From
text books, Chinese primary school students are learning that Johor was the
world’s largest producer of gambier from the 1830s to 1850s.
Replanting saplings in the compound of SJK (C) Pu Sze, Skudai |
The
important link between the Chinese and Malay communities in the
pioneering era and how pepper and gambier earned its
place of honour in Johor for its role in boosting the state’s economy, are in
their school syllabus.
But
what is gambier? While students may have a vague idea, most Johorens don’t and
hardly anyone has ever seen a gambier plant. It is rather ironic that gambier
plants, which were once widely cultivated in Johor, are no longer found here.
The
Johor Baru Chinese Association is well aware of it and in 2013, they sent a
team on a mission to Indonesia to carry out extensive research into the cultivation
of pepper and gambier and uncover how it contributed to Johor’s economic
development.
The
team made two visits where they discovered that farmers on Kundur Island were
still using traditional methods with very little mechanization in the process
to harvest, boil young gambier leaves, press them to extract juice and dry the
juice concentrate before it was shaped into a block, cake or cube form.
In
September 2015, their findings were presented in the Johor Baru Chinese
Heritage Museum in an interesting exhibit themed, Sharing of Hardships.
Watering the plants after planting them in the school compound |
The
Chinese translation of this phrase described how the pioneers in the Malay and
Chinese communities worked together, sharing both bitter and sweet experiences
as they built the state’s economy, literally from the ground up.
Through
this exhibition, visitors learned that before the invention of chemical dyes,
the juice from gambier leaves was widely used for leather tanning and dyeing
cloth. With Europe as a major market, Johor was then the world’s largest
producer of gambier.
As the
chemical industry developed in the early 20th century and synthetic
colours were invented, the demand for gambier ceased and the plants virtually
disappeared. While we still have pepper plantations here, there are hardly
any gambier plants.
The exhibition also
provided a further insight into the history of Chinese-Malay relationships
which undergirds the strong support between the Johor sultanate and the Chinese
immigrant community.
History
recorded that Chinese and Malay farmers were already successfully cultivating
gambier plantations in Singapore and the Riau Islands in Indonesia but after 10
to 15 years, their land was exhausted and infertile. So in 1844, when Temenggong
Daeng Ibrahim invited the Chinese to move into Johor to open the land for new
plantations, they were ready to relocate.
Teow Kai Fook [2nd from Right] presenting a range of implements used in gambier farming, which were donated by a farm he visited in Kundur Island, Indonesia |
Immigrant
Chinese with a strong pioneering spirit were attracted to the prospect of huge
tracts of land, waiting for them to clear for cultivation. The Teochew
belonging to the Ngee Heng society, were the dominant clan among the early
settlers.
Under
the kangchu or River Lord system, farmers who arrived in Johor
obtained a permit known as surat sungai from the ruler to cultivate
and govern a plot of land.
One of
the earliest records showed that the Johor ruler issued permits to two kangchu, Kapitan Seah Tai Heng and Seah
Ling Chai of the Ngee Heng society, to develop plantations on the banks of
Sungai Skudai.
As pepper and gambier cultivation became widespread, wealth
poured into the state coffers. While they prospered, the Chinese farmers gave
gambier its nickname, gam mi (Mandarin)
a phrase translated as “golden honey.”
Between
1844 and 1916, over 130 plantations developed successfully throughout the state.
But as gambier lost its economic value in the 1920s, gambier plantations were
gradually replaced by rubber plantations.
It is indeed commendable that the legacy of pepper and gambier
and its contribution to Johor’s economic development is carefully persevered in
the JB Chinese Heritage Museum and students are studying it in their school
syllabus.
While preserving this legacy, the JB Chinese Association also
aims to revive the planting of gambier in Johor for education purposes. One of
its initiatives is establishing the Gambier Planting and Education
Association with a joint committee headed by president, Ho Kuek Kuwang and
vice-president, Gan Ah Tian.
Its
first gambier planting project in 2016 was where 40 gambier saplings were
planted, aptly in SJK (C) Chian Kuo, situated at Bukit Gambier near Tangkak.
These plants were cultivated from seedlings brought back from Kundur Island.
The
first in the series of gambier planting projects in and around JB kicked off in
June 2017 at SJK (C) Pu Sze in Skudai and this will be followed by similar
projects in other schools here.
Representatives
from the JB Chinese Association and Gambier Planting and Education Association
toured a mini exhibition led by JB Chinese Association President, Datuk Seri
Tey Kim Chai, to learn more about the industry from information buntings.
They
also viewed a range of implements used in the gambier production process that
were donated by farmers in Kundur Island. This
exhibition will also be presented at every gambier planting project held in other
schools.
The
association representatives were joined by SJK (C) Pu Sze principal, Tan Chow
Choo, in a planting ceremony where eight gambier saplings were planted in the
school compound.
“I
hope to be invited back next year to see how these plants have flourished in
your care,” said Ho who believed that the saplings would be well taken care of
here.
The
revival of gambier in Johor through the planting projects in schools aims to
help students better appreciate the essence of Sharing of Hardships. Ho said it was vital for younger generations
to value their rich heritage derived from the fruit of labour and hardship that
pioneering generations endured when they cleared the Johor jungles and
successfully cultivated the land with pepper and gambier.
Ho
also announced that the JB Chinese Association, North-West Region Joint
Committee, will be publishing a book on the history of the kangchu system since the 1780s, from gambier cultivation to rubber
and pineapple plantations and the development of the Skudai area. This book
entitled, History of the Skudai Chinese
Community, is scheduled to be
published by December 2017.
A version of this was published in the August 2017 issue of The Iskandarian
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