Blessed with a wealth of culture and heritage, Johor is
gearing up to welcome more visitors in the Visit Johor 2020 campaign and share
with them a glimpse of Malay heritage.
Visitors are welcomed by Malay traditional dancers |
Set within the Johor Heritage Foundation – Yayasan Warisan
Johor – the One-Stop Malay Heritage Center welcomes visitors to enjoy and
experience a touch of Malay heritage in a conducted tour that involves hands-on
activities like batik painting and traditional games, and which ends with light
refreshments.
The Malay Heritage Center is sprawled across a hillock dotted with
modern buildings, Rumah Limas Johor or wooden Malay houses designed in
traditional architecture unique to Johor, as well as a landmark mansion which
houses the Galleri Tenun, a gallery dedicated to preserving the art of songket-weaving.
This mansion, which is more than 100 years
old, is in fact an old palace once named Istana Tunku Fatimah, the former residence
of younger sister of Sultan Ibrahim, the Johor Sultan from 1895 to 1959.
I’m at a preview of the Malay heritage tour and our group
learnt that tours are offered in two sessions, 10.30am and 2pm, and with several
activities for visitor participation, the tour should be completed within three
hours.
Visitors are invited to learn the basic steps in Malay traditional dances |
The tour kicks off with the removal of footwear – a typically
Malay custom before entering a home – to step into a Rumah Limas, a Malay-style
wooden gazebo where guests are traditionally welcomed and entertained while
seated on its wooden floors.
To welcome us, a group of dancers perform the Zapin, a lively
Johor traditional folk dance. At the end of their performance, the dancers step
forward to invite visitors to follow their lead in learning the basic steps and
dance along with them.
With our footwear on again, we walk to the recently
refurbished old building which houses the songket-weaving gallery.
The traditional art of songket-weaving was revived in Johor
under royal command as His Majesty the Johor Sultan wished to ensure that
valuable weaving skills are preserved for posterity.
During the conducted tour, we are introduced to various
patterns in the fabric designs and informed that only three are available for the
commoners’ use.
Meanwhile we can only admire the designs that are woven exclusively
for the Sultan, Permaisuri or Queen, and members of the royal household.
Visitors learn about the various songket fabric designs |
A skilled worker demonstrates the art of spinning threads into
spools while another is weaving the fabric, thread-by-thread on a wooden
traditional weaving frame.
I observe her meticulous skills that involve time and patience
in weaving the songket fabric, thread-by-thread, and watch how this accounts
for the high cost in each piece of completed work.
I’m fascinated by the glitter and glamour of golden threads
woven into songket fabric and get a sense of the superior value of each piece
of hand-woven fabric compared to mass-produced or machine-manufactured
materials in the modern market.
Within the glass-fronted showcase, there are spools of
polyester threads in a range of synthetic colours for visitors to compare
against bunches of thread that are dyed using traditional methods and natural ingredients
like turmeric roots and Butterfly Blue-pea flowers.
Next, we are ushered to the event area where we can observe
craftsmen and craftswomen skilled in the art of traditional kite-making and
batik-painting as well as the assembling and playing of the angklung, a
traditional musical instrument made from bamboo.
Visitors watch and learn to play traditional games like Five Stones |
This is a free-and-easy time for visitors to participate in
these handicrafts or move to another area where visitors may also have a go at
playing traditional games!
Seated on woven floor mats, young people are playing Batu
Seremban or Five Stones, Congkak and checkers, and in the adjacent
open space, some boys are playing Sepak Takraw, a game literally
translated as “kicking a rattan ball.”
Visitors then pick their choices to try batik-painting or
learn to play traditional games while some prefer to watch the craftsmen as they
demonstrate the art of making a traditional kite or angklung.
While all this is going on, the mellow sounds of the angklung
fill the air as curious visitors try their hand at playing these traditional musical
instruments.
We are told that the activities presented may vary with each
tour so that visitors can have different experiences with Johor traditional
handicrafts and musical instruments.
Instead of the angklung, the gambus – a stringed
musical instrument with Arab influence and played like the guitar – may be
featured in the tour experience.
The tour ends with light refreshments served with a hot
beverage like Teh Tarik or traditional pulled-milk tea.
Visitors enjoying the thrill of painting their own pieces of batik |
The refreshment menu has a mix of sweet and savoury items like
stir-fried noodles, curry-puffs and popular local kueh or cakes like seri-muka.
The visitors who have completed painting their pieces of batik
can happily take them home as special souvenirs.
Before leaving the Malay Heritage Center, I also visit the
other Rumah Limas which houses the souvenir shop and showcases a collection of
traditional Malay costumes.
Visitors are encouraged to dress up in Johor Malay traditional
costumes and pose for photographs at Instagram-worthy spots like the open
windows and charming verandah of the Rumah Limas.
I also explore the interior of the Rumah Limas to admire its
traditional architecture and layout and feel how it is naturally ventilated by
crosswinds through strategically positioned windows.
A souvenir shop is housed within the Rumah Limas, a Malay house designed in traditional Johor architecture |
It’s a wonder of traditional architecture in Malay homes for
families to live comfortably in an era when there was no air-conditioning!
Besides the Malay heritage tour, visitors may choose to have
an exclusive experience of a traditional Malay wedding performed with a
traditional welcome, bridal reception and wedding ceremony with blessings and
which ends with a traditional dance for everyone to join in.
The Johor Malay Heritage experience is organised by S N
Vacation Sdn Bhd for A Glimpse of Malay Heritage and A Malay
Traditional Wedding.
Tours for minimum 20 visitors should be arranged a week in
advance. Tel: +607 226 1780 and 226 1781, email: snvc@snvacation.com or mobile
Tel: +6019 778 6188.
The One-Stop Malay Heritage Center is closed on Fridays and
Public Holidays. For more info, visit website: www.snvacation.com
A version of this was published in the November 2019 issue of The Iskandarian.
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