Archive for February 20th, 2009

New Photos: Motorbiking the Cameron Highlands, Malaysia

Posted by Kevin Maes on Feb 20 2009 | Malaysia, Nature, Photos, Transportation

I’ve uploaded new photos from my motorbike drive up in the Cameron Highlands where tea is grown on the mountain slopes. The air was cool and the roads wind around these mountains and up and down the hills. Driving the motorbike is the best way to experience the Cameron Highlands.

no comments for now

New Photos: Six Albums from Penang, Malaysia

Posted by Kevin Maes on Feb 20 2009 | Animals, Food, History, Malaysia, Nature, Photos

I’ve uploaded six new photo albums from my visit to Penang, Malaysia, including the following:

Georgetown
Food in Penang
Jewish Cemetery in Penang
Driving to Penang Hill
Penang Botanical Garden
Penang by Night

1 comment for now

New Photos: Kuala Lumpur and Putrajaya, Malaysia

Posted by Kevin Maes on Feb 20 2009 | Food, Malaysia, Photos

I’ve uploaded new photos from a driving tour of Putrajaya, Malaysia’s new administrative center which includes the Prime Minister’s home, his office, the Justice Department, a mosque and large boulevards and bridges over a man-made lake.

Also, new photos have been added from walking and sightseeing in Kuala Lumpur as well as photos from my last weekend in KL.

no comments for now

Penang’s Jewish Cemetery: Remains of a Community

Posted by Kevin Maes on Feb 20 2009 | History, Logistics, Malaysia, Religion/Spirituality

The plaque at the Jewish Cemetery of Penang

The plaque at the Jewish Cemetery of Penang

Malaysia is a country that is jam-packed with diversity including many cultures, environments, foods, terrain and foreign influences throughout its rich history. With all of those great things going for it the question arises as to why Tamar didn’t join me on this visit to Malaysia since we all know she loves these things as much as I do. Well, unfortunately Israel citizens are not permitted to enter Malaysia and Malaysians are not allowed to visit Israel, in fact it even says so in their passports! That’s really too bad for everyone since I’m sure Israelis would have a blast adding Malaysia to their Southeast Asia itineraries and, from some of the young Malaysians I spoke to, there seems to be a fair amount of interest and curiosity about visiting Israel as well.

I started to dig a bit deeper into the current state of Israeli-Malaysian relations and I came across an interesting article written by an Israel professor for whom an exception may have been made (or he holds another passport) since he recently spoke at a conference in Kuala Lumpur. You can read about his impressions of Malaysia and its cultural diversity as well as his experiences with colleagues and conference attendees.

As with anything related to Internet research one thing led to another and I found myself looking into whether there is or ever was a Jewish community in Malaysia. After all, there are thousands of Jews in Iran and nobody from Israel is hopping on a plane to vacation in Iran these days or vice-versa. It turns out that there is a very small Jewish community in Malaysia although it was larger in the past. That past is now represented by the Jewish cemetery that still exists today in the middle of Georgetown on the island of Penang. There were a couple of articles written about this cemetery and they gave me the idea that I could just rent a motorbike and drive around looking for it myself.
Continue Reading »

5 comments for now

I Got the Visa Exemption for Vietnam!

Posted by Kevin Maes on Feb 20 2009 | Logistics, Vietnam

For anyone who may have read my previous posts, Applying for Visa Exemption and Still Working on the Visa Exemption for Vietnam, I have good news for my latest update! I got the Certificate of Visa Exemption which is valid until 2014!

Kevin's US Naturalization Certificate (1979)

Kevin's US Naturalization Certificate (1979)

The problem the first time was that the Vietnamese Embassy wanted to see further proof that I was previously a Vietnamese citizen prior to becoming an American citizen. I have no official Vietnamese documents that prove that such as an old Vietnamese identity card or passport. However, once I sent in a copy of my US Naturalization Certificate they were able to see that the “Country of former nationality” was “Vietnam” and this was sufficient proof that I was previously a “Vietnamese citizen”. On a side note, one thing I love about this Certificate of Naturalization is that I weighed only 30 pounds and still they thought to indicate that my “marital status” was “single”.
Continue Reading »

no comments for now