Malaysia

Penny Wong relives childhood memories during Kota Kinabalu visit

Australian minister has breakfast at favourite joint, visits former school, goes for walkabout at Foh Sang

Updated 3 years ago · Published on 30 Jun 2022 4:52PM

Penny Wong relives childhood memories during Kota Kinabalu visit
Australian Foreign Minister Penny Wong talks to Luyang assemblyman Phoong Jin Zhe during her walkabout at Foh Sang in Luyang, Kota Kinabalu, today. – JASON SANTOS/The Vibes pic, June 30, 2022 

by Jason Santos

KOTA KINABALU – Australian Foreign Minister Penny Wong took time to visit her former alma mater, the Kinabalu International School (KIS), today, as she spent time with students at the school. 

She recalled the school was a lot smaller and noted she did not quite enjoy learning Bahasa Malaysia then.

“When I was here I remember the school was a lot smaller.

“There was no verandah and there was only one building. But it was fun, I remember it was a very diverse school,” she said, when asked what she can recall of her former school. 

She also said her favourite activities were running and swimming then, and never quite got into her studies until moving to Australia some time in 1976. 

“I was quite young and I remember doing Bahasa (Malaysia) and not enjoying it very much.

“Probably, at the time, we were already wanting to move, but there was a lot of old-style teaching back then,” she said when speaking on her favourite subjects while schooling in Sabah. 

Wong further revealed that she had climbed Mount Kinabalu seven times before stating that her entry into politics gave her a sense of purpose.

“I think most of us must have a sense of purpose in our lives. I think coming from Malaysia to Australia in the 70s was quite hard...I think there was an experience of things being different and hard things happened and I tried to change these things. 

“I think all of us need a sense of purpose like teaching or designing buildings,” she told the students.

Several Kinabalu International School students talk to Penny Wong at the school’s library. Wong had attended the school as a child before moving to Australia. – JASON SANTOS/The Vibes pic, June 30, 2022
Several Kinabalu International School students talk to Penny Wong at the school’s library. Wong had attended the school as a child before moving to Australia. – JASON SANTOS/The Vibes pic, June 30, 2022

Wong also said that she would love to visit Tg Aru Beach, where her old family home is situated if she had the time to do it. 

Prior to her interview with the students, Wong also walked around her old school, where she visited the school’s library and greeted some of the students. 

She spent her early years in Kota Kinabalu before moving to Adelaide in South Australia at the age of eight. 

Earlier, Wong stopped to have breakfast at her favourite childhood restaurant, Restoran Kuo Man, located at Sunny Garden here in the morning. 

She ordered congee, soup noodle, fish ball soup and Chinese tea while having breakfast with her brother James Wong, who works as an architect in Sabah. 

Wong recalled that her father, Datuk Francis Wong, used to take her and her siblings for breakfast often at the restaurant. 

Following her visit to the school, Wong later walked around the Foh Sang shoplots along with Luyang assemblyman Phoong Jin Zhe. 

During her walkabout, she was briefed on the Foh Sang area, which according to Phoong is one of the oldest Chinese community spots in Sabah. 

“It has a 40- or 50-year history of being frequented by the Chinese communities in the area, sharing the local Chinese culture,” said Phoong, adding that there were a lot of similarities in culture between the Chinese in Sabah and Australia. 

The visits are part of Wong’s three-day working visit to Malaysia.  

She also hosted a reception with government, business and civil society leaders last night, where she described her visit to Sabah as an act of homecoming, hope and respect. 

Wong is Australia’s first foreign minister of Asian heritage. – The Vibes, June 30, 2022 

Related News

Malaysia / 3d

Tsunami alert: Stay calm and obey instructions from the authorities – Hajiji (video)

Malaysia / 1w

Sabah embarks on five-year initiative to document multiethnic heritage - Hajiji

Malaysia / 1w

Anwar - Sabah's special grant interim payment increased from RM600m to RM1.5b

Malaysia / 1w

Anwar to clarify Sabah 40 pct entitlement talks tomorrow

Malaysia / 2w

Sabah: GRS confident government will agree to review revenue entitlement rate 

Malaysia / 2w

Main Sandakan-Lahad Datu road in Sukau collapses, thousands of users affected

Spotlight

Malaysia

Bersatu-PH tie-up a possibility as coalition seeks Malay support, analyst says

By Alfian Z.M. Tahir

Malaysia

Woman molested on her way home from work (video)

Malaysia

Court allows Daim's daughter to permanently keep passport

Malaysia

Santiago pokes holes in data centre hype, asks: Who really benefits?

By Alfian Z.M. Tahir

Malaysia

Jeweller vows to pursue Rosmah until ‘every penny’ is recovered as RM67.5m battle enters enforcement phase

Malaysia

Ambulance carrying two injured men crashes en route to hospital after MPV collision in Besut

Malaysia

Man blames 'lack of love' for sexual assault on teens

Business

BNM's OPR to stay at 2.75 pcent in 2026 amid strong domestic demand - Kenanga IB

Malaysia

Missing jewellery: Rosmah ordered to pay RM67.5 million

You may be interested

Malaysia

Johor polls: UMNO asserts independence from federal Unity Government agreement

Malaysia

Fatal road accidents claim at least 16 lives in little more than a week

Malaysia

Tuanku Muhriz is still the legitimate Yang di-Pertuan Besar of Negeri Sembilan - KJ

Malaysia

PN leadership dispute deepens as chairman stresses coalition built on consensus

Malaysia

Man charged with murder after body found wrapped in mattress in Melaka shophouse

Malaysia

J-KOM files police report against Albert Tei over repeated protests at Comms Ministry

Malaysia

Zero tolerance for corruption as JPJ faces fresh bribery allegations - Minister warns

Malaysia

Isa Samad's 'Tan Sri' title revoked