Friday, 29 March 2013

Masjid Banda Hilir 1820 (2)

Masjid Bandar Hilir diasaskan oleh Dato Shabuddin bin Hj Mohd Amin pada 1820 Masihi. Beliau berasal dari Cirebon, Tanah Jawa, Indonesia.

Dato Shahbuddin meninggal dunia dan dikebumikan di Makam Shahbudin, Jalan Panjang, Qariah Banda Hilir, Jalan Laksamana Cheng Ho, Melaka.

Anaknya Inchek Nyonia bt Sheikh Mohd Sahabudin berkahwin dengan Ismail. 

Ismail berasal dari Yaman (Yemen). Beliau seorang yang handal sebagai pelayar, saudagar, pedagang, dan peniaga batu permata di kawasan berhampiran Masjid Kapitan Kling di George Town, Pulau Pinang. Ia dikenali sebagai Ismail Alyamani atau Ismail Yamani. Mungkin juga beliau ,berkhidmat sebagai engineer bagi kapal dagang British yang berlayar dari Yaman ke Tanah Melayu dan berlabuh di Pulau Pinang dan Melaka.

Mereka dikurniakan 3 orang anak lelaki iaitu Hj Mohd Sharif bin Ismail, Hj Noordin bin Ismail dan Zainal (Zenal) bin Ismail.

Pada mulanya, Hj Mohd Sharif membuat dan menjual gula Melaka / gula kabung (jaggery) yang dimasak di perkarangan rumahnya bersebelahan Masjid Banda Hilir. Setelah kembali dari mengerjakan Haji pada 1896, beliau menjalankan perniagaan saduran emas yang diperlajarinya semasa di Makkah. Beliau berniaga emas selama 10 tahun dan mempunyai 4 buah bangunan rumah/rumah kedai in Taman Melaka Raya iaitu di No 76 Banda Hilir, No 77 Banda Hilir, No 111 Banda Bilir dan No 113 Banda Hilir. Kini nama jalan telah ditukarkan kepada Jalan Parameswara. . Beliau juga menjadi Imam Masjid Banda Hilir pada zamannya. 

Antara mereka yang hidup sezamannya ialah Mohamad Saleh bin Khatib Usuf. Namanya nyatakan dalam Wasiat Hj Mohd Sharif bertarikh 1906. Anak2nya ialah Omar dan Hj Ashari.

Dua orang saksi (witnesses) bagi Wasiat Hj Mohd Sharif pada 1906 ialah Zainal bin Omar (Sidang) dan Omar bin Saleh (Bilal).

Selepas kematian Hj Mohd Sharif, adiknya Hj Noordin menggantinya sebagai Imam Masjid Banda Hilir. Hj Noordin dan adiknya Zainal (Zenal) membantu menjaga dan membesarkan 5 anak2 arwah Hj Mohd Sharif selepas ketiadaannya.

Seterusnya Hj Noordin diganti oleh Hj Ashari bin Mohd Salleh.

Seterusnya, Hj Ahmad bin Awal mengganti Hj Ashari.

Seterusnya Hj Jaafar b Hj Ashari menjadi Imam ke-5 Masjid Banda Hilir selepas Hj Ahmad bin Awal.

Selepas itu Masjid Banda Hilir diambilalih dan menjadi masjid di bawah kelolaaan Kerajaan Malaysia dengan imamnya tidak lagi datang dari keturunan Dato' Shahbuddin tetapi dilantik.

Maka tiada lagi imam dari keturunan Dato' Shahbuddin menjawat pekerjaan sebagai imam di masjid ini.

Hj Mazlan bin Hj Abdul Rahim ialah cucu Hj Noordin bin Ismail.

Hj Salleh bin Mohd Yusope ialah cucu Hj Mohd Sharif bin Ismail.

Hj Mazlan dan Hj Salleh adalah dua pupu.

Masjid Banda Hilir yang asal (1820) berupa madrassah kecil tempat belajar al Quran, dengan anak2 Hj Mohd Sharif mengajar al Quran pada penduduk sekitar Kg Banda HIlir dan kampung2 berhampiran. 

Dinding masjid dibom dan musnah semasa Perang Dunia Kedua dan dibina semula selepas perang.

Status madrassah ini kekal hingga 1960-an sebelum ia menjadi masjid. Masjid ini dibesarkan dengan membina kaki lima di bahagian masjid paling hampir dengan rumah Hj Mohd Sharif.

Kawasan Masjid Banda Hilir seluas 1 ekar telah diwakafkan dan rumah2 yang wujud dalam perkarangan tanah wakaf menjadi rumah abu. Ini bermaksud rumah2 yang sedia ada bukan milik persendirian dan tidak boleh diniagakan (dijual).

Antara rumah yang wujud setelah Hj Mohd Sharif meninggal dunia ialah rumahnya sendiri (262-T Banda HIlir), rumah Inchek Sarah (cucu Hj Mohd Sharif), rumah Asiah (anak Hj Mohs Sharif) dan bangunan batu yang dibina oleh pihak Masjid bagi Hj Abdul Rashid (cucu Hj Mohd Sharif). Ketiga2 mereka ini telah pun meninggal dunia. 

Inchek Sarah bt Mohd Yusope (Mak Sarah) dikebumikan di Nilai. 

Asiah bt Hj Mohd Sharif (Nek Ya / Ya Tampin) meninggal pada 28 April 1984 dan dikebumikan di Kubor Jalan Panjang, Melaka.

Hj Abdul Rashid bin Mohd Yusope meninggal pada 8 Mac 2009 dan dikebumikan di Masjid Jamek Gelugor, Gelugor di Pulau Pinang.

Thursday, 28 March 2013

Jelutong Press

Jelutong Press which was owned by Syed Sheikh Al-Hadi was located at 555 Jelutong Road in Jelutong, Penang.

Jelutong Press is important because it was an early Malay press in Malaya. It published books on Malay fiction based on foreign folklore, Turkish, Arabic or Egyptian.

I have listed Syed Sheikh Al-Hadi's publications elsewhere on the Internet.

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Update 3 September 2013:

In 1919, Syed Sheikh shifted to Penang and lived at 410 Jalan Jelutong (main street), near the Esso petrol station. Syed Sheikh’s residence in Penang was close to Masjid Jamek Jelutong, in Mukim Jelutong. A tram line ran on Jalan Jelutong. The tram line has been removed. Jalan Jelutong is a busy and congested road today. Syed Sheikh's residence is now a Chinese temple run by vegetarian nuns who cook and giveaway food to the poor. The Penang Heritage Trust (PHT) has informed at the Penang and Hajj 2013 conference, that it will try and buy back or repossess the house for history's sake and for Syed Sheikh's repute as a foremost radical movement fighter for Islamic reform way back then. Syed Sheikh's stand on Islamic reform is used everywhere in Malaysia today.

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Syed Sheikh’s eldest son, Syed Alwi al-Hady’s family lived across the road at 431 Jelutong Road, Penang.

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Prof. Eric Tagliacozzo’s hajj abstract booklet which was distributed at the Penang and Hajj 2013 conference at the E&O Hotel in Penang, 17-18 August 2013 is a useful resource on history of the hajj pilgrimage.


Prof. Eric Tagliacozzo’s hajj abstract booklet (page 18) featured a small image of a hajj booklet with the caption: Alwee bin Syeikh Abdul Hadi, Penerangan, Teguran dan Nasihat Atas Pelayaran Naik Haji ke ‘tanah suci’, 431 Jelutong Press, Pulau Pinang.

The hajj booklet featured on page 18 was authored by Alwi bin Sheikh Alhady and was published by Jelutong Press, with an image of the Kaabah on the front cover. The caption in Prof. Eric's booklet indicates that Jelutong Press was extant at 431 Jalan Jelutong.


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Another photo from Arkib Negara Malaysia showed that most probably Jelutong Press was annexed to Syed Alwi al-Hady’s house at 431 Jalan Jelutong. Jelutong Press at 431 Jalan Jelutong would be on the opposite side of the road compared to Syed Sheikh’s al-Hadi's residence. It could be 20 houses or doors farther down the road on Jalan Jelutong (towards the Chinese clan jetties).

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Jelutong Press ceased to function just before WWII. The reason for its closing is unknown and neither did Syed Alwi or Dr SMA Alhady mention the reasons why in the accounts of the family in the book The Real Cry of Syed Sheikh Alhady. It could be due to the high cost of lithography printing (newsprint and ink) as WWII already broke out in Europe in 1939. In addition, shipping routes to South Asia, Southeast Asia, and the Far East via the Suez Canal were controlled by the army. This could have affected shipping of printing materials.

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I read somewhere that Jelutong Press has been demolished and now a paint shop stands on site. It will be worth to search for the site at 431 Jalan Jelutong and to look it up in old maps and booklets of the late 1920s- early 1930s.

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Possible Jelutong Press site in 2021 (based on Google Map)

There is just a big empty parking lot with some old houses with zinc roofs at one periphery.

Two roads border the house site - Jalan Jelutong and Jalan Ahmad Nor. 

Jelutong Press occupied a building in the middle. It was taken over by Hurp Seng Hong Trading, 555 Jalan Jelutong. Both have been demolished.
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Here is a list of shops on Jalan Jelutong. The shops are scattered and are not properly numbered.

== Jalan Madrasah 

Kedai Kopi Lum Kah, 595 Jalan Jelutong, Jelutong (corner shop, should be 593, 595)

Poh Hin Pawnshop, 595 Jalan Jelutong, Jelutong (should be 591)

577-589 are missing shops (they don't exist).

Noorjahan Mini Market (convenient store), should be 575

Lorong kosong - ?
1 small gerai or shack - should be 573

Kedai Emas Fatt Meng, should be 571

The Rice (Chinese shop), should be 569

Ali Ameir Nasi Kandar, 567 Lebuhraya Gelugor, Jelutong, 11600 George Town, Pulau Pinang

== Jalan Pokok Asam

Jalan Pokok Asam (enrance from Jalan Jelutong) is now closed off by the Khye Sian Ong Temple.

Khye Sian Ong Temple (celebrating 200 years heritage in Jelutong) = 1819-2019. This temple replaced a house which once stood on the site on Jalan Pokok Asam. There was a tiny road (Jalan Pokok Asam) leading to the houses at rear.  

Actstreet Realty (demolished)

555-563 is a large empty parking lot with old zinc houses at periphery)

Location of Jelutong Press at 555 Jalan Jelutong, Jelutong (now empty parking lot): 

Hurp Seng Hong Trading, 555 Jalan Jelutong
former Jelutong Press, 555 Jalan Jelutong, established in 1919-1934 (demolished).

This Nippon paint shop has moved to a new location in Jalan Perak:
Hurp Seng Hong Trading, 376 D & E Jalan Perak, Taman Continental, 11600 Jelutong, Pulau Pinang.

Yong Leng Motor (demolished)

Vaja Curry House, 537 Jalan Jelutong (demolished)

NC Tech Precision Solution Sdn Bhd (auto parts store) (demolished)

Highly Sdn Bhd (demolished)

== Jalan Ahmad Nor, Jelutong

Map of Jelutong and location of Jelutong Press.