'I could wrap you up in newspaper and there wouldn’t be a
gap anywhere!'
This somewhat startling skill comes from working in Mook’s Fruit Shop after school in 1960s Hamilton. Along with wielding an alarming knife to slice up the tough Queensland Blue pumpkins, it is one of the many
skills of Teresa Purnell.
'So who are the other Chinese who came to Hamilton in the
earliest days?' I ask Teresa.
'We are the Hamilton Chinese', is the rapid reply.
31 August, 2013
09 August, 2013
The Miller’s legacy
'You can sit next to him. He’s one of those'.
George Yanis was 8 years old, in 3rd class at Tighes Hill Primary School. The boy told to sit next to George was Vancho Jovanovski, a Macedonian from what was then Yugoslavia. Since George could speak Greek, Macedonian and English, his teacher thought George could take Vancho under his wing. They spoke Macedonian to each other at first, and Vancho learned English.
George always remembers being dubbed one of those.
George Yanis was 8 years old, in 3rd class at Tighes Hill Primary School. The boy told to sit next to George was Vancho Jovanovski, a Macedonian from what was then Yugoslavia. Since George could speak Greek, Macedonian and English, his teacher thought George could take Vancho under his wing. They spoke Macedonian to each other at first, and Vancho learned English.
George always remembers being dubbed one of those.
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