LONDON: The atmosphere
at the Malaysia Hall canteen on the first day of its reopening last Monday, was
nothing short of a reunion of old friends at a place everyone calls home away
from home.
In spite of a chilly wet day, customers started
arriving for the long awaited breakfast of nasi lemak as early as 8am and there
was a steady flow of customers peaking at lunch time and continued till dinner
and closing time.
The new operators of the canteen at No: 32
Queensborough Terrace, are familiar faces and are no stranger to the running of
the canteen. Hairani Muhammad and husband Azhar Kamaruddin, of the popular
Makan Café in Portobello, once ran Malaysia Hall canteen when Malaysia Hall was
in Bryanston Square in the late 90’s.
According to someone who heard that the couple
had won the tender the second time round, “It is Bryanston Square all over
again” – the friendly warm atmosphere, delicious affordable food and a place to
call home.
“I am very very happy to be back; it is like
running the canteen 20 years ago. Only the venue has changed. I would love to
bring back that atmosphere,” gushed Hairani or better known as Ani to all as
she greeted familiar faces.
No one better to vouch that than Datuk Yunus
Raiss, 84, a former magistrate who used to run Sels English College in Covent
Garden.
During the temporary closure of the canteen for
renovation, I met up with Yunus at Jave-U Café, for want of a convenient place
for tea.
“I am lost without the canteen,” said Yunus,
his face crestfallen. “It was like a little bit of Malaysia for me. I go there
for the atmosphere, the Malaysian atmosphere. Not so much for the food,” he had
said then.
Yunus must be one of the few remaining
Malaysians who had enjoyed the hospitality of Malaysia Hall canteen since he
was a student in 1954.
It was then located at Bryanston Square, near
Oxford Street, a place that held a lot of wonderful memories for young
Malaysian students back then.
Yunus was a young teacher sent for training at
the Malayan Teachers’ Training College, Kirkby, Liverpool in 1954. He would
come to London during the breaks and the Malaysia hall Canteen was the
temporary home away from home. He went back to teach at STAR college and came
back to do Law, practised as a magistrate and then opened up the College.
“At that time, you have to dress up for dinner,
the cooks then were mostly West Indians and you have to be careful as
sometimes, there were sausages!” he laughed.
Those were the days when you paid just under a
pound for the dishes and fruits but could eat as rice as much as you like. Dato
Lat's drawing of the canteen then, very much captured the mood.
“The Malaysia Hall canteen to me is a
continuation of Malaysia. When they were going to close down the Hall some
15years ago, I met a Malaysian lady who was married to a local and had been
here a long time. She said to me, if you close down Malaysia hall canteen, I
will lose Malaysia, I will lose the emotional ties.”
Not being able to travel home, Yunus very much needed
that emotional link to the country he loves and had not returned for many
years.
“There was a lovely sitting room with velvet
curtains and a piano and a library. Most students went there because it was
warm,” he reminisced.
Regulars to the `Malaysia Hall canteen, be it
when it was in Brianston Square or at the present place, are not unfamiliar to
the gentleman always smartly attired in his suit, muffler, hat and an umbrella,
walking down the few steps to the canteen.
“It is another world. You take away the
canteen, there’s nothing left anymore, not only for students but for the
Malaysian community,” he added.
As if to justify his regular presence there,
Yunus had strengthened his ties to the canteen by giving free English lessons
to Malaysian students.
“You know I teach here on Fridays. I always
come here first to have tea, or just to sit down before going upstairs to
teach. I feel very much at home here. I like the atmosphere. It is not a
restaurant. It is not so much the food…it is the atmosphere. There are happy
people, people you don’t know, they say hello to you. You smile and they smile
back. This is very much like Malaysia to me…I have missed it very much,” he
said sipping a glass or water as that is about all he could afford to drink
giving his health conditions.
He is like the uncle figure. I remember those
who came to Malaysia Hall after having had the misfortune to be victims of the
famous London scams, and it was Yunus who offered not just advise but paid for
their temporary accommodation.
On the first day the canteen reopened its
doors, familiar faces of trooped down the steps to the basement, happy that it
is opened again. Backpackers, travellers and holiday makers came down with
their luggage and strollers happy in the knowledge that there’s home cooked
food here.A group of former Tungku Kurshiah students led by Dato' Zuraidah Atan
was also there to add to the merriment.
During the closure, I usually found groups of
disappointed customers who arrived not knowing it was still closed.But they can
be rest assured, the doors are now open.
Two nights ago at the Islamic Circle at the
adjoining hall, I felt choked just looking at the unity, the togetherness that
Malaysia Hall and the canteen offer.
-nst online.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.