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st.george's church |
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goddess mercy temple |
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Goddess of Mercy Temple
Jalan Masjid Kapitan Keling (originally called Pitt Street, after William Pitt the Younger), is simply Penang’s spiritual heartland, as here you will find, at various times of the day, peoples of faith praying at three of the most important houses of worship on the island. The first is the Goddess of Mercy Temple where, surrounded by swirls of smoke rising from the joss offerings, you can observe a few hopeful supplicants consulting the “oracle sticks”. At the Sri Maha Mariamman Temple, prayer time is marked by the clang of the temple bell and the auspicious sound of the nadaswaram, a classical reed instrument of South India, intoxicatingly played by an old Tamil musician whose inflatable cheeks never fail to remind me of the jazz legend, Dizzy Gillespie. The Indian flower-sellers who ply their trade between the Goddess of Mercy and the Sri Maha Mariamman temples, cleverly compose sweet-smelling flower offerings and garlands for sale to devotees of both the Buddhist and Hindu goddesses.
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kapitan keling mosque |
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khoo kongsi |
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malay mosque |
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Malay Mosque at Acheen Street
Last but not least, you will come to the Malay Mosque at Acheen Street, built by a Hadhrami Arab merchant-prince from Aceh. This mosque complex, dating from the late 18th century, seems all the more precious after some of its counterparts in Aceh were destroyed by the 2004 tsunami. This tight-knit neighbourhood was a hub of Malay and Sumatran spice traders, booksellers and pilgrim brokers during the days when the journey to Mecca was made by steamship.
When you have completed your Street of Harmony tour, you might want to ramble along Armenian Street, or come back the next day. This is a special enclave, not only because it used to be the address of Penang’s early Armenian traders, but because it has a most interesting assortment of galleries, shops and restaurants, all occupying 19th century shophouses. Start from the Penang Heritage Centre around the corner, at the junction of Acheen Street and Carnarvon Street, for an introduction to the specific qualities of the World Heritage Site. Then drop by the Islamic Museum, which displays Penang’s Muslim community history in a former mansion of an Acehnese Arab pepper trader. On a good day, you might gain entry into the Sun Yat Sen Penang Base, which was the revolutionary party’s headquarters when the doctor lived in Penang for over four months in 1910, winning followers, raising funds and planning revolution.
Along this street you will find several art galleries, one of them featuring the works of Fuan Wong, an international fused glass artist. The shops around it sell designer soaps, designer jewellery and art photographs. A quaint attraction of this area is the industrious Indian recycler, who collects newspaper, cardboard, aluminium cans, bottles and other materials, sorts them and reassembles them in meticulous order before reselling them to the private or industrial buyer. Such has been his trade for decades, and such has been the habits of Penangites, guided by the maxim “waste not, want not”, rather than by municipal regulations or fears of global warming.
Further down the road is the Edelweiss Café, run by a heritage guide who is married to a Swiss expatriate (hence the café’s redolent name). Lunch and dinner are served in an exquisite heritage setting, and if it is not too busy, the owner might let you wander up to the private museum upstairs. Past this is another clan temple, the Cheah Kongsi, tucked into a private courtyard. At the eastern end of the street, a shop sells Nyonya beaded shoes, hand-made and custom-fitted by the resident cobbler.
On your way back, walk through Little India, the most vibrant part of George Town today. With the smells of Indian incense, the sound of Bollywood music, and the sight of resplendent sarees hanging at the shopfronts, you might suddenly think you are in South India. If you are really keen to learn about the story of spices (or if you would like to try out the most highly rated tour according to a recent national survey) then you must engage Teresa Capol (yes, the woman who runs Edelweiss Café), to take you through the spice market at Market Street.
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george town |
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Terracotta roofs in the old quarter
of George Town
By now, you may have surveyed a few shophouses inside and out. Bear in mind that the entire old quarter of George Town is made up of rows upon rows of shophouses – almost 2,500 in the World Heritage Site Core Zone, and roughly equal the number in the Buffer Zone. Some are still inhabited by extended families who have lived there for three or more generations, others serve as regular shops and eateries. During the first few years after Rent Control Repeal in 2000, a portion of the old houses were decanted and left looking rather forlorn. After a slow turnaround, an increasing number of these are being rescued from ruin and given a new lease of life by loving new occupants.
“Shophouse” is a generic term for a double-storey terrace house. Originally “shop + house” applied to a unit with a shop below and living quarters, upstairs, but nowadays, it might refer to a terraced house of wholly residential or wholly commercial use. A row of shophouses is fronted by the five-footway (so called, whether they are indeed five-feet in width or not) formed by a continuous front arcade with public right of way. Even though he (or she) might impede pedestrian access, the ubiquitous hawker, and occasionally the cobbler and fortune-teller, add intrigue to the streetscapes.
Times moves slowly for some Penangites – the joss-stick maker who still rolls the incense sticks by hand, the goldsmith who sits cross-legged on the floor hammering an ear-ring by lamplight, the coffee roaster patiently turning his beans over a stoked wood fire, the maker of songkok or Muslim headgear running every seam on his vintage hand-operated sewing machine. Some of these trades hang in the balance. Will the lanterns maker who fabricates the traditional Chinese surname lanterns with bamboo and rice paper teach his craft to another generation? Will the signboard maker find a talented apprentice who can simultaneously master the skills of woodcarving, gilding and calligraphy?
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Traditional trade
Fortunately there are some traditional trades that are in no danger of disappearing – the ones that produce food for the thousands of constantly hungry Penangites. Like Tolkein’s hobbits, most Penangites enjoy at least six meals a day – breakfast, elevenses, luncheon, tea, dinner and late supper. Fortunately there is no shortage of variety as far as food is concerned – all kinds of rice, noodles, breads, sweetmeats, curries, stir-fries, soups, dumplings and puddings are being freshly prepared at any time of day.
Penang, which prides itself as the world capital of street food, is home to all sorts of cooking legends. Nasi Kandar (literally, “yoked rice”) was once carried by itinerant Tamil Muslim hawkers on shoulder yokes, but is now loosely franchised as Nasi Kander shop throughout Malaysia, proffering a dazzling range of Indian curries. Western-Oriental fusion food was concocted by Hainanese cooks who, tired of being called “Hylam boys” by their colonial masters when they were closer to 60 than 16, opened their own restaurants known for a crispy fried chicken known as Inche Kabin – the No. 1 top secret ingredient being Lea & Perrin’s Worcestershire sauce! Penang Laksa, a healthy concoction of rice noodles and salad fish soup, was created by Straits Chinese womenfolk who pressed their silky white noodles by hand and plucked edible ginger flowers and fragrant herbs from their bounteous gardens.
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THAIPUSAM |
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Thaipusam
Of course, there are special foods for festivals, and with our multicultural society, there are festivals all year round. Like Malaysia, Penang celebrates major festivals like Hari Raya (Idul Fitri), Deepavali (Diwali) Christmas and Chinese New Year. In addition, we have a spectacular Thaipusam Festival (some say the largest in the world), with the procession of the silver chariot and self-mortifying feats endured by the kavadi-bearers. Previously banned in Communist China or having withered away elsewhere, many Chinese festivals are still vigorously celebrated here – the eve of the Jade Emperor’s birthday, when every Hokkien (Fujian) family in town puts out their altars decorated with sugar-cane stalks, or the Hungry Ghosts Festival during the seventh lunar month, where elaborate offerings and performances of Chinese opera are set out before a paper-and-tinsel likeness of the King of Hades, before the effigy is publicly destroyed in a bonfire at the end of the three-day feast.
If you are here on the last Sunday of the month, you can catch the monthly Little Penang Street Market, an exciting arts and crafts bazaar with free live music and cultural performances. On any other Sunday afternoon, drop in to see Chinese opera practiced at the Penang Teochew Association in Chulia Street, or listen to a round of Cantonese classical singing at the Sun Tak Association in Love Lane.
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PERANAKAN MANSION |
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Pinang Peranakan Mansion
If you are here any day of the week, catch one of the twice-daily tours of the Cheong Fatt Tze Mansion at Leith Street, a traditional Chinese courtyard mansion and now an enchanting boutique hotel. The tours focus on Chinese architecture and feng shui. Yet another courtyard mansion was converted into the Pinang Peranakan Mansion, which showcases the opulent lifestyle of the Straits Chinese, and their eclectic Chinese and European tastes. Both these mansions are splendid examples of the virtual palaces built by the fabulously rich Chinese of the Straits Settlements.
Much of the built heritage which I have described today, would have disappeared years ago if not for the dedicated efforts of the Penang Heritage Trust, community groups such as the Penang Teochew Association, many private owners who put their money where their mouth is, and the good people of Penang, who steadily gained a sense of pride and responsibility towards their “old houses”. In the last few years, the Penang diaspora have shown a renewed interest in their hometown – these sons and daughters of Penang went abroad to study and work years ago, but continually returned due to their strong sense of belonging and even stronger love of Penang food.
If you are thinking of traveling through Asia, you would do well to choose George Town, a city at the crossroads of Asian civilizations. And if you come with a purpose, to learn something about Asia’s spiritual traditions, to immerse yourself in Asian architecture or to revel in the variety of its living heritage, you will not be disappointed. This is what the authors of “Twentieth Century Impressions” meant, when they advised the traveller to Penang that he is “on his mission – not to ‘see Naples and die’ but to see Penang, and live ever afterwards with only the most pleasant memories of this visit, be it long or brief.”
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