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Peranakan



         


Peranakan, Baba-Nyonya (娘惹) and Straits Chinese (after the Straits of Malacca) (土生華人) are terms used for the culture of the early Chinese immigrants to Malacca on the Malay Peninsula, many of whom intermarried with the Malay population, and later spread throughout the British Straits Settlements to Singapore and Penang, and even further down to Indonesia.

The word Peranakan is also used to describe Indonesian Chinese. In both Malay and Bahasa Indonesia 'Peranakan' means 'descendants'. Babas refer to the male descendants and the Nyonyas the female.

Most Baba and Nyonya are english educated, as a result of the British colony in Malaya. They originated from various tribes (or groups) of chinese, among the popular ones are hokkiens, and some teochews.

The ramains of the Baba Culture and its olden days nostalgia can be found along the Heereen Street, which is situated in the state of Malacca, Malaysia, and in the Peranakan Museum in Singapore. There one can find museums displaying furnitures, foodwares, and even traditional clothes of the Baba and Nyanya.

In the olden days, they are usually traders, rubber tree managers, businessman.

The Peranakans have taken elements from both cultures, for instance from their Malay origin a unique (and very tasty) cuisine has developed making use of the abundant spices found in Malaysia (examples are Chicken Kapitan, a dry chicken curry, and Inchi Kabin, a Nyonya version of fried chicken). The women (Nyonyas) have taken to wearing the baju kebaya (a Malay dress, seen most notably as the uniform of Malaysia Airlines' female flight attendants). However, most of the Peranakans eschewed Islam, preferring the ancestral worship of the Chinese, although some have now converted to Christianity. The wedding ceremony of the Peranakan is mostly Chinese, and is one of the most fascinating wedding ceremonies in Malaysia.

Their language, Baba Malay, is a dialect of the Malay language, which contains many Hokkien words. However, only members of the older generation still use it in daily life.

See also: Malaysian Chinese, Indonesian Chinese, Overseas Chinese

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