Jakarta Globe – AFP, Dyah Ayu Pitaloka, May 19, 2013
Dwi Cahyono points to salvaged artifacts at his museum. (JG Photo/ Dyah Ayu Pitaloka) |
Malang. It
was a sunny morning and a group of European tourists can be seen walking in
front of Malang, East Java’s main Cathedral Church, located near the city’s
historic street Jalan Ijen — dotted by centuries-old houses and buildings built
during the Dutch colonial period and the early years of Indonesian
independence.
One by one,
the tourists pulled out their digital cameras, pointing the lenses at the
buildings’ unique facades, which have become an important tool in the city’s
success to achieve national heritage status this month.
“There’s 19
of us, all from the Netherlands,” says Paul Vasseur, who hails from the Dutch
town Hoofddorp. “We are staying for three nights in Malang. After that we will
continue the tour to Sukamade Beach in Banyuwangi.”
Vasseur,
who is in his 50s, said that one of his uncles used to live in Malang in the
1960s. At the time he used to visit him and go to Malang whenever he traveled
to Indonesia as a boy.
Dwi Cahyono
showing scenes from his
museum(JG Photo/Dyah Ayu Pitaloka)
|
“My other
friend was also born and raised here. We returned to Malang to reminisce the
old days. One of my friends came to dispose the ashes of his parents who used
to work in Jember [a short drive from Malang] and the other wants to see his
childhood home in Malang,” he said in Indonesian.
Vasseur
then pointed his finger at one of the residential buildings across the street.
The colonial-style house has many windows on the front with a high roof typical
of old buildings such as this. “That’s my friend’s childhood house. The house
was built by his parents,” he said.
The home
sits across the church, built in 1934 to serve as a landmark for Jalan Ijen, at
the time Malang’s poshest area that was occupied by wealthy Dutch merchants and
government officials.
At the dawn
of the 20th century, Malang transformed itself from a small port town into a
booming industrial city and Dutch architect Thomas Karsten was responsible for
that change — bringing chaos into
order
through careful city planning and designing almost all of Malang’s buildings in
just 40 years.
But much of
Karsten’s legacy failed to survive, giving way to progress and the need for
modern shopping centers and housing. Even along Jalan Ijen, some buildings have
begun to crumble through years of neglect, while the nearby traditional market
was destroyed to make way for offices and business centers.
And just
like Karsten a century earlier, one man may hold the key to the heritage’s
survival.
“I began to
realize it 15 years ago,” said Dwi Cahyono, 49, about the city’s vanishing
historic buildings. “It is important to improve and develop the city without
destroying history.”
Dwi said
that he had spent around Rp 10 billion ($1 million) of his own money to pursue
his dream, knocking door after door to convince Malang officials to support an
annual event he initiated 10 years ago, Festival Malang Tempo Doeloe.
This year,
the festival provided tourists and locals a glimpse of the past by decorating
modern buildings to represent what once stood in their place, be it a rice
field overrun with chicken and ducks or a long gone cinema complex.
Dwi, who
now heads the East Java tourism promotion agency, also reorganized the city’s
street vendors and introduced a curriculum on heritage preservations at local
schools. But his biggest achievement, he said, was building the Malang Tempo
Doeloe Museum, which opened last year.
To build
the museum, he said he had to do 14 years of research to track down and rescue
some 72 different artifacts, some as old as 600 years, scattered throughout
Malang.
Even the
museum itself is a success story at preserving Malang’s history. It occupies an
old 1,000-square meter property that he salvaged and renovated to host a
collection of artifacts, which tells the history of the city.
To finance
his effort to save the city’s history he opened his own restaurant, Inggil,
which is decorated by framed old newspapers that were once published in Malang
as well as traditional dance masks unique to the city. The restaurant also
hosts some of the properties and decorations he uses every year for the
festival.
Ida Ayu
Made Wahyu, Malang’s tourism and culture chief, realized that preserving
historical buildings is key to harnessing the city’s tourism potentials and
even acknowledged that the government plays a large part in the bid to save the
city’s history. But Ida said there is little her office could do about it.
“With
[heritage buildings] being more than 50 years old, some are damaged. Ijen area
has been named as a heritage area. There should not be any offices or
manufacturing industry there. The houses should also not be transformed [into
new buildings] but restored [to original shape],” she said.
“We don’t
know exactly why those kinds of permit [to rebuild or demolish old buildings]
are issued. It is the authority of the Public Works Agency.”
In the early
20th century, Karsten built more than 90 houses along Jalan Ijen but only a few
survived or are still in their original colonial-style architecture. The
condition threatens Malang’s burgeoning tourism industry with Dutch tourists
like Vasseur, who wish to walk down memory lane and expect a well-preserved
city that makes up half of the 25,000 foreign tourists who visit each year.
Henry
Helios, who runs a backpacker lodging in Malang, said he caters mostly to Dutch
tourists, while other nationalities only make up around 30 percent. Local
tourists make up just 20 percent, he said.
“Visitors
love to stroll the Splendid Flower Market and Chinese temple in Chinatown,” he
said, adding that Malang should also hold more cultural events.
“Normally,
they only stay for one night before heading out to [Mount] Bromo, [Mount]
Semeru, or Bali. But if there is an interesting event in the city, they can
stay for up to three weeks in Malang,” he added.
Dwi’s many
efforts to save the city’s history started to bear fruit in 2011, when he
spearheaded the establishment of the Jati Daya Community, a group of volunteers
who helped repaint old buildings in Kayutangan, another historical area.
Potehi
puppets from Malang’s Eng An Kiong Chinese temple. (JG Photo/
Dyah Ayu
Pitaloka)
|
“I sent e-mails to about 500 people I know, containing an invitation to participate in the cause. And that day 1,500 people came,” he said, expressing his surprise at the amount of support and enthusiasm from the locals towards his cause.
The event
also attracted the attention of former tourism minister I Gede Ardika, who now
runs the Indonesian Heritage Trust. Ardika “came and pushed me to list [Malang]
as a heritage city,” he said.
That year,
he enrolled Malang to the International National Trust Organization, a global
network of National Trusts and similar nongovernmental organizations, to be
listed as one of Unesco’s World Heritage Cities, alongside the likes of
Singapore and Malaysia’s Penang.
The INTO
mandates a city to be listed as a heritage city on the national and regional
levels before being considered for World Heritage status.
The group
also requires at least 10 years of proven efforts to rescue a city’s historical
sites, and Dwi has submitted documents composed mainly of his own work because
Malang’s own administration had shown very little interest in formulating its
own program.
On May 7,
Malang was named as one of two National Heritage Cities in Indonesia alongside
Sawahlunto, West Sumatra.
“This early
achievement is my pride as well as Malang pride,” Dwi said.
But to
attain World Heritage status, Dwi said everyone must do their part.
“Penang can
win the tittle after 18 years of long cooperation between the government,
society and investors,” he said. “If we are successful, [Malang] can be like
Singapore. [Singapore] is neat, clean and had become the destination for many
visitors around the world. Economic growth would definitely also
follow.”
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