A Tenth Life for S'pore's Strays
Samuel Chua grew up playing with stray cats. "In public housing in Singapore, it's illegal to keep a cat," he says, "So if I wanted a pet, I had to play with the cats that lived in the common areas around our building." Many Singaporeans today still live in soaring, high-density apartment buildings where pets are not allowed. "This is why people come here," Sam says.
"Here" is the Neko no Niwa cat cafe, on Singapore's bustling Boat Quay. Sam and his partner, Tan Sue Lynn, opened the cafe in 2013, the first of its kind in the city (there are now five).
Sam and Sue had traveled extensively to Japan for work -- she worked in a bank, he in media -- where they first encountered the concept of a cafe where people could come to play and interact with cats. "In all of the cafes we visited there was an amazing calmness and tranquility," Sam says.
The world's first cat cafe, Cat Flower Garden, opened in Taiwan in 1998. The cafe quickly became a popular destination for locals and tourists. The cafe was so popular with Japanese tourists that one opened in Tokyo in 2005. These days, Tokyo is home to 39 such cafes. Cat cafes are becoming popular globally, sprouting up across Europe, Asia and North America. Indonesia now has two: Cutie Cats Cafe and The Cat Cabin, both in Jakarta.
"As in Japan, many people in Singapore work long hours and have stressful jobs," Sam says. "People come to Neko no Niwa to relax, unwind and have an experience that they can't find any other way." Sam and Sue call it "cat therapy" and they point to research that shows that a cat's purring has a therapeutic effect on humans. "People move to a lower frequency when they come here," Sam says.
When Sam met Sue, she had a cat named Marbles. Sam says he found to his surprise that spending time with an animal had a remarkable effect on him; he felt relaxed and calmer when he played with Marbles. Interacting with pets can reportedly lower the blood pressure and reduce anxiety and stress. (In Japan, the Ferray Corporation, an Internet solutions company, has filled its Tokyo office with cats to help employees relax and increase productivity.)
After Marbles died, Sue cried for two weeks, mourning Marbles as a member of the family. Sam also felt the loss keenly. "We wanted to honor his memory by letting other people share the experience of affection and interacting with cats that we had been privileged to know," he says.
Neko no Niwa is modeled closely on Japanese cafes. The cafe has a large, open, sunny room, with seats along the wall for people and plenty of linked cat towers and blocks for the felines. And strict rules: no children under 7 are allowed; visitors must first remove their shoes and wash their hands; be gentle with the cats; and not pick them up or disturb them if they're sleeping. For many Singaporeans, says Sam, this is their first experience touching animals.
When Sue and Sam began thinking about opening a cat cafe in Singapore, they faced a major obstacle: the Singapore health authorities had no idea how to regulate sanitation and hygiene issues for such a business and were reluctant to create a precedent.
In addition, both Sam and Sue were new to the idea of running their own business, and neither had ever worked in a restaurant. They spent about a year researching and traveling to cat cafes in Japan, speaking with the owners. Sam says he also did a lot of online reading about cat breeds, grooming, health and nutrition. He and Sue discussed using pedigree cats, as the Japanese cafes did. However, Sam says, he was driven by the memory of playing with stray cats when he was a boy and wanting to help them in some way.
The couple decided they wanted to fill their cat cafe with strays, both to illustrate to people the extent of the homeless feline problem in Singapore and to deter people from buying expensive, pedigreed cats when so many cats needed homes. "We wanted to dispel myths about strays," Sam says. "We wanted to show people how important just love and good food are."
Stray cats are a serious issue in Singapore, with an estimated 80,000 cats living in parks and around buildings. The Agri-Food and Veterinary Authority (AVA) and the Cat Welfare Society jointly fund a program to sterilize stray cats.
Sam got to know a network of cat rescuers, private individuals who feed strays and catch them to be sterilized. Rescuers are a very close-knit group and Sam says it took him a long time to gain their trust. Initially, he says, they were worried the cafe wouldn't last and the cats would be discarded a second time.
Now, he says, the rescuers bring them cats that need a home; cats that the rescuers feel would not be able to survive on the streets. "We have five cats that were recovered as kittens, and one pair that was fished out of a canal," Sam says.
The cats keep the names that their rescuers have given them. The current roster includes Brown Monkey, Skittles, Little Miss Muffet, Luna and Baloo. A local veterinarian makes house calls.
After Sam was able to convince the Singapore health authorities that the cats would have no access to the kitchen, and that their litter boxes would be placed in a separate area, the authorities finally agreed to license Neko no Niwa.
Even then, Sam and Sue spent several months integrating the cats into their new environment -- and with each other -- before they felt they could open to the public. Sam laughs: "That's when I realized our cafe would definitely be a labor of love," he says. "We were spending money on rent and utilities, but couldn't open until we were sure the cats were ready for people."
Sue left her job to focus full-time on managing Neko no Niwa. ("The cafe can only support one of us," Sam says.) The cafe has strict rules about food: no savory foods can be sold, as the smell would entice cats; food is served in sealable boxes, and all drinks have lids.
Sam maintains that with the right care, good nutrition and a loving environment you can turn mistrustful, scrawny alley cats into loving, gentle, soft creatures. I touch several of the cats, and their fur is like angora. I express my surprise to Sam, who explains his philosophy that a healthy diet, vitamins and probiotics will reverse most of the effects that neglect and hardship have had on the cats.
"We want to show people what is possible with adopting cats," Sam says. "People can see and touch for themselves, to understand that adopted cats are beautiful and affectionate."
Sam and Sue want to help reduce the number of strays in Singapore, who often face a short, disease-ridden and stressful life. "The more people get our message," Sam says, "the fewer cats will be abandoned." The couple offers workshops for people who are considering adopting stray cats and plan to become a go-to advice center for new pet owners.
Neko no Niwa is located at 54A Boat Quay, Singapore. Closed on Tuesdays.
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