Sunday, 3 June 2012

Malay Marriages and Weddings

Now I will do the weddings of the early Malay doctors, their grandparents, parents, children, relatives, peers and friends. The photos were sent to me over many years. Some related stories, some also wrote stories, anecdotes, etc. You can still send your wedding photos and I can upload them here in this blog. If you are sending photos or video links, please provide some details (state your name, whose wedding, date of wedding, wedding venue, etc). In the meantime, take a look at this wedding video taken at the E&O. YouTube wedding video: Wedding of CJ & Steph, Garden Wedding at E&O

TIMELINE

I will need to search for at least 43 wedding photos... need to arrange first...will take some time, as I now have editing to do for about 1 month.

HOW TO CREATE WEDDING PHOTOS WITH PHOTO EFFECTS

Most are composite photos as wedding photos are not available for many of the doctors. I worked in PowerPoint, where I combined 2 photos and used overlay and repeat techniques. I used 2 programs to add the photo effects - MyScrapNook (for frames when necessary), and Pixlr-o-matic (for the film reel effect). I don't have Adobe Photoshop and Aldus Freehand.

WHAT IS KNOWN ABOUT THE EARLY MALAY DOCTORS

Most biographies have no date(s) of marriage(s) stated. They can be approximated from the DOB of the first child. Some of the names of the wives were unknown and only call names were known.
  1. Dr Abdul Aziz married Wan Sharihah bt Haji Ashaari from Kedah and then Zaleha from Singapore.
  2. Nawab Din married Raj Bee; Zainab Bee married Akram; Dr Abdul Karim bin Nawab Din married Bismillah Begum bte Munawar, the eldest daughter of Hafiz Ghulam Sarwar.
  3. Dato' Setia Abdul Razak married Puan Saleha; they were the parents of Dr Abdul Latiff. 
  4. Tan Sri Abdul Majid married Puan Sri To’ Puan Khairany bt Mahyuddin (in early 1950s).
  5. Dr Abdul Wahab Khan bin Muhammad Lal Khan married Fatimah Bee bte Dustagoer Hussain at her residence in 124, Langkawi Road in Kelawei District in Penang, then a British Settlement, on 17 June 1938.

1800
1820
1840
1860
1880
1900
1910
Dr Abdul Latiff bin Abdul Razak married Che Safiah bt Sulong in 1910.
1920
1930
1931
1932
1933
1934
1935
1936
1937
1938
Dr Abdul Wahab Khan bin Muhammad Lal Khan married Fatimah Bee bte Dustagoer Hussain in Penang in 1938.
1939
Dr Haji Abbas married Zawyah bt Ibrahim in 1939; remarried in 1939 to Shareah bt Mohd Taib.
1940
1950
1951
Tan Sri Abdul Majid married Puan Sri To’ Puan Khairany bt Mahyuddin in early 1950s. Their eldest son Aljafri Majid was born at home in 1952.
1952
Dr Abdul Wahab married Datin Intan bte Haji Mustapha @ Tan Kim Poh in 1952.
1953
1954
1955
1956
1957
Dr Haji Abbas married Azizah bt Hassan in 1957.
1958
1959
1960
1970
1971
1972
1973
1974
1975
1976
1977
1978
1979
1980
1981
1982
1983
1984
1985
1986
1987
1988
1989
1990
2000
2010
2011
2012
Professor Dr Nik Abdullah (anaesthesiologist) daughter's wedding in 2012.


Islamic prayer for the newly weds from Surah ar-Rum: 21
Invitation note from a Malay doctor's family
2013
Dr Mustaffa Musa (immunologist) son's wedding reception in 2013.



2014
2015
2016
2017
2018
2019
2020

British East India Company and the Straits Settlements


What was the main interest of the British East India Company? How well did it compete with its competitor and enemy, the Dutch East India Company (VOC)? Why did we have the Straits Settlements? Were they for the interest of the Malays or who? They were for the interests of the British. Why did they set up the 3 settlements? How did they come to be? Are they any good for the Malays? What is the significance of the Straits Settlements in our history? How were the Straits Settlements monitored administratively? Did the development of the first medical school follow the trade progress of the British East India Company? How did the British East India Company become involved in politics when initially it was set up for trade? What were the weaknesses we had that led to the British becoming involved with local politics? What happened in the 1600s, 1700s, 1800s and 1900s? What was Captain Francis Light's purpose in Penang in 1786? What was Stamford Raffles' purpose in Singapore in 1819? Which British man arrived in Malacca in 1795? Do we have the maps and census of the Straits Settlements at these times? Why are early documents and maps of the Straits Settlements important? They are important because they will tell us who were at the 3 settlements during those years. They are also important because a lot of local laws were changed by the British captains and great changes happened to the local communities. I think the British captains had overstepped their limits as trade captains and entered into local politics and changed everything else to their content. Their rules became our rules and we played by their rules. So we came to be under the colonials. Whose fault? We have our own selves to blame for letting go of our homeland, and leaving things to the British captains to do as they pleased. Now we have a lot of problems - land rights is a major problem today - violating local laws and regulations, pressing the Malays to move out where they belong, and taking advantage of their weaknesses, the list is endless while initially there was none. The 3 Straits Settlements are the most worrisome of the Malay lands. We inherit a lot of problems wrt land rights, landing rights and ownership. This is what I see as a result of the trade activities of the British East India Company at the 3 settlements.
Administrative history: The following describes the historical background to the East India Company's factories and their changing function.
1600-1709: The visits to the east of the first Company ships, undertaken in a series of separately funded voyages, were exploratory in nature. Captains were under instructions to seek out those places that offered the best opportunities for trade and to seek permission to trade from local rulers. According to the information received back, Company instructions then became more specific and the captains were advised to visit or revisit particular places to try to establish connections. At these ports. captains tried to obtain permission for a merchant or merchants to settle and, if necessary, to set up factories. A "factory" was a trading post where a number of merchants, or factors, resided. When company ships arrived at the factories, ships' merchants were thus enabled to exchange goods for trading immediately instead of having to wait to make deals with local merchants. Factories were run by a chief factor and a council of factors. In the areas that proved most successful for trading, groups of factories were eventually established. These were known as settlements and were governed by an agent and council. Eventually: certain settlements developed into centres to which all other factories in the region reported. These became known as presidencies and were administered by an agent (first called a president and later a governor) and a large council of senior factors.
Contacts developed only gradually. The Company's first interest lay in the Malay archipelago and the Spice islands, although from the start it faced considerable competition from Dutch merchants. 
In Arabia and the Red Sea, the Company increased its presence as the strategic importance of the region became apparent. The British conflicts with European powers in Africa and the need to protect the route to India were factors in the establishment of political agencies at Bushire (1763) and Bagdhad (1798); the factory at Mocha also took on a new function as a political agency. To the east, the Company's need to protect its trade with China led to the establishment of Penang (1786), Malacca (1795) and Singapore (1819).
Within India, the Company's trading function finally came to an end under the Charter Act of 1813 when its monopoly rights on trade to India were withdrawn. In 1833 the Company's monopoly on the China trade was also abolished. 
Source: http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/. Retrieved from The National Archives, UK, 3 June 2012.
Royal Coat of Arms of the British East India Company (Penang Museum)"Honi soit qui mal y pense" is a French phrase meaning: "Shamed be he who thinks evil of it". The royal motto in Norman-French is: "Dieu et mon driot".
Royal motto: Dieu et mon droit has generally been used as the motto of English—and later British (outside of Scotland)—monarchs since being adopted by Edward III. It was first used as a battle cry by King Richard I in 1198 at the Battle of Gisors, when he defeated the forces of Philip II of France and after he made it his motto. The belief in medieval Europe was not that victory automatically went to the side with the better army but that, as with personal trial by combat, to the side that God viewed with favour. Hence Richard wrote after his victory "It is not us who have done it but God and our right through us". So after his victories on the crusades "Richard was speaking what he believed to be the truth when he told the Holy Roman Emperor: 'I am born of a rank which recognises no superior but God'. Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dieu_et_mon_droit

Coat of Arms of the British East India Company and a statue of Captain Francis Light.
Photo from Penang Museum.
British East India Company govt office building, corner of Downing Street and Beach Street, Penang circa 1883. An earlier illustration of the building was hand-drawn circa 1850.