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©New Sunday Times (Used by
permission)
Called to the Bar less than a month before Merdeka, N. Kamala Devi remembers the
big day vividly and talks to P. SELVARANI about giving back to society.
IT was a big family, the parents and all nine children, and
the talk at the family dinner table in the late 1940s and early 1950s almost
always centred on the coming independence and how the family could serve the new
nation.
It was also a time when the thinking was that a girl’s place was in the kitchen
and learning all the other domestic duties that would serve them well in a
marriage, while the boys were to be educated so that they could bring in the
money.
But the country’s push for independence also saw many a father thinking differently, like M. Nadchatiram who decided that his children, both sons and
daughters alike, should study and serve the family and nation.
Kamala Devi, the eldest child, he decided, should become a doctor and serve the
people.
But Kamala refused, saying "hospitals depress me" and went
for law. Her father agreed.
Being the eldest, and a girl at that, Kamala had to make sure that she succeeded
and set an example to her younger brothers and sisters.
(Four of her five sisters became lawyers — Puan Sri Saraswathy Devi Alagendra,
Vijayalakshmi Devi, Suseela Devi and Mahadevi — and the one who did not become a
lawyer, Dhanapakia Devi, married one, lawyer-politician Datuk S.P. Seenivasagam.
A brother, Mahadevan, died when he was 17. Two brothers, Sahadevan and Jega
Devan, are lawyers and the youngest brother, named after the late Mahadevan, is
a doctor.)
Kamala, who had her education at the King George V primary school and Seremban
Convent, read law at Lincoln’s Inn in London and was called to the English Bar
in 1956. She returned to Malaya in June that year.
She chambered at Messrs Yong Sze Lean in Seremban and was called to the Malayan
Bar on Aug 2, 1957, 29 days before Merdeka.
August 1957 was a great month for Kamala, being called to the Bar early in the
month and attending the Merdeka celebrations at the end of the month.
"We drove up to Kuala Lumpur. It was a very nice and grand feeling. The Merdeka
Stadium was filled with people," remembers Kamala, 75, who accompanied her
father, Nadchatiram, a state executive councillor, and mother, Rajapakiam.
"The Yam Tuan (Yang Di-Pertuan Besar of Negri Sembilan Tuanku Abdul Rahman
Tuanku Muhammad, who became the first king) and his entourage arrived by train
from Seremban."
Kamala, like others at the stadium, were mesmerised when Tunku Abdul Rahman
Putra Al-Haj punched his clenched fist into the air and declared "Merdeka!
Merdeka! Merdeka!"
"It was a proud moment for us. People were happy because it meant that our
country would be run by our own people."
Kamala set up the legal firm of N. Kamala Devi & Co in Seremban and did a lot of
conveyancing work as the British were selling most of their rubber estates then.
It was around that time that she got into property development.
"My father had several plots of land in Labu Road and I suggested that we could
build some bungalows.
"We built 15 bungalows and rented them out to the British Army."
Kamala then developed another piece of her father’s property in Port Dickson
before she set her sights on Kuala Lumpur and Klang.
The Taynton Estate in Cheras was up for sale and Kamala bought all 126.4ha of it
for RM2.8 million in June, 1966.
"It was a lot of money then but I took a loan from AIA and built houses, phase
by phase. Fortunately, the rubber trees were high-yielding and the monthly
income from the trees helped to pay the interest on the loan."
Kamala says she was able to secure the 100 per cent loan for the project thanks
to her friend, Datuk Harun Idris, the former Selangor menteri besar, who studied
law with her in London.
As the housing project was in the "outskirts", Kamala came up with a marketing
strategy to sell her houses — affordable houses and easy financing.
"My single-storey terrace houses were priced at RM12,500 and I went to the
squatter areas with my clerk, Loong Ling Shau.
"I told the squatters that they only needed to pay RM2,500 and I would arrange
the bank loan for the remaining RM10,000 over 10 years. The monthly instalment
was RM136."
The four-bedroom single-storey terrace houses started selling like hot cakes and
Kamala was able to pay off her bank loan in three years.
Her next housing development project was Taman Mutiara in Jalan Kota Raja, Klang.
"But my late husband, Dr K. Thevarajah, did not like it at all and he used to
irritate me by calling me ‘developer’."
Kamala says her projects were successful because "I do a lot of thinking before
I embark on something".
"A good business person must know how to manage his funds. I don’t like
borrowing because I don’t like paying interest."
Kamala has named many roads in her housing estate after those who are near and
dear to her, like her father, Nadchatiram, Harun, her second sister Dhanapakia
Devi and her youngest sister Mahadevi.
Jalan Arasekesari is named after a cousin, Jalan Choo Lip Kung is named after a
lawyer friend while Jalan Bee Eng is named after Kamala’s former secretary who
suffered cancer.
Forty-one years later, Kamala is still developing vacant pockets of the former
rubber estate which stretches to the border of Sungei Besi.
And till today, she has a hands-on approach managing the day-to-day affairs of
her legal firm and construction company.
"Although I have a team of site supervisors and engineers, I still deal with the
government departments and agencies myself.
"You could say I am the chairman, managing director, clerk and runner for the
company."
Despite her busy schedule, Kamala finds time to offer prayers twice a day at her
own Krishna temple perched on a hill across the main Jalan Cheras, which has now
turned into a highway, from Taynton View.
Life is not just looking into the housing company and legal firm, or playing the
veenai (Indian stringed musical instrument), violin and singing bhajan (Hindu
hymns).
For Kamala, whose life has been good in a Malaysia run by Malaysians, has now
embarked on a big project for the people — building a hospital in memory of her
husband near the temple.
"It will be a free hospital with facilities for every discipline of medicine,"
says Kamala. "It should be ready in a year.
"This is my contribution to society."
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