Last updated at 8:02 AM. Saturday 20 March 2010

Go to comments July 21, 2009

Christiane Oelrich

A Hash House Harrier group taking a roadside break during a 28-kilometer run, known as the “ball-breaker,” which takes place every year near Kuala Lumpur. (Photo: Christiane Oelrich, DPA)

A Hash House Harrier group taking a roadside break during a 28-kilometer run, known as the “ball-breaker,” which takes place every year near Kuala Lumpur. (Photo: Christiane Oelrich, DPA)

A Long Running Tradition

Oh, sh*t”! The orthopedic surgeon bellows a curse as he emerges from the jungle, his face flushed and sweat dripping off his nose from running.

“F***ing life-saving!” he shouts as he approaches one of the drinking stations that dot the staked-out running course. An army officer shows no mercy and shouts at the doctor to move his “arse.”

The two Malaysians are in fact best friends, enjoy each other’s companionship and especially the rough language that is part of it. They are “hashers,” members of the international family of Hash House Harrier running clubs, which follow only one strict rule: there are no rules.

While clubs — or kennels, as they are called — usually meet once a week for runs ranging from 8 to 10 kilometers, the doctor and the army officer also participate in a Full Moon Hash. As the name suggests, they get together once a month only.

On a recent Sunday they organized their annual “ball-breaker” run: 28 kilometers in the stifling heat and humidity of Malaysia’s jungle. As after every run, copious amounts of beer await the runners at the finish line.

“Hash House Harriers are a drinking club with a running problem, or vice versa,” says Jega, who helped organize the ball-breaker run, of the clubs’ philosophy.

Hashers insist the running and sweating side by side welds the members together as a group. They rave about the camaraderie.

Hash kennels exist all over the world, but Malaysia is where it all began.

The first club was founded in 1938 in Kuala Lumpur in what was then still called British Malaya.

Some colonial officers became bored with tea parties and rounds of golf and Albert Gispert initiated a long-distance run with his friends every Monday evening.

The club derives its name from the annex of the club where the officers were housed. It was known as the Hash House, hash being an old military term for boring food.

The club’s statutes were designed “one, to promote physical fitness, two, to get rid of weekend hangovers, three, to acquire a good thirst and satisfy it in beer, four, to persuade older members that they are not as old as they feel,” Jega says.

He is also a proud member of the Mother Hash, as the original club of 1938 is known today, and has done lots of research on the origins of the Hashers.

There are more than 1,700 kennels around the world, even one in Antarctica, which aptly calls itself the Deep Freeze Hash House Harriers.

At the recent ball-breaker run outside Kuala Lumpur there were 186 participants from all walks of life: a mechanic, doctor, petroleum engineer and diplomat.

Some Brits are among them, a few Australians, many Malaysians and, yes, even a few women.

“The first time I heard the language here I thought I saw stars,” says Dr. Malar, who is a hasher herself but helping out with medical attention for tired limbs today. “You either become deaf or leave.”

All members have acquired nicknames, many of which sound rather rude.

Like Captain Prickhart, for example, who did not run but had earlier laid the paper trail for the runners to follow.

Every few kilometers, the trail ends in a pile of paper shreds, which brings about yet another jovial task for the runners besides exerting themselves physically.

“[The trail] continues somewhere within 100 meters of the pile,” Captain Prickhart explains. “The fast runners have to find where, and the slower ones can catch up.”

“The whole idea is not to be competitive but to set your own goals and beat yourself,” says Rick, the grandmaster of the Full Moon Harriers. “There is no accolade or shame.”

At the end of the run, he calls the runners to order in the Circle, the highlight of every hash. All participants stand in a circle around some beer crates and the grandmaster reviews the race.

“Bigmouth Monkey, get your ass up here,” he commands, ordering a runner to stand on a beer crate.

There are traditions to which every member must adhere. It is, for instance, strictly forbidden to urinate during a run or to point with fingers, requiring the use of elbows to indicate direction.

Breaking any these traditions results in swift “punishment” with Bigmouth Monkey being sentenced to drink a beer in a single go.

Hashers who cannot accomplish that task must pour the remaining contents over their head.

Likewise, hashers who run in a pair of new shoes must drink beer from them, sometimes “filtered” through their sweat-soaked socks.

As Bigmouth Monkey is subjected to his punishment, the crowd howls anthems with lyrics like:

“Why was he born at all? He’s no f***ing use to anyone. He’s no f***ing use at all. He might be a joy to his mother, but he’s a pain in the asshole to me.”

And during the next full moon, the hashers are due to meet again to run, drink, swear, howl and enjoy being part of a fraternity.

Deutsche Presse-Agentur

Jakarta-based Hash House groups include:

TGIS, which runs on the second and fourth Saturday of the month.

lozlee@cbn.net.id
0811 843 846
http://sites.google.com/site/tgish3

Betawi, which also runs on Saturdays.

jonny_fonggo@hotmail.com
0812 911 8733
www.geocities.com/betawih3
 
For more on hashing in Jakarta visit:
www.geocities.com/hashjakarta



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