Change happens. Get over it.

Change happens. Get over it.
f/8, 1/125 sec, at 14mm, 640 ISO, on a X-Pro1

f/8, 1/125 sec, at 14mm, 640 ISO, on a X-Pro1

Lately I have been busy working on an idea. It goes back to an old post about teaching NGOs how to fish. But that is for another post in the future. The result of laboring over this idea has led me to spend endless hours talking to people and just as many hours in front of the computer and away from my camera. It got to a point where I needed to get our and breathe. I needed to see this city I live in. As if on cue, a Facebook friend wrote and told me he would be visiting Penang and would love to meet face-to-face. Just what I needed – an excuse to get out. So this morning I meet up with Mohd Shukur Jahar from Sabah.

Mohd Shukur Jahar  and I at the Toh Soon Cafe on Campbell St.

Mohd Shukur Jahar and I at the Toh Soon Cafe on Campbell St.

Shukur (his name mean “thankful”) wanted to see some of Penang and chat. Two things I love to do. So I grabbed my X-Pro1 and we meet up in downtown Georgetown. Things were pretty slow at 8:30 am. So I suggested we try the Goddess of Mercy Temple on Jalan Masjid Kapitan Keling.

The Goddess of Mercy Temple is one of these places that I have mix feelings about. It is always busy with locals worshiping and giving food outs to the poor. But visually it has changed a lot recently as they are renovating it. They’ve gutted it! They’ve removed all the old wood and broken tiles and completely restored it so it looks brand new.  I am sure it is a good thing for the community. I am sure every community want their places of worship to look good and to not be falling apart. Every community wants to put it’s best foot forward. Yet, for me the personality of this place is gone. All the old patina has been scrubbed away. Hundreds of years of smoke from the devotee’s incense had vanished. The effects of millions of prayers washed away. It is as if there is no history. They have removed the old dark and dusty Chinese lanterns and replaced them with new bright red ones, fresh from the factory. This is now a new temple that they call “historic”. It is not just the Goddess of Mercy Temple, many places around Georgetown are being torn down or renovated for historical preservation. I get it. It needs to be done. It doesn’t mean I have to like it… or does it? Maybe it does. These places were never for me. They belonged to the people who have lived here and worship here for centuries.

What it tells me is I can’t keep sitting at my computer and expect things to stay the same. In the short the five years I have lived here this town has changed, a lot. I am thankful I took time to photographed this old temple the way it was a few years back. My advice to you- don’t sit around and watch the world change and then complain. Get out and photograph. Stop time and preserve it. In the words of my good friend Fernando Gros, “Don’t Complain – Make Art“.

f/3.2, 1/500 sec, at 14mm, 400 ISO, on a X-Pro1

f/3.2, 1/500 sec, at 14mm, 400 ISO, on a X-Pro1

 

About The Author

Matt Brandon

Matt is a Malaysia based assignment photographer. Well known as a photographer and international workshop instructor, Matt’s images have been used by business and organizations around the globe. Matt is also a Fujifilm Malaysia brand ambassador. Matt is a contributor to National Geographic, National Geographic Traveller and other major publications.

5 Comments

  1. Jacob James

    I think this is happening all over the world and in some places at an alarming rate. Take Myanmar for instance, probably my favourite country in SE Asia, I think that if I was to go back today 12 months on since my last visit it would be a completely different place.
    My first visit was days after Aung San Suu Kyi’s election, now after 12 months of investment and political reform the country is changing and opening up to the outside world. As a photographer that upsets me because that is why I found it so magical in the first place, but for the people of Burma it is massively overdue after decades of military rule. Does it matter what I think? No because for the people living there day in day out it is a change for the better.

    Great work Matt, keep it up!

    Jake

    Reply
    • Matt

      Thanks for chiming in Jake. Someday I want to get to Burma or Bhutan. Both are on my bucket list.

      Reply
      • Jacob James

        Burma is incredible, I think you would love it. Bhutan is on my list too for the hopefully not so near future!

        Reply
        • Craig Ferguson

          I was in Burma in 2001. I can’t even begin to imagine how much it must have changed since then.

          Reply
  2. lens2heart

    Assuming it is positive change for those involved perhaps we should embrace it and even empower it. By embrace it I mean recording the process, the before, during and after. This may provide a historic record for those involved. We have only one photograph of my wife from her childhood and none of the traditional extended family Chinese courtyard house in which she grew up. Her family now live in a standard concrete box house – – not very poetic but at least the roof doesn’t blow off in a typhoon (one of her experiences). It would be great for both myself and our kids to have photographs of all that (well I wouldn’t have recommended someone photographing or videoing in the typhoon 🙂 but you get my point.

    By empower I mean that sometimes (especially in NGO type situations) we, as photographers, may act as matchmakers between the people involved in a particular positive change project and other people around the world with capacity and compassion to contribute to the change. Occasionally images may actually be catalysts for change.

    Reply

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