British author looking to connect with family of S’porean WWII pilot who was inspiration for character in book

British author Onjali Rauf based a major character in her book on Singaporean World War II pilot Tan Kay Hai. PHOTO: ONJALI RAUF/LIANHE ZAOBAO FILE

SINGAPORE – A British author is looking to get in touch with the family of a Singaporean World War II pilot, who was the inspiration behind a major character in a book she wrote.

Ms Onjali Rauf, who has won multiple awards for her work in Britain, wrote The Lion Above The Door in 2021. It features a major character based on Wing Commander Tan Kay Hai, a decorated, daredevil Singaporean pilot who flew with the Royal Air Force (RAF) during World War II on at least 190 missions.

“Tan Kay Hai’s story has made such a huge impact on my life – The Lion Above The Door would never have been written if I hadn’t learnt of him,” said Ms Onjali, who arrived in Singapore on April 21 for a series of speaking engagements with various schools, including Tanglin Trust School, United World College of South East Asia and Dulwich College.

“He represents all the millions of brave men and women who fought during World War II, but whose names and efforts can barely be found in our history books.”

Ms Onjali told The Straits Times that she would like to get in touch with Mr Tan’s family, so that they know what he means to not only her, but also to the thousands of children now learning and wanting to find out more about his story.

“I would love them to know that his legacy goes on, and is growing – and that all this is just a beginning!” she said, adding that she has plans to rediscover and document such stories of heroism through various forms of media.

She plans to leave Singapore on May 1 after her engagements are completed, but said she would be more than happy to delay her travel plans should it afford her the chance to meet Mr Tan’s family.

Born in 1914, Mr Tan began his career as a car salesman, but took up flying to prove a point.

His daughter, Madam Tan Mui Hua, told ST in a 1991 interview: “My father told us that many Englishmen would make fun of the Chinese and said they could not be pilots. He took up flying to prove that the Chinese could be pilots too.”

In 1941, he became the first Straits-born Chinese to fly with the RAF, as well as the first recruit from Malaya to receive the Distinguished Flying Cross, one of the highest military honours in Britain, which is awarded to officers for “an act or acts of valour, courage or devotion to duty whilst flying in active operations against the enemy”.

In an article titled The Chinese Of Singapore And Their Imperial Second World War 1930-1945, published in the 2012 edition of the Chinese Southern Diaspora Studies journal, historian Ernest Koh chronicled Mr Tan’s daring feats.

Nicknamed “Charlie Chan” by members of his squadron after a Chinese detective character in Hollywood movies, Mr Tan was known for his cheerful attitude among his peers and superiors, who noted his “exceptional keenness, initiative and total disregard of danger” in their recommendations for him to receive the Distinguished Flying Cross.

He would fly at low altitudes to entice German anti-aircraft emplacements to fire at him to give away their locations. He would then turn around to fire on them, successfully silencing them.

Mr Tan would also go above and beyond his duty in the face of intense fire – on one occasion, he was given the positions of five enemy batteries, and was told to engage three. He went on to successfully engage all five of them, then registered a further battery that he had located, and finally successfully engaged a concentration of enemy transports.

He was also the only Singapore-born Chinese pilot to fly with the RAF in the Battle of Normandy. During the operation, which spanned more than two months from June to August 1944, his plane was shot down over Paris. He narrowly survived (no thanks to a faulty parachute) and was captured by German forces, who took him to a prisoner-of-war camp.

Mr Tan escaped the camp by jumping off a train. He foraged in forests for food for three days before being rescued by American troops who sent him back to England. Following this, he continued training and was sent to India to fight the Japanese, but they surrendered before he went back into action.

After the war, Mr Tan returned to Singapore and worked with the Department of Social Welfare until he retired.

He died in 1991 at the age of 77, leaving his wife, three sons, a daughter and eight grandchildren. One of his sons is Mr Tan Thuan Heng, a former national swimmer and Singapore’s first Sportsman of the Year in 1967.

Mr Tan Kay Hai is buried in Kranji War Cemetery.

Ms Onjali first heard of Mr Tan’s exploits from a Singapore woman she met in a museum in Seoul in 2017.

That encounter with the woman, whose name she does not recall, led Ms Onjali to do more research about Mr Tan after she returned to Britain.

She travelled to different museums and RAF bases in England to track down records or mentions of him, spending over £1,000 (S$1,700) in the process.

But there was little she could find out from the RAF, and she turned to Singaporean archives. She contacted Singapore Press Holdings, which published ST, and managed to obtain an article about Mr Tan, along with permission to publish it in her book along with his profile.

“It meant everything to me to have a real report on Tan Kay Hai right there for children to see after reading the story,” she said.

In March 2023, Ms Onjali’s agents were contacted by Authors Abroad, a British organisation that arranges for authors to visit schools, libraries and festivals worldwide, with an invitation for her to speak about her books at international schools here.

“I said yes right away – I had been wanting to visit Singapore since writing The Lion Above the Door. The hope of visiting Tan Kay Hai’s grave and finding out more about him and his descendants was too great,” she said.

Mr Tan Kay Hai (right) and then British Colonial Affairs Minister Lennox Bode (centre) at the opening ceremony of Paya Lebar International Airport on Aug 20, 1955. PHOTO: LIANHE ZAOBAO FILE

While her trip was being planned, The Lion Above The Door was nominated for the Red Dot Book Awards 2024, an initiative of the International School Libraries Network in Singapore that shortlists the best new books in several categories.

Ms Onjali has written eight children’s books for those aged seven and up, with a total of nearly 1.4 million copies sold across physical, digital and audio formats.

She is also the founder of women’s rights organisation Making Herstory and O’s Refugee Aid Team, which supports refugee aid response teams.

In 2022, for her services to literature and women’s rights, she was appointed a Member of the Order of the British Empire, which recognises individuals for outstanding achievement or service to the community that has had a long-term, significant impact.

“My writing is driven by real-life people, situations and issues that I know our children are aware of, can see, or have some experience of,” she said, noting that the overarching theme throughout her stories is the courage to ask questions that must be asked.

“Whether it’s racism, refugees, domestic violence, homelessness or war... I do what I do in the hope that somewhere, some day, a child, parent or teacher is going to finish one of my stories, and begin the discussions we need to happen if we’re going to tackle those issues head on.”

Ms Onjali’s books can be found in public libraries across Singapore.

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