Siam Sojourns
For a late riser like me, seeing any place in the early morning hours is always a novel experience. So, as a lecturer at a college in Bangkok, when I had no choice but to get up in the wee hours of morning for work, the experience was truly refreshing. Not only were my taxi rides to college a breeze on the otherwise chock-a-block arterial nerve for tourists in Bangkok called Sukhumvit road. But so also were the sights and smells, till then unfamiliar to me of a world popular `shopping and fun’ holiday destination, totally enlightening. The early morning peace and calm mixed with the sweet fragrance of joss sticks is in complete contradiction to the glitter and clamour in the evenings along the same roads. And the presence of Buddhist monks in rust and maroon coloured robes, collecting alms and offering blessings to devotees at street corners lends a special grace to the morning cityscape which is diametrically opposite to the sleazy glamour at the thronging beer parlours and go-go bars along the same by lanes which double up as `cowboy streets’ in the evenings packed with enticing bar girls and preening party `arm-candies`.
Had it not been for my early morning sojourns, I would have completely missed these remnants of Thai cultural essence on the streets of Bangkok. But well, Bangkok is not Thailand. And that can be said for most of the big cities of the world. Modern cities are not representatives of the cultural core of a country or a region. They are rather a by-product of the various processes that took place in recent history. Bangkok, for instance, is not more than 200 years old. An independent Thai capital came to be formed at Sukhothai in northern Thailand in the 13th Century, because of the disintegration of the Khmer empire in Cambodia. But within a century the kingdom at Sukhothai was overthrown by an emerging new Kingdom of Ayutthaya along the banks of the Chao Phraya River, a little further north of Bangkok. Ayutthaya grew as a trading centre, with growing contacts with traders from India, China, Arabia and the European world. But unfortunately the thriving city of Ayutthaya was burnt and ransacked by the invading Burmese army in the latter half of the 18th Century. Subsequently, the capital was moved to Thonburi, now better known as a suburb of Bangkok. The present Era of Thai history began when Bangkok was established as the official capital of Thailand by King Rama I in 1782. This also marked the beginning of the line of Kings belonging to the present reigning Chakri dynasty. It is not only the world’s oldest surviving Monarchy, but the present king is also the longest reigning Monarch.
As a teacher in Thailand, I was in for more surprises. I noticed that my students never stood straight in front of me, but bend gently from one knee. Reverence and respect to ones teacher, then be it an academic or a spiritual preacher, is indeed deeply woven into Thai life. And it is strictly adhered to in schools and junior colleges. These experiences were learning for me. For a tourist in Bangkok, it is a little difficult to imagine that such values exist. Because, what we see, moving on from the polite smiles and graceful `swadhika` greetings of the Thai airhostesses, is an ultra modern airport and city. All it takes is a walk down main Sukhumvit road, with its odd and even numbered streets, or Soi as it’s called in Thai, on either side. And that is if you enjoy jostling and paving a path through crowded sidewalks!! Forget the umpteen numbers of shops lining the streets, but even the pavements are teeming with vendors, selling anything from souvenirs to t-shirts to designer duplicates of everything under the sun.
The enormity of some of the glitzy malls is sometimes staggering even for visitors from downtown Manhattan! But the glamorous Bangkok that we see of today is a very recent transformation. It includes the sky train, the metro, and the fancy malls where one could either spend time buying a Ferrari or visit the huge `ocean world’ created in the basement of one of Asia’s largest shopping complex! And of course the ever mushrooming small and big massage parlours and exotic spas which form the chief attraction at all holiday destinations within Thailand.
I have personally witnessed these rapid developments in the past 7 years. Bangkok is on a demolition spree of all things old and quaint. Every old bungalow, pretty wooden Thai style constructions are being knocked down and replaced with skyscrapers. A few of these get converted into boutique hotels and spas; others are simply broken down for the soaring real estate value of land, especially on prime locations of Bangkok. The constant buzz of construction work is a well know soundscape of the city. It’s strange to note that even during the busiest of traffic hours the roads are quiet with no honking or brakes screeching, thanks to the polite and patient ways of the Buddhist; but the din of construction work in every street cannot be missed.
But the roots of these recent developments go back a little further. Despite the strong western trade relations and cultural influences, which in fact, led to many reforms in the 19th Century, Thailand as a country was never colonised by any western power. Historians attribute it to strong and able leadership by Thai Kings and ministers. Besides, Thailand hasn’t seen a war in the past 200 years. It wasn’t part of WWII even. In fact, Bangkok did well as a peaceful buffer zone between warring nations. Many Indians and Chinese saw this as an opportunity to set up shops selling essentials like food grains, cloth, and shoes to the armies in the neighbouring army camps. These products are the chief exports of Thailand even today. Bangkok rose not just as the business and industrial centre of an agrarian Thailand, but also the `rest and relaxation’ hub of the world; of-late complete with `holiday companions` in all shapes and gender, offering all kinds of services.
I say gender, because honestly, it’s one city which has put me at complete ease with transsexuals. Being the most happening place for all sorts of cosmetic and sex-change surgeries, Bangkok has a large community of transsexuals. Fondly called as `lady boys’, they are an accepted lot with no apparent stigma attached. Employed mostly at restaurants and shopping malls, they are a big hit as night club performers. More on them and the rest of `Amazing Thailand’ later......
Wednesday, March 10, 2010
Wednesday, February 17, 2010
The Pepper Empire
The Pepper Empire
There is a huge boulder called Velliamkallu, 10 km into the sea from Payyoli beach near Kozikode. Local lore has it that during the Portuguese rule, murderers and serious law offenders were executed here and thrown off the rock into the sea. A morbid history to an otherwise peaceful beach surrounds. But that’s what the entire stretch of the western coast of India is – a strip of land that attracted traders, travelers and rulers, resulting in not just a tumultuous and fascinating history of activities from ancient times, but also a series of colonization in the 500 years of recent history. The Portuguese led the way and spread their Pepper Empire all around the Indian coast; particularly along the Western coast.
We have, indeed, come a long way from understanding a nation’s growth purely on the basis of its geology and geography but their significance in forming the culture, politics, economics and even language of a region, is still a determining factor. The importance of the Western Coast during the ancient times cannot be ignored. And all it takes is a drive along NH 17, and a few minor detours here and there, to understand and enjoy this.
The Indus valley settlements along the Gujarat coast, and in the Great Rann of Kutch, dating as far back as the 3rd millennium BC have unearthed monumental evidence for long standing maritime contact with Mesopotamia and Egypt. This was followed by a flourish of Greeco Roman trade and settlements, around the turn of the millennium all along the Peninsular coast line . The recent excavations at Patanam, near Kodungallur in Central Kerala have shed further light on this connection. Besides excavations, there are interesting references to the culture and economy of these regions, in the works of Greco Roman geographers, explorers, and political envoys. Dioscorides, the Greek Physician who was a contemporary of Pliny, describes the medicinal virtues of spices like pepper and turmeric from the Western coast in his treatise. The Periplus of the Erythraean Sea has frequent references to Barygaza (Bharuch in Gujarat) and Muziris (identified as the regions around Kodungallur in Central Kerala). All these fascinating references to a far away land must have poked the curiosity of later travelers.
The sea trade route began at the Mediterranean coast, crossing over the Nile delta, into the Red sea, and out into the Arabian Sea at the Gulf of Aden onto the Indian shores. But in 45AD the discovery of the existing monsoon winds enabled a straight sail from Aden to Muziris; thus avoiding skirting along the Arab coast. Port towns of Bharuch, Nala sopara, and Kalyan north of Bombay, and many smaller centres further south remained active well into the historic period.
But the arrival of one man changed the cultural landscape of the entire western coast of India. Its effects linger on. Not just in nooks and crannies, but entire cities and states of Peninsular India. The man - Vasco de Gama from Portugal. Improved navigational skills and techniques facilitated direct sailing across the Arabian Sea and Indian Ocean. It eliminated the perils of close encounters with pirates and hard to pass middle men along the narrow Red sea. So saddled with an excellent knowledge of the African coastline, Vasco set sail to India from Lisbon in 1497, decidedly to explore a new sea route which would break the monopoly of the Venetian merchants over sea trade. He sailed around the Cape of Good Hope and into the Arabian Sea and reached the port town of Calicut in Kerala in May 1498. Vasco literally fulfilled the dream of Portuguese explorer Bartholomew Dias, who had explored the route upto South Africa. Although not welcomed initially in Calicut, his subsequent voyage to Kerala coast with a fleet of warships saw a warm welcome at Cochin and later again at Calicut in 1502. Thus the Portuguese became the first to colonize along the Indian shores. They established the first European trading centre at Quilon in 1502. Although items of trade included cottons, silks, indigo, incense, precious stones and various other indigenous product, Indian spices were the most coveted items of trade.
Within a few years a headquarters was set up in Goa, although trade continued to be managed from Kozhikode, Kochi, and Kollam ports in Kerala. Slowly and steadily the Pepper Empire grew. Provinces north of Goa were managed from Bassein (modern Vasai, near Bombay). From the western most outpost at the island of Diu in Gujarat, the Empire followed a steady trail along the Western coast at Daman, Vasai, Bombay, Chaul, Goa, Honavar, Basrur, Mangalore, Calicut, Cannanore, Cochin and Quilon. This trail continues along the Coromandle coast from Tuticorin, all the way upto Hoogly in modern Bengal.
Following this coastal trail by road, beginning at the amazing fort and cathedral at the island of Diu in Gujarat, upto Fort Kochi in Kerala, is like surfing through the high and low waves of Portuguese heritage in India. What is obviously visible to the eye is the well preserved monuments; particularly the Bom Jesus World Heritage monument complex in Goa or the St. Angelo’s fort at Kannur, Kerala. But for the ardent history buffs, the dilapidated remains of once glorious monuments at smaller centre like Chaul, in Maharashtra can also tell a tale.
What we often forget is the distinct cultural ethos that these trade contacts and colonization’s give to the entire region. The 400 years of Portuguese rule is still alive at these towns, in its architecture, language, food and the inimitable `indigenous’ catholic flavor to the very being of states like Goa. The road side Cupolas along the streets is a unique cultural symbol all along these settlements. The urgency with which the colonizers enforced the supremacy of the Roman Catholic Church on the locals in a series of bloody inquisition all across the coast can be sensed in the prisons and gallows at the spooky fortified abandoned `ghost’ towns at all the Portuguese strongholds.
The introduction of food preserves like vinegar, techniques of baking, or the acceptance of pork as a meat consumed by the civilized may be minor aspects of the assimilation process. But direct trade with the vast western market had far reaching impact on the coastal economy. It led to commercial cultivation of home garden spices like pepper and ginger, improved techniques for coconut plantations and it’s by product, and many such experiments. But the introduction of `outward looking’ houses with balconies to `see and be seen’ and large windows, is my favorite. Certainly in stark contrast to the prevalent closed structures of the times, with rooms opening to a central courtyard.
There is a huge boulder called Velliamkallu, 10 km into the sea from Payyoli beach near Kozikode. Local lore has it that during the Portuguese rule, murderers and serious law offenders were executed here and thrown off the rock into the sea. A morbid history to an otherwise peaceful beach surrounds. But that’s what the entire stretch of the western coast of India is – a strip of land that attracted traders, travelers and rulers, resulting in not just a tumultuous and fascinating history of activities from ancient times, but also a series of colonization in the 500 years of recent history. The Portuguese led the way and spread their Pepper Empire all around the Indian coast; particularly along the Western coast.
We have, indeed, come a long way from understanding a nation’s growth purely on the basis of its geology and geography but their significance in forming the culture, politics, economics and even language of a region, is still a determining factor. The importance of the Western Coast during the ancient times cannot be ignored. And all it takes is a drive along NH 17, and a few minor detours here and there, to understand and enjoy this.
The Indus valley settlements along the Gujarat coast, and in the Great Rann of Kutch, dating as far back as the 3rd millennium BC have unearthed monumental evidence for long standing maritime contact with Mesopotamia and Egypt. This was followed by a flourish of Greeco Roman trade and settlements, around the turn of the millennium all along the Peninsular coast line . The recent excavations at Patanam, near Kodungallur in Central Kerala have shed further light on this connection. Besides excavations, there are interesting references to the culture and economy of these regions, in the works of Greco Roman geographers, explorers, and political envoys. Dioscorides, the Greek Physician who was a contemporary of Pliny, describes the medicinal virtues of spices like pepper and turmeric from the Western coast in his treatise. The Periplus of the Erythraean Sea has frequent references to Barygaza (Bharuch in Gujarat) and Muziris (identified as the regions around Kodungallur in Central Kerala). All these fascinating references to a far away land must have poked the curiosity of later travelers.
The sea trade route began at the Mediterranean coast, crossing over the Nile delta, into the Red sea, and out into the Arabian Sea at the Gulf of Aden onto the Indian shores. But in 45AD the discovery of the existing monsoon winds enabled a straight sail from Aden to Muziris; thus avoiding skirting along the Arab coast. Port towns of Bharuch, Nala sopara, and Kalyan north of Bombay, and many smaller centres further south remained active well into the historic period.
But the arrival of one man changed the cultural landscape of the entire western coast of India. Its effects linger on. Not just in nooks and crannies, but entire cities and states of Peninsular India. The man - Vasco de Gama from Portugal. Improved navigational skills and techniques facilitated direct sailing across the Arabian Sea and Indian Ocean. It eliminated the perils of close encounters with pirates and hard to pass middle men along the narrow Red sea. So saddled with an excellent knowledge of the African coastline, Vasco set sail to India from Lisbon in 1497, decidedly to explore a new sea route which would break the monopoly of the Venetian merchants over sea trade. He sailed around the Cape of Good Hope and into the Arabian Sea and reached the port town of Calicut in Kerala in May 1498. Vasco literally fulfilled the dream of Portuguese explorer Bartholomew Dias, who had explored the route upto South Africa. Although not welcomed initially in Calicut, his subsequent voyage to Kerala coast with a fleet of warships saw a warm welcome at Cochin and later again at Calicut in 1502. Thus the Portuguese became the first to colonize along the Indian shores. They established the first European trading centre at Quilon in 1502. Although items of trade included cottons, silks, indigo, incense, precious stones and various other indigenous product, Indian spices were the most coveted items of trade.
Within a few years a headquarters was set up in Goa, although trade continued to be managed from Kozhikode, Kochi, and Kollam ports in Kerala. Slowly and steadily the Pepper Empire grew. Provinces north of Goa were managed from Bassein (modern Vasai, near Bombay). From the western most outpost at the island of Diu in Gujarat, the Empire followed a steady trail along the Western coast at Daman, Vasai, Bombay, Chaul, Goa, Honavar, Basrur, Mangalore, Calicut, Cannanore, Cochin and Quilon. This trail continues along the Coromandle coast from Tuticorin, all the way upto Hoogly in modern Bengal.
Following this coastal trail by road, beginning at the amazing fort and cathedral at the island of Diu in Gujarat, upto Fort Kochi in Kerala, is like surfing through the high and low waves of Portuguese heritage in India. What is obviously visible to the eye is the well preserved monuments; particularly the Bom Jesus World Heritage monument complex in Goa or the St. Angelo’s fort at Kannur, Kerala. But for the ardent history buffs, the dilapidated remains of once glorious monuments at smaller centre like Chaul, in Maharashtra can also tell a tale.
What we often forget is the distinct cultural ethos that these trade contacts and colonization’s give to the entire region. The 400 years of Portuguese rule is still alive at these towns, in its architecture, language, food and the inimitable `indigenous’ catholic flavor to the very being of states like Goa. The road side Cupolas along the streets is a unique cultural symbol all along these settlements. The urgency with which the colonizers enforced the supremacy of the Roman Catholic Church on the locals in a series of bloody inquisition all across the coast can be sensed in the prisons and gallows at the spooky fortified abandoned `ghost’ towns at all the Portuguese strongholds.
The introduction of food preserves like vinegar, techniques of baking, or the acceptance of pork as a meat consumed by the civilized may be minor aspects of the assimilation process. But direct trade with the vast western market had far reaching impact on the coastal economy. It led to commercial cultivation of home garden spices like pepper and ginger, improved techniques for coconut plantations and it’s by product, and many such experiments. But the introduction of `outward looking’ houses with balconies to `see and be seen’ and large windows, is my favorite. Certainly in stark contrast to the prevalent closed structures of the times, with rooms opening to a central courtyard.
Wednesday, January 13, 2010
Myanmar III – In a time warp
Long live the chaaya kadas of the world. Then be it a European sidewalk café, a Bombay tapri, a Kerala thattu kada or the Burmese tea shop. This is the best place to take a deep breath, sit back with a cup of steaming tea and enjoy the world go by. It’s here that I put my rule number one of my very own `travel survival lessons’ into practice. Always keep your eyes, nose and ears open to the sights, smells and sounds around you.
So, while Ameena and I rounded off my Mandalay visit over a cup of tea, my eyes trained on the psychedelic coloured cream cakes, which looked more sugar paste than cream, in the glass cabinets of one of the popular `Burma Tea Shop’, I tuned my ears to the cacophony of chatter around me. Ameena informed me that, the tea shops in Myanmar were the venue for striking business deals of all kinds. Men, mostly in colourful checkered lungis and women, in bordered or floral lungis, raised banter. While it was impossible to see young women or for that matter young men, hanging out at the tea shops in Mandalay, the older women folk looked very comfortable sharing table with men and discussing business over a cup of tea.
South and South East Asian society is pretty much conservative. But perhaps even more so in Myanmar. Having kept the rest of the world out of the country since independence, Myanmar is far behind in all things fashionable and glamorous. In fact, it was difficult to see people in a costume other than the lungi, except in Yangon. Most Burmese men I saw on the streets and tea shops were `rice beer' pot bellied. Donning their lungi like a skirt, with a protruding bunched knot on the belly, with huge cheroot like local cigar in one hand, and guzzling strong tea with the other, they do make an interesting sight.
I did wonder about the checkered lungis when I visited a cottage weaving unit at Mandalay. Especially the pattern, tiny and large intertwining or simple squares, in earthy shades of all colors, is so popular all over Southern and Eastern India. What came to my mind were the Early Historic records of the weavers of Paithan in Maharastra, and their community’s subsequent spread to the regions of Deccan, Central and Western India during Medieval periods. In more recent times, the colonization of Myanmar by Indians, and particularly by people from the Deccan, could have influenced the fabric patterns at the weaving units set up by the Britishers.
Besides colonization’s, the country was also a hotspot for rebel exile. The veteran freedom fighter Bal Gangadhar Tilak was exiled at the Mandalay Prison between 1908-1914. There are also stories about large number of Mappila rebels who were deported to Burma and the Andaman after the 1921 rebellion in Malabar region of Kerala. In fact, there are a large number of people from the Malabar region in Kerala who went to Burma those days. One eminent Malayalam writer, U A Khader, was born there to a Burmese mother and a Malabari father from Koyilandy. The stories of U A Khader are strewn with memories of his early days in Myanmar, making the writer seem more Burmese, than a Malayalee. Another famous Malayalam writer, Punathil Kunhabdulla, also has similar Burmese connection. His father, from Vatakara in Kerala, lived in British Burma for a long time before returning to Malabar. While in Burma, he married a Burmese woman and raised a family. Recently, Kunhabdulla toured Burma in search of his Burmese cousins. Like some of his stories, his recent travelogue on this trip, has several references to his Burmese past. The presence of the multitudes of Indians in Burma also brings to mind the poem `Assam Panikkaar’ meaning `workers from Assam’ by the famous poet Krishna Warrier.
In that sense Myanmar was a perfect melting pot. It is now difficult to disentangle the various threads from India, Nepal, China, and Thailand from this tapestry called Myanmar. The cultural ethos is predominantly Buddhist, and perhaps that’s why it wasn’t too difficult to accommodate the various strains from the above four nations. Except for a few savory items, the modern eating habits in Burma are more akin to Chinese and Thai cuisines. The flashes of modernity in Yangon are all a reflection of the ever growing contingent of Burmese in Thailand.
This melting pot was always boiling over with social and political strife. Right from historical times, the country has been at political cross-roads. In recent history, all minor and major clashes by displaced locals and rebel ethnic groups were controlled and contained by the British forces. Myanmar’s involvement in the WWII further deteriorated the nation. It resulted in large scale migration of human population across the borders. Thousands died on `The Trek’ across the Indian border. Many rich merchants and traders moved their business to the islands of Malaysia and Singapore. A massive contingent of Indians, Chinese and Burmese labour force moved to the islands mostly as Rubber plantation workers.
Today Myanmar is the poorest nation in South East Asia. Constant political turbulence, corruption and mismanagement of nation’s resources has stagnated and isolated the nation. It has become famous for its transnational drug trade. Myanmar is the world’s 2nd largest producer of opium and a major player in the `Golden Triangle’ of drug trade across its northern border with China and Thailand. Most of the coveted Burmese red rubies and yellow sapphires, from the Mogak mines, near Mymyo, get sold in the black market. The working conditions of the miners at these quarries are just one of the many human rights violations in Myanmar.
Myanmar is awaiting a revival. Seeing the wealth of heritage and culture in the regions around its heart called Mandalay, one cannot but wish for it. The world needs to see and know more of this forgotten landmass. Experience the life around the fertile plains of the Irrawady and at the Yangon delta. And while at it, take time off to appreciate the fine silversmiths and their splendid filigree work at Saigon, the exquisitely embroidered carpets, with stuffed appliqué work and sequins at Inwa, the leather string puppets with dazzling embroidery and wooden heads at Amrapura, and to take a stroll along the line of stalls by the Irrawady, selling water-colour paintings by contemporary artists, most of them repeats of a popular scene or portrait. This fascination with water-colour art, I learned, was also a left-over British tradition, when the white sahibs and memsahibs took time off to paint the `quaint’ life along the Irrawady. Yes, its time to start afresh.
So, while Ameena and I rounded off my Mandalay visit over a cup of tea, my eyes trained on the psychedelic coloured cream cakes, which looked more sugar paste than cream, in the glass cabinets of one of the popular `Burma Tea Shop’, I tuned my ears to the cacophony of chatter around me. Ameena informed me that, the tea shops in Myanmar were the venue for striking business deals of all kinds. Men, mostly in colourful checkered lungis and women, in bordered or floral lungis, raised banter. While it was impossible to see young women or for that matter young men, hanging out at the tea shops in Mandalay, the older women folk looked very comfortable sharing table with men and discussing business over a cup of tea.
South and South East Asian society is pretty much conservative. But perhaps even more so in Myanmar. Having kept the rest of the world out of the country since independence, Myanmar is far behind in all things fashionable and glamorous. In fact, it was difficult to see people in a costume other than the lungi, except in Yangon. Most Burmese men I saw on the streets and tea shops were `rice beer' pot bellied. Donning their lungi like a skirt, with a protruding bunched knot on the belly, with huge cheroot like local cigar in one hand, and guzzling strong tea with the other, they do make an interesting sight.
I did wonder about the checkered lungis when I visited a cottage weaving unit at Mandalay. Especially the pattern, tiny and large intertwining or simple squares, in earthy shades of all colors, is so popular all over Southern and Eastern India. What came to my mind were the Early Historic records of the weavers of Paithan in Maharastra, and their community’s subsequent spread to the regions of Deccan, Central and Western India during Medieval periods. In more recent times, the colonization of Myanmar by Indians, and particularly by people from the Deccan, could have influenced the fabric patterns at the weaving units set up by the Britishers.
Besides colonization’s, the country was also a hotspot for rebel exile. The veteran freedom fighter Bal Gangadhar Tilak was exiled at the Mandalay Prison between 1908-1914. There are also stories about large number of Mappila rebels who were deported to Burma and the Andaman after the 1921 rebellion in Malabar region of Kerala. In fact, there are a large number of people from the Malabar region in Kerala who went to Burma those days. One eminent Malayalam writer, U A Khader, was born there to a Burmese mother and a Malabari father from Koyilandy. The stories of U A Khader are strewn with memories of his early days in Myanmar, making the writer seem more Burmese, than a Malayalee. Another famous Malayalam writer, Punathil Kunhabdulla, also has similar Burmese connection. His father, from Vatakara in Kerala, lived in British Burma for a long time before returning to Malabar. While in Burma, he married a Burmese woman and raised a family. Recently, Kunhabdulla toured Burma in search of his Burmese cousins. Like some of his stories, his recent travelogue on this trip, has several references to his Burmese past. The presence of the multitudes of Indians in Burma also brings to mind the poem `Assam Panikkaar’ meaning `workers from Assam’ by the famous poet Krishna Warrier.
In that sense Myanmar was a perfect melting pot. It is now difficult to disentangle the various threads from India, Nepal, China, and Thailand from this tapestry called Myanmar. The cultural ethos is predominantly Buddhist, and perhaps that’s why it wasn’t too difficult to accommodate the various strains from the above four nations. Except for a few savory items, the modern eating habits in Burma are more akin to Chinese and Thai cuisines. The flashes of modernity in Yangon are all a reflection of the ever growing contingent of Burmese in Thailand.
This melting pot was always boiling over with social and political strife. Right from historical times, the country has been at political cross-roads. In recent history, all minor and major clashes by displaced locals and rebel ethnic groups were controlled and contained by the British forces. Myanmar’s involvement in the WWII further deteriorated the nation. It resulted in large scale migration of human population across the borders. Thousands died on `The Trek’ across the Indian border. Many rich merchants and traders moved their business to the islands of Malaysia and Singapore. A massive contingent of Indians, Chinese and Burmese labour force moved to the islands mostly as Rubber plantation workers.
Today Myanmar is the poorest nation in South East Asia. Constant political turbulence, corruption and mismanagement of nation’s resources has stagnated and isolated the nation. It has become famous for its transnational drug trade. Myanmar is the world’s 2nd largest producer of opium and a major player in the `Golden Triangle’ of drug trade across its northern border with China and Thailand. Most of the coveted Burmese red rubies and yellow sapphires, from the Mogak mines, near Mymyo, get sold in the black market. The working conditions of the miners at these quarries are just one of the many human rights violations in Myanmar.
Myanmar is awaiting a revival. Seeing the wealth of heritage and culture in the regions around its heart called Mandalay, one cannot but wish for it. The world needs to see and know more of this forgotten landmass. Experience the life around the fertile plains of the Irrawady and at the Yangon delta. And while at it, take time off to appreciate the fine silversmiths and their splendid filigree work at Saigon, the exquisitely embroidered carpets, with stuffed appliqué work and sequins at Inwa, the leather string puppets with dazzling embroidery and wooden heads at Amrapura, and to take a stroll along the line of stalls by the Irrawady, selling water-colour paintings by contemporary artists, most of them repeats of a popular scene or portrait. This fascination with water-colour art, I learned, was also a left-over British tradition, when the white sahibs and memsahibs took time off to paint the `quaint’ life along the Irrawady. Yes, its time to start afresh.
Myanmar II – My Irrawady sojourn
After an overnight bus ride from Yangon, I took a days rest at Mymyo, the `only’ hill station in Myanmar, located close to Mandalay. I stayed at this very colonial British club house turned resort; a charming red mansion with a lovely driveway, garden, patio, and balcony on the outside and a warm and cozy interior, complete with a piano, fire place and banister stairways from the past. A fumbling entourage of humble employees ensured a comfortable stay. Other than a vast, beautiful botanical garden, in excellent maintenance, Mymyo is a quaint town with a smattering of lovely colonial bungalows which are mostly abandoned. As usual, the markets are still alive. The neat rows of shops, with old and new signboards of bakers, and merchants, reminded me of its cantonment past. I could imagine a lively market, bustling with young, smart railway and army officers, taking a few days break from work and the humid weather at Yangon, Mandalay or the teak jungles to enjoy English breakfast at the sunny roadside cafes of Mymyo. But today, this pretty little market, struggles to bake a decent loaf of bread.
My guide, Ameena, a third generation, half Tamil, half Burmese Muslim lady, received me the next day morning and we were on our 2 hour ride to Mandalay. She was more a companion than a guide, and talking to her made interesting learning about migrant populations in Myanmar. She said she lived in Mandalay, in a locality full of `Madrasis’. Undoubtedly, the legacy of migrants from the Madras Presidency lives on in Myanmar. There is also a huge population of people of Nepali origins settled in Myanmar; particularly in Mymyo. Known as Gorkhalese, most of them have an ancestry in Myanmar dating back to the Raj.
We drove past teak wood plantations, which looked more like forests interspersed with quaint vegetable farms, and flower beds. I watched the trucks, laden with amazingly huge cylinders of teak go by. But even more fascinating were the vans loaded with tons of neatly stacked flowers!! All on their way to the Thai border. Mymyo is well known for its horticulture efforts since the British time. But the tradition of decorating homes with fancy flowers is long since gone with the British.
Finally, I was in Mandalay, facing the prominent Mandalay hills, sprouting many old and new pagodas all uniformly painted white with golden domes. Ameena and I, headed straight for the Fort Palace, in the northern end of the city, surrounded by a wide moat, connected with a bridge on all four sides. The present wood palace is actually an exercise in reconstruction after the original 1857 palace it was thoroughly razed to the ground in the WW II bombings. The king’s private apartment, `The Glass Palace’ dazzled in the hot afternoon sun. It’s not just the most extensively gilded among the many official and residential structures within the fort complex, but it’s also the most elaborately decorated with tiny bits of colored glass. It literally `reflects’ its short-lived grandeur.
Although Mandalay city was founded as recently as 1857 by King Mindon, it is surrounded by medieval history on either side of a lifeline called River Irrawady. After the fall of the `Golden Era’ at Pagan in the 12th Century the towns of Saigon, Inwa, Amrapura, and Mingun saw successive back and forth as political nerve centres. And there is something special about each of these settlements.
At Amrapura, for instance, a visit to the 100 year old Mahagandhayon Monastry, one of the largest in the world, is a must. The monastery is home to several thousands of young and old monks. The Bagaya Monastry of Inwa, built completely of teakwood in 1834, is a phenomenal piece of architecture with some of the supporting teak pillars as large as 3m in circumference. It is definitely one of its kind heritage monument. Although, blackened with age, its intricate carvings, the lacquered pillars and gilded cool interiors are still resplendent in beauty. Saigon too has many monasteries and pagodas. Rebuilt and renovated over the centuries, some of the pagodas on the Saigon hills, date back to the 14th century. Amrapura also boasts of the longest surviving teak wood bridge in the world. Although rickety, this 150 year old and 1.2 km long bridge connects villages along the lagoons and islands on the Irrawady and is still used by pedestrians and cyclists.
Mingun is 11kms upstream of Mandalay, on the opposite bank of the Irrawady. Had it not been for the 200 year old Mingun Pagoda, this sleepy village wouldn’t stand a chance in history’s memory. The Pagoda is most certainly one of the most amazing architectural remains in Myanmar. It’s huge. Reportedly, the massive earthquake in 1838 reduced its height to half. Or else the pagoda would have been the largest in the world. The remaining half itself looks formidable, with gaping cracks cutting across its `all brick’ edifice. I thoroughly enjoyed my bullock cart rides to the pagodas, along the vast alluvial plains of this village.
But, it was sailing across the Irrawady to reach Mingun, which will remain my most memorable experience about Myanmar. I have this penchant for crossing arterial rivers like Irrawady, which cuts across one or several countries. The quiet solitary ride on the upper deck of the motorized boat, watching the Mingun Pagoda, rise like an isolated hill on the flat banks in the horizon, will always remain afresh in my memory. Every river is a lifeline. And rivers like the Irrawady, are indeed so. Starting at its two main tributaries, Rivers Mihika and the Mallika in the northern states, the Irrawady cuts across the entire length of Burma. The agrarian economy and the teakwood trade of British Burma, was completely dependent on this. The river was the most convenient mode of transportation for massive loads of teakwood from the forested upper reaches of Myanmar, to the docks at Yangon. There are references to how river Irrawady had more wood in the water than water itself!!
Unfortunately, I couldn’t make it to the 4000 and more monuments at Pagan, further north of Mandalay. That’s because I didn’t want to rush Pagan. I wanted a week long stay just in Pagan to explore the `Golden Era’ architectural remains. “Maybe sometime soon”, said Ameena, as we rounded off our trip at one of the many popular tea shop restaurants. And yes, there was still so much more to see and learn of contemporary Myanmar in Mandalay.
My guide, Ameena, a third generation, half Tamil, half Burmese Muslim lady, received me the next day morning and we were on our 2 hour ride to Mandalay. She was more a companion than a guide, and talking to her made interesting learning about migrant populations in Myanmar. She said she lived in Mandalay, in a locality full of `Madrasis’. Undoubtedly, the legacy of migrants from the Madras Presidency lives on in Myanmar. There is also a huge population of people of Nepali origins settled in Myanmar; particularly in Mymyo. Known as Gorkhalese, most of them have an ancestry in Myanmar dating back to the Raj.
We drove past teak wood plantations, which looked more like forests interspersed with quaint vegetable farms, and flower beds. I watched the trucks, laden with amazingly huge cylinders of teak go by. But even more fascinating were the vans loaded with tons of neatly stacked flowers!! All on their way to the Thai border. Mymyo is well known for its horticulture efforts since the British time. But the tradition of decorating homes with fancy flowers is long since gone with the British.
Finally, I was in Mandalay, facing the prominent Mandalay hills, sprouting many old and new pagodas all uniformly painted white with golden domes. Ameena and I, headed straight for the Fort Palace, in the northern end of the city, surrounded by a wide moat, connected with a bridge on all four sides. The present wood palace is actually an exercise in reconstruction after the original 1857 palace it was thoroughly razed to the ground in the WW II bombings. The king’s private apartment, `The Glass Palace’ dazzled in the hot afternoon sun. It’s not just the most extensively gilded among the many official and residential structures within the fort complex, but it’s also the most elaborately decorated with tiny bits of colored glass. It literally `reflects’ its short-lived grandeur.
Although Mandalay city was founded as recently as 1857 by King Mindon, it is surrounded by medieval history on either side of a lifeline called River Irrawady. After the fall of the `Golden Era’ at Pagan in the 12th Century the towns of Saigon, Inwa, Amrapura, and Mingun saw successive back and forth as political nerve centres. And there is something special about each of these settlements.
At Amrapura, for instance, a visit to the 100 year old Mahagandhayon Monastry, one of the largest in the world, is a must. The monastery is home to several thousands of young and old monks. The Bagaya Monastry of Inwa, built completely of teakwood in 1834, is a phenomenal piece of architecture with some of the supporting teak pillars as large as 3m in circumference. It is definitely one of its kind heritage monument. Although, blackened with age, its intricate carvings, the lacquered pillars and gilded cool interiors are still resplendent in beauty. Saigon too has many monasteries and pagodas. Rebuilt and renovated over the centuries, some of the pagodas on the Saigon hills, date back to the 14th century. Amrapura also boasts of the longest surviving teak wood bridge in the world. Although rickety, this 150 year old and 1.2 km long bridge connects villages along the lagoons and islands on the Irrawady and is still used by pedestrians and cyclists.
Mingun is 11kms upstream of Mandalay, on the opposite bank of the Irrawady. Had it not been for the 200 year old Mingun Pagoda, this sleepy village wouldn’t stand a chance in history’s memory. The Pagoda is most certainly one of the most amazing architectural remains in Myanmar. It’s huge. Reportedly, the massive earthquake in 1838 reduced its height to half. Or else the pagoda would have been the largest in the world. The remaining half itself looks formidable, with gaping cracks cutting across its `all brick’ edifice. I thoroughly enjoyed my bullock cart rides to the pagodas, along the vast alluvial plains of this village.
But, it was sailing across the Irrawady to reach Mingun, which will remain my most memorable experience about Myanmar. I have this penchant for crossing arterial rivers like Irrawady, which cuts across one or several countries. The quiet solitary ride on the upper deck of the motorized boat, watching the Mingun Pagoda, rise like an isolated hill on the flat banks in the horizon, will always remain afresh in my memory. Every river is a lifeline. And rivers like the Irrawady, are indeed so. Starting at its two main tributaries, Rivers Mihika and the Mallika in the northern states, the Irrawady cuts across the entire length of Burma. The agrarian economy and the teakwood trade of British Burma, was completely dependent on this. The river was the most convenient mode of transportation for massive loads of teakwood from the forested upper reaches of Myanmar, to the docks at Yangon. There are references to how river Irrawady had more wood in the water than water itself!!
Unfortunately, I couldn’t make it to the 4000 and more monuments at Pagan, further north of Mandalay. That’s because I didn’t want to rush Pagan. I wanted a week long stay just in Pagan to explore the `Golden Era’ architectural remains. “Maybe sometime soon”, said Ameena, as we rounded off our trip at one of the many popular tea shop restaurants. And yes, there was still so much more to see and learn of contemporary Myanmar in Mandalay.
Ammu's and her new school
ammu started attending school in our village on the 4th.its a short three month stint, before she moves to a `city' school. she likes it. its a local neighbourhood school. she's treated like a `special case'. no uniform, no textbooks, no homework for ammu. while the other kidz are burdened with all the above!!! yesterday, she came home worried and towards bedtime she was crying. she finally told me about the `big long stick' that all teachers in the kindergarten have and which they keep banging on the table and threaten to beat up naughty children. i had to go to school and speak to the class teacher, and principal. according to them `local' kidz are `wild' and need to be `tamed'. isnt it funny, rather unfair, our first lessons in life is to `fear'. fear teachers, fear parents, fear god.... and expect to to have `mind without fear, and the head is held high'......... no wonder `awakening' is super slow!!!......
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