“Rudyard Kipling’s words in
‘Letters From the East’ still resonate:
‘This is Burma, and it will be quite unlike any land you know about.’
”
***
A rooster crows. Tropical
birds whoop from towering palms. I wipe the sleepiness from my eyes,
awaiting a taxi that will take me to the airport. I’m headed for Upper
Burma. Mingalarbar, as the local greeting goes; it’s almost morning.
Across the dark waters of Lake Inya, I seea bell-shaped golden image through a veil of fog. Shwedagon Pagoda, Burma’s most sacred site, seems to be the only light burning in Rangoon,a long-isolated city of 4 million that is just emerging from decades of military rule.
Aung San Suu Kyi lives on this lakefront, too. But the Lady, as the Burmese Nobel laureate and democracy activist is known here, isn’t at her family’s walled residential compound this morning. Instead, she’s on her first trip to the United States, five months after being electedto her country’s parliament in April.
I hear the taxi rattling up the rutted lane and heave my backpack onto my shoulder. I’m used to taking Rangoon taxis. Because although most travelers stayed away from Burma (officially, Myanmar) since the Lady called for a tourism boycott in 1996, I came anyway — four times over 13 years.
I found that, in an age of globalization in which it seems every major Asian capital has become a faceless forest of skyscrapers, Rudyard Kipling’s words in “Letters From the East” still resonate: “This is Burma, and it will be quite unlike any land you know about.”
I’ve grown to admire this complex and isolated country at the strategic crossroads of India, China and Thailand for its saturation of culture and historical treasures. I’ve learned to respect the Burmese I’ve met, from artists to taxi drivers to a childhood friend of the Lady, for their genuine warmth and stubborn sense of self in the face of adversity.
So I’m not surprised when my taxi driver strikes up a conversation. Mr. Tun, a scholarly man with owlish glasses, speaks English — like many in this former British colony, whose university was once among the finest in Southeast Asia. He asks me about my time in Rangoon.
I tell him I can barely believe the changes since my last trip, two years earlier. How this time around I’d joked with the immigration agent at the airport, instead of cowering. How I’d seen security guards watching Suu Kyi shaking hands with Burmese exiles in the United States on a big-screen television when I arrived.
As we veer onto the tree-fringed airport avenue, Mr. Tun turns to me. “Now people are open and free,” he says, smiling broadly. “There’s no shadow behind us.”
***
It’s an understatement to say that shadows still lurk, especially in the conflict-ridden border areas. But to a tourist, Burma is, like the U.S. Embassy in Rangoon, once again open for business. According to the Asian Development Bank, tourism has the potential to become the country’s biggest source of revenue, providing income for 50,000 people.
So though I’d ignored its boycott call in the past, I was relieved when Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy issued new guidelines in 2011 promoting “responsible tourism.”
The guidelines stated that “the NLD would welcome visitors who are keen to promote the welfare of the common people and the conservation of the environment and to acquire an insight into the cultural, political and social life of the country.” I understood that these guidelines would help tourist dollars trickle down to local communities, among the most underserved in Asia.
Walking onto the tarmac among a small herd of picture-snapping fellow passengers, I had a purpose. On this trip, I planned to atone for the travel “sins” of my past. Acquiring fresh insight? Check. Promoting the welfare of the common people? Check. Steering my cash away from corrupt cronies by living as locally as possible? Check and check. NLD’s responsible-tourism challenge? Accepted.
As the propellers on the jet bound for Burma’s historic heartland began to whirl, I vowed to travel like the Lady.
***
The Irrawaddy River came
into focus first, its monsoon-muddied waters carving a broad and
meandering channel through low sandstone hills. Then, as we approached
our destination, hundreds of castlelike structures came into relief,
clinging to the riverbank or scattered among flat scrubland leached dry
by the sun and millennia of human habitation.
My hefty seatmate, part of a boisterous
Chinese tour group, leaned over my lap to take a video from the plane’s
window. I could hardly blame him. This was Bagan — Burma’s Rome, if you
will — a 16-square-mile historic site where the first Burmese king and
his merit-seeking courtiers began transforming their newly adopted
Theravada Buddhist faith into spectacular brick and mortar in the 11th
century.
***
“There’s no government-funded health care here,” Lin said as we rumbled and bounced toward the village market square, where the two-year-old clinic is located. We were perched on a narrow wooden bench in one of the company’s restored 1940s-era Chevrolet buses, used to ferry clients to hot-air balloon rides. “When I got married,” he continued, “my family gave 50,000 kyat to this clinic. And now I give 1,000 kyat per month from my salary.”
Ten minutes later, inspired by Lin’s generosity, I handed a crisp $100 bill to the clinic nurse. And for the first time in this largely cash-only country I was certain of where the entire amount was going. Htin Agwin, a 30-year-old doctor, told me that he and his volunteer staff of six serve 45 to 50 patients a day, five days a week, free of charge. “The most common problems,” he said, “are hypertension and malnutrition.” Looking at the list of common ailments he’d treated recently, I also noticed “snake bite.”
With 20 patients still waiting on the steps outside at 5 p.m., I decided not to take up more of the doctor’s time. To quote the Lady, as far as “promoting the welfare of the common people” is concerned, “there is so much to be done.” Through considered giving, a tourist can do something, at least.
***
“Taunggyi helped bring me good fortune with my boat business,” he said. When I asked him how, he told me, “If you make the same prayer and give the same donation at the four pagodas built by King Anawrahta, your prayer will come true.”
“What are those pagodas?” I quickly asked.
“Taunggyi, Lawkananda, Shwezigon and Tuyin Taung,” he said, cutting the motor so we could enjoy the view. “When I bought my first boat 12 years ago, I gave 500 kyat to each temple. Last year, I gave 6,000.”
He fired up the outboard motor to return to shore, telling me that he often ferries pilgrims to the Taunggyi side. “Most people do Taunggyi in the early morning, before it gets too hot,” he said.
The sun had set as we putted by the Shwezigon, its golden reflection hovering above the smooth indigo water. Like everyone everywhere, I had a wish or two worth praying for.
***
The next morning, I bolted awake. I’d hoped to sleep in, but my watch read 5:30 a.m. I knew why I was up, though. The Lady would certainly consider a pilgrimage as both “acquiring cultural and social insight” and “promoting the common good.”
Throwing on my clothes, I grabbed my bike and stumbled across the dirt courtyard, where the night guard slept next to the company buses. When I pedaled past the crossroad leading to the jetty at 6 a.m., Ko Min Lwin was already there, waiting for his first customer. He agreed to take me to the mountaintop.
Fifteen minutes later, we approached the river’s opposite bank. A rickety wooden jetty extended from a mangrove. Branches and ropy vines dipped into the murky shallows. We stopped for a noodle breakfast at a shanty where Ko Min Lwin arranged to rent one of the patrons’ beat-up Yamahas.
Spinning up a dirt road, we began the ascent, me clutching the motorcycle seat’s back rail and Ko Min Lwin driving on the left — one of Burma’s British colonial legacies. After 10 jarring minutes lacing up through hamlets built of gray brick into the bluffy terrain, past thatched-roof huts and women carrying bundles of branches on their heads, we hit smooth pavement as the road cleared. We’d reached the top.
We climbed up the tunnel of stairs through the temple complex to the stupa platform, hearing low harmonious intonations, like a Buddhist Gregorian chant. There was a room next to me full of people praying. Soon I’d be praying, too. But first I must donate.
I’d decided to give 1,000 kyat to each temple. Buddhist finances seem well organized, with a donation desk and official receipts bearing a blurry full-color stupa image and elaborate, scrolling Burmese script. Ko Min Lwin helped me translate the receipt.
“You can earmark your donation for gold-leaf restoration, electricity or general maintenance,” he told me.
I chose gold leaf.
As we climbed the final steps to the stupa, he asked, “What day are you?”
In Burmese cosmology, the day of week on which you were born is important because it determines which of the seven small shrines around the stupa will receive your prayers.
“I’m Tuesday,” I replied. Really, I had no idea. I just hoped the Great-Above wouldn’t mind.
Kneeling at the Tuesday shrine, sending up my prayer, I also hoped the G.A. would forgive my clumsy genuflection sequencing: folded hands to forehead and to heart, palms on floor, forehead to floor, up and repeat. Although my knees were creaky, my intention was sincere.
***
My knees limbered up as I
neared the end of the pilgrimage. Lawkananda and Shwezigon — the middle
two on my four-pagoda itinerary — were in town, so I checked them off
easily. But I needed a car and guide to take me to Tuyin Taung, atop a
small mountain a few miles from Bagan. Not exactly a tourist hot spot.
source: The Washington Post
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/liveblog/wp/2013/02/15/traveling-like-the-lady-suu-kyis-election-to-parliament-has-prompted-burma-to-open-up/
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