Gallery: Malaysia 2002.01

Back - Next

Malaysian Children at the Penang National Mosque

While visiting the National Mosque in Penang, Malaysia, I wandered outside the courtyard. As a non-Muslim, I was not allowed inside the mosque itself. The afternoon sun beat hard. Within the mosque grounds was a small day-care facility / religious school. Children started to emerge from the school and congregated around the drinking fountain.

I started taking photos of one of the children and soon more children started congregating, hamming for the camera. Of all of the photos, this is my favorite. The expression of each of the children has a story in of itself. It reminds me of the Last Supper, not to mix religious genres too much.

The girls are wearing the mini-tudung or headscarf. Although Malaysia has been an Islamic country for a very long time, women have not traditionally covered up. The pajama-like clothes are traditional costume. It has only been within the last decade that more and more women have adopted the tudung as an expression of religious belief. One should avoid reading this as a form of extremism, but rather as a development of new forms of piety.

 

Filename: 020106a-28b-Mosque.jpg
Equipment: Canon EOS-3, EF 100mm f/2.8 USM Macro, Fuji Provia 100

 

 


Copyright © 2002-04 by Karen Nakamura. All rights reserved. This page and its images may not be reduplicated in any form. I have been actively policing other websites and blogs. I have had several people's accounts kicked off their ISPs for plagiarizing content from this site. Please do not jeopardize your ISP accounts by engaging in copyright violations, it is a violation of Federal and International Copyright laws as well as your ISP terms of service.
Last modified: Wednesday, 26-Jan-2005 22:08:34 EST , 191 visits (2 today, 15 this week) .
Google
  Web Photoethnography.com