Book contents
- Frontmatter
- INTRODUCTION AND ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
- A NOTE ON NOMENCLATURE
- Contents
- I HOW IT BEGAN IN JAVA, UP TO 1942: Maria's birth and parentage; parents' background; adoptions; Hertogh children; Che Aminah
- II MARIA COMES UNDER THE CARE OF CHE AMINAH, 1942: Mrs. Hertogh's version; Che Aminah's version; court discounts both; was Mrs. Hertogh interned?; date of Maria's transfer to Che Aminah
- III MARIA: 1942 TO 1950: KAMPONG TO COURT
- IV MARIA IN SINGAPORE: Placed in care of Social Welfare Department pending result of court proceedings; custody awarded to parents: April/May 1950
- V PUBLIC INTEREST QUICKENS: LEAVE TO APPEAL GIVEN
- VI MARIA AT YORK HILL: APRIL/JULY 1950
- VII THE APPEAL JUDGEMENT, JULY 1950
- VIII MARIA'S MARRIAGE, 1 AUGUST 1950
- IX LEGAL PROCEEDINGS RESUMED, AUGUST/SEPTEMBER 1950
- X FOUR SMOULDERING MONTHS, AUGUST/NOVEMBER 1950
- XI THE JUDGEMENT OF MR. JUSTICE BROWN, 2 DECEMBER 1950
- XII THE LAST TEN DAYS: 2 TO 12 DECEMBER 1950
- XIII 11, 12, 13 DECEMBER. RIOTS – THE END OF ONE AND MANY LIVES
- XIV EPILOGUE: MARIA IN HOLLAND, FROM DECEMBER 1950
- NOTE ON SOURCES
- THE AUTHOR
II - MARIA COMES UNDER THE CARE OF CHE AMINAH, 1942: Mrs. Hertogh's version; Che Aminah's version; court discounts both; was Mrs. Hertogh interned?; date of Maria's transfer to Che Aminah
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 October 2015
- Frontmatter
- INTRODUCTION AND ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
- A NOTE ON NOMENCLATURE
- Contents
- I HOW IT BEGAN IN JAVA, UP TO 1942: Maria's birth and parentage; parents' background; adoptions; Hertogh children; Che Aminah
- II MARIA COMES UNDER THE CARE OF CHE AMINAH, 1942: Mrs. Hertogh's version; Che Aminah's version; court discounts both; was Mrs. Hertogh interned?; date of Maria's transfer to Che Aminah
- III MARIA: 1942 TO 1950: KAMPONG TO COURT
- IV MARIA IN SINGAPORE: Placed in care of Social Welfare Department pending result of court proceedings; custody awarded to parents: April/May 1950
- V PUBLIC INTEREST QUICKENS: LEAVE TO APPEAL GIVEN
- VI MARIA AT YORK HILL: APRIL/JULY 1950
- VII THE APPEAL JUDGEMENT, JULY 1950
- VIII MARIA'S MARRIAGE, 1 AUGUST 1950
- IX LEGAL PROCEEDINGS RESUMED, AUGUST/SEPTEMBER 1950
- X FOUR SMOULDERING MONTHS, AUGUST/NOVEMBER 1950
- XI THE JUDGEMENT OF MR. JUSTICE BROWN, 2 DECEMBER 1950
- XII THE LAST TEN DAYS: 2 TO 12 DECEMBER 1950
- XIII 11, 12, 13 DECEMBER. RIOTS – THE END OF ONE AND MANY LIVES
- XIV EPILOGUE: MARIA IN HOLLAND, FROM DECEMBER 1950
- NOTE ON SOURCES
- THE AUTHOR
Summary
There are two versions of the circumstances and understanding under which Maria came under the care of Che Aminah. One is the version given by Mrs. Adeline Hertogh and put forward by the Dutch authorities; the other is Che Aminah's. They differ in material respects.
Mrs. Hertogh's version was given in evidence before Mr. Justice Brown at the hearing in November 1950 (see Chapter XI). Its basis is that, at the time of her confinement with her sixth child in December 1942, under her mother's persuasion, she had reluctantly agreed to allow Maria to go and stay with Che Aminah on a short visit. Before Maria returned to her, she was interned.
This is not far removed from the sworn testimony of Frans van Lunteren of the Consulate-General for the Netherlands in Singapore, submitted at the first High Court hearing and dated 22 April 1950, to the effect that Maria had been handed over to Che Aminah for “safekeeping” – not in adoption – immediately before Mrs. Hertogh's internment.
In evidence, Mrs. Hertogh stated that in December 1942, when living with her mother at Tjimahi and expecting her sixth child towards the end of that month, Che Aminah three times asked her to let Maria go to stay with her for a few days at Bandoeng, a short distance away. Three times Mrs. Hertogh refused.
Around the time the sixth child was born on 29 December, her mother, Che Aminah's friend, persuaded Mrs. Hertogh to allow the child to go and visit Che Aminah for three or four days.
Three days after Mrs. Hertogh's confinement, Che Aminah arrived to fetch Maria.
As the child did not return on the third or fourth day, Mrs. Hertogh borrowed a bicycle on the fifth day (eight days after her confinement) and set out for Bandoeng to bring back her daughter.
On the outskirts of Bandoeng, she was arrested by a Japanese sentry because she had no pass. She was thereupon interned.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Tangled WorldsThe Story of Maria Hertogh, pp. 6 - 13Publisher: ISEAS–Yusof Ishak InstitutePrint publication year: 1980