FLEA MARKET IN KUALA LUMPUR AND ELSEWHERE…A LIVING MUSEUM, GALLERY AND LIBRARY
…GIVEN A
NEW LEASE OF LIFE. AND OSMAN IN ‘MALAYSIAN SNOW’ VISITING IT AND FINDING AN
INTERESTING FACT ON HIS GRANDFATHER.
By
Mansor Puteh
The flea
market or ‘pasar karat’ which translate literally as ‘rusty market’ in Lorong
Petaling in Kuala Lumpur which had been in existence for years, was suddenly closed
by City Hall. This followed the negative reporting by a local newspaper.
I
immediately wrote to the Mayor of the city complaining about it and saying how
there are such markets in all the major cities in the world. And how I would
make a trip to one if I am abroad where I often found something interesting.
Even if
there is nothing there for me to buy but at the very least I could learn a
thing or two from the things that are offered for sale, most of which would be
discarded anyway, thus adding to the pile of garbage of things that still have
some more life and which could be useful to some others.
I got a new or fresh copy of a coffee table book on the history of Portuguese maritime exploration to the East including to Melaka in
I then
donated it to the Melaka
Museum authorities who
found it interesting since it has all the information on the history of
Portuguese maritime exploration that they did not have.
And at
the flea or morning market in Hitchins in England
I found a book on Stamford Raffles who the British claimed to have ‘founded’ Singapore being
offered for just one pound sterling; I immediately bought it.
Fortunately,
the Kuala Lumpur Mayor found my arguments for the reestablishment of the flea
market at Lorong Petaling to be convincing so he ordered that the market be
retained and better still be upgraded.
So everybody who goes there can check what the traders have to offer.
And
unlike the flea markets in the other cities, it is now opened every morning
till ten, when before it was opened only on the weekend.
I go
there occasionally even if I do not intend to buy anything, since such markets
are not just places where the traders sell discarded objects, but where one can
learn a thing or two about the history of the city and also country from the
discarded objects and things that are sold, some of whom may not be for sale
anywhere and they may not be useless objects too for many.
And as
the saying goes, ‘One man’s garbage is the other man’s treasure…’ where the
value of something priceless may also mean that it is not that terribly expensive
after all.
See you
there…
I
sometimes go there even when I did not have anything to buy; I like to be there
because this is where a hidden part of the city is present; and it is in all
the things I see.
They may
be things that had been discarded by many others who could afford to get rid of
them, but they are still good and they are also dirt cheap to buy that can
still be used for a while.
I am
sure some of the traders had gone on to doing other things after spending a
while trading here, because they have managed to gain some experience in
business and had got enough money to invest on other business that can further
uplift them onto a new level of business and social activities.
No
wonder I had not seen a few of them who used to be there where I had bought
some things or at least checked some others and queried them on their prices.
I would
be happy to be able to shoot a small scene in my forthcoming feature film
called, ‘Malaysian Snow’ by showing the lead actor called Osman visiting it and
finding something very precious to him,
something that his grandfather had lost or disposed of.
What
will this scene mean to him and to the film? A lot.
And what
can the object be? I know. It is an old military identification card which says
that his grandfather had once been in the military and had been given an award
for having confronted the communists and killing some of them.
Or I
could have Osman finding and buying an old newspaper cutting in the jawi or
Arabic script saying so. Which is which? I can decide on which idea I want to
use.
This is
stunning. I had not imagined being able to come to this to add just a bit more
details in this film which I am eager to work on.
And
making Osman visit the pasar karat does not have to be just that; he can
actually do something interesting on the side to add more details and
information to the story and to his family history.
I always
make sure I visit the flea markets when I am abroad and who knows what I would
find there.
I got a
new book on the history of the Portuguese exploration and colonization of the
Far East at the flea market in Lisbon
for eighty ringgit. I gave it to Perzim or Perbadanan Muzium Melaka.
I was
pulling my trolley bag to go to the bus stop to go to the airport for my flight
back to Kuala Lumpur via Paris , when I noticed the many stalls that
had been erected across the street.
I was
lucky because I had the time to go there and I was surprised to see the book,
which is not a recent edition but still new and untouched. So I immediately
bought it with the intention of giving it to Perzim.
And who
knows what I would find in the other flea markets when I am abroad? I hope I
can find some more interesting objects or manuscripts related to the ancient
history of Melaka that no one has got till now.
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