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Kuala Lumpur
kaleidoscope
By Mehru
Jaffer
One afternoon last November I flew into Kuala
Lumpur's Suban International Airport, the only one in the world
perhaps that is cradled in the lap of a lush rainforest, to be greeted
by a nation in mourning. Nikky at the airport's taxi service said that
Sultan Salahuddin Abdul Aziz Shah, the 11th king had passed away that
morning. Rajan, the taxi driver called the 75 year-old Sultan of
Selangor, a people's king and added that he was proud of the Malaysian
monarchy. To Rajan, whose calling card describes him as an
"executive chauffeur" and includes his mobile telephone
number, the country's constitutional monarchy is a symbol of
continuity and national unity. He would hate to see it abolished
despite the opinion of some others who feel that all the pomp and show
is meaningless and an unnecessary burden on the state exchequer.
Unlike monarchies in other parts of the world, the royal throne here
is unique for more reasons than one. The king is elected every five
years on a rotational basis amongst eight other sovereigns who are
already rulers at the state level.
Since the throne is not inherited weeks can lapse
before the next king is elected by the council of nine rulers from
different provinces. The television and newspapers were crowded with
full page details about the royal funeral and tearful pictures of the
recently widowed Siti Aishah, the pretty queen only in her early 30s.
The media hype was similar to the obsession of the British with
members of their own royal family. At the Istana Negara, the official
residence of the king of Malaysia on a hillock and away from the heat
and dust of the city, the resemblance to London's Buckingham palace is
complete especially during the ceremonial changing of guards.
Driving into the city saw flags flying at half mast
as a period of seven days of mourning was declared. The staff at the
hotel suggested that a public holiday is actually a good time to drive
around the city as it is free of its legendary traffic jams. Azhar,
another taxi driver was happy to take me to the Twin Towers although
he has never found the time to climb to the top of the latest icon of
the city's economic power. He is pleased that his city is home to the
tallest towers for that makes the whole world know about Kuala Lumpur.
Ramesh Biswas, an architect friend who spent his childhood in Kuala
Lumpur and editor of Metropolis Now, lumps the Twin Towers together
with Karaoke Architecture that is visible to him in all the
"tiger economies" of South East Asia. In karaoke it is not
important how well you can sing, he says, what matters is that you do
it with verve and gusto. The policy of trying to get the biggest and
the highest of everything even succeeds as today there is hardly
anyone who is not aware of the 88 storeys, 450 metres of glittering
steel and glass and 180,000 square metres per office tower that is
advertised on millions of picture postcards and visible within the
ancient Klang valley for tens of kilometers.
Since the city is still in search of its place on
the globe prestige projects continue to be constructed. In fact many
describe the city as an on-going building site ever since it was born
in 1857. It was the southwest coastal town of Malacca that was always
the most important city in South East Asia since the second millennium
while Kuala Lumpur was just a muddy delta where two rivers met. At
first it was the Chinese tin miners who cleared the jungles and built
settled there. The Malay Sultans were happy to be away from both the
mosquitoes and the miners and remained in their comfortable capital of
Klang just north of Malacca. But tin mining soon brought in much
money. In 1885 Yong Koon expanded the tin business into pewter and
founded the Royal Selangor legacy of craftsmanship. It is fascinating
to drive down to the Royal Selangor pewter showroom and factory to
watch Malaysian artisans hand caste and engrave on exquisite items to
this day. The British came next and towards the end of the 19th
century replaced the settlement of haphazard wooden structures of the
tin miners with an urban pattern of shop houses connected by an
endless row of arcades that helped to protect pedestrians from the
heat, humidity and tropical rainfall.
In the meanwhile the Chinese made enough money to
construct temples and own shops. The British brought in Indians to
help them build railway lines, labour in rubber plantations and just
before they left Malaysia in 1957 Indian professionals replaced the
English in offices, hospitals and in schools. Just like the coastal
towns of the Malaysian peninsula, Kuala Lumpur too became a meeting
place not just of the two muddy rivers but adventurers, fortune
hunters and romantics from across Asia. In the midst of the phalanx
like construction of today, some parts of the pretty arcades still
remain. But the home of Yap Ah Loy the Chinese who founded Kuala
Lumpur just a 150 year ago is long replaced by the multi storeyed
offices of the Hongkong and Shanghai Bank. The grey block of concrete
looming over the oldest mosque in town tries to tower over the
exquisite Moorish architecture. But it is heartening to see the mosque
so spick and span and awash in a paint so white that its glow in the
morning sunlight equals that of all the steel and glass surrounding
it, as if to say that there can not be much of a future without a
past.
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