NO HOLDS BARRED

Raja Petra Kamarudin


Today, 14 April 2007, I will not talk about politics, race, religion, corruption or abuse of power. Today, 14 April 2007, I will give the powers-that-be and those who walk through the corridors of power a rest. Today, 14 April 2007, is Marina’s and my 34th wedding anniversary.

Marina and I met about 40 years ago in late 1967 or early 1968. I can’t remember the exact date but I do know it was about a year or two before the 13 May 1969 race riots. Marina, who was then only 14 and went by the name of Mable, was in Form Two in the Bukit Nanas Convent. I was in Form Five in the Victoria Institution.

Ours is not a case of love at first sight but love at first fight. I was rushing to school on my motorbike and took a short cut through Brickfields. Marina was running across the road to catch her school bus and I almost knocked her down. I shouted something obscene at her and she responded in an even more obscene manner.

One day I needed a date for a dance at the Selangor Club and my brother offered to introduce me to a girl he happened to know who lived in Jalan Thambi Abdullah in Brickfields. Lo and behold, it was this girl who I almost killed and who I had exchanged pornographic words with.

Ours was a ‘turmoil’ relationship with me dodging the Brickfields gangsters every time I needed to visit Marina or pick her up for a date. Brickfields, which was the territory of the Chinese Gang 36 and Indian Gangs 08 and Pat Long Fu, was ‘at war’ with Bangsar, my home base, which was controlled by the Malay Gangs 24, Kaw Lok Kaw (969), Sah Pat Kau (789) and Sam Pat (38). In fact, even the Brickfields Gangs 36 and 08 were at war with each other as were the Malay Bangsar gangs who went to war with one another on and off -- so you never knew which gang was ‘safe’ to join.

Finally, for purposes of my health and long life, for it would have been a matter of time before I would be cornered in ‘enemy territory’, Marina and I got married on 14 April 1973 when she was 18 and I twenty-two. That made it possible for us to live together under one roof and which got me off the dangerous streets. We now have five children, two grandchildren with one more on the way, plus a son-in-law and daughter-in-law.

I will allow the photographs to tell the rest of the story. Oh, and before I forget, I would also like to take this opportunity to wish Yang Berhormat Mulia Tengku Tan Sri Razaleigh Hamzah many happy returns of the day. Tengku Razaleigh turned 70 yesterday.

1) Finally, with great reluctance, I came out into the world at midnight on 27 September 1950 in Surrey, England. That makes me a Libran, and a midnight tiger according to the Chinese horoscope.

2) That was me trying to walk before I could even crawl. I eventually figured out that one must learn how to crawl before one can walk. Even at that age I already believed in complete transparency, which explains the concept of Malaysia Today.

3) I always wanted to be a sailor. This is my mum and me, in my first sailor outfit. Unfortunately I was rejected by the navy because I am sea sick on boats. I did buy a boat later in life though, but it was parked in front of my garage and never saw the sea.

4) “Anakanda dengan anak Raja Kamarudin dalam rumahnya, adapun rambut budak ini perang semacam anak orang putih. Anakanda cuba hendak bawa balik ke Malaya, budak ini hendak kechek hanya sama Raja Kamarudin,” wrote the then Raja Muda of Selangor to his father, Sultan Hisamuddin Alam Shah, the Sixth Sultan of Selangor who went on to become the Second Agong (King) of Malaysia.

5) “Kekanda dengan anak Raja Kamarudin dekat dengan motorkar kekanda, bernama Raja Petra,” wrote the then Raja Muda of Selangor (who later became Sultan Salahuddin Abdul Aziz Shah) to his son, the present Sultan of Selangor. (He meant I and not the car is named ‘Raja Petra’).

6) I now have a brother, Raja Idris -- our first family portrait.

7) Mable, now Marina, who I met about 40 years ago when she was 14 and I 17.

8) The love of my life, my Yamaha 650cc Twin -- the first four-stroke Yamaha and modelled after the Triumph Bonneville, and the first unit imported into Malaysia. Oh, and the second love of my life, Marina.

9) Four years later we were married. The akad nikah ceremony.

10) The batal wuduk ceremony.

11) My Welsh mother, Barbara Mabel Parnell @ Bariah, doing the renjis during the bersanding ceremony.

12) My first motorcycle and what made it possible for me to ‘meet’ Marina.

13) At 16 my interests were the same as most teenagers then and now.

14) As husband and wife and just starting out in our working careers.



A CHIP OFF THE OLD BLOCK