El Dorado News-Times

Homestyle holiday

Malaysians in Singapore host stranded students for New Year

- ANNABELLE LIANG

SINGAPORE — Chan Jit Yen loves Lunar New Year. It is as much about festivitie­s as it is a homecoming for the 31-year-old Malaysian woman.

Chan, who lives in neighborin­g Singapore with her husband, usually takes a week off work to visit his family in Kuala Lumpur.

They then travel to her hometown in Ipoh, and usher in the year with more visits, meals and celebrator­y firecracke­rs.

Now, with the pandemic upending lives on both sides of bridges that link Singapore and Malaysia, Chan cannot travel. Instead, she opened the door of her rented apartment to four Malaysian students.

“Especially (for) Malaysian students, Chinese New Year has been something that they’re really looking forward to,” Chan said. “I hope they … feel like home and not feeling left out in Singapore.”

Like Chan, the students are spending their first Lunar New Year away from home. They also have a shared interest in engineerin­g, the field she studied before launching a healthy snacks startup.

Chan heeded a call by the Malaysian Associatio­n in Singapore, which asked Malaysians to treat students to a meal over the festive period.

The associatio­n eventually matched 25 students to 10 hosts.

“This initiative is all about the food and the people. Food is what brings people together, especially for Malaysians,” said management committee member Lee Ji En.

After mulling over several menus, Chan settled on a hot pot lunch. She visited a supermarke­t early on Saturday, and quickly got to slicing ingredient­s and preparing tomato and Sichuan peppercorn broths.

Conversati­on flowed once the students arrived. They discussed university life, work prospects, and their favorite Malaysian cities and dishes.

It was an otherwise quiet celebratio­n for Ter Leong Kern, who visited Chan with three university friends.

Under strict pandemic rules, households in Singapore, which has a handful of coronaviru­s cases reported daily, can welcome up to eight visitors a day.

At night, Ter, 21, dreamed that he was celebratin­g with his family at their home in the Malaysian town of Klang.

Ter’s father and mother have seven siblings each, and the family makes the rounds during the holiday season.

“Hope is hope, but reality is still a thing, you know, so we cannot go back,” Ter said. “I hope that the pandemic will go away as soon as possible because it has been very detrimenta­l to all of our daily lives.”

“This initiative is all about the food and the people. Food is what brings people together, especially for Malaysians.”

— Lee Ji En, management committee member, Malaysian Associatio­n in Singapore

 ?? (AP/Annabelle Liang) ?? Malaysian students Felix Mong, (from left), Ter Leong Kern and Siew Ee Sung enjoy a Lunar New Year hot pot lunch provided by their Malaysian host Chan Jit Yen (right) at her apartment in Singapore. With Malaysian workers and students stranded in the city-state over the Lunar New Year due to coronaviru­s travel restrictio­ns, the Malaysian Associatio­n in Singapore has called on Malaysians to treat students to a meal.
(AP/Annabelle Liang) Malaysian students Felix Mong, (from left), Ter Leong Kern and Siew Ee Sung enjoy a Lunar New Year hot pot lunch provided by their Malaysian host Chan Jit Yen (right) at her apartment in Singapore. With Malaysian workers and students stranded in the city-state over the Lunar New Year due to coronaviru­s travel restrictio­ns, the Malaysian Associatio­n in Singapore has called on Malaysians to treat students to a meal.
 ??  ?? Yen prepares ingredient­s for a Lunar New Year hot pot lunch she is hosting for Malaysian students.
Yen prepares ingredient­s for a Lunar New Year hot pot lunch she is hosting for Malaysian students.
 ??  ?? Pedestrian­s cross a street with a lit giant ox display to welcome the Lunar New Year at Chinatown in Singapore.
Pedestrian­s cross a street with a lit giant ox display to welcome the Lunar New Year at Chinatown in Singapore.
 ??  ?? Yen smiles while talking with Malaysian students.
Yen smiles while talking with Malaysian students.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States