Memories of an 11 Year Old
I don’t know why I have suddenly
rekindled my interest in Aden. Perhaps it is a mid
life crisis I am going through. Perhaps it is
because when people ask me “where were you born” and
I answer “Aden” I see a blank look which means
either “where the hell is that?” or “did he say he
was born in Eden?”
The more likely reason is that
from about the time of my 40th birthday
in January 2001 I have been thinking more and more
about my birth place and have built up a strange
yearning to go back there for a visit. Why, I don’t
know, there’s probably nothing left that I would
recognise. Maybe I have to reconfirm who I am and to
where I belong. My father was born in Broxburn (a
small town in West Lothian, Scotland), my mother was
born in Bridgend, a small village in West Lothian,
Scotland), and I was born 4000 miles from there in a
foreign land, and spoke with an English accent until
one day in June 1978, my girlfriend asked me “which
part of England are you from?”. The place holds deep
memories, in fact I have few good childhood memories
from many places other than Aden. ( I intend writing
about my boarding school exploits in another
forum). So there you have it. Barren, hot, dry,
inhospitable, scary, beautiful Aden. This was my
home for the first 14 years of my life.
My story probably starts in
1950-something when my father accepted a job working
in the British Petroleum refinery in Little Aden.
From that moment on my fate was sealed. I was born
on 19th January 1961 in Little Aden
hospital. At the time the place was the Peoples
Democratic Republic of South Yemen, but thanks to
the slowly diminishing British Empire, technically I
was born in a little part of Britain called Aden
(Colony).
As a toddler I don’t recollect
much about daily life. My first vivid memories are
probably of the British army before the evacuation.
My dad had a cine camera which was probably top of
the range for the day. I got all his stuff converted
to video for his 60th birthday. We have
watched it several times and there’s some brilliant
footage of an army open day in one of the camps on
the way to Bir Fukum. From my point of view, the
road to Bir Fukum was the road where you went
“straight on” instead of turning left to go to the
BP club. To a 7 year old this road represented a
journey into the great unknown and a great
adventure. The mountain pass you go through is very
imposing and I almost felt as if it let to another
world. I remember climbing all over a tank and the
soldiers had made the camp into a fairground with
stalls and free rides in army jeeps. Part of the
open day was a fly over, and to cap it all we got
our photographs taken with these cool dudes in army
uniforms. Of course, none of us kids ever asked why
these people were there, hanging about in the
mountains. It’s not something we worried about.
Like I say, early on my memories
are vague. It’s a mixture of coffee mornings, beetle
drives, curry lunches, lassie films at the weekly
cinema in the BP club, Tin Tin, Zorro and Casey
Jones on the black and white telly in the house and
constant wall to wall sunshine. It must have rained
once because I can remember being at the school and
being unable to go out into the playground because
there was a huge puddle. Once in so many years!
In Aden the weekend was Thursday
and Friday. One of life’s few constants was the
Friday feed in the BP club. Dad had curry with all
the side dishes (which sadly many of the curry shops
nowadays don’t do), mum had the lobster theremodore
and I always has the bangers mash and beans.
I don’t remember being evacuated.
It was 1968 and I would be 7. I have seen the cine
film of my mother and I standing in the queue to get
into this very ancient looking aeroplane with
propellers. The men were left behind to get on with
the oil refining process and I was bundled back to
this cold place called Scotland where I was forced
to spend time with people who spoke with a different
accent from me!
Fortunately that was temporary,
and soon we were back where it was warm and I felt I
belonged. I was 8 and was soon to have my short life
turned on it’s head. In Little Aden, there is
education provided up to a point. This point came in
1969. I went to boarding school. New Park School in
St Andrews to be precise. In reality, this meant
that I had to fly unaccompanied from Aden to
Edinburgh via Jeddah, Beirut, Geneva and London
three times a year (unless my folks were on holiday
in Scotland anyway). When I say unaccompanied, I
mean no adults. At the end of the school holidays it
would be common for there to be a dozen kids on the
same flight out of Aden (in the early days). Soon I
was in an established pattern of coming “home” for
holidays. Sadly the thing I never got used to was
leaving Aden at the end of the holiday. Flights out
seemed to be early in the morning, hence an early
alarm call. To this day I don’t like getting woken
up early for a flight. The sight of the suitcases
and the dark outside bring back some terrible
memories of being 9 and scared of being on my own.
Around this time was when the
British left the locals to get on with it, and this
coincided with my most vivid memories. There’s
probably a book in this somewhere, however here’s a
brief summary of my best times in Aden between 1970
and 1975.
I lived in 3 different houses in
my time. The first was before I remember, the second
was a street called 1 Hampshire Crescent. This must
have been early 1970. I recall an old guy (christ he
was probably about 45!) opposite. We had no toys,
but he had built a house out of used fag packets. We
played with it for ages. Latterly we moved to 15
Marine Drive. This was a magnificent road which
skirted the curved Ghadir bay and had a great view.
I don’t remember when it stopped being called that
but I remember my air mail letters from school had
to be changed to 15 Kornish-Al-Ghadir. It was still
the same place when I had my next holiday. The
residential part of Little Aden wasn’t huge. You
could walk from one end to the other in 15 minutes.
For a young person I seemed to know everybody. Even
if there weren’t kids around there were always grown
ups who would take you places.
As a child in Little Aden I had
expectations. I didn’t appreciate what was done for
me until over 20 years later, but there must have
been a committee made up of mums and dads who
decided on different events over the holidays to
keep us kids occupied. When I got off that plane the
first thing I did after I woke up was ask to see the
list of events and find out when the fancy dress
party, the beach BBQ, the dhow trip, the sandcastle
competition, the swimming gala, the car treasure
hunt, the quiz night (which included a kids section)
and the various discos were. The list of events also
included the organised film show and the special
sporting events. I have mentioned the Lassie films
already. I can’t remember most of the others, but
one fond memory is of seeing Jason and the Argonauts
for the first time. There was also organised
badminton and golf among other things.
If somebody reading this was one
of these people who organised all these events just
for my enjoyment then I want to thank you from the
bottom of my heart. I had a ball.
Inbetween these events, I
conducted my social life by going the BP Club beach
daily which was a safe area surrounded by fences and
breakwaters to keep undesirable fish and big waves
out. Sadly it only kept undesirable BIG fish out, so
we still had to swim with conger eels, barracuda,
sting rays, stone fish, jelly fish, sea slugs and
cray fish. But we were hardy and young and didn’t
know what we were doing. We had a ball there every
day, swimming without a care in the world. We had
beach BBQ’s with water fights, we had sand castle
competitions and in the early days the beach was
full of people.
By the early 1970’s I got the
impression that the BP club beach was run down. The
shop that sold Iced lollies and coke always seemed
to be shut and I suspected that there were big holes
in the protective fences. This must have been a
gradual process because I can’t put it down to a
single event. Possibly it was because there was a
swimming pool open for use by merchant seamen which
we were allowed to use. I remember vaguely on
several occasions arriving at the beach and seeing
no people, then deciding to go to the “Seamans
mission” instead. What I don’t know is whether
people deserted the beach because it was run down or
because there was a better option (what is probably
more close to the truth was that more people were
leaving Aden following independence but that was
something that went right over my head as an 11 year
old – after all this was my home, why would I
leave?)
So what was the food like? Apart
from the BP club there was nowhere to go for a meal
outside the BP club unless the parents made their
own entertainment. I wasn’t responsible for the
purchasing of food, but I was there when the fishman
came to the back door once a week with his stinking
offering covered in flies. To my horror my mother
always purchased something. It was the same in the
car park outside the BP club when the fruit and
vegetable man came. Through the flies, my parents
found enough to bring us sustainance. Two other
memorable incidents spring to mind. I remember
buying mars bars and asking my dad why the chocolate
was white. He said it was the heat. Yeah, right! I
also remember having to open a packet of corn flakes
and spreading them out, picking out the cockroaches
before putting them back in the packet as if nothing
was wrong. It was what we did. It’s against this
backdrop that the Little Aden parents excelled
themselves by making edible meals and bringing us up
on as normal a diet as possible.
Many people had a servant. Others
had an Aiya. The servant did the cooking, the aiya
did the cleaning and ironing. If I remember right,
most houses had servants and, coincidentally each
house had a servants quarters built in. Some people
had cooks who didn’t “live in” and some just had
servants who appeared at random, and I’m sure I
wasn’t the only child who was babysat by someone who
didn’t speak a word of english. As a small child, I
was oblivious to the working and living conditions
of these people. What is memorable for me is the
heat in their quarters, which adjoined the garage.
No air conditioning. Also, they all had outside
toilets with no flush, no bog paper and it always
stank. Sometimes the quarters were occupied,
sometimes they were empty. Their names were
invariably Mohammed or Aisha, and no sooner were you
attached to one then they moved on. Some were
magnificent cooks. My parents tell me that certain
dinner parties were legendary. In fact, some of the
cooks would team together for a big one. Given the
lack of food for sale, it’s amazing that many people
were still able to have the roast and Yorkshire
pudding once a week!
So what of the troubles? As a kid
I am sure that my parents shielded me from some of
the realities of life, after all, once I was 8 I was
only coming home (I still don’t have a problem
calling it home) three times a year for an average
of 12 weeks. All houses had verandahs and all
verandahs had trellace work all around it. When I
asked my dad, he said it was to stop a grenade.
Seemed like a good idea to me. There must have been
incidents, but the only one I witnessed was well
after the army had left. It was on Marine Drive and
a group of local militia driving along the road in a
truck shot a dog that was not exactly a pet, but it
was known to most of us kids. It lay for ages before
it died. We didn’t know why they did it. For being
in a country in which walking 10 yards from A to B
must have been so dangerous at times, we were
oblivious. I remember an alley way just beside our
house in Hampshire Crescent and seeing an albino
arab throwing conkers at us. We got our gang
together and chased him. He got his gang and we had
a set-to on some piece of waste ground for no
Particular reason. Nobody won, yet we always looked
out for him after that.
It’s easy to accept now, but in
1973 Aden (me aged 11) there were no pet shops. I
was a cat lover, and I and my friends Edwina and
Eleanor regularly befriended cats from neighbouring
houses. What you need to understand is that when we
were on holiday in Aden, there were numerous
occasions when other families were having their
holiday in the UK leaving their houses unoccupied,
therefore their whole garden was available to us
kids. Since nobody had an official pet, we knew
where the “action” was. I had a cat called Tortie
(original name for a tortoise shell cat – eh). The
amount of kittens this thing produced I wondered if
it had been spawned off a rabbit! A couple of houses
down there was another litter of kittens and we
befriended one we names roary, because every time
you picked it up, if it didn’t shit on you, it
roared at you. We had air conditioning in the
houses and there was an outhouse at the back which
you could open and at any one time there were up to
10 cats in there sheltering from the heat.
When we were not playing with
cats we were always looking for somewhere new to
explore. In those days everywhere was dangerous a
place to explore so we had to wait for an adult who
was willing to take us to those exotic locations.
I’d like to personally thank the following grown
ups, without whose expertise and encouragement I
would have achieved nothing.
Phillip Preston, Dudley Hall,
David Wiles, My dad (Andrew Young)
Cowries
It’s probably not possible for
anyone to appreciate this paragraph unless they have
been to a seaside resort (Blackpool, Scarborough)
and tried to purchase a small bag of seashells. In
Aden, if you went looking for shells at low tide,
you could find the most sexy shells ever. We’re
talking about razor shells with both halves intact,
scorpion shells, sea urchins and the piece de
resistance the cowrie. While the first two mentioned
could be found lying on the beach, you had to place
your hand into the unknown to get the cowrie. In a
world where, as an 11 year old you could get your
hand bitten off by a moray eel, this was a very
special adventure. The cowries were alive and you
left them out in the sun to die then picked them out
with a toothpick. Our house was decorated most
beautifully with shells including sea urchins. With
hindsight I think we took them for granted. Today my
mum and dad still have sea urchins in their house
they brought home from Aden, I only wish I knew then
what I know now about shells and how rare they are.
Boat
trips
As a young kid growing up, there
were always two boat trips laid on. The dhow trip
was always one of the highlights of the holidays.
There was always at least one organised for the
family. I never really knew what my mum put into the
cool box which was chucked onto the boat. I should
explain the word boat first. We’re talking about a
pile of wood hamered together. These things never
looked seaworthy but when I think about it, the best
times were when it was windy, and the spray from the
sea was coming over the top of the boat. It seemed
to me all the kids enjoyed it, yet the adults always
had a wee green look, about them. On nearly all
occasions, the dhow trip included a trip into the
blue grotto. This was an island which was just a
cave. There were bats ( who cleared out when they
heard the boat’s motor), and sharks (who the crew
scared away by plunging large stones into the water
suspended by ropes). It was in this atmosphere where
we were now expected to “swim”, which we duly did.
The second boat trip that was
arranged was on a more modern launch called the
Al-se-ma-ma. The good thing about this trip was that
there were more kids and less adults. Although I
never knew, I suppose the parents drew straws as to
who would “supervise “ the children. The Al-se-ma-ma
was a seaworthy launch and basically the captain
just pointed the thing towards the open sea and
pressed “go”. We sat on the front and got the white
knuckle ride of our lives. Wet, scared and in need
of a clean pair of pants, we loved every minute.
When he stopped, we had a buffet (or is it a
smorgasmord), then we headed back. He had a net
which he dragged behind the boat and we all had to
cling onto. It was a shorter trip than the dhow
trip, but again, it was one of the highlights.
After that, we retired to one of
the Yemen’s many uninhabited beaches for the picnic.
For people in the know I would say that the beaches
we visited were just north of Bir Fokum. Deserted
yellow sands, blue sea, coral, mountains, sunshine
and plenty to eat – you would be forgiven for
thinking that this was paradise. We spent all day in
this wilderness without a care in the world and when
it was time to go home we all left with heavy
hearts. How could we forget the flying fish, which
on one occasion actually leapt into the boat, the
giant manta rays, and the porpoises who seemed to
follow us everywhere.
Snorkelling and spearfishing
I was never mega-adventurous but
I had a pal (Jeremy Wiles) whose dad had a boat and
took us out in Ghadir bay snorkelling. I have since
been snorkelling elsewhere but I have to say this
was very scary. The only fish we wanted to skewer
was a parrot fish, yet most of the fish we saw were
either ugly or very scary. I remember the final time
I went spearfishing was one day when Jeremy’s dad
left us on the breakwater which runs from the
swimming pool at the seamans mission. This was
unchartered territory for me, and is the only time
in my life when I have come face to face with a
shark. I have no idea what type it was or how big it
was. I saw it from about 20 yards and that is the
last time I swam in the open sea in Aden!
Climbing
Each summer holiday there were
always two ambitions. First was to climb what we
called “observation tower”. This was a hill on
Ghadir Bay near the hospital. The second was a
mountain which we called “Shamsan”. It probably has
a more arabic name, but to a 12 year old I could
sometimes see this huge mountain through the heat
haze on a clear day and I knew that people had been
up it, but we always had the same problem – whose
dad would take us?
I climbed observation tower
several times over the years. This must have been an
old army look out, but the view was worth the many
many steps (If anyone knows how many, contact me via
the
forum and I’ll modify this part of the article).
My eternal regret is that I never ever took my
camera up to the top. I long for a photograph over
Ghadir Bay with my house in it.
To the best of my memory I only
ever climbed Shamsan once. It was with Philip
Preston who took a car full of us with a picnic. A
trip into “Big Aden” was a treat in itself, a drive
though Maalla, up through the Crater Pass and
basically, for us, into the unknown. I wish I had a
more vivid memory of the climb, but I remember
clearly the wind up the top and the overwhelming
feeling when I saw the view. In world terms it’s
probably not a very big peak, but it certainly was
the highlight of that particular holiday.
The
Forbidden Zone
As a young teenager I suppose we
all do things our parents would not approve of. My
only major discretion was to build a tree house and
to borrow my dads matches to light a small fire in
the tree house. Needless to say, the whole thing
caught fire and I have to thank our house boy Saeed
for putting it out. The only other thing me and my
friends did was to explore the hills which I suppose
separated Little Aden from the ports where the
tankers came in. In my terms these were mountains
right beside my friend Kevin Morans house. Close by
there was a disused building which we called the
“white house”. It was easy to get onto the roof. We
used this as a base. Further on and round the corner
overlooking the “golf course” there was a cave. We
always called this the hyenas cave (or was that the
older boys trying to scare us). I never ever saw a
hyena, yet none of us ever progressed past the first
bend! Further on, there was a no-go zone. It had
signs up, and was probably used as a shooting range
at one point, but there seemed to be a lot of clay
around. We sometimes went that far, but it was
seriously quiet …and what about those hyenas! We
were probably more at risk from the scorpions which
funnily enough we used to catch with our hands an
put into jars and make them fight each other.
Crabs
What does a youngster in the
early 70’s do when he has no Gameboy, Playstation,
television or video recorder? I’ll tell you. Invite
your friends along for a crab race.
On Ghadir Beach lived at least 3
million hermit crabs. We made a crab-run out of lego
and sometimes we had up to 300 hermit crabs in my
bedroom at one time. We would always release them
the next day before they became dehydrated, but
there were always a few that “got away”. I remember
my mum shouting “what’s that clicking noise in the
corner of my room?”. Sure enough, one had escaped.
Good times, though.
Summary
To finish my Aden memories, can I
mention those who I would like to get in touch with.
Not all are close friends and some may not even
remember me, but if you are a parent of, or a son of
the following, could you please get in touch.
Russell Titmuss, Nigel Stoneman,
Kevin Moran, Nigel Molesworth, Jeremy Wiles Penelope
Wiles, Kelvin Micheal, Adrien Michael, Andrew
Morgan, Richard Morgan, Eleanor Linton, Wendy
Hargreaves, Donna Philips, Marianne Dunbar, Martin
Dunbar, William Dunbar, Karen Roberts, Julian
Dilley, Chris Dilley, Erica Rolfe, Karen Wilson,
Lindsay Wilson, Penelope or Amanda Meiras, A good
friend called Jane Davies? Someone at the British
Embassy called Bedria, Gillian and Dudley Hall.
Anyone else who may have
photographs of those above or their parents, or any
scenery photographs from Little Aden, Big Aden, the
Seamans mission, the BP Club, Bir Fukum, the golf
club, the community centre, even the hospital or the
cinema. I’d even like to see a photograph of Khadris,
or a photo of the vegetable man who frequented the
car park of the BP Club. You can post your photos in
the
Gallery.
Basically, I lived there for 14
years and hardly took a decent photograph of the
place or my friends.
Please contact me through the
forum if you would like to share any memories
with me. I gotta get back there sometime. Is there
anybody reading this who has been back? Please get
in touch.
by Craig Young