A walk through Little Asia
On Saturday I took my friend Retha along and the two of us became, for the morning at least, tourists in our own town. We joined Ishvara Dhyan, a local tour guide on a guided walk of Johannesburg’s Chinatown. It is located in Cyrildene (close to Bruma) and most of the shops and eateries are in Derrick Avenue. This is not really a tourist destination, rather just a functioning neighbourhood favoured by new Chinese immigrants. This is where they live, where they buy their groceries and where they speak Chinese. There are even a Chinese police that collaborates with the SAPD, a Chinese medical clinic and the Chinese newspapers are printed right there in Cyrildene.
We gathered under the big Chinese gate welcoming people into Chinatown and our first stop was a Buddhist shrine. The nuns welcomed us and, through an interpreter, told us a bit about Buddhist philosophy. A young Chinese boy played on two different Chinese flutes for us, one of the ladies did a demonstration of Tai Chi exercises with a sword and we were treated to a Chinese tea ceremony.
Ishvara, a chef by training, focused much of the rest of the walk on Asian cuisine. He took us to an Indonesian shop, a fantastic Thai shop (complete with a picture of the Thai king and queen) and a few Chinese supermarkets. We also visited a Chinese tea store (if you need to buy the Chinese ambassador a gift, they stock some of the most expensive teas available in Johannesburg!)
Another restaurant that caught my eye was called Delicious Casserole Food Rest. In this big urn on the photo below are different casseroles in small dishes, heated by a coal fire at the bottom of the urn.
You can visit Ishvara's website here.
Palm Trading House
I drive past the Palm Trading House in Linden (corner of 5th
Street and 4th Avenue) almost every day and for some time now wanted to stop
and go in. It was the French painted furniture, especially the chairs on
display outside their shop that first drew my attention. Walk inside, and
you find a treasure trove of vintage collectables and art deco items. I had a
wonderful time browsing their wares and fell in love with a beautiful French
headboard and a little Delft lookalike cow-shaped milk jug. The joy of walking
in the shop reminded me of trips to the antique markets in l'Isle sur la Sorgue and St-Quen….
You can visit their website here (currently under construction).
Ceramic Factory
The other day I popped into the Ceramic Factory. It is located in Linden just opposite everyone’s favourite neighbourhood coffee shop, the Whippet (see here). In a large white space ceramic light fittings hang above beautiful wooden tables laden with a wide selection of very quirky ceramics. The shop opened in March this year and their plan is to launch a new line of products every three months. At the moment the range on display is called “Citizenship” and consists of the Fro Family (even the family dog has an afro!) and the Village of the Rhino, celebrating the rhino with items such as utensil holders, piggy banks and funky wall pot plant holders.
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