Batu Pahat

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Batu Pahat
باتو ڤاهت
峇株巴辖
District of Malaysia
Flag of Batu Pahatباتو ڤاهت峇株巴辖
Flag
Location of Batu Pahatباتو ڤاهت峇株巴辖
Country  Malaysia
State Flag of Johor.svg Johor Darul Ta'zim
Seat Batu Pahat 峇株巴辖 (Bandar Penggaram)
Government
 • District officer Norizan Kulop
 • Member of Parliament YB Datuk Mohd Idris Jusi (PKR) [1]
Area
 • Total 1,872.56 km2 (723.00 sq mi)
Population (2010)
 • Total 417,458 (16th)
National calling code 07-42xxxxx, 07-43xxxxx, 07-44xxxxx, 07-45xxxxx
Vehicle registration J

Batu Pahat is a district in the state of Johor, Malaysia. It lies southeast of Muar, southwest of Kluang, northwest of Pontian, and south of Segamat and the new Tangkak district. The capital of the district is Bandar Penggaram, Batu Pahat.

Geography

Batu Pahat River

The capital of the district Bandar Penggaram,Batu Pahat is located at Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.. It is 239 km (150 miles) from Kuala Lumpur. The next nearest town is Muar which is 50 km (30 miles) northwest of Batu Pahat. The town of Kluang is located about 52 km (32 miles) to the northeast. Johor Baru is located about 70 km to 100 km (43 miles to 62 miles) to the southeast of the town.

The district itself borders the districts of Segamat and Tangkak to the north, Kluang to the east, Muar to the west and shares a border in the southeast with the district of Pontian. The coast of the Straits of Melaka lies to the south.

History

A plaque next to the Batu Pahat Well depicting the town's origin (www.batupahat.org).

The town acquired the name Batu Pahat, which means "chiselled stone", from the quarries near the estuary.[1] There are multiple theories as to the origin of this name. In around 1456, the Siamese army, led by Admiral Awi Di Chu, camped in Batu Pahat before attacking Malacca.[2] Legend has it that the invading Siamese troops were chiselling rocks at a rocky spot in the coastal village of Kampung Minyak Beku, in hope to get fresh water during their retreat from the Melaka troops, led by Tun Perak, the famous Bendahara (Prime Minister) of the Malacca Empire. Another possible explanation for the origin of the name is the fortress ("a famosa") built by the Portuguese after capturing Melaka, which was made from granite rocks taken from the mouth of Sungai Batu Pahat.

Renowned for its salted fish in the past, Batu Pahat was formerly known as Bandar Penggaram, which means "town of salt-makers". In 1893/1894, the present township was founded by Dato' Bentara Luar, Mohamed Salleh bin Perang, acting on the orders of the Sultan of Johor, Sultan Abu Bakar.[3]

Batu Pahat was also the location of the headquarters for the 1Bn FIR of Fijian troops serving as part of the Commonwealth forces during The Malayan Emergency, from 1952 to 1956. The 1,600 strong force saw considerable action during the campaign and contributed to the securing of the area during that period.[4]

Today, the ancient well can still be found in Minyak Beku, though little was done to maintain this ancient landmark which gives name to the town. For the town's centennial celebration in the early '90s, a quaint monument depicting a floating hand chiselling a rock was set up in the town square. It became the landmark of the town instantaneously. Currently, the newly refurbished town square is popular with locals on weekend nights and also provides as a venue for many public festive celebrations.

Bandar Penggaram, Batu Pahat is growing rapidly and has now developed to become the second major town in Johor state after Johor Bahru.

Subdivisions and administration

The district is further divided into fourteen administrative sub-districts (mukim-mukim). The sub-districts are designated with a number (Mukim 1 until 12,17 and 18):

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2

Bandar Penggaram, Batu Pahat is administered by Majlis Perbandaran Batu Pahat or Batu Pahat Municipal Council which was upgraded from the previous District Council (Majlis Daerah Batu Pahat Barat)on 9 June 2001 while Yong Peng is administered by Majlis Daerah Yong Peng or Yong Peng District Council which previous named Majlis Daerah Batu Pahat Timur.

Batu Pahat district has 525 gazetted villages (kampung-kampung pl.) and village-clusters (kampung rangkaian) where smaller villages were annexed to their bigger immediate neighbours for the purpose of administration. The villages are represented by Ketua-Ketua Kampung (village heads), answering to the Penghulu (sub-district chief) administering the sub-district. The sub-district itself however is under the jurisdiction of the Pegawai Daerah (District Officer). The district office of Batu Pahat also have five district engineers to oversee all the sub-districts infrastructure.

Growth in small and medium industries such as textiles, garments and electronics helped to boost development, and Batu Pahat was upgraded to town status (Majlis Perbandaran) in 2001, alongside Muar, Kluang and Skudai. As of 2008, the government does not have any plans to upgrade Batu Pahat to a city status (Majlis Bandaraya).

Towns

Demographics

Whole district of Batu Pahat has a population of about 417,458 local residents.[5] The most populated mukim is Simpang Kanan with more than 311,862 people and the least populated is Bagan with a population of only 4,692.

The Chinese (45%) are concentrated in Bandar Penggaram, Batu Pahat and Yong Peng while the other part of Batu Pahat majority are Malay (52%). The Indians (3%) are less significant in Batu Pahat, working in rubber estates or as area business-owners.

The dialect group of Chinese community in Batu Pahat are varies:

Religion

In Batu Pahat, the major religions are Islam, Buddhism, Christianity, Taoism, Hinduism and Confucianism.

There are two major mosques in Batu Pahat: Masjid Dato' Bentara Luar (located at Jalan Ampuan) and Masjid Sultan Ismail (located at Jalan Kluang).

Batu Pahat has over 400 Chinese temples, a reflection of its racial harmony. Some of these temples are beautifully renovated and thus have also become a tourist attraction. Many tourists, especially from Singapore, visit these temples and this has become part of the local economy. A unique Chinese temple located at Bukit Pasir is the Jian Nan Temple.

Economy

Local "pasar malam" or night markets are held in residential areas with petty traders setting up stalls and selling a variety of food and daily necessities at bargain prices. These night markets are held every night in different places with a weekly rotation schedule:

  • Sunday: Taman Nira尼拉花园,Seri Sulong少女系列
  • Monday: Taman Bukit Pasir 白沙孚花园
  • Tuesday: Taman Soga 苏雅花园
  • Wednesday: Taman Bukit Perdana 龙华山庄
  • Thursday: Jalan Omar (former Bus Stand)
  • Friday: Square One
  • Saturday: Kampung Kenangan Dato Onn

Food

Batu Pahat is a haven for local Malaysian food. The best way to enjoy local Malaysian food, is to savour it with a cup of coffee brewed from locally grown coffee beans. Traditionally, in Malaysia coffee is served in a porcelain cup and saucer, with a small porcelain spoon used to stir your coffee. This has now been replaced in many parts of Malaysia by glasses and plastic spoons, which take away so much of the whole kopi culture. However, in Batu Pahat many eateries, referred to as "Kopitiam", carry on this traditional way of serving coffee. Some of the famous eateries include SJ Corner Kopitiam(角头咖啡店) and Glutton Square(海墘小贩中心).

Batu Pahat is also famous for its nasi bariani. This is a south Indian dish that has long been adopted by local people and now became a signature dish here. The bariani rice is served with either mutton, beef or chicken. Some places also sell vegetarian option. Some famous place for Nasi Bariani is Restoran Bariani Power in Taman Soga near the hospital or Nasi Beriani Md. Shah at the Medan Selera Benteng Peserai.

Batu Pahat is also famous for asam pedas dishes. These are slightly different from the ones served in Malacca. Famous asam pedas outlet is at Jalan Rahmat where there is about 5-6 restaurants all serving asam pedas with different variety in term of opening hours, type of fish and side dishes. Most famous is the first shop Restoran Man Cathays and the next door shop, Asam Pedas Tambak. The hot selling fish is stingray, red snapper, sembilang (a variety of brackish water catfish). One can also have a fish head asam pedas (red snapper). While usually eaten with plain white rice, there is variety of side dishes like bean sprouts, telur masin (salted egg), telur dadar (Malaysian-style omelette), winged bean, or tempeh, all cooked in sambal-like servings. To bring the spiciness into the next level, these food can be eaten with a complimentary sambal belacan.

Shopping

  • SquareOne Mall (Parkson and AEON BiG)
  • Batu Pahat Mall (Pacific is anchor tenants)
  • Summit Parade
  • YC Superstore
  • Green Point
  • Farson
  • Save n' Save
  • The Store Batu Pahat
  • Nirwana Maju Hypermarket
  • Aeon Mall Batu Pahat (under construction)
  • Tesco Pasir Raja (proposed)

Education

In Batu Pahat, there are 24 national secondary schools, 3 independent Chinese secondary schools and a vocational school. Among some of the secondary schools in Batu Pahat are:

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See also

References

External links

Neighbouring district