The Star Malaysia - Star2

Preserving Chinatown’s charm

Former radio deejay Chong Keat Aun goes the extra mile to keep the memories of Kuala Lumpur’s Chinatown alive and well.

- By MAJORIE CHIEW star2@thestar.com.my

FORMER radio deejay Chong Keat Aun, 40, is in rapt attention when he interviews elders for their life stories. And his listeners focus intently when he engages them on the airwaves.

More than a decade ago, Chong went all out to trace seniors to document their oral history.

Some of these elders have passed away but the oral history of their past and of a bygone era lives on – thanks to Chong, who was convinced their stories were a cultural heritage which would be of importance to future generation­s.

He has started sharing the oral history of 100 people whom he interviewe­d, on his Facebook The Classic Accents page which he started in 2005. He mooted this idea as a campaign to preserve one’s mother tongue.

When he first set out on the project, he spent his own money and time to travel to villages around Malaysia to locate elderly people for this project.

“I was searching for old people from different dialect groups to record, and collect their stories, poems and opera folk songs. These groups included the Teochew, Fuzhounese, Hokkien, Hainanese, Hakka, Cantonese, Guangxi and Shan Jiang,” said Chong, who is intent on preserving Chinese dialects.

He felt that if he had not done so, those colourful life stories would be lost forever.

Chong said: “My job as a radio deejay did not require me to do that.” But he was passionate about preserving a blast from the past and sharing it with the larger community.

As a deejay, Chong was duly recognised for his work when he won the Anugerah Seri Angkasa award for Best Radio DJ 2011 (Male). He was the first Chinese radio deejay to win this award.

(Anugerah Seri Angkasa is a national media award given by the Informatio­n Ministry. Award ceremonies have been held every five years since the 1970s. Nowadays, this award ceremony is jointly organised by Radio Televisyen Malaysia, Astro and other broadcast stations.)

Chong holds a diploma in journalism from Tunku Abdul Rahman (TAR) College in Setapak, Kuala Lumpur, and a degree in film and broadcasti­ng from Limkokwing University of Creative Technology in Cyberjaya, Selangor.

After graduating, he worked with Music Valley Malaysia, then the biggest retail and recording company, which produced Malay records. Following that, he joined Sin Chew Jit Poh as a crime reporter, then worked with TVB8, a Hong Kong TV production company based in Malaysia, which produced entertainm­ent shows for broadcast in Hong Kong.

In mid 2005, he joined RTM, where he worked on contract for about 12 years until mid last year, when his contract expired.

After RTM, Chong joined a production house in Kota Damansara, Selangor, which produces advertisem­ents and short films.

The film Cemetery Of Courtesy, which was directed by him, was nominated for the Asian Short Film Competitio­n (in the Wide Angle category) at the 22nd Busan Internatio­nal Film Festival last year.

The film, he said, is not controvers­ial although it is based on the May 13, 1969, incident (or the SinoMalay sectarian violence) in this nation. The plot centres on the themes of remembranc­e and forgivenes­s.

In 2016, this Alor Setar native was the festival director of the Kedah Padi Heritage (Warisan Padi Kedah) Festival in Jitra, Kedah.

The festival was to recognise and raise greater awareness of the tradition of growing padi by incorporat­ing community art, cultural performanc­es, education and disseminat­ion of informatio­n on padi culture and history to the public.

With his performanc­e arts background, Chong went into the padi field with make-up on, and did a contempora­ry dance there. Although it was a messy, muddy affair, he felt invigorate­d – and he kept spectators entertaine­d with the innovative dance!

An ex-student of SMJK Keat Hwa in Alor Setar, he reminisced about his childhood in Kedah, a padi-producing state with verdant green rice fields, and how children would play in the mud and even catch fish in the padi fields!

“My paternal grandmothe­r liked Cantonese opera while my maternal grandmothe­r was a Teochew opera singer. When I was young, I

lived in a temple. My father, a medium, would stage Chinese operas on deities’ birthdays,” said Chong, who has been interested in Chinese opera since young.

Some radio listeners dislike Chinese opera songs, he said, adding that he got brickbats from them in his early days as a radio deejay.

“They wrongly perceived that tok tok cheang music (Cantonese phrase referring to Chinese opera) was entertainm­ent for dead people, ghosts and deities. They questioned why we promoted it to the living, instead of accepting Chinese opera as part of Chinese cultural heritage,” he said.

Chong is also the founder of the Petaling Street Heritage House in Chinatown (196, Jalan Tun H.S. Lee, KL). The upper floor of this two-storey shophouse is used as a place to store the cultural treasures of Petaling Street. On the ground floor is a restaurant which serves the cuisines of several Chinese dialect groups. There are also interestin­g posters on the walls, including a photo of a young Elizabeth Choy Him Heong in her heyday. (Choy, now 85, is the grand dame of Chinese opera in Malaysia.)

Chong said the heritage house underwent renovation for six months last November, with financial assistance of RM400,000 from the Asean Arts And Cultural Foundation.

Back in 2009, Chong and an ad hoc group of people, keen on saving Petaling Street, organised the Petaling Street Community Art Project to help Chinatown residents affected by the proposed MRT project.

“When some Chinatown residents affected by the MRT project moved out, some discarded many unwanted belongings in the backlanes of their premises. We salvaged some of those items,” said Chong, who felt like “a new guardian” of those old treasures that are now exhibited at the heritage house. Other items were donated by former residents.

The exhibits include Chinese opera parapherna­lia, Chinese opera scripts and magazines, old suitcases, a Rediffusio­n set, furniture and old photos.

Some old Chinese LP records belonging to Chong are also exhibited in this building.

“There are also 2,100 different dialect records from the 1950s to 1960s, from Yan Kee Records & Recording, Chinese opera records donated by former residents of Petaling Street and by radio listeners when I was a deejay,” he said.

According to Chong, Petaling Street used to be the hub of Kuala Lumpur, long before there was Kuala Lumpur City Centre. These days, it is in a sorry state in a fast-developing city. Over time, there has been an influx of foreign immigrants taking over from Chinese traders, and people don’t seem to care anymore.

“But Chinatown still has much to offer, especially its rich historical value, and it should be preserved. One person’s energy cannot do much for this cause, so I hope more people will come forth to support and preserve our heritage!”

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 ?? — YAP CHEE HONG/The Star ?? Chong is passionate about preserving stories of a past era and sharing them with the larger community.
— YAP CHEE HONG/The Star Chong is passionate about preserving stories of a past era and sharing them with the larger community.
 ??  ?? Chong doing a contempora­ry dance in a padi field at the foot of Gunung Jerai, Kedah, as part of the Kedah Padi Heritage Festival. — Warisan Padi Kedah
Chong doing a contempora­ry dance in a padi field at the foot of Gunung Jerai, Kedah, as part of the Kedah Padi Heritage Festival. — Warisan Padi Kedah

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