Let's take a little break from food and go for a walk. To be precise it is a slow walk around Kuala Lumpur sprinkled with a splash of history and a dash of stories from the past.
Recently, I joined the KLickr (KL's Flickr group) Heritage Themed Photo Walk that was led by famous book author and newspaper columnist Kam Raslan. You may have seen Raslan's Ceritalah's column in The Star or his numerous books such as Confessions of an Old Boy gracing our local bookstores.
Having been a long standing fan of Raslan's works (I dutifully thumb through The Edge for his column every Saturday even though I've left the corporate world aeons ago), I was thrilled to have him rant about the city's notorious past. So raptured I was with the stories I admit I took very few photos to justify my existence in that photo group (hangs head in shame!).
Nevertheless I manage to cobble together a decent picture album for the Flickr set. However, I seriously doubt it is good enough for this Saturday's Urbanscapes (the most happening event with music, food, photos from Klickr and etc).
Back to the walk and that chunk of history. Tune out now if you fall asleep of the single mention of that H word.
But seriously, it is good stuff that had me riveted, which I will "try" to capture below in easy digestible chunks. I've also done some research and supplemented it with dates and more facts.
Why Kuala Lumpur as a city?
Raslan points out that historically capital cities are usually located next to a port. However, in our case it was a little different since Kuala Lumpur was nowhere near the port Klang or Swettenham as it was known those days. From what I read, prior to 1880s the port was originally the administrative centre. However it was subsequently shifted to Kuala Lumpur, which had gained a commercial importance as boats would dock near sand bank where the two rivers, Sungai Klang and Gombak met. These boats would carry goods that would be shifted onwards to the booming tin mines in Ampang. Raslan tells of how goods would be uploaded next to the bridge. Guards will stand there with guns not to shoot people from crossing the bridge but in case any crocodile from the river will attack these boat handlers.
Yap Ah Loy's town
Kuala Lumpur was ruled by the infamous Kapitan China, Yap Ah Loy. Raslan points out that the Chinese left their homeland China following the Taiping Rebellion where an estimated 25 million people perished during those bloody civil wars. The Chinese came in waves to work in the mines. Life was tough those days hence they turned to opium that was controlled by the Chinese secret societies headed by Yap. Raslan tells of a story on how Yap once issued a lucrative reward for the head of his enemies. People would overzealously cut off their friend's heads just to try and collect the reward.
Sultan Abdul Samad Building
The bridge divided the two areas - on one side it was Chinatown but on the other side was where the British held court. They built the magnificent Sultan Abdul Samad building that was named after the present Sultan of Selangor. Designed by Arthur Norman, the building had a Moorish influence that the British felt will fit in the area. The building housed the colonial British adminstrative headquarters. Just across the road was the Padang that became the cricket playing grounds. There's a quirky history reference that Raslan remembers on a young Malay boy that once won a biscuit eating competition organised at these grounds.
Masjid Jamek
Designed by the same architect, Arthur Norman, the mosque was located on the sandbank where the two rivers converge together. In a similiar style to the Sultan Abdul Samad Building, the domes had a Moorish look. According to Raslan, the mosque was actually wrongly aligned as it was built to fit that piece of land. It is the oldest mosque in KL being built in 1909. Originally Malay burial grounds, some but not all of the graves were moved to other parts of the KL when they built the mosque. It is interesting to note that in the olden days, the river actually rose up to the bottom of the steps of the mosque. Due to development, the land around KL had been leveled layer by layer causing the river banks to sink lower and lower in comparison.
Medan Pasar - The Market Square
Just located off the landing point, this was the heart of Kuala Lumpur in those days. Yap Ah Loy's home built after 1881 was where the old HSBC building is located that faces the square (not the present building). Here he could oversee everything from his notorious dealings in the opium dens and gambling houses that he owned. During the day, stalls will be found n the square but at night, people flock here for opium and to gamble for a chance to get rich. After Yap's death, these stalls were then relocated to Central Market. Long before Central Market was a tourist place, it was a wet market. In 1937, an Art Deco clock tower with geometrical designs was built to commemorate the coronation of King George IV, the present Queen Elizabeth II's father.
Bukit Aman
The Colonial British used to have their police headquarters known as "the Fort" on a site overlooking the Padang. This was later renamed as Bukit Aman. This was one of the strategies the British employed since it was at higher ground that gave them a vantage point should the Chinese ever attack them. As a warning to the Chinese, everyday at noon the British will fire a cannon that could be heard as far as Chinatown.
Sin Sze Ya Temple
Located just behind the shophouses along Central Market, this small temple is said to be the oldest Taoist temple in Kuala Lumpur. Built by Yap Ah Loy in honour of the Sin Sze Ya deity, you can find a picture of the Kapitan China within the four walls of the temple.
Nowadays devotees offer their prayers here. Street people also consider this place their refuge to rest a while. The temple is a popular place for tourists and of course photographers.
I reckon it is the best place for photography since you get colourful characters and there's something real magical about the incense, hanging lanterns and joss sticks. We end our walk here with a group photo and a little Malaysian custom, a drink and a chat at the nearby mamak stall.
The walk was organised by KLickr in conjunction with this coming Saturday's Urbanscapes. If you haven't checked it out yet, do visit their site and see what acts are playing, food you get and of course entertainment like KLickr-ville. There are various photography contests and photo screenings. Read more about it here. Foodies can also look forward to The Last Polka's ice cream including their special one day KL flavour, which will be unveiled on that day itself. For more details on KLickr, follow them on facebook or join their KLickr group on Flickr.
If you are interested to learn more about Kuala Lumpur, there are free Heritage Walks conducted by volunteers. They take off from the Central Market Information Counter at 10.30am daily.
I miss KL ... a lot!!
ReplyDeleteLove the photos, espesh the mind-map one :-)
ps . Can't wait to be back in Sept ;-)
Julian - awww, am sure it's fun and sand at Abu Dhabi. You'll have a great time in KL.
ReplyDeleteNice write-up Boo!
ReplyDeleteThe pants on the floor pic reminded me of that song "Pants on the Ground"! Heh!
Nice post about Malaysian history. Read about it sejarah so long time ago and seemed to have forgot almost everything. Haha! Nice to know how KL was developed. Nice photos too!
ReplyDeleteLovely write up and pictures Boo. As I read the first few lines, I thought you were talking about a certain march that happened not so many Saturday's ago.
ReplyDeleteMana tau, historic walk pulak ;)
Terrific pics and I loved "Confessions" but your pics are a work of art too, Boo and I'm horribly jealous whenever I see them. Also starving :-)
ReplyDeleteThank you for this post! Born & bred in KL and I didn't know such a wonderful "walk" was offered.
ReplyDeleteThanks again.
I am SUCH a tourist in my own country. Must really get onto one of these. Love the mindmap!
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ReplyDeleteDevil's been bugging me for us to go on one of these heritage walks. We really oughta go while the buildings are still around, really. Who knows when history will become nothing but history? :(
ReplyDeletelovely photo it is very good work. keep it up.
ReplyDeleteGood write-up about KL ...
ReplyDeleteLovely. Does he conduct heritage tours on a regular basis? Wanted to join the one from Central Market but it's closed to Malaysians!
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