Johor Bahru Old Chinese Temple Explained

Johor Bahru Old Chinese Temple
Native Name:Malay: Tokong Cina Lama Johor Bahru
Chinese: 柔佛古廟
Location:Johor Bahru
Coordinates:1.4606°N 103.7631°W
Religious Affiliation:Taoism, Buddhism, Confucianism
District:Johor Bahru District
State:Johor
Country:Malaysia
Founded By:Tan Hiok Nee
Established:1870s[1]
Architecture Type:Chinese temple

Johor Bahru Old Chinese Temple known as Old Temple by the locals, is a Chinese temple located in Johor Bahru, Johor, Malaysia. Located at Jalan Trus, the temple is flanked by modern skyscrapers. This temple is one of the oldest structures in the city and become the symbol of unity among five Chinese ethnic groups of Teochew, Hoklo (Hokkien), Cantonese, Hakka and Hainanese people.

In 2007, a documentary series called My Roots featured the temple in the episode "Grand March with the Deities".[2]

History

The temple history dates back as early as between 1870 and 1880 in the 19th century.[1] Since the relationship between the local Chinese are very warm with the Johor monarchy, Sultan Abu Bakar encouraged the Chinese to build their places of worship and for the burial by providing them land.[1] The temple was then founded by then Head of Ngee Heng Company led by Tan Hiok Nee.[1] [3] In 1981, the temple was proposed to undergoing renovation with the request was accepted in 1994 with total expenditure of RM1.5 million.[3] The renovated temple was then completed in the following year in December 1995 with much of its cultural design are being preserved and important relics such as the century-old bronze bell, incense burner and wooden tablet remain.[3]

Features

Two old artefacts located inside the temple which are the plaque and bronze bell.[3] The main alcove of the temple holds the image of the main deity, Yuan Tian Shang Di. There are five deities inside the temple with each of them are separately worshipped by Teochew, Hoklo (Hokkien), Cantonese, Hakka and Hainanese people:[3]

The annual Chingay parade

Every year in the first lunar month of 20-23rd, the temple organises its annual Chingay known as the "Parade of Deities" . The parade lasts for four days with the final is on the night of the 3rd day when the deities parade around the Johor Bahru city centre. The annual parade attracted more than 300,000 people to march around the major roads of the city together with the five deities being worshipped in the old temple.[4] In 2021, date changed to 1st-15th of the first lunar month.

References

  1. Web site: Bonded in tradition. Peggy Loh. New Straits Times. 4 April 2016. 8 March 2019.
  2. Web site: Living in Johor [Johor Old Chinese Temple]]. Crescendo International College. 8 March 2019. https://web.archive.org/web/20190308050317/http://www.crescendo.edu.my/site/pages/10/Living_in_Johor. 8 March 2019. dead.
  3. Web site: 柔佛古庙历史简介. Introduction to the history of Johor Temple. zh. JB Tiong-Hua. 1 October 2007. https://web.archive.org/web/20070917040204/http://www.jb-tionghua.org.my/gumiao/gumiao.htm. 17 September 2007. dead.
  4. Web site: Johor carves history with 300,000 crowd in Chingay Festival. New Straits Times. 29 February 2016. 8 March 2019.

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