'Fish listeners', Malaysia's mysterious culture, may be dying out
Men profess to be able to hunt fish by 'hearing' their songs, but those are being drowned out by dredging and other modern threats
WATCH: Disquieting times for Malaysia's fish listeners
One hand clinging to his boat’s gunwale, Harun Muhammad submerges himself, eyes and ears wide open underwater as he “listens” for fish sounds emanating from the blue depths.
Harun is one of Malaysia’s last “fish listeners,” and he and his apprentice son Zuraini are believed to be the only active practitioners of this mysterious and dying local art.
“When you listen, it is like through a looking glass – you can see mackerel, sardine,” said Harun, 68, who has fished the Setiu lagoons on Malaysia’s rural east coast his whole life.
“For us, we only look for gelama [a type of croaker]. But in the schools of gelama, there will be other fish. The gelama is the king of fish," he said.