Wednesday, October 29, 2008

Puri Hotel, Malacca (Melaka)

Opposite of the Baba House, that's the one of the famous Puri Hotel at Malacca. (Why I say famous?! Because I failed to book it twice already....).

The Puri Hotel

This hotel also have the similar design like The Baba House. It's the Baba-Nyonya Design.

The Lobby

After the Reception Area

Nice decoration especially the design below the wooden windows

I noticed that are few sorrows flying around

The hotel occupied three units of the colonial building, you will see this open air garden on your right.

The rooms at the first floor....

Romantic Area....

Open Air Garden Cafe on the left of the lobby. You can relax yourself here with a mug of beer in your hand! :)

Room rate : MYR214.00 nett for Superior Deluxe (2 person), including breakfast for 2. Wireless Broadband provided. Hmm....more expensive than The Baba House, but the environment also different.
You can check the latest rate here.


View Larger Map

The Puri Hotel (N2°11.783' E102°14.720')
118, Jalan Tun Tan Cheng Lock,
75200 Melaka.
Tel : +606-2825588
Fax : +606-2815588
http://www.hotelpuri.com/

* Private Car Park for guess.







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Tuesday, October 28, 2008

The Baba House, Malacca

We been attracted by this Baba House Peranakan design Hotel during our evening walk along Jalan Tun Tan Cheng Lock (Heeren Street).
(N2°11.787' E102°14.694')

I took the chance to snap some photos of it. And also the hotel details as below....

The Reception of the Hotel

The open air garden equipped with Free Wifi Services

The Unique design staircase to 1st floor


Antique chair from the hotel

I did check the rate of the room : Deluxe Double for MYR138.00 nett during peak season (Price included breakfast for two). For other room rates, please click here.
I feel it's quite reasonable because it's located at the tourist area. We decided to try it next trip to Malacca!

The Baba House
125-127, Jalan Tun Tan Cheng Lock,
752000 Melaka,
Malaysia.
Tel : +606-2811216
Fax : +606-2811217
www.thebabahouse.com.my

* If you are driving, the car parking is located at the back of the Hotel.






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Monday, October 27, 2008

2nd Visit to Nyonya Suan Restaurant (Nyonya Foods), Malacca (Melaka)

After the trip of D-Paradise Tropical Fruit World, we continued our journey to Malacca town for dinner. We decided to visit the Nyonya Suan Restaurant again after a year. You can read our last visit here.

We still insist to order our Favorite Dishes : Chicken Pongteh, Nyonya Mix Vege & the Sambal Squid.

Chicken Pongteh - a chicken stew cooked with tauchu or salted soy beans and gula melaka. It is saltish-sweet and can be substituted as a soup dish in Peranakan crusine

Nyonya Chap Chai (Mix vegetables)

Squid cooked with Sambal

The foods standard were maintain very well and we really enjoyed our dinner and the cozy environment!

Cozy Environment

One of the decoration of the restaurant

The total damages were reasonable and less than MYR40.00 for 2 adults and one child.

We rated : 4.5/5

Related Melaka post :-
*
Nyonya Suan Restaurant, Malacca
*
Panaroma Malacca (Melaka) Tour Bus
* An Evening at Malacca (Melaka)
* Stadhuys, Malacca (Melaka)
* St. Paul's Church, Malacca
* Aldy Hotel, Malacca (Melaka)
* Jonker Walk Night Market, Malacca (Melaka)
* Ole Sayang Nyonya Food Restaurant, Malacca (Melaka)
* Malacca (Melaka) River Cruise
* Dim Sum Restaurant at Malacca
* Special Homemade Herbal Tea at Malacca
* Portuguese Village, Malacca (Melaka)
* Famous Malacca's Popiah
* Hotel Equatorial, Malacca
* Taiwan Beef Noodle Malacca
* Mahkota Parade, Malacca
* Malacca (Melaka)






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Friday, October 24, 2008

Jewish cemetery in Bucharest vandalized

Unknown vandals toppled or otherwise damaged as many as 200 grave markers in the largest Jewish cemetery in Bucharest. There is a slideshow of the damage on yahoo news.

From what I can tell from news reports, the cemetery is the vast 20th century cemetery, still in use by the Jewish community, in the far south of the city at Soseau Giurgiului 162. This is where my own great-uncle, Pinkas Gruber, who died in 1980 at the age of 98, is buried.

Thursday, October 23, 2008

Jewish spaces and places -- my new Ruthless Cosmopolitan column

My new Ruthless Cosmopolitan column deals with the concept of Jewish space(s) and Jewish place(s). It's a bit peripheral to concrete issues of Jewish heritage and Jewish heritage travel, but it fits within the broad context of the discussion and in the rich tapestry of culture, history and heritage. I also describe some surprising new places to "travel"... (By the way, you can see all my columns aggregated on my Ruthless Cosmopolitan blog.)


Places and spaces: Exploring
what makes up the Jewish tapestry
Ruth Ellen Gruber
Avner Gruber, the first cousin once removed of Ruth Ellen Gruber, visits a Jewish cemetery in Hamburg, Germany.
ROME (JTA) -- We've all played the "Jewish geography" game -- you know, questioning someone we've only just met in order to discover common Jewish connections, friends or even family.
n doing so, we are mapping out our experiences, delineating a sort of Jewish topography of interlinking


















backgrounds, histories and far-flung mishpocha.

Somehow I feel a sense of profound satisfaction when I discover an unexpected link with a stranger. It's like a gift, an almost magical sense of communion with the densely woven tapestry of Jewish life -- or at least with an individual or a place that helps make up that tapestry.

The idea of Jewish topography and the spaces and places -- physical and metaphysical -- in which Jews live, dream and interact forms the basis of a fascinating new book.

“Jewish Topographies: Visions of Space, Traditions of Place” (Ashgate Publishing House, 2008) is a collection of essays by a score of international scholars who participated in a six-year research project at the University of Potsdam in Germany.

Called Makom, or "place" in Hebrew, the project aimed to explore the relevance of space and place in Jewish life and culture.

In my own writing, I have dealt frequently with "Jewish space" in the way that the Paris-based historian Diana Pinto framed it. She coined the term in the 1990s to describe the place occupied by Jews, Jewish culture and Jewish memory within mainstream European society, regardless of the size or activity of the local Jewish population.

CLICK TO READ FULL STORY

Lost Wooden Tombstones from Jewish Cemeteries in Eastern Europe

Tomek Wisniewski, the pioneering Jewish heritage expert in Bialystok, Poland, has just published a fascinating article -- with lots of rare pictures -- detailing the lost wooden tombstones from Jewish cemeteries in eastern Europe. The oldest such tombstones date back to the 18th century, he reports -- the photographs he includes, from the World War I period, show evocative views of many such wooden markers, standing side by side with traditional carved and often painted stone mazzevot.

Most of the wooden markers were flat-faced planks. But Tomek includes extraordinary photos of wooden ohels, or shrines, and tombs resembling miniature wooden peak-roofed houses.

Tomek's new book, A History of Lost Jewish Shtetl Cemeteries, will be published in the coming months and will include further information on Jewish wooden grave markers.

In his article, published in the online Jewish Magazine, he writes:

With a few exceptions, small-town Jewish cemeteries in Poland 'exist' only on old maps and old photographs. Their rich artistic heritage has been lost, or survives only in fragmentary or merely symbolic form, e.g. walled cemeteries behind whose walls practically nothing is to be found. The most interesting and impressive tombstones (matzevot) have disappeared. They all met the same fate. The Germans used them to cobble roads and pavements, to reinforce escarpments and clad the beds and banks of rivers. They were used in the construction of flights of stairs and farmers used them as sandstone knife-sharpeners. Despite these years of destruction, tens of thousands of the most beautiful stone tombstones managed to survive in Poland, but not one single wooden one has been preserved.

For centuries the Jews erected wooden tombstones. Typically they were to be found in the poorest communities in areas where stone was in short supply. . . . .

Surviving photographs show that wooden tombstones are very similar to each other, being made from long slender wooden planks of oak or pine whose shape is vaguely reminiscent of a primitive human form. The top resembles a head and the remainder offers just the suggestion of the human body. The slender, elongated, wooden tombstone is unique in shape, in minimalist ornamentation and, especially, in the manner of accommodating the inscription to the narrow register. Although association with the human form may be unintentional, the minimalist ornamentation and accommodation of inscription to the narrow register are clearly deliberate.

Read the Full Article, on jewishmag.com

Wednesday, October 22, 2008

World JOTA 2008 at Johor Bahru (17th - 19th OCT)

This year the World JOTA was held at the Datatran Johor Bahru (a.k.a. Johore Bahru City Square) which is located beside the General Hospital & opposite of Hyatt Regency Hotel. The station callsign : 9M1CSJ

The event started on 17th OCT 2008 and end on 19th OCT 2008, total of 3 days and it was the second time held at Johor Bahru. You can visit the First Johore Bahru JOTA here. This time the event being supported by many others societies and communities, SKMM (formerly known as MCMC) was one of it. Commercial tents, food and drinks were provided during the events.


The World Scout Jamboree (French: Jamboree Scout Mondial) is a Scoutingjamboree of the World Organization of the Scout Movement, typically attended by several tens of thousands of Scouts from around the world, aged 14 to 17.

The first World Scout Jamboree was organized by The Boy Scout Association in London. With exceptions for the war years, it has been organized approximately every four years, in the more recent years by the World Organization of the Scout Movement (WOSM), in different locations over the world. The 21st World Scout Jamboree in 2007 was held in Hylands Park, Essex, United Kingdom, and celebrated the Centenary of Scouting. For more information, please click here.

On the first day, all the helpful HAM members were there to setting up the antennas and the equipments. Yes, a lot of fun during the process....

9W2TSK on the left

Discussion within 9W2JOC and gang

As usual, the VHF and HF stations were setup, and this is the first time the Satellite Communication Station was setup also to communicate with ISS (International Space Station). And it's also the first time we put up a Helium Balloon (a.k.a. Hot Air Balloon) to setup the G5RV Dipole Antenna as Inverted-V resonant.

"The G5RV antenna, with its special feeder arrangement, is a multi-band center-fed antenna capable of efficient operation on all HF bands from 3.5 to 28 MHz. Its dimensions are specifically designed so it can be installed in areas of limited space, but which can accommodate a reasonably straight run of 102 ft for the flat-top."

The balloon and the G5RV in the small picture

Pictures above & below shows - The "Rise" of the Ballon

Second day was great with many visitors, Scouts and Girl Guides. Fellow HAMs were there for support and help....
The event was officially open by the VIP - 9M2TJO around 3pm.


VIP visiting the booth....


Johor Bahru on The Air - The slogan

The mineral water bottle and 9W2JOC decoration...

The HAMs relax before the Scouts arrive.....9W2ALM with cap

MCMC in action

9W2VAC complaining there's no coverage of P1 WiMax

9W2JOC, 9W2BDX & 9M2NP

9W2BDX & 9W2JJR guiding the scouts for radio communications
(pictures above & below)


That was also the time 9W2JOH with fellows setting the Satellite Tracking System.


Yaesu G-5500 Rotor

The Controller and the GS-232A Computer Interface

The Tracking Software

9W2JOH - Feroz during the setup


The YAESU G-5500 SATELLITE AZIMUTH/ELEVATION ROTOR come with the controller to lets you keep track of all aspects of the antenna system's positioning. The rotor rotate at max. 450° for azimuth and 180° for elevation.
The GS-232A Computer Controlled Interface package with the NOVA satellite tracking software which contains many powerful features for not only pointing antennas but also display options that are invaluable to instructing orbital fundamentals.

BU-50 Diamond 50 Ohm Balun
The BU-50 is a 1:1 50 Ohm HF balun covering 1.7 to 40MHz. It will handle 1.2kW PEP and helps reduce feed line radiation and radiation pattern distortion.



That was about close to 4:40pm local time, everyone were anxiously waiting for the ISS passing by on top of us.....

As you can see the "Communication Cyborg" standing on the left


The Satellite Tracker will park at the direction of south, and it will start to track the position of the ISS 3 minutes before the vision and follow it in 7 minutes then after the ISS out of vision, it will go back to the 'park' position. 9W2BUG holding the mic and CQ!

The respond was good with 107 participants of Scouts & G. Guides (7 from Singapore Rovers) and 50 visitors. And 25 of station master to help and make the event happen!

Singapore Rovers

Some others pictures for sharing......

The Public Washroom

The popular booth, serves food & drink....

The Portable VHF Antenna for Local Transmission

The Communication Cyborg - Main Attraction Of the Day

There were 10 total contacts collected from other country through HF and total of 5 QSL card from SSTV.

The event was end with Thunder Storm and heavy rain on the last day evening.
(Thanks and see you guys next year again!)