| Pulau Mayat is one of the small islands of Labuan. It is said to resemble two human bodies lying side by side. Once, a long time ago, on Labuan, two young people fell in love. Their parents objected to the relationship and refused to allow them to marry. The couple, unable to bear the thought of life apart decided to elope. But before they could carry out their plan they were found out and banished from their village. Bitter at the injustice of this, the two young people vowed that if they ever should return something dreadful would happen to them. After many difficulties and adjustments to the world outside their village, the two prospered and their love for each other did not fade over the years. | ![]() |
| But as they grew older they began to think of the village they left so long ago and a longing grew in them to see it just once more. Finally, forgetting the curse and the circumstances of their departure they set off for their village. They were almost within sight of it when a storm blow up and the boat they were travelling on was tossed about by huge waves. The couple's body were flung onto two small islands. Over the centuries these islands took the forms of a man and a woman. Finally they joined together forming the shape that can still be seen today. | |
Sunday, January 30, 2011
The story of pulau mayat
Legendary-The story of batu si bongkok
| Batu Si Bongkok is a large boulder in the shape of a stooping man holding his hands to his chest. This is one of the stories explaining the unusual shape of this rock. At the foot of a mountain lived Betara Guru, a master of magic and silat, and his beautiful daughter, Melati. Occasionally, young men seeking to learn from the master would make the long and difficult journey to his cave. One such was Kelana. He proved to be the best of Betara Guru's students so when the young man fell in love with Melati and asked to marry her, he was happy to give his consent. | ![]() |
| One month after the wedding Kelana had to go into seclusion to practise some secret magical rituals. Before he left he made Melati swear not to follow him or contact him in any way until he returned. A few days after Kelana's departure, Betara Guru died. Lonely and longing for her husband Melati forgot her promise. She prepared some food to take to him. She found him sitting on the ground meditating. As she went to him to give him the food there was a loud clap of thunder. Before her eyes Kelana turned to stone. On sensing her presence he had begun to rise and was frozen forever in that position. | |
Tanjung kubong story
| While legends and myths are riveting facts interwoven with fantasy can be equally gripping. When the Tanjung Kubong coal mine was closed down in 1911 following a tragedy, it marked the demise of Port Victoria as the bustling port of call for Labuan's coal industry. But the history of the tragedy of the Tanjung Kubong coal mine has since become interwoven with fiction. | |
The Tanjung Kubong coal mine, the chimney of which still stands today, was productive during the colonial period between 1847 and 1911. Strategically located and connected to Port Victoria by the railway, it supplied good quality coal for the domestic and international markets. The mine employed hundreds of convicts from Hong Kong whom the locals called Cina Shantung (Shantung Chinese). The mine was quite large, and workers laboured in shifts for long hours. There were eight tunnels, through which workers were lowered in baskets in batches of twos and threes, until they reached a depth of more than 100 feet under ground. At the end of their shifts, the workers were raised along the same route that they entered. One day, the workers, lowered deep into the pits, were ordered to dig upwards, a departure from their usual practice. The change was rewarding - for coal was found in abundance, and they were urged to push further up. They worked hard and long, losing track of time. Suddenly they heard a distant siren signaling the arrival of a cargo ship... and only then realized they were below the sea bed. | ![]() |
| Buried deep in the earth, the men had no idea of the weather conditions outside of the mine or the level of the tide in the sea. Suddenly, the tide came upon them, and the network of tunnels - their link to the safety of land-was flooded. The passages filled with sea water, becoming death traps. Workers who were within reach of the stations where baskets transported men up to the surface tugged desperately at the dangling ropes to summon help. The ropes snapped under the strain, the baskets swayed in mid-air, and men tipped over, out of reach of those waiting frantically below. Except for a few who managed to escape, most of the workers died in the labyrinth of channels... their bodies were found floating in the sea a few days later. The survivors and those who did not go into the tunnels that tragic day were bitter. They sought out the company authorities on behalf of the men who died, and charged the company with unlawfully forcing the workers into sections of the mine known to be unsafe. They said the company was callous and greedy, more interested in profits than in the lives and welfare of the workers. In solidarity, they massed together, determined that the deaths of their fellow workers should not go unavenged. Once docile and meek, the Shantung Chinese and Singaporean Chinese mine workers became frenzied, and attacked the company authorities in a bloody clash. The rampage went on for several days; many lives were lost, and property ruined. The company enlisted the help of three local Malay "warriors" - Amin, from Ganggarak Village; Asad, from Belekut Village; and Matarap, whose birthplace was unknown. The three had become famous following a railroad disaster at Batu Arang, a tiny village along the busy Tanjung Kubong-Port Victoria route. One day, two trains going in opposite directions collided head-on, causing trolleys of coal to spill their load and the locomotives to derail. The derailment of Beruang and Asli, as the two trains were known, cut off transportation links to Port Victoria, the outlet from which all coal was exported. The coal company worked frantically to get the trains back on track, but all attempts proved futile. Even stripped of their loads, the trains were simply too heavy to move. The company announced that anyone who could get Beruang and Asli running again would earn a reward of five hundred pounds. Amin, Asad, and Matarap took up the challenge. According to local sources, the trio, using only their bare muscles, lifted the two trains and gently put them back in place. When the angry mob descended on the Tanjung Kubong coal mine authorities, the three heroes were quickly sent for... and just as quickly they stopped the riot. They threw themselves into the centre of the crowd, and lifted the fighting men like they were toy soldiers, flinging them in all directions. The rest of the rioters, watching this unbelievable sight, fled for their lives. But mining activities ceased on the island, and soon the British naval force closed down Port Victoria. Today, the Chimney and the tunnels in and around Tg. Kubong remain Labuan once prolific coal industry. | |
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)



