of love, even though that love was a secret.
"But
the holidays ended and Adi had to return to Jakarta.
He left me his address, so that I could find him in case of any problem. Days
went by, then months. I had missed my periods for three months and my face was
growing pale; I was bilious every morning. So the mistress was suspicious. When
finally one morning I just had to vomit, the mistress confronted me angrily.
'"Imah, you are definitely pregnant. You've shamed your
family. Who was it? You ungrateful child. What will your father and mother
say?' The lady was terribly angry. Her eyes opened wide as if to swallow me. I
could not restrain my tears any longer.
'"Come
on, who is he? I am going to force him to marry you.' What was there to say?
'Master Adi...!' I faltered between sobs. The
mistress' amazement was beyond expression. Her only child, the sole heir of her
wealth, a future judge, and pride of the whole family. Mistress Munah's arrogant face went red, then it turned pale. She
struck my cheek with all her might, sending my head crashing against the floor.
'"How
clever of you to slander my child — that's impossible!', she screamed. 'You
filth... you whore... tomorrow you leave... get that!'
"The
sky shattered and the earth trembled, all my dreams vanished... there was
nobody who could protect me.
"That
night I made up my mind to go to Jakarta, although I had not received my pay.
That night the Devil led me to break into the safe with the key which Master Adi often used to steal money from his mother. I put a
16
bunch of thousand
and ten thousand rupiah notes into my purse and went
quickly to the bus station, which was full of people.
"It
was quite late in the day when I got to Jakarta. My head throbbed: thief —
thief! After searching for a long time I finally got to the house where Master Adi lived. The lady, the owner of the house, said that
Master Adi had gone on a trip with Ningsih, his fiancee. Oh... my
body felt so weak; it was as if it had lost every ounce of strength, as if I
had been struck by a stone. I nearly fainted. I was just a scrap of rubbish,
thrown away like a dry piece of sugar-cane after all the sweetness had been
sucked out.
"And
so it was that when they got back they found me unconscious in front of the
house. Master Adi pretended there was nothing between
him and I. 'Yes... this is Imah, my mother's
housemaid. What is the matter...?'
"Since
that moment it has been like a nightmare. Master Adi
had only been playing games with me. There was no love... only desire. I was
like an owl longing for the moon. The ravine that separated Master Adi from me was too deep.
"That
night the police arrested me. Apparently Mistress Munah
had reported the theft and had guessed that I would go to Jakarta. I confessed
everything, but no one believed that I was pregnant to Master Adi. Before the interrogators, Master Adi
went even so far as to say that I was a bad girl who played around with the
customers at his mother's restaurant. Even in the court there was nothing in my
defence. I was a thief... two hundred thousand rupiah4... the gavel came down and I
was sentenced to six months in prison.
"There's
no need to expand on the story of my miserable fate behind these walls. I was
still sane enough not to kill the child I was carrying. I have friends here as
unfortunate as me who have got two or three year sentences for killing a child
unwanted by father or mother."
Imah paused for a moment to kiss the baby in her lap.
"Whatever
may have been the cause he has now been born. Doesn't he too have a right to
live? But soon I am going to be free. But little Adi...
What am I going to do with him? I suffered so much pain to give birth to him;
he is part of my soul. Every bit of my love I have poured on him. But I will
not be able to nurture him. I will have to work again as a maid. And no one
will take me in with a baby in my arms. Whether in a home or factory or just
washing dishes in a restaurant, I will have to give him away to somebody who
wants to bring him up. He did not ask to be born, yet God has given him the
spirit of life. I have to be separated from my child... Not that I don't love him!"
Tears
rolled down, moistening her face. She kissed the little thing passionately.
"I
understand, Imah. Let him go to parents who will love
him, put him through school until he becomes an adult. Let us pray that he may
be better than his irresponsible father, may he become a judge who is just and
wise..."
We
prayed in silence.
Notes
1. The
Indonesian word prihatin
means "concerned" or "apprehensive".
2. The celebrations at the end of the Islamic
month of fasting.
3. A long piece of cloth worn by Javanese women
as a skirt.
4. About $ US 125.