The descendants of early China immigrants and local people are called Chan Nyangnya, a native Chinese ethnic group in Southeast Asia. Chan Nyanggya retains Chinese traditional customs, but also absorbs the local Malay culture. It is the representative of cultural exchange and integration between China and Malaysia, and it is also a unique cultural symbol and precious cultural heritage in Malaysia.
Ideologically, the widowed tend to western culture, especially British culture, and their children are educated in English. This seems quite contradictory to the fact that they still retain ancient Chinese habits, traditions and beliefs. In fact, the early beggars belong to a group of contradictions. They are divorced from the Chinese society, but they can't really integrate into the Malay society, and they become people who are stranded at both ends. Fortunately, this situation changed later, and they began to integrate into the system of Chinese society. Some children of lonely people were also sent to elementary schools in China to receive basic mother tongue education and return to their ethnic groups, and Malacca was scattered all over the country.