Since many ancestral customs and traditions of their
Chinese forefathers are still practiced, Babas and Nyonyas
assimilated the local Malay way of life. The Malay language is spoken at home,
though curiously interspersed with
some Chinese dialect. The local Malay attire
sarong kebaya is worn
and many ceremonial traditions,
such as weddings, are
celebrated in traditional Malay custom. This unique marriage of cultures
resulted in
a novel marriage of cuisines, both Chinese and Malay, and is what is now
known
in Malaysia as Nyonya food.
Thursday, May 17, 2012
Nyonya food
China
has always traded with lands near and
far across
the globe. During the Ming Dynasty, as
a diplomatic gesture to strengthen
ties with the rich and strategic port
of
Malacca on the Malayan Peninsula,
the Emperor of China betrothed his
daughter
Princess Hang Li Po to the
Sultan of Malacca.
The royal princess and her entourage of about 500
formed the first permanent Chinese settlement in
Malacca at Bukit China or China
Hill. These early Chinese settlers wed local Malay brides and gave rise to the first generation
of mixed Chinese-Malays known as Peranakan, the male being known as Baba and the
female as Nyonya, pronounced nyoh-nyah and sometimes spelt Nonya.
The term 'Peranakan' originated in Indonesia for the descendants
of immigrant Chinese who had married and integrated with local Indonesians. Akin
to the Peranakan in
Indonesia, these descendents of
mixed Chinese-Malay had forsaken their
Chinese mother tongue and spoke the
local Malay language,
assimilated Malay customs, culture and
dress. Descendants of this early
Peranakan community in Malaysia then married within their own community of
Babas and Nyonyas
establishing a strong hybrid culture
proud of it's heritage.
It was around this era, that the rich
and strategic trading port of
Malacca,
had attracted the
attention of the Portuguese. The strong
naval armada of the Portuguese soon captured Malacca, making it a Portuguese colony for the next 130
years. After Malacca
fell to the Dutch, who took over from the Portuguese as the main European trading power
in the region, the British started exerting their control in the area. In
1786 Sir Francis Light, representing the British East India Company, established
British control of the island of Pinang, now called Penang, and opened the port to trade. The 1824
Anglo-Dutch Treaty with the British ended the Dutch presence on the Malay
Peninsula. Two years later, in 1826, the British East India Company united Penang, Malacca and
Singapore into a British colony, calling it the 'Straits Settlements'. The
rest of the Malayan Peninsula
remained under the control
and rule of the Malay Sultans. Although the first
Peranakan communities first proliferated in Malacca, many Babas and
Nyonyas settled in Penang and Singapore - and therefore - were also called
Straits Chinese.
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