Archive for February, 2011

Notes on Genocidal Tourism in Cambodia


2011
02.27

One of the emotionally complicating factors of constantly living in and travelling through countries with troubled pasts is that you will inevitably end up having many conversations with and interacting with people who had lived through that troubled past.

And given that troubled pasts often involved death, betrayal, torture, imprisonment and whatnot, it’s a disconcerting feeling wondering which side the guy selling you a beer was on.  Or whether your student had any immediate family members or friends tortured and imprisoned (which happened in Turkey a few times, including once with a middle-aged business student casually mentioning that his father’s three best friends were executed for being communists after the military coup thirty years ago). Or whether the sweet middle aged Chinese dorm mother you work with daily ever betrayed her parents as a Red Guard, or if she had been pulled out of school to farm millet for her teen years, or if her family had starved to death during the famines after the Great Leap Forward.

(Side note: I’ll probably get myself on the Great Firewall’s bad list for this one. Too many key words. Damn.)

In Cambodia, I kind of knew which side most of the people were on, since the Khmer Rouge pretty much destroyed the country and its people quite thoroughly before finally being run out of town. So I started wondering about all the kind, smiling people we met: the tuktuk drivers, the waitstaff, the guides, the construction workers, the hotel staff, the armless and legless land-mined book sellers on the streets,  the children running after you keening out a phoenetic approximation of monnaieeeeeee monnnnaiiiieee.

I’m making these photos big, by the way, so they can be seen clearly and immediately. They will be wider than the parameters my theme gives me. This is intentional. I don’t want small pictures here.

 

The note from one bookseller

You know that everyone had been screwed over, whether directly or indirectly. It has been pretty hard to be Cambodian in the past 50 years and have not had a rather rough time (to put it mildly).  I read somewhere that Post Traumatic Stress Disorder levels ranged from 50% to 80%, depending on how it was defined.  The genocide took place between 1975 and 1979. I’m 36. I was born in 1974.

If I had been born Cambodian, my family and I would have definitely been murdered: we are full of teachers and educated folk, city dwellers mostly.  As a baby, it would not have been inconceivable that I would have been murdered alongside my mother. In the museum, I saw a portrait of a young mother holding her baby before being tortured and murdered. Both of them. The baby was tortured and murdered too.  It was their mug shot. The Khmer Rouge were very meticulous in their documentation: mug shots just after arrest, shots after torture, shots upon death.

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Brief Notes on 15 Days in Cambodia (part 1)


2011
02.20

Look closely at the photo on the tuktuk ceiling

We just got back from Cambodia last night, returning to a cold, grey Shanghai and a chaotic jumble of bills, dirty laundry, empty fridge and dusty floors.  The two flights from Phnom Penh to Guangzhou to Shanghai had been turbulent and cloudy and the taxi home from Hongqiao airport was lead-footed and jerky.

We attempted to make some sense of our initial chaos (bills go on table, dirty laundry gets tossed into pile of floors, jumble of camera cables and rechargers moved from bag to dedicated drawer) then went out to eat a late meal of garlic shoots, dumplings, etc at the Hunan place up the road (and around a few corners).

I didn’t attempt to tackle my photos until this morning. It seems I took 1,054 photos on this trip.  I may have to write a number of posts to begin to make sense of everything.

Here are a few brief notes to get us started on Cambodia. I don’t have the mental energy for anything greater. Bear with me.

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How much would YOU pay to be bit by a rabid monkey: More good times in Phnom Penh


2011
02.08

Have I ever mentioned how much I loathe monkeys?  In India, on an island just off Mumbai, a monkey once mugged me with a snarl for my bottled water; in Ubud, in Bali, a monkey lunged at me and dug his claws into my leg and wouldn’t let go. I wasn’t even teasing him with out of reach bananas like the other people in the monkey sanctuary.  It was spite, pure and simple. Monkeys hate me. In Chinese astrology, I’m a tiger, and a tiger’s mortal enemy is apparently the monkey. I am rather inclined to agree.

I had finally recovered enough from my bout of inexplicable tummy bug to haul my exhausted, drained self out with Doug and his parents to tick off the sights of Phnom Penh. Bad move.  I should have known it would all end in tears- after all, this was the year that saw two of my laptops die in one week; this was the year where my wisdom teeth went apeshit on my jawline and wreaked all sorts of collateral damage; this was a year where all sorts of things had gone horribly awry. I should have known better than to tempt fate by going to Wat Phnom, the Wat that is at the top of a hill littered with wild monkeys. Yes. Wild monkeys. My favourite kind.

I steered clear of the monkeys. I have photos of myself off in a far corner away from the monkey, petting a very nice cat whilst the other tourists took pictures of a rather photogenic monkey that was apparently looking after two kittens. Only after the monkey walked away did I venture near the kittens to have a look.  Did I mention how much I loathe/fear monkeys?

My nemesis and the adorable cats

So, yeah. Cute cats, no monkey, I moved in closer. Aaaaaaaaand, yeah, the monkey leapt up from its hiding place and bit my arm, drawing blood from both tooth and claw.

Since I didn’t fancy dying of rabies on my holiday, Doug and I caught a tuk tuk to the local international medical clinic where I was lectured sternly for having lost my immunization records (they are somewhere in a garbage dump in Turkey, I imagine) and for having failed to have my booster shots for rabies, typhoid and diphtheria when my original vaccinations expired.  That would have been some time around 2008 when my yellow fever also expired. I’m a bit of a careless traveller.

Do you know what happens when you haven’t had your booster shots? You need an immediate round of immunoglobulin shots. How many you need is based on your weight. Oh, how I wish I could have been, say, 10kg lighter! If only I’d done a lengthy ashtanga yoga retreat before coming here! I could have saved about $200– not that $200 is a big deal when your total bill comes to $1299 (including a nice, new round of typhoid and diphtheria and rabies shots!).

Here, let me show you some pictures to remind you to get your freaking booster shots when they come due. Avert your eyes if you can’t handle pointy metal things or bleedy bits.  There were about 12 shots in all: one on each shoulder, 4 or so around each of the two puncture wounds and another on each hip, just above the underwear line.  Apparently I was the bravest little soldier they’d ever had in that clinic when it comes to rabies shots as most need to be held down, screaming for mercy. I cracked jokes.

The tuk tuk driver who took us out there (and who took Doug to the hotel and back to grab my credit card when we found out what the bill was going to come to) told me that we foreigners were just wasting our money on these fancy, expensive clinics. Whenever Cambodians get bit by a monkey, he said, they just cover the bite in Tiger Balm. After all, tiger is the nemesis of the monkey just as the monkey is the nemesis of the tiger. No worries.

Scary bits below the cut.

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Shouldn’t it be…harder?: On Travelling in Comfort


2011
02.07

They named a whole street after me

Let me introduce you to a few key examples of how I have traveled in the past.

Let’s start at the beginning, when I was barely 20 years old. In 1994, I spent two months sleeping on my friend’s sofa in a small flat above a pagan shop in Galway, Ireland. I lived on packets of soup stretched with veggies from the market and a few pints of Guinness per day. I walked a lot. I hitch hiked. I looked out at the water and wrote a lot. I think I spent $3000 in just over three months.

On my way back home via London, I couldn’t afford a hotel so I took the tube out to Heathrow the night before my morning flight and slept on the benches in the Concord waiting room. They were crenelated benches so there were ridges digging into my hips and my shoulders. I couldn’t afford airport food so I just didn’t eat. It was a logical conclusion.

When I finally got home after a three day bus-ferry-tube-bench journey from Galway to Vancouver, I had to go to the doctor for muscle relaxants because I’d done terrible things to my trapezius from all my awkward sleeping positions combined with an ergonomically cruel backpack.

In early 1998, I spent a month in a small shack outside of Accra, Ghana, sharing a foam mattress on a wooden platform with my ex London flatmate, Jan.  We had no electricity, bucket showers, squat loos. I read a lot, wrote a lot, ate fufu and kenke and jollof rice and rode in trotros on pot holed red dirt roads with bags of chickens in my lap. I had flown to Ghana on Balkan Airlines via Sofia, Bulgaria. We had stowaways on our flight and most of the carry on baggage consisted on enormous square plastic zip-up bags full of the passengers’ life possessions. I spent approximately 150 pounds sterling that month.

For most of the mid-to-late 1990s, I slept in dorm rooms. Mostly in London, but also all over Europe. I rarely set foot inside a restaurant. Baguettes and cheese and tomatoes were my mainstays. A room of my own seemed laughably decadent and wasn’t even considered. I walked, I took buses, I walked even more. For three years, I lived out of a backpack.

I won’t bore you with an itemized list of all the ways in which I ruined my health and musculature and sanity with endless night buses and train station floor beds and bread, bread and more bread. I won’t rattle on about my daily calculations and re-calculations of budget and the gnawing I felt inside knowing that my 1500 pounds had to last from, say, November until June. I made it work. I’m still alive.

Phnom Penh decor

However, nearly 17 years since I first started traveling overseas and 9 years since I was first able to afford a room of my own (which was in Kayseri, in Cappadocia, Turkey, when my school provided me with my very own room in a shared flat), I am still hesitant to step out of my discomfort zone and embrace the fact that, by gum, I can afford to be comfortable, well fed and not in constant stress mode. I don’t have to pull back muscles getting from here to there. I don’t have to coast on the edge of self imposed poverty.

I’m in Cambodia right now, with Doug and his parents. Three Clevelanders and a Canadian in Phnom Penh. Yes, Virginia, Americans do travel.  We’re staying in a really cushy guest house near the riverside. Our room has a private pool. Yes. A private pool. And wifi. And a few loungey pillowed platforms for reading amongst our ferns beneath the lovely sunny skies. And A/C. There is a gorgeous reed tapestry on the wall. We’re paying $75 a night for this. For the next two weeks, we’ll be staying in similar places in Sihanoukville and Siem Reap. We’ll be hiring taxis to drive us from here to there. I think tonight we’ll be taking a boat cruise on the Mekong. We’re eating in restaurants– with cocktails on terraces, appetizers, mains, white table cloths. We’re eating out three meals a day. In restaurants. With white table cloths. Not bread and cheese, or more aptly, not noodles.

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Chinese New Year II: Explosions, Bunnies, Shuttered Doors


2011
02.03

So the incessant festive explosions of last night continued until very very late, late enough for me to have filmed several chunks of an hour’s worth of explosions around midnight and still had time to upload, edit, save and upload to YouTube and then add it to yesterday’s post before it was calm enough outside to even try to get some sleep. That was sometime around 3am.

Around 5:30am this morning, a very enthusiastic fellow in our parking lot below decided to greet the new year with a long series of sunrise explosions. Throughout the day today there have been a million tiny, ear-breaking explosions everywhere. Children gleefully tossing lit firecrackers at my feet. Firecrackers burning, wedged into any crevice available and exploding as I pass. The startle factor is always near. The streets are littered with spent gunpowder and exploded red paper. The street sweepers with their home made twig brooms are kept busy.

Right now, on the first night of the new year, the skies are booming again. It sounds like Beirut, or maybe London in 1940. Boom boom boom boom, boom boom boom.

Hopefully it will ease up a little so I can get some sleep. Why do I need sleep? Well, because tomorrow we are flying to Cambodia for our Year of The Bunny 2-week New Year holiday!

The package came with 2 bunnies; we now have one in the kitchen (see above) and one on the front door.

(Feel free to reference the Dead Kennedys here. I’m okay with that. Also Spalding Gray’s Swimming to Cambodia.)

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Chinese New Year in Shanghai: Bunnies Gone Wild


2011
02.02

As a Rooster, Doug’s mortal enemy in Chinese astrology is the Rabbit. And lo, come tomorrow, we shall be fully immersed in the Year of the Rabbit. There are bunnies EVERYWHERE. It’s like Donnie Darko with lots of red and gold and glitter. There are sparkly cutout stickers of bunny silhouettes on department store glass doors. Shop windows have huge bunny heads placed atop mannequin necks, as if rabbits wore feathered Ugg boots and cute tops.  Most household doors are decorated with one of the cardboard cut out new year signs, all red and gold and boldly bunnied. Including ours, which is totally bling. Ours has a creepy glued on emerald rhinestone eye. The bunny is watching. All Roosters beware.

A mean streak a mile wide

The streets are nearly devoid of humans now. Sidewalks are walkable for the first time since, well, last year at this time.  There are no cars and only a few bicycles. Shops are shut, shutters slammed down. I’d say there ain’t nobody here but us chickens, except the Doomed Chickens seem to have packed up and gone home to their filial Doomed Chickens back in their hometown. I don’t have to reign in my inevitable wave of sadness when walking down our street, noting the bound ankles of the ducks and the hugely puffed feathers of the chickens shivering in their cages, a foot away from the blood and feathers of their companions.

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