Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 October 2015
Maria lived in Java with Che Aminah from the turn of the year in 1942/43 until some time after the end of the Japanese occupation.
When Maria was handed over, Che Aminah was living in Bandoeng. But when Mrs. Hertogh's mother went to see her at Mrs. Hertogh's request after Mrs. Hertogh had been interned, she found the house empty.
Che Aminah and Maria had apparently gone to Batavia. Che Aminah told the Social Welfare Department on 24 April 1950 that they later moved back to Bandoeng “because of Bertha. If I were found with a Dutch child, the terrorists would have killed me.”
Maria was known to Malays as “Puteh”, the fair one: she was conspicuous and Che Aminah's claim that the care of Maria was at great personal risk to herself had some basis.
Back in Bandoeng, Che Aminah, making use of a skill acquired during her long residence in Japan, got a job as an interpreter with the Japanese military police.
She avoided trouble during the occupation but continued to be in fear of “terrorists” and, as travel became easier in 1947, she took Maria, via Singapore, to live in Kemaman, in the state of Trengganu in the Federation of Malaya, where she had relatives. She claimed that leaving Java meant the loss of a substantial amount of property which she estimated as being worth about S$50,000.
At Kemaman, Maria attended the Chukai Malay Girls School for more than two years. She wore Malay clothes. She could not use a knife and fork. She learnt the Quran.
Sergeant Hertogh, Maria's father, was sent as a prisoner of war from Java to Japan, where he was released in 1945.
He returned to Java and rejoined his wife. They said they enquired about Maria but could not find her. Eventually they returned to Holland without having been able to contact Maria or Che Aminah. They asked the Dutch authorities in Java and Singapore to try and trace the child.
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