Tuesday, April 29, 2014

Listen to your heart...

(Courtesy of forwarded mail from CK Chang)

Monday, April 28, 2014

The Wisdom of Mahatma Gandhi

When Gandhi was studying law at the University College of London, a white professor, whose last name was Peters, disliked him intensely and always displayed prejudice and animosity towards him.

Also, because Gandhi never lowered his head when addressing him, as he expected... there were always "arguments" and confrontations.

One day, Mr. Peters was having lunch at the dining room of the University, and Gandhi came along with his tray and sat next to the professor. The professor said, "Mr Gandhi, you do not understand.
A pig and a bird do not sit together to eat.

Gandhi looked at him as a parent would a rude child and calmly replied, "You do not worry professor. I'll fly away," and he went and sat at another table. 

Mr. Peters, reddened with rage, decided to take revenge on the next test paper, but Gandhi responded brilliantly to all questions. Mr. Peters, unhappy and frustrated, asked him the following question. "Mr Gandhi, if you were walking down the street and found a package, and within was a bag of
wisdom and another bag with a lot of money, which one would you take?" 

Without hesitating, Gandhi responded, "The one with the money, of course."

Mr. Peters, smiling sarcastically said, "I, in your place, would have taken the wisdom, don't you think?" 

Gandhi shrugged indifferently and responded,"
Each one takes what he doesn't have."

Mr. Peters, by this time was fit to be tied. So great was his anger that he wrote on Gandhi's exam sheet the word "
idiot" and gave it to Gandhi. Gandhi took the exam sheet and sat down at his desk trying very hard to remain calm while he contemplated his next move. 

A few minutes later, Gandhi got up, went to the professor and said to him in a dignified but sarcastically polite tone, "Mr. Peters,
you signed the sheet, but you did not give me the grade."

(By Courtesy of forwarded mail from Kong Seh Yik)

Saturday, April 26, 2014

My Trip To Kuching, Sarawak

The blogger’s note:  My wife Soh Ai and I went for a free-and-easy 4D3N trip to Kuching, Sarawak from Friday April 18 to Monday April 21, 2014.  We booked our own AirAsia tickets, but the itinerary as well as the accommodation and transport for the trip were planned and arranged by my cousin brother Pan Mook Weng.  He and his wife and 3 former colleagues of his were our tour companions.

Kuching is the capital and the most populous city in the state of Sarawak in Malaysia. The city covers an area of 431 km² and has a population about 165,642 on the north, while 159,490 on the south.

This is my first visit to Kuching and, to be exact, also my first visit ever to East Malaysia.  It turned out to be an unexpectedly enjoyable trip, many thanks to Pan's good work and genorisity in sponsoring our accommodation through redemption of his time-sharing holiday scheme membership points. 

A detailed travelogue in Chinese language on this trip can be found in my other blog, namely http://lautaionn.blogspot.com/2014/04/20144_24.html for readers who can read Chinese. 

As the saying goes, "a picture speaks a thousand words", the following photos and captions serve to give a brief account of the trip:
1.                 SIGHT-SEEING
Places visited or activities in chronological order were: Fairy Cave, Bao Ling Shan Temple, Wind Cave, Tasik Biru (Blue Lake), Siniawan Old Street, Kuching Waterfront, Semenggoh Wildlife Centre, Annah Rais Bidayuh Longhouse, Sarawak Ethnology Museum, Chinese History Museum, Tua Pek Kong Temple, Carpenter Street, China Street, India Street, Jalan Gambier, Main Bazaar, Sunset River Cruise, Cat Museum, Orchid Park, Damai Beach Resort, Sarawak Cultural Village (traditional houses of  Malays, Melanau, Orang Ulu, Penan, Iban, Bidayuh and Chinese).  
Fairy Cave takes its name from a stalagmite structure at the entrance that is said to resemble a Chinese deity, Kuan Yin, the Chinese Goddess of Mercy. 
The cave is dark with gorgeous winding and steep cement steps.
The enormous cave entrance provides sunlight into the cavern which is massive.
Fairy statue and the supposedly collection of droplets of holy water in the Fairy Cave

Bao Ling Shan Temple with Buddha statue

Wind Cave named for the constant cooling breeze which blows throughout the cavern.
It is a series of three dark tunnel caves filled with insect-eating bats and their stinky guano. Underground streams run through the cave and boardwalks are available but they are not lighted hence the necessity to bring ones own torchlight.
Tasik Biru, a picturesque and mysterious artificial lake about 300ft deep. This place used to be a gold mine where Hakka miners excavated gold with simple tools, but later laid to waste when the gold ran out, forming an expansive lake from the rain water or underground spring.
Siniawan old town with vintage wooden shophouse buildings
A homestay hotel in Siniawan old town
Statues of cats, landmarks of Kuching, found just about everywhere based on a mistranslation of the city's name
Kuching Waterfront, which lines the south bank of Sarawak River, is THE place to sample the city's cosmopolitan vibes.
Scenic view of the State Assembly Building (DUN) at night
Semenggoh Wildlife Centre is home to a bunch of rescued or orphaned orangutans, and their offspring, including some gorgeous babies.
Semenggoh Nature Reserve where orang-utans live here and roam freely
Tourists gathered before the nine o’clock feeding to be briefed on the behaviour of the orang-utans – and given some tips on our own behavior: we are entering the orang-utans’ jungle and there are no fences. Don’t get any food out. Let go of your bag if an orang-utan grabs it. Don’t use tripods or walking sticks because they look like guns. Don’t stare orang-utans in the eye.
Tourists walked along a forest track for around five minutes and gathered on a wooden viewing platform, facing another wooden platform.
The most fierce big male orang-utan


Annah Rais Bidayuh Longhouse
The Sarawak State Museum is the oldest museum in Borneo. It was established in 1888 and opened in 1891 in a purpose-built building in Kuching. Sponsored by Charles Brooke, the second White Rajah of Sarawak, it is now called Ethnology Museum and houses various ethnic displays and historical items from Sarawak.
Chinese History Museum. A small colonial-era museum that used to be the courthouse for the Sarawakian Chinese, then the office of the Chinese Chamber of Commerce. It now houses a small permanent exhibition of Kuching's many Chinese groups.
Tua Pek Kong Temple is the oldest Chinese temple in Kuching, built in 1843, and located strategically at the heart of Kuching. It was just at the opposite of Chinese Museum.
The largest and most kitsch Cat Statue is this huge white concrete version glaring at passersby with its paw raised. With blue eyes and often dressed in a top hat and waistcoat, or a big bow tie, the Great Cat was erected in 1990 and measures in at 1.5 metres / 5 feet in height.
Carpenter Street or Jalan Carpenter is an old street in Kuching.  Due to its location, it is considered the backstreet to Main Bazaar, which acted as the main thoroughfare fronting the river. In the old days, Carpenter Street was called "attap street" because of the thatch houses on both sides. This was where carpenters set up their workshop, earning the street its name.
A facelift took place in 1884, by courtesy of a big fire that razed all the wooden houses along the street. Charles Brooke, the then White Rajah of Sarawak, issued a decree that henceforth the houses to be rebuilt with non inflammable material. This necessitated the construction of the more permanent brick shophouses along Carpenter Street, a few of them surviving till today. During those days, Carpenter Street was a lower working class neighbourhood filled with opium dens, gambling joints, brothels and other clandestine activities. These were eventually cleaned up by the British.
Today Carpenter Street marks the entrance to the Kuching Chinatown. There is a big Chinese archway here, and the shops stock the daily necessities of the local Chinese in Kuching.
India Street lined with shops selling all kinds of goods, particularly textiles
Going on board the Sarawak River Sunset Cruise
A cruise on the Sarawak River provides the unique insight of the riverine of the life of Kuching. One will see “tambangs”, small house-like boats used for ferrying locals across the river from the Malay Kampong built on stilts and also the fishing village. Also can be viewed are the Astana (former residence of the Rajah Brooke and now the Governor’s residence), Fort Margherita (built during the reign of Rajah Charles Brooke and now a Police Museum), Satok Bridge, the State Assembly building (a stunning building which stood majestic on the banks of the muddy Sarawak River), Malay village with their daily chores and towards the Sarawak Bureau Convention Center and etc.
Sarawak State Legislative Assembly Building. 
This is a nine-storey high building with a distinctive "payung" (umbrella) roof and an iconic landmark for Sarawak.  Reinforced by nine gigantic pillars and numerous arches, the building reflects the sovereignty of the people’s power as well as the support of all the races in the state.
The Cat Museum has a large collection of cat memorabilia, since "Kuching" means "Cat" in Malay. The museum is located at Kuching North City Hall at Petra Jaya, on top of Bukit Siol. Cat lovers will find all range of exhibits, photos, feline art and cat souvenirs. Some interesting cat characters like Felix the Cat, and Garfield the Cat are also housed here.
Inside Orchid Park
Sarawak Cultural Village. Known as a local “living museum”, the village features the traditional buildings of the indigenous people of Sarawak.
Entrance to Sarawak Cultural Village
The model of the Sarawak Cultural Village
Malay house
Melanau house
Penan with blowpipe
Iban longhouse
Bidayuh longhouse
Chinese house

Waiting outside the theatre for the cultural show to begin

2.                 ENTERTAINMENT
Traditional dances performed in sequence by: Iban, Bidayuh, Orang Ulu, Melanau and Malays
Welcoming dance by all natives of Sarawak
Iban dance
Bidayuh dance imitating the movement of eagles
Melanau dance
This was a talented Orang Ulu blowpipe hunter, who successfully shot darts at balloons from a distance.
An audience being asked to try the blowpipe shooting
Malay dance
Audience from the floor invited to participate in dancing on stage

Grand finale of the show
3.                 DINING

One of the most popular seafood stall in Top Spot Food Court


Sweet-flavoured prawns


Fish with tamarind sour sauce

Bottom left dish was bamboo clams in curry, while the top left was Sarawak’s famous wild fern, midin served with belacan  
Red Bean Ice (Air Batu Campur)
Foo Chow Mee
Nasi Goreng Kampung
Chicken Fried Rice
4.                 ACCOMODATION
4-star Grand Margherita Hotel
4-star Damai Beach Resort
Sea-view from the guestroom balcony

5.                 SOLO & GROUP PHOTOS
 
The only group photo of all seven of us in this trip to Kuching
A pose with my cousin Pan Mook Weng (pic left)
A pose with a Penan man
‘Passport’ for collection of village stamps from the various houses.
All village stamps collected on our 'passports'
6.                 SHOPPING


Sarawak pepper has gained international recognition by chefs and gourmets as one of the most favourite pepper ingredients due to its distinctive flavour and taste perfected through years of government funded agro-research. 

The pepper plant
Close-up view of pepper vines
Bird's nest jelly
White Pepper Berries and Powder
Kuching biscuits and candies

Souvenir key-chains bought from Cat Museum

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