Station to station across Malaysia
Jeremy Atiyah takes the train from
Singapore to Bangkok via the old Penang town of Georgetown
WHY IS there no great Eurasian rail
terminus in Singapore ,
commanding a network of long-distance trains to Peking , Moscow
and Paris ? I
bet there would be if the Singaporeans had anything to do with it. But until Laos
discovers the train, Thailand is
as far as rail travellers from Singapore
can go.
Luckily a two-day journey to Bangkok
was enough for me. Which was why I suddenly found myself last month in the
station cafe in Singapore ,
listening to the rain. A single line of track ran away north through a dripping
forest of potted palm trees. The coffee tasted odd.
Even odder, Singapore 's
train station is technically a part of Malaysia . I
enjoyed the anomalous experience of passing through Malaysian immigration
before checking out of Singapore
(20 minutes later at the border). But the train was surprisingly dull inside.
No ducks on the luggage rack, no peasants squatting on sacks of rice. It might
have been the 9.20am
from Euston to Birmingham ,
and I was sitting in a big quiet armchair. The other passengers included an
American school teacher who was larger than an entire Chinese family.
It didn't take long to cross this
minuscule country. Suddenly I was on the causeway to Malaysia .
Grey waters, a narrow strait, a road lined with trucks. We hit land: this was
mainland Asia , stretching all the
way to Calais
and Ostend .
After Singapore ,
the first impression was of trash. The second was of corrugated roofs, flapping
laundry, spindly coconut palms, shacks and muddy streams.
Some of the housing looked remarkably
British. The Malaysian countryside featured bungalows and terraced houses with
red roofs. But inside the train I was soon feeling rather bored. The
air-conditioning was so cold that I might have been on an unheated train in Norway .
Except that the earth outside looked red and tropically forested. Hours later
we were rumbling through misty Kuala
Lumpur , which looked little more than a
thinly scattered web of flyovers and distant skyscrapers.
Night fell like a stone. The
air-conditioning was now so fierce I had a headache. Only on arrival at the
oddly named town of Butterworth at
9.30pm
could I finally escape into the reality of hot, wet, salty breezes from the Indian
Ocean .
Along with late-working commuters,
local teenagers from Butterworth's pubs and a few scraggly backpackers, I
strolled through to the terminal for Penang
ferries. We made the 20-minute crossing overlooked by the bright lights of Georgetown .
Disembarking, I suddenly became a king,
lounging back in a rickshaw with my hands behind my head. Nor did the Cathay
Hotel dispel the illusion. It was only a tenner a night, but from the outside its
columns and Corinthian capitals looked palatial. Inside, I heard footsteps on
the ceiling; there was a woman eating noodles under a fan and an old man
sweeping the floor. May the human race always be blessed with such arrivals.
An improbably cool breeze blew in from
the murky mountains of mainland Malaysia . I
passed a British war memorial to "Our glorious dead. 1914- 1918".
This was the Padang , a
moth-eaten piece of muddy grass marking the centre of town. Cocks crowed, bells
from a Hindu temple rang out like those from churches. I passed the grimy brick
walls of a 200-year-old British fort, still the major architectural feature of
this sad old town.
Who could have built that fort? In the
local museum I found a bewigged statue of Captain Francis Light, who founded Georgetown in
1786. He was interested in cinnamon, cloves, cumin, pepper, chillies, star
anise and tamarind. I cared more about the fact that this was a town where
backpackers could catch ferries to Medan in
jungly Sumatra .
The last stop before the jungles took
over? That sounded just about right until I noticed that it was also a town
where old Chinese clan associations had set up their kongsi, or temples, for
the worship of their ancestors - benevolent self-help societies for people of
the same surname. I visited the Khoo Kongsi, as large as a council estate,
comprising entire blocks of homes built around alleyways and courtyards. Old
Chinese music rattled from doorways. The main temple, full of hanging lanterns,
was a vast chaos of ceramic shard decorations, gilt and swooping swallows.
Later I dropped in on the Kuanyin temple. Amid pillars of entwined snakes,
blackened burners and huge incense sticks three metres high, I found that
people had scribbled notes with their prayers on them: "Biology I, 11-
12.15pm. Give me a good grade please."
In my years of visiting China I
had never seen anywhere half as Chinese as this. I dropped in on the Hangchow
Cafe and sat at a round marble-topped table under a sooty ceiling. "Life's
greatest imperfection is melancholy wisdom" ran a Confucian saying on the
wall. A Portuguese sailor in the corner was coughing his guts out. Ancestral
portraits on the wall going back to about 1919 included a man whom I suspect to
have been the first Chinese in history to wear a tie.
The following afternoon I crossed back
to the mainland. Destination: Bangkok .
Eat you heart out, Virgin Trains! Even my second-class compartment contained
immaculate couchettes that folded down after dark, with curtains that drew
across to protect sleepers' privacy.
The border, too, was stress-free. Leave
the luggage on the train, sir! Step this way to have your passport stamped! But
where, I asked myself, were the belligerent officials rummaging through my
rucksack? Unavailable on this border, it seemed.
The next morning I woke up in Thailand ,
with white cranes flapping across muddy paddy fields. We passed ramshackle
houses on stilts and temples like peaked meringues. Hua Hin station, when we
got there, looked like a temple in itself, surrounded by sodden grass and cows.
We rolled into Bangkok
two hours late. Not bad for a two-day journey, I thought, as we crawled, at
snail's pace, into Asia 's
traffic-jam capital.
Getting there
Jeremy Atiyah's flights to and from Singapore
and Bangkok
were courtesy of Singapore Airlines. Trains run daily between Singapore
and Butterworth, departing Singapore
early morning and arriving in the evening. First and second-class seats are
both perfectly comfortable and, from Singapore ,
cost S$127 first, S$60 second (about pounds 45 to pounds 22). From Butterworth
to Bangkok a
train departs every afternoon, arriving in Bangkok
the next morning. Very comfortable second-class sleepers cost S$95 if bought in
Singapore .
Reservations can be made through Malaysian company Ktm Berhad (tel: 00 603
2757269; fax: 00 603 2736527).
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