Face to Face with Malaysia

Text and Photos by Jeneen R. Garcia

published on 28 February 2008

 

 

“I give you good price, lah!”

 

The Chinese vendor was eyeing me from underneath a bunch of bead necklaces hanging over our heads. Across the street, a dark-skinned Indian had said the same thing about a pack of souvenir magnets, which I later got for a lower price at another stall.

 

I was at Jalan Petaling, at Kuala Lumpur’s famous night market. Said to be the domain of Chinese merchants, the street was surprisingly peopled with just as many Indians, Malays, Pakistanis, and dan lain-lain (other races) peddling the same wares. This was truly Malaysia--a melting pot of Asian cultures with nobody losing their native identity and everybody getting along just fine despite. Which made it all the more important that I drum up my best Asian bargaining skills.

 

“Five ringgit each for four,” I said. A European couple stopped to check out the necklaces. I kept silent as they bargained and bought one for RM 18 (P234). “Eight ringgit,” the Chinese vendor said after they left, “I give you good price!” He shook his head in disbelief at my obstinacy. Finally I conceded, as the other stalls were packing up for the night, and I was only halfway through the throng.

 

Just a few hours earlier I was at Bukit Bintang, an avenue of classy malls, towering five-star hotels and upscale bars--seemingly worlds away from this noisy, packed marketplace. Yet around me now I could see the same tourists I saw there jostling and haggling as if they had never shopped in a mall.

 

Kuala Lumpur is visited by millions of tourists yearly for its nationwide mega sales, Formula One races, the larger-than-life Petronas Towers, and Asian fusion food. I myself had come here not to shop, but to discover the true face of Malaysia, if it could indeed still be found amidst the traffic jams and urban sophistication.

 

Almost everywhere, the women wore scarves that covered their hair and neck, an indication that Islam is the country’s official religion. Near the city’s Lake Gardens is found Malaysia’s biggest mosque, with a unique umbrella-shaped roof having 13 points that symbolize Malaysia’s 13 states.

 

Yet also common are Chinese temples all lit up with red lanterns at night, while just at the outskirts of the city are Batu Caves--large, natural limestone caverns that house Hindu temples and altars. Here Indians go up the 272 steps to the caves barefoot, usually with heads shaved, bringing sugarcane and fruits to offer thanksgiving for answered prayers. Government buildings still proudly bear the old British colonial architecture.

 

Despite this distinct diversity, however, in fast food joints or grand buffet spreads, whether the dish was Indian roti, Chinese bihun or Malay ulam-ulaman, everyone would eat with their hands and speak the same language, a mixture of Malay and Chinese melded into something not quite either one or the other. Most people spoke English well, but it was unnerving to hear some of them say “Mahal kita” once they would find out I was Filipino. After all, how many countries can you go to where both street vendors and store owners speak Tagalog so familiarly?

 

My last night in Malaysia, I attended the Chinese New Year Open House, which meant that everyone, whatever their race, culture or religion, was welcome to celebrate the festival. As dragons and lions danced to the drumbeats, and chingay acrobats balanced impossibly tall bamboo poles on their foreheads, a multitude of Orientals, Malays, South Americans, Europeans, Eurasians, Middle Easterners--even women with just their eyes visible through their black burqas--joined in on the festivities.

 

It was the same, I was told, whether the celebration was the Muslim Eid ul-Fitr, the Hindu Deepavali, the Buddhist Wesak, or the Christian Christmas. Whatever the cause for merriment, everyone in the neighborhood was invited to the party. The spirit of fusion and harmony is not just in the spicy food or the hodgepodge Melayu language. In Kuala Lumpur, I had found not the face of Malaysia, but the many faces of one multicultural nation, its arms opened wide, always ready to embrace the world, lah.

 

 

SOME PLACES TO SEE AROUND KL

 

Kuala Lumpur City Centre (KLCC)

Here you find the 88-storey Petronas Twin Towers, which allows visitors free trips up its sky bridge if you come early and don’t mind the queue. Other things to do are shopping at the malls and gaping at live sharks and exotic animals at the Aquaria.

 

Menara Kuala Lumpur

The KL Tower gives a 360o view of the city from 276 meters above the ground, and offers nature-friendly activities at the large forest reserve right below it. Admission is RM 20 (P 260) for adults and RM 10 (P130) for children.

 

Eye on Malaysia

This 60-meter high giant ferris wheel at Taman Tasik Titiwangsa affords those who are not afraid of heights a view of KL, the “garden city of lights” at night, and its relaxing hills and lake gardens during the day. Admission is RM 15 (P195) for adults and RM 8 (P104) for children 3-12 years old. Free tickets if you fly Malaysia Airlines.

 

Malaysia Airlines flies every Thursday and Sunday from Cebu to Kuala Lumpur via Kota Kinabalu. For inquiries, contact (032) 2313887 or 2314359, or visit www.malaysiaairlines.com. For more information on places to go, visit Tourism Malaysia at www.tourismmalaysia.gov.my.

Comments

  1. One more place on my list of Asian countries I simply must visit. Stop by Bangkok and Macau as well, if you haven't already. =)

    ReplyDelete
  2. haha. incidentally, i WAS in bangkok last january (still haven't sorted my photos :P) and i was supposed to go to macau next week for another media tour, but i had to ask God to intervene so i could say no kay sige na lang ko laag :P need to finish my thesis!

    ReplyDelete
  3. yep yep :) but bangkok was still more fun for me :D i should write about it too.

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  4. me too! i was there this month for 5 days. i've been missing the food ever since i got home =( so tempted to go back this holy week break. post na the pics! =)

    ReplyDelete
  5. you make shopping sound so cultured, in a manner of speaking. =)

    hope you finish what you're writing this evening.

    HUGS,
    jemi

    ReplyDelete
  6. hi jeneen! did u get to taste the roti? i LOVE their roti prata, feasting on them using your hands and dipping them on lamb (or what they similarly call kambing) curry..hmmmm *Smack!*

    ReplyDelete
  7. hay naku...on our last night, we went to have a midnight snack and i while my companions ordered nan and nasi lemak, i ordered the most complicated-sounding roti on the menu: keping kosong. i asked the waiter what it was but didn't understand the reply, so i just said, fine i'll order that, at least i'll get something exotic. and what do i get? two pieces of white bread with butter and some honey-like jam in between :P so much for exotic names. di ko na p-in-icture-an.

    hey we missed you at the big birthday bash... ganda nung ginawa mo :)

    ReplyDelete
  8. hahaha! from ur description, i think u'l find the same thing at KOPI ROTI there in manila (there's one in blue ridge). Too bad, roti prata is more like a thin panini/pita bread -- lost in translation in malaysia ^_^

    onga e, iris textd me that night (w/c made me more envious). t'was really too bad. Sana mapaprint ung ginawa ko. Originally kasi it was to be framed for perry (as a gift) and stickers made for distribution sa knyang fan club... kaso kinapos ata sila sa oras. ngVideoke daw kayo and had more fun when the 'other' guests left na -_^

    say HI to all for me!

    ReplyDelete
  9. i love malaysia. especially penang. :-) got close friends there. btw, your pictures are amazing!

    ReplyDelete
  10. oh, by the way, im curious. why were you in malaysia? bakasyon lang? maayo pa ka.

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  11. thanks claire! wala gud, raket. the usual fam tour hehehe. didn't get to got to penang na kay we were really there for the chinese new year :P

    ReplyDelete

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