Saturday, October 24, 2009

Sarawak - on the Island of Borneo


Sarawak exists on Borneo, the third largest in the world after Greenland and New Guinea. Malaysian belongs two states on Borneo are separated in Sarawak with a size of 123520 square kilometer and Sabah with 75230 square kilometer. The sultanate Brunei wedged in between these two Malaysian states and the southern two third of Borneo is belong to Indonesia and called Kalimantan.

Sarawak is well famous for its richness in plants and animal species, in a way Borneo is a center of biodiversity in tropical Asia. There are 10 national parks and wildlife sanctuaries in Sarawak and which are home to quite a number of endangered animal species such as Proposcis Monkeys, Orang Utans, Sumatran Rhinoceros, Clouded Leopard, Asian Elephants et cetera.


Archaeological encounters at Santubong Peninsula serve that the Chinese came to trade during Tang, Yuan and Sung dynasties from 618 AD to 1368 AD. And it was under the control of the Sultan of Brunei once in the past, at some point, there is no written records of the "middle age". In fact, Sarawak's history is like an exciting story from a novel played by enthralling characters of various performers. It was full of mysterious and alluring time while James Brooke landed his first step to the inside of Sarawak from the Sarawak River. He become first White Raja in Sarawak.

"My intention is first to visit Sarawak - a river whence they get antimony ore, as yet unknown and unmarked on teh charts. At Sarawak, I hope to get hold of the Rajah of Borneo proper and go up to the capital with him and, if possible, make an excursion up the river. I feel confident something is to be done"
James Brooke (29 April 1803 – 11 June 1868)

The Chronicles of the Brooke ruled in an era by three generations of an English family whose first foray into Sarawak. James Brooke arrived in Kuching in 1839 to deliver a letter to the governor of Sarawak, Raja Muda Hashim. Sarawak was ruled by Brunei Sultanate at the time he arrived. The Brunei Sultanate and rebellion from the Malays and Bidayuh who had been forced into hard labor by the Governor. Rajah Muda Hashim was not able to control teh uprising and requested to James Brooke to compromise and bring a peaceful settlement with the natives. Brooke succeeded the operations and become White Raja of Sarawak in 1842 as a reward. Not before expanding his territory, in 1842 Rajah Brooke died.

His nephew Charles Brook took over him. Charles Brooke was well organized and capable person who set a proper system of government and extension of Sarawak Border. From 1941 - 1945, during the Japanese occupation, Charles and his family fled to Australia. No difference like other places during Japanese occupation, all economic and administrative structures are collapsed and the people of Sarawak were suffered. Before the return of Sir Charles Vyner Brooke, Sarawak was already took over by Austrilian Military Administration. Sarawak's colonization by British on 1 July 1946 and hundreds of government officers resigned from government service. In 1949, the second British Governor was assasinated by Rosli Dhobi. Despite Malaysia independent on 31 August 1957 (Merdeka Day), Sarawak did not achieve full independence until 16 September 1963 due to opposition from Indonesia and Philippines.


The People
There are 28 ethnic groups inhabitant in Sarawak with their own distinct language, culture and lifestyle. Urban ares are populated by Malay, Chinese, Melanaus and small percentage of Ibans and Bidayuh who are relocated from their village for various reasons such as work or education. There are only a small community of Indians living in Sarawak. It is a harmony amongst the population of over 2 million in 28 indigenous ethnic groups who speak 45 different languages. Furthermore Sarawak is a place of the cluster of various traditions, pratices and religions.

"But who is the civilised Malay or, as he is also termed, the Deurero-Malay or Coastal Malay, of Malaya, Sumatra, Java, Bali, Lombok, Borneo, Celebes, Ternate, Timor, Sumba, and other islands? This broad-headed individual with more or less Mongoloid features, olive skin, lank black hair and thin beard is the Proto-Malay plus many foreign strains derived from inter-marrage with Chinese from teh Chou period onwards, with Indians from Bengal and the Deccan, with Arabs and Siamese." Sir Richard Winstedt, The Malays: A Cultural History

The Malays
Twenty one percentage of the population in Sarawak, Malays are traditionally fishing, wood carving, silver and brass crafting as well as traditional Malay textile weaving. They are in fact originally migrated from Sumatra and they speak different dialect from the Malays of Peninsular Malaysia. Mostly they live traditionally along the coast.

The Chinese
They came to Sarawak as traders in early 6th century, Chinese now the 29 % of the population of Sarawak and practically built up strong community in social and business fields since 19th century then. Sarawakian Chinese are comprising Hokkien, Foochow, Hakka, Cantonese, Teochew and Henghua. They maintain their tradition and celebrate almost all of major cultural and religious activities.


The Iban
They are the largest portion of the total population which is 30 % of entire Sarawak, Iban are reputed as "headhunters of Borneo". Ibans dwell in their renowned longhouses and famous for their weaving, silver crafting, wood carvings and beads. The Ibans traditionally settle in the river valleys of Batang Ai, the Skrang River, Saribas, and the Rajang River by building up their longhouses. These longhouses may have somewhere between six to nearly a hundred units! Longhouses generally located in newly opened areas are typically made of bamboo and tree bark, but more established and prosperous longhouses can be made of precious and long-lasting hardwoods from the nearby forest. They practice their own democracy in a communal group. They keep the elderly as important rote to make major decisions. The headman who is elected by the people of the entire community of each longhouse. Nowadays, Ibans are well known for their hospitality and friendliness.

The Orang Ulu
The Orang Ulu means upriver people and it had used to mention numerous tribes who live in upriver of inside Sarawak. In fact these groups make up approximately 5.5% of Sarawak's total population. Those tribal groups include also major Kenyah and Kyan tribes as well as the minority groups of Kajang, Kejaman, Punan, Ukit and Penang. The word Orang Ulu nowadays more widely called also to down-river tribes of Lun Bawang, Lun Deyeh, Murut and Berwan as well as the hill tribal Kelabits.

***Note: I sincerely tried to write about Sarawak at a glance and I doubt my post would be covered all about Sarawak.

Ref:-
- Wikipedia
- Sarawak by Robert Hoebel
- Sarawak Tourism Board
- Masama
- Wan (Kuching)

Photos:-
- Courtesy of Sarawak Tourism Board
- Sir Francis Grant from file Wikipedia

ဆက္ဖတ္ၾကည္႔မယ္...

Tuesday, October 13, 2009

Proud to be a Myanmar

ဆက္ဖတ္ၾကည္႔မယ္...

Tuesday, October 6, 2009

The Nearest Forest to Kuala Lumpur

I visited to my friend's house last one month ago and saw from his house a green forest along a hill in Kapong area. Then I straightaway asked him if possible to climb up the small hill and trek across the forest so the sake of my stupid hobby :). He answered me it is very convenient to do so as it has been developed as a forest reserve since long time ago. In fact, Forest Institute of Malaysia (FRIM) is the nearest forest to Kuala Lumpur.

Last 80 years ago, the place was vegetable gardens and shrubby forest where abandoned tin mine wastes. In 1926 and since then, foresters and scientists started develop the forest in nature by British government's support. Nowadays, it is an ideal place to research for forest ecology in forest science park. Aside of these forestry and scientific knowledge center, the park fosters as leisure picnic place and jungle trekking. There is a diversity of animal lives, and believed to be existed wild boars and small species of foxes (I saw the wild boar trails somewhere in the forest).

I leaved my house about half pass eight in the morning and took a KTM to Kapong Sentral then hired a taxi to FRIM. The taxi driver dropped me at the gate of FRIM. Walking the to information center from the gate took about twenty minutes. A number of people for the jogging and biking on the way into the park. The information center is located in the building D6. I went in the center but they gave fliers and leaflets but no information provided personally. I bought a ticket for canopy walk.


I bought takeaway lunch for myself and started to trek up to the hill which is about 70 minutes as I was on my way to trek and spot the birds along the trail. I spotted White-Rumped Shama which is the major highlight of FRIM (later I was told by a nature staff from FRIM) on the way to canopy walk. Incidentally, in the middle of the trek, I met a man with two Japanese tourists (I am not quiet sure where are they from) and asked me "are you a birdwatcher???" apparently I am a guy with a binocular and looking to the up trees :) then I replied him happily "yes I am". We introduced each other and agreed to meet him down there in the base camp next 2 hours.


I continued up trekking until most likely the peak of the hill (1000 feet) and viewed the panoramic view of Kuala Lumpur from the canopy walkway. My picnic lunch was had near the waterfall and subsequently I trekked back the same way to the base camp. I met Mohd Zain near the information center together with his young son. He led us in the selah walk for half an hour with technical explanation about the FRIM and the nature of the plants as well as the resident animals. I must say he is very knowledgeable and nature lover. Furthermore, he is a good birdwatcher and bird guide for FRIM. We spotted together a few species before I left the park. He sent me until the entrance gate with his motor after our conversation about birds and nature in general.

Afterward, I ringed my friend to fetch me to his home in the early evening. He hosted me a bottle of Chivas Regal with varieties of foods. Finally, his family sent the happy and drunk amateur birdwatcher to his home in the very late evening :P

Private Bird List of FRIM

- Common Flame Back Woodpecker
- Black-Browed Barbet
- House Swift
- Asian Palm Swift (not confirmed)
- Green Imperial Pigeon
- White-Rumped Shama
- Peaceful Dove (I always wrongly mention as Spotted Dove)
- Large-Billed Crow
- Common Iora
- Black-Naped Oriole
- Oriental Magpie Robin
- Crested Myna
- Red-Whiskered Bulbul (not confirmed)


Ref:
- FRIM official website
- Wiki encyclopedia
- Birds of South-East Asia by Craig Robson
- Mohd Zain - FRIM

Photo:
- xiaoloongzi
- Markus Seibel
- botany hawaii

ဆက္ဖတ္ၾကည္႔မယ္...

License

License
Thank you very much for visiting my blog. I really do. I am trying to write and share my knowledge, experience,information etc etc. I would be very much appreciated for your either encouraging or critical comments to my any post. Furthermore, some photos herein the posts are not mine and perhaps some information too. However I always try to credit or mention the courtesy of the respective owner and/or where I got it from. Anyway please leave your message anything regards to my blog or if you want to use any part of information from my blog. I would follow up thereafter your message, accordingly.
Contact: thomasjrlatt@gmail.com