Thursday, July 30, 2015

Where do I come from?




I posted this quote on facebook a few days back as it struck very closely to where I see myself.  As most know I was born in New Zealand and lived there for 55 years.

A few years ago I moved to Australia and then on to Bangladesh teaching Physics at different secondary schools.In the last year I have visited Australia, New Zealand, Bangladesh, China, Malaysia, Thailand, Vietnam, Cambodia, Turkey, Italy, France, Spain and England.  An exceptional travel year made extraordinary but the illness of my wife.  (See earlier blogs if interested!)

I travel on a New Zealand passport but that is really the limit of any real association with that country, outside of my wonderful daughters, a few family members and some excellent friendships.  My money is invested in Australia, I work in Bangladesh and I feel most at ease in South East Asia.  I have excellent friendships in New Zealand, Australia, Bangladesh, Cambodia, Vietnam, Thailand, England and other places as well (my disclaimer in case I missed you).  I am not involved in any electoral process and my only affiliations are with world wide organisations in education and community.

Yes, I do support the All Blacks when they play but I also support the Rabbitohs in the NRL and of course Chelsea in the English League.  I follow baseball a little and the Yankees benefit from a small amount of support.

Hence Krishnamurti quote above.  I don't particularly like Krishnamurti as a philosopher/guru.  When a philosopher becomes so self-absorbed he considers himself (or others do) a guru then it is time to look elsewhere.  I think it was Clive James who said "It takes a thousand followers to support one guru burbling on."  But this quote makes sense.  All of the nastiness in the world appears to come from people taking entrenched positions based around nationalism, xenophobia, or religion.  If those three were removed from the world it would be a much nicer place.

I have become interested in the growing movement of internationalism.  My fear of course is it has the potential to become an oppressive movement utilised by the elite to make capital from the poor (goodness me, I sound like Marx).  But the idea of nations working for the good of all humanity rather than just their own nation sounds wonderfully pure.

After all a New Zealander is not better than a Bangladeshi or a Cambodian just because he was born in New Zealand!

So my answer to where do I come from is now going to be "the third planet from the sun".

Thursday, July 16, 2015

Cambodia

The Mekong
I have just spent 8 days in Cambodia and have loved it.  While I expected the majesty of Angkor Wat and the sadness of The Killing Fields both were more extreme than expected.
What I did not expect was the friendliness of the people, the value for money, the excitement of both Siem Reap and Phnom Penh and the constant delight of being on the street.  Cambodia is a third world country but having lived in Bangladesh (another third world country) the gulf between the two in the day to day (and night) is huge.

Firstly the amazing!
Monks at lunch
Angkor Wat
Angkor Wat is without doubt incredible and should be on everyone's bucket list.  I saw the first temple and thought that's pretty good.  But it was only a fraction of the whole temple complex.  It is immense and I understand why there are multi-day passes.  Away from the main areas there are some very peaceful and reflective areas with few people.  The Buddhist influence in the temple is obvious and in many parts it is still a living monastery.  There were monks doing blessings and monks having lunch.  Young monks playing games and a baptism of sorts taking place.  Especially away from the package tour group areas it is a very quiet and thoughtful place.  There are also very little signage and a lot of freedom of where you can go.  Can't imagine that in other countries.
Royal Palace
Royal Palace
Other amazing places were the Buddhist temples with their amazing colour and statues.  The people were most welcoming and friendly into their space.  The Royal Palace in Phnom Penh is also an incredible place.  The National Museum also has wonderful examples of Khmer statues and has amazing figurines of Buddha.

Angkor, Anchor or Cambodia Beer

The food is also amazing though the insects and shellfish were a bit much but the local beer is good!
Lunch
Shell fish for eating













The really, really, sad!
The Killing Fields.  This has really affected me!  I have found the dichotomy between such wonderfully friendly people and the most horrific crimes hard to reconcile.  I have tried talking to some local Cambodians.  To them it is in the past.  Sad, but in the past.  None of them were born then.  It is difficult to meet older Cambodians but less than 40 years old they are easy to meet.  There seems to be  line drawn in history around that time.
The Killing Fields
I know the activities of the Khmer Rouge (Pol Pot) were affected by what was happening in the world and South East Asia at the time.  The carpet bombing by US forces produced disarray and disaffection at the time, the Maoist 'experiment' through the cultural revolution in China was seen as a powerful revolutionary and idealistic process, the internal anti-royalist view was dominant in many areas, the encroachment across borders by other nations fermenting nationalism.  All of these were significant!

But to kill a quarter of the population!

Liberation for the Cambodian people from the Pol Pot came from the the Vietnamese.  They seemed to have been very beneficent in their treatment of the Cambodians and were really liberators.  The western powers, including England, Australia, New Zealand, USA and most of Europe recognized Pol Pot as the legitimate rulers for several decades.  Even though the atrocities were known!

For Cambodia it still goes on!  There are trials happening now.  The present government has leaders who were part of the Khmer Rouge.

Buddha images are revered!
If the wonderful people of Cambodia can do this then it is possible anywhere.  We all need to think about protecting ourselves, society and the world from similar events.

Buddha at Angkor Wat
So Cambodia is weird!

  • Beautiful people - friendly and fun loving!
  • In eight days I never met a negative local person.
  • They are so positive even though they have a tough life.
  • Wonderful history
  • Religiously powerful - nearly everyone is a Buddhist!
But!  Why, why, why!  The Killing Fields still haunt!


I have to come back to this place!

Monday, July 6, 2015

Mission for Kimi

The puppet
A few days back I got a request via facebook from one of the drama teachers at my school.  It went like this
"let me know if you can help me pick up a few lightweight shadow puppets for MYP theatre classes. I saw them last time we were there and thought I'd see them somewhere else on our trip and never did"
My only clues on this were that they were around 250 Baht only seen at Wat Arun and I got a picture sent to me.
Many people may have replied no with an expletive added.  But as y'all know when a Southern Belle requests you to do something the only correct response is "Yes Ma'am".
So my Mission was to travel across Bangkok in 35 degrees temperature with humidity approaching 3000% to get some damn puppets!  Oh I would get to visit Wat Arun as well.

Sky Train
Sky Train inside
So yesterday I journeyed to Wat Arun to find the puppets.  The journey was via two Sky Train journeys, a trip on the river and a ferry across the river.  The return was the same.
The Sky Train is an impressive way of travelling across central Bangkok.  The air conditioning is super cool and things always work well.  From the outside it looks perfect.  From the inside it can be a little crowded.




The boat journey was similar.  A pleasant journey up the Chao Phraya river with a breeze blowing to keep you cool sounds great.  Reality slightly different.
Only seat left
River barge





River boats




Hotel boat

The Chao Phraya river goes right through the centre of Bangkok and is a major transportation link.  There are multiple passenger boats, many riverside hotels have their own boats, small freight boats and huge barges being towed down river.  Accidents do happen!  An accident in 1995 was due to one of the floating piers becoming overloaded with people and sinking into the mud.  The amount of boat traffic is huge.



Monks at the temple
Main temple with scaffold
Wat Arun is impressive.  It is one of the major landmarks in Bangkok.  It has at various times been a Buddhist and Hindu temple.  But with Thailand being overwhelmingly Buddhist the temple is seen as one of the major Buddhist temples in Bangkok.  There are always monks present.  At present the temple is being restored, with the porcelain that has been damaged being replaced and the entire temple complex being painted by hand.  This I would imagine will take years.
Painting the temple





A spire

Buddha in Wat Arun
Detail of painting


Hence much of the temple complex was closed and scaffolding surrounded much of the temple including the central spire.  There are a number of souvenir shops where I presumed those puppets would be found.

The temple is very well cared for with immaculate gardens.  

Souvenir shops - Yay!
Maybe a wall hanging
So after going through the temples I went looking for the puppets.  So after going down rows of souvenir shops (oh the excitement!), I could not locate any puppets.
 I even tried to ask someone which brought out the wonderful Thai smile of bemusement.  I found all those expected souvenir things but no puppets.


A buddha?
Some of these maybe



Lunch
The kitchen
So completely defeated I traveled back across the river and sat at a roadside stall for lunch.  Lunch was chicken and galangal in coconut soup with steamed rice.  Cost 90 Baht.  Invoice coming your way, Kimi.
Boat ride back
 The journey in return was the same only with more people as both the river boats and Sky Train are transport for school children who were now out of school for the day!

Few Singha beers have tasted as nice!