In
late December 2023, I received a message from Susan Chong in Singapore who
said:
With Friends of the Museum, Singapore, in Johor Baru for their study tour on Johor Chingay |
At
that time, February 2024 was still a while away so before I replied Susan’s
message, I did a bit of online research (www.fom.com.sg) to understand more
about the Friends of the Museum in Singapore.
I then
learnt that Friends of the Museums (FOM) was a volunteer organization for the
National Museum in Singapore. Started in 1978, it initially focused on Study
Groups and lectures to build expertise on Singapore’s and the region’s history
and culture.
I shared a sumptuous lunch with the FOM group on the first day of their stay in Johor Baru |
With
eight to nine study groups that ran concurrently throughout the year, the first
docent training programme was established in 1980 and after the participants
graduated in 1981, the first docent guided tours were launched.
The FOM now provide guided tours at 10 heritage institutions including the Asian Civilisations Museum, National Museum Singapore, Gilman Barracks and Changi Chapel among others, and with the Urban Redevelopment Authority in Chinatown and Kampong Gelam.
The
FOM has some 1500 members made up of 50 nationalities, with Singaporeans as the
largest nationality group who are museum guides.
The FOM group visited destinations in downtown Johor Baru |
Susan
explained that she was part of the study tour group and have brought docents to
destinations in Malaysia like Penang, Melaka, Terengganu and now to Johor.
At
end February 2024, Susan and her FOM group have plans for a stay experience in
Johor to witness the Chingay festival, a temple tradition unique to Johor Baru
that will mark the close of the annual Chinese New Year celebrations here.
The FOM group on board a visitor tour truck at the Desaru Fruit Farm |
[They
took my advice to stay in a downtown hotel because many roads will be closed
for this festival and it will be challenging for the group to coordinate
transport in the crush of the crowd gathered to watch this annual street
parade.]
Susan
went on to say that her sister-in-law (my friend, Nali) who lives in Johor Baru,
introduced my books to her and reiterated that My Johor Stories were a great
inspiration to her personal quest into Johor history.
So
after the 15 days of Chinese New Year festivities, I got in touch with Susan
again and she replied, confirming that she and her group were all set for their
adventure in Johor.
The FOM group had an experience of the floating village in Kukup |
My
stories on heritage traders like Hiap Joo Bakery, Sin Keng Wah mattress-makers,
Mee Rebus Haji Wahid, Kerala Restaurant, Mee Ho Seng Kee and the Desaru Fruit
Farm, who are still doing the businesses started by their forefathers, are
among those documented in My Johor Stories 2: Interesting Places and
Inspirational People.
Johor’s
Historic Hills and Palaces, Old Markets and Bus Terminals as well
as our Street of Harmony are among the Johor culture and heritage stories documented
in my 2017 MPH Non-Fiction Bestseller, My Johor Stories: True Tales, Real
People, Rich Heritage.
I
was pleased that this group had arranged a local tour guide with transport to
take them from the heritage quarter to see major landmarks and palaces in and
around the city before meeting me for lunch.
Archive photo: Wong Peng Soon with the Thomas Cup trophy |
It
was a pleasure to meet the FOM group made up of three Singaporeans, Candice
Yeo, Azra Moiz and Mohandas Menon, Gisella Harrold from Germany, Jonathan and
Helen Garner from the United Kingdom, Shiv and Roopa Dewan from India and Susan
who is Malaysian, from Terengganu and now based in Singapore.
Shiv
Dewan invited me to sit next to him and with Candice seated on my other side, I
was warmly welcomed to join them for a sumptuous lunch.
The cover designs of the three books for the trilogy of My Johor Stories |
While
lunch was served, conversation flowed freely and I was happy to discover that
Jonathan Garner had in fact, read My Johor Stories: True Tales, Real People,
Rich Heritage, and was familiar with stories about my mum and dad, and
Johor’s culture and heritage.
[My
books are dedicated to my mum and dad who shaped my thinking and outlook in
life. I had the privilege to share about it in a recent interview broadcast by BFM Radio station, a day ahead of January 31 when His Majesty the Sultan of
Johor ascended the throne as Agong or King of Malaysia.]
Throng of devotees along with dragon dancers performances at Xin Kong |
When
I talked about our grandfather, four-time Johor state badminton champion in the
1930s and who trained the Wong brothers in their early years, Mohandas was quick
to connect the dots because he was familiar with Wong Peng Soon, who earned the
prestigious reputation as one of the greatest badminton players of all time.
Chinese opera actor in full costume, ready for the show |
In
the course of conversation, I reminded the visitors that Johor and Singapore
had a unique relationship.
In a history
long before Singapore gained independence in 1965, Singapore and Malaya were in
fact, one country that shared a special bond through geography, economy and
family links where many families have relatives and homes on both sides of the
Causeway.
It was my privilege to share briefly about the Johor Chingay which is a temple tradition of the Johor Old Temple that was built on
land gifted by the Johor ruler.
Susan was close to the main stage and caught the JB Drums troop posing for a group shot |
For
the annual Chingay festival, the deities will be taken out of the temple and
placed in a temporary shrine known as Xin Kong, the next day, February 29.
This
was also a destination for the FOM visitors to witness the excitement as
devotees thronged this area to worship and enjoy live entertainment presented
in traditional Chinese opera and music.
View of a section of Chingay parade from hotel on Jalan Wong Ah Fook |
She
also shared her observations at the Xin Kong that included prayer rituals,
dragon dancers, drummers drumming and hundreds of people armed with joss-sticks
while three of the five stages set up here presented live Chinese opera shows.
“I
have never seen so much action in my life,” declared Gisella.
The
Xin Kong was where the Chingay parade will kick off the following evening,
March 1, in an annual street parade through the city that went uninterrupted
for more than 100 years except once during the Japanese invasion in World War
Two.
Admiring the strength and skills of this acrobat who wielded a giant flag pole in the parade |
This
year, as the world celebrates the lunar Year of the Dragon, the FOM visitors in
Johor were in for a treat because the Chingay parade will feature more dragon
dancers and floats designed with the dragon motif.
Gisella
told me that she then discovered that the Johor Chingay was not just a
religious event but an enormous parade where various organisations/brands
sponsored the decorated floats. [She also identified her favourite float that
night.]
She
had her most memorable moments when she met someone who told her where to get
the festival T-shirt and kindly explained its significance to her, a Caucasian
visitor.
Gisella declared that this was her favourite decorated float that night |
For
the night parade, I reminded the FOM group to keep their eyes on the main stage
set up at the JBCC Mall on Jalan Wong Ah Fook because there will be live
cultural performances for the Johor Royal Family, this year represented by His
Majesty the Regent of Johor, Johor Crown Prince Tunku Ismail, and VIPs seated
there.
After
Susan witnessed the 24 Festive Drums’ dramatic art of drumming by the JB Drums
troop, I received her text message that read, “Such a powerful performance!”
I am
familiar with the drummers because I had the privilege to document the story of
the 24 Festive Drums, an art of drumming that was founded in Johor Baru, in My
Johor Stories 3: Proudly Johor, Then and Now, the third and final
instalment that completed the trilogy of My Johor Stories.
Devotees carrying a deity on sedan chair on its return to the Johor Old Temple at the close of the Chingay festival in Johor Baru |
“I
can feel the vibe and witnessed how the people shouted Daulat Tuanku
with passion,” said Susan who observed the interaction between the rakyat and
the Regent of Johor who was seated on the main stage with his two older
children and other VIPs to watch the parade.
Susan
thoroughly enjoyed her experience of the Chingay festival right up to the final
part the next morning when she watched the deities being returned to the Johor
Old Temple where they will stay until the festival held for the next lunar new
year.
The
FOM group left for Singapore that afternoon, bringing with them fresh insights
into Johor culture and heritage after their brief stay to experience something
different in an exciting itinerary that explored sites in Johor Baru, Iskandar
Puteri and Desaru, with the Johor Chingay as the highlight of this study tour.
P.S.
Following this visit by the FOM group, I am honoured to receive an invitation
to do a lecture on My Johor Stories at their Monday Morning Lectures
held in-person at the Asian Civilisations Museum in Singapore or via Zoom. We are
considering dates now…more about this later.
Photo Credits to Susan Chong and Gisella Harrold. Thanks very much!
NOTE: My Johor Stories books are available from MPH bookstores nationwide and on line from mphonline. In Johor Baru, my books are available from JARO and YSpace.
No comments:
Post a Comment