Making Good on Jakarta's Eastern Promise
Katrin Figge | August 05, 2009
Eastern Promise customers keep coming back for the venue’s homey feel and good selection of British-Indian food, music nights and other activities. (Photo: Afriadi Hikmal, JG) Related articles
First Culinary Festival in Jakarta 5:37pm Nov 10, 2009
Eating Outside The Box in Jakarta 6:32pm Oct 28, 2009
Take a Bite on the Wild Side 5:58pm Jan 11, 2010
Indonesian Exhibition Reveals a German-Dutch Botanist on the Frontier 4:25pm Nov 27, 2009
For Kids Only? Jakarta Adults Yo-Yo Too 4:26pm Nov 12, 2009
Share This Page
Post a comment
Please login to post comment
Comments
Be the first to write your opinion!
It is early afternoon, and the main road to Kemang in South Jakarta, normally congested, is surprisingly empty.
At Eastern Promise bar and restaurant, a few people sit at the bar, reading newspapers or working on laptop computers while enjoying a refreshing beer.
It is a cozy place, with wooden interiors, a pool table and a dartboard scattered around the bar. As time passes, the bar quickly fills. Most of the customers know each other and greet other patrons as they arrive or chat with the waitresses, appearing very much at home.
This Saturday, Eastern Promise will be celebrating its 20th anniversary, making it one of the longest-lasting spots on Jakarta’s fast-changing restaurant and bar scene.
Joel Friedman, an aid worker from America, first visited Eastern Promise in 1990 and has been a regular since 1995, after he moved to Kemang with his family and started to work just across the street.
“Back then, it was one of the few places that served beer and it was known as a friendly place,” Friedman said. “At the time, nobody had mobile phones, and every time you stopped by at this place, there was always someone to talk to.”
When asked what made him return almost daily for so many years, he simply said, “People,” then explained he doesn’t only mean the other customers who have become close friends, but also the staff that make the place what it is.
“Our chef Pak Heri has been at EP since the beginning,” said Lens Ter Wee, who has been manager of Eastern Promise for more than three years. “Another iconic waitress, Ibu Eni, has been here for 16 years. She never forgets a name. If she gets your name on your first visit, you will be greeted by name on your second visit. Unbelievably, sometimes customers from over 10 years ago pay us a visit and she still remembers their names.”
Eastern Promise was opened and established by Carl Gilchrist, who owned “a small British Empire in Jakarta,” as Friedman described it. At one point, Gilchrist owned 18 pubs throughout the country, including in Bali, of which only Eastern Promise and Country Woods in South Jakarta still exist today. When Gilchrist returned to Britain a couple of years ago because of health problems, new management took over Eastern Promise, but were unable to maintain the homey touch and lost almost all the regular customers to other venues.
In April 2006, Bartele Santema, who already owned several entertainment venues in town, came to the rescue and, together with Lens, who was then working as an English teacher in Jakarta, helped to bring back the good old days.
“First thing we did was to locate all the earlier regulars and we invited them here one night, to get their ideas and input about how things should be done,” Lens says.
Asking for input worked. The bond between staff and guests grew strong again and went well beyond having the occasional drink together. Friedman recalled an incident when a member of the community became ill.
“He didn’t have any insurance at the time,” Friedman said. “So the whole bar came together to collect a large amount of money and got him back to the UK — a testament to the community here. There is actually still some money left over and we decided that this money should be used for expatriates who are destitute.”
The upcoming anniversary will be celebrated, said Lens, as a thank you to loyal Eastern Promise’s customers and some of the longest-serving staff members.
“I tried to collect old photos of the people who have been coming here for many years,” he said. “For the anniversary, I am planning to put on a slide show. There will also be a free flow of beer from nine until midnight. And of course, there’s going to be lots of live music.”
Eastern Promise hosts regular open-mic nights every Tuesday, a monthly quiz night and live music: jazz night on Wednesdays, rock and pop music on Fridays, Blues and Country on Saturdays and an acoustic band on Sundays. The venue is also known for its food.
“We are a British-Indian restaurant,” Lens said. “We serve typical British-Indian curries like chicken tikka masala, beef vindaloo and Balti curries, as well as bangers and mash, traditional fish and chips and an assortment of meat pies.”
Eastern Promise also features an outdoor area with a stage where bands supply live entertainment, as well as an extra room that is mostly used for sport events screenings, such as rugby, football, cricket and Formula One racing.
This might be the secret of Eastern Promise’s success: that along with a friendly staff that cares about their customers, the venue offers entertainment for just about everyone.
Eastern Promise 20th Anniversary
August 8
Jalan Kemang Raya No. 5
South Jakarta
Tel. 021 7179 0151
Feces, Arsenic Pervade Water Supply, Sickening Half a Nation
Did Miss Indonesia Run to Mystical Sect?
Another Expat’s Home Stormed in Ramadan Riot on Lombok
Tommy Suharto Sues Garuda Over Description as ‘Convicted Murderer’
United States Appears Powerless to Stop Koran-Burning Ceremony
Outcry Over 63 Indonesian ‘Slave Women’
Garuda Delay Not Indonesian President's Son’s Fault: Democrats
Police Bust Married Indonesian Legislator and Girlfriend in Hotel
2:36pm | Defiant Florida church says Koran burning to go ahead
2:20pm | BP seeks to shift blame for oil spill
2:12pm | Australian regulators reject NAB bid for AXA Asia Pacific
1:50pm | Philippines admits police may have shot some hostages
1:50pm | US losing war in Afghanistan: Taliban leader
1:40pm | Philippines admits police may have shot some tourists
1:37pm | Another Expat’s Home Stormed i...
Another 2 cases which show the culture of lynching is still practicing in Indonesia.
Many times, religious sentiments are involved.
In case the religious sentiments are Muslim, - the Indonesian authorities ...
1:28pm | SBY to Build Trust With Toughe...
he was saying in the photo above: "Mine is about this big!"
1:26pm | Gayus’s Lawyers Vow to Expose ...
Good luck Adnan Buyung Nasution! I truly hope that this trial will be a revelation for many and lots of other cases will be uncovered!
1:22pm | 43 Lawmakers in House Ethics C...
What a collection of rather dubious characters is leading this country? No wonder that this great country is getting more and more sucked into a maelstrom of inefficiency and corruption ...
10:04am | Feces, Arsenic Pervade Water S...
Contaminated water is only part of the problem. The importance of watching ones hands thoroughly with soap and water after going to the toilet can not be understated. Whenever I ...
9:16am | Feces, Arsenic Pervade Water S...
Your friendly government and leaders worried about filling their own pockets and to hell with the people.











