Membership
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Interested in becoming a Peranakan Association member? Please click here to fill in the membership form and post it back to us with a cheque of SGD103.00 payable to "The Peranakan Association". |
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| Peranakan History |
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| Tuesday, 03 October 2006 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
![]() Portrait of a Nyonya Who are the Babas? The Babas are descendants of an early Chinese community that settled in the Malay archipelago at least since the 17th century. Many members of the early community were seafarers who traded between the ports of southern China and those of Southeast Asia. The oldest Chinese communities can be found in Malacca. As Chinese women were by law not allowed to leave their native country until the middle of the 19th century, many of these early traders married non-Muslim natives of the Malay archipelago, such as Balinese or Batak slaves. In the 18th and 19th centuries the Babas were involved in opium, sireh, nutmeg and liquor farming, pepper and gambier cultivation, tin mining, commodity trading and property. In the early 20th century, many Babas invested in rubber. They also worked as compradores (Chinese middlemen) for big Western companies and banks. As a Chinese community that always considered Malaya home, many Peranakans were involved in civic projects and local government, and numbered among the key players in Malaysia and Singapore's road to independence. Many Nyonyas also led the way in female emancipation.
Clearing up the terms. Up to the early 20th century, the terms "Baba", "Straits Chinese", "Straits-born Chinese" and "Peranakan" or "Peranakan Chinese" all referred to the same people. The women are known as "Nyonyas". Older ladies are also known as "Bibiks". However after World War 2, many Babas began to differentiate between "Baba", "Peranakan" and "Straits Chinese". Some writers feel the term "Straits Chinese" refers to the Chinese born and bred in the Straits Settlements (ie., Singapore, Malacca and Penang), and who regarded the colonies as their home. A "Straits Chinese" person is therefore not necessarily a "Baba". Similarly, the term "Peranakan" is a Malay word for someone who is "born locally". However, in common usage in English-Language publications, all these terms are synonymous. To learn more about these terms, download this article by Baba Peter Lee
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Webmaster
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The Peranakan Association
(Singapore)
Raffles City P.O.Box 1640
Singapore 911755
Tel: (65) 6255 0704
Fax: (65) 6353 6801





