Friday, March 31, 2017

Seven adjectives for Southeast Asia

Ted. With only four weeks experience in just three countries I have presumptuously come up with seven ways to describe this part of the world:

1. Ancient.  OK – I have heard of ancient China and India but not the many kingdoms that dominated this region such as the Khmer and the Javanese. And they had huge cities when most people in Europe were huddled in dirty little villages. 



2. Hot. I’m talking “dog days of August in Georgia” hot. Luxury hotels, the nicer restaurants and malls are air conditioned but we don’t go there. When we get hungry (which is not as often in this heat) we look for a café with an open table, under a fan…that is turning. Then we run back to our hotel and hop in the pool. But before you feel too sorry for us, we do insist on hotels with a/c in the room. 











3. Wet. Rivers, lakes, oceans, irrigation canals, paddies…and rain. Water is everywhere.  Need I mention the humidity? But surprisingly few mosquitos!




4. Verdant. As one might expect, every unpaved surface is teeming with plant life. Trees, vines, bushes, grasses and incredible flowers are everywhere.






5. Wild. They have elephants, bears, leopards, rhinoceroses, monkeys, apes, snakes, crocodiles, giant lizards.  Darned near any kind of animal you can think of and a bunch you haven’t (google pangolin).

6. Complicated. Each country is a vast swirl of languages, cultures, religions, foods and traditions.  There are minority peoples everywhere; Hindu minorities in Malaysia, Muslim minorities in Thailand. There are Chinese in every city and indigenous peoples in the countryside. And no, they don’t always play nicely together. Countries born out of the post WWII nationalist movements are still trying to create their national identities. It reminds me of something an Italian patriot said upon the unification of Italy in the 19th century; “We have made Italy. Now we must make Italians.”

7. Friendly.  Everyone smiles at us! And they go out of their way to speak to us - in English. I’m not just talking about waiters – children in the streets, husbands walking with their wives, tuk tuk drivers all greet us as we pass. They just seem thrilled that people from other countries are visiting their town. The only people we occasionally see scowling are European tourists. Maybe they’re hot!




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