Thursday, May 10, 2007

Whole Lhasa Love

After dealing with endless travel obstacles for two weeks, we found ourselves elated to be finally commencing our much-anticipated trip to Tibet. After changing planes in Chengdu, we began a spectacularly-scenic and not-especially-bumpy northwestern flight over the cloudpiercing Himalayas. In a little over two hours, we made groundfall on the Tibetan plateau, some 3,650 meters (about 12,000 feet) above sea level.

As we deplaned from our aircraft, we immediately felt the palpable effects of the altitude. Slowly ambling toward Lhasa’s lone baggage carousel, we felt as if we were bearing twenty-pound weights around each of our ankles. Nevertheless, clear sunny skies and temperate weather greeted our arrival, and we were pleasantly surprised to discover our smiling Tibetan guide, Phuntsok, standing in the arrivals hall with a discreet placard in hand that simply read “Banerjee.” After enduring three months of signs bearing “Murthy,” Kaberi took it as an auspicious sign of good things to come.

During the one-hour ride to our hotel, Phuntsok shared his background with us and provided a quick orientation to Tibet. Born and raised in Lhasa, Tibet’s capital and most populous city, he had worked as a tour guide for 20 years. He counted among his clients Uma Thurman’s father, a long-time Tibetphile who gave both of his daughters Buddhist names. Phuntsok spoke matter-of-factly, and without emotion or judgment, almost always leaving us to fill in the blanks for ourselves during the conversation.

Over the course of the drive, we inferred that in an effort to more rapidly assimilate Tibet (officially, a special administrative district) into the mainland, the Chinese government was compelling ethnic Han Chinese villagers to relocate to Tibet. As a result of these efforts, Tibetans were now a distinct minority in Lhasa. In a further effort to control foreign impressions of Tibet (again, our takeaway, not Phuntsok’s), the Chinese government was delicensing Tibetan tour guides and replacing them with their Chinese counterparts. Today, Tibet’s tourist economy disproportionately boasted Chinese tour guides and drivers.

Learning all of this did not endear the Chinese government to us, and made us realize that a candid blog entry on the matter would need to wait until we were out of China. We were also enormously thankful to have found an endangered species of sorts, a native Tibetan tour guide (although we do not begrudge the rank-and-file Chinese settlers in Tibet, many or all of whom are just trying to make a better life for themselves and their families).

Riveted by the conversation and the passing scenery of towering, distant sand-colored peaks reflecting in modest indigo streams, we found that the hourlong ride to Lhasa flew by. The Chinese government was rapidly upgrading Tibet’s infrastructure (earthmovers and dumptrucks were seemingly omnipresent) to the mainland’s standards, and the new airport road which at one point tunneled smoothly through a rather sizeable mountain reflected formidable Chinese engineering prowess. As Lhasa neared, Phuntsok pointed out several examples of houses rebuilt in traditional Tibetan flatroof style and we caught our first glimpse of Tibet’s official animal mascot, the yak (which appeared at first blush to resemble a fuzzy water buffalo).

Making our way into Lhasa, it was difficult to distinguish the city from any other Chinese urban outpost. The wide, main thoroughfare was flanked by commercial establishments catering to a Chinese sensibility including boldly-advertised Chinese restaurants, clothing shops and electronics stalls. The sight led Vik to quietly whisper that the Chinese would invariably rule the world, but they would preside over a much cheesier one. Only upon turning down a small, cramped alley leading to our “boutique” hotel did authentic Tibet introduce itself. The smell of yak butter and incense assaulted us as Phuntsok escorted us around one corner and then another full of staring and weathered Tibetan faces.

We had chosen the hotel, the House of Shambhala, based on lavish praise from the New York Times travel section and the NPR website (two sources which provide an unambiguous window into Kaberi’s political persuasion). Situated in the old section of the city known as the Jokhang, the hotel boasted an expansive roofdeck with clear views of not only the proximate street life, but also the prominent mountaintops encircling Lhasa on all sides.

We spent our first afternoon adjusting to the altitude by drinking (on our Beijing friend Werner’s recommendation) copious amounts of hot ginger water and moving around slowly and deliberately. We soon found ourselves shocked and dismayed to discover that the mere act of climbing up three flights of stairs to the rooftop restaurant was the basis for a near hospitalization. Huffing and puffing, with our fast-beating hearts in our throats, we were forced to come to terms with the notion that we were essentially spending the next several days conducting our lives as if we were on top of Mt. Hood.

The next morning, Phuntsok met us with tickets in hand to see the Potala Palace, the Dalai Lama’s former residence, at exactly 10:30 am. As we approached the distinctive structure high atop a central hilltop, we saw masses of Tibetan pilgrims either prostrating themselves before the building or rotating clockwise Tibetan prayer wheels in their right hands. Due to the political sensitivity (pictures of the current Dalai Lama – the 14th of the line – are prohibited in Tibet), admission to the palace was strictly regulated by the Chinese government, which exactly specified both an admission time and a departure time not to exceed one hour therafter. With Phuntsok’s expert guidance, we managed to tour the palace in a cool 59 minutes. This was no small feet, considering the excruciating several-hundred step climb up to the main entrance.

Unable to take pictures inside the Red Palace (the ceremonial wing) and the White Palace (the residential wing), we focused on the experience itself. As we walked from one dimly-lit, but elaborately-colorful room to another, we were exposed to the rich symbolism of Tibetan Buddhism. As conveniently self-described Indians (our U.S. passports were neatly tucked away out of sight), we were charmed by several Tibetan priests who, upon asking Phuntsok where we were from, would smile at us warmly and proclaim India as a good friend to Tibet (by way of context, after cleverly evading capture by the Chinese in 1959, the 14th Dalai Lama was granted refuge by India in Dharamsala, a town located in the northeastern state of Uttaranchal).

Feeling a responsibility to preserve the warm feelings, we always took care to respond to the priests by respectfully clasping our hands together in the traditional Indian namaste pose. As our tour progressed, it was also quite clear that Tibetans shared a spiritual connection with their southwest neighbor, with several prominent Buddhist teachers (potentially including Buddha himself) emigrating north from India. The act of walking through the home of generations of Dalai Lamas with the knowledge that the 14th Dalai Lama hasn’t been allowed to return there in nearly 50 years made us both sad and angry.

After leaving the Potala Palace, we made a beeline to Lhasa’s outskirts to see the Drepung Monastery before it closed in the early afternoon. Founded in 1416, Drepung once housed over 10,000 monks. After a tractor ride up the monastery’s winding entrance road, we saw Tibetan monks of all ages in their distinctive red attire. We were particularly amused by a couple of young monks who chose to pair their robes with Nike sandals.

Making our way through the monastery complex, we saw the large kitchen where the monks cook (with ample amounts of ghee butter on hand) as well as dark, cramped living quarters. Moving along, we were particularly struck by the beauty of the main prayer area which was adorned with colorful silk banners hanging from the ceiling. We then made our way to the repository for the Tibetan texts, which do not represent complete sets of works, but, rather, only what monks and loyal believers could save from destruction by the Chinese.

Our final stop of the day was at the Jokhang Temple, namesake of the oldest Lhasa district, and the holiest of all temples in Tibetan Buddhism. Our late afternoon arrival (designed to afford us with a few hours to recuperate from the dizzying effects of our otherwise-ordinary physical activity from earlier in the day), translated into sighting fewer prostrating devotees than at daybreak, leaving Kaberi to return on subsequent mornings to take more pictures. At Jokhang, we were disappointed to learn that all of the images and idols had been recreated in the recent years because the originals had been destroyed by the Chinese during Mao’s deplorable Cultural Revolution.

As our first full day in Tibet came to a close, we had a chance to reflect on the previous hours. While we appreciated the scale, grandeur and cultural significance of each of these three Lhasa landmarks that we had visited, we were most struck by the persistent faith and devotion of the Tibetan people in the face of such considerable adversity. It was hard not to be humbled by their spirit and perseverance.













Tuesday, May 8, 2007

Beijing Redux

After docking in the smoggy Chinese metropolis of Chongqing (by some accounts, the most populous city in the world with a reputed 36 million+ residents) early the next day, we took a brief, but harried, cab ride to the local bus terminal. From Chongqing, we made our way five hours southwest by bus to the Sichuan provincial capital of Chengdu, famed for its pandas and spicy regional cuisine.

Upon arriving in Chengdu, we spent the entire afternoon furiously calling local travel agencies in a last-ditch effort to obtain a Tibetan entry visa. After a few thankless hours on the phone, it soon became apparent that the local travel agents were using the present circumstances as an opportunity to gouge foreign visitors. At that point, Kaberi suggested that we simply return to Beijing where our hotel owner friend Shauna was likely to have some local influence and expertise, particularly in the travel agent area. After conferring with Shauna via phone, we summarily booked a flight back to Beijing 30 hours hence.

We had planned to get up early the next morning to visit the Panda Reserve located 45 minutes away. Our plans were sidetracked, however, when Kaberi came down with a nasty and incapacitating stomach bug. Convinced that she had contracted food poisoning from an otherwise forgettable noodle lunch a few hours earlier, Kaberi spent a miserable, sleepless night and day commuting to the aft-located porcelain goddess. After being sedated with a cocktail of Dayquil and Tylenol PM, Kaberi was ushered onto the flight to Beijing. Once in Beijing, she collapsed in a heap at the Cote Cour SL hotel, our newfound home-away-from-home, leaving Vik and Shauna to tend to Tibetan visa and trip logistics (which they managed successfully only because of Shauna). Meanwhile, Kaberi recuperated in style, as Shauna had greeted us with wine, tasty Chinese snacks and an upgrade to a roomy suite with high ceilings and a small terrace.

When she awoke the next morning, highly-motivated and with her mind set on traipsing to the city’s antique fair, Kaberi had to be physically restrained by Shauna and Vik. Resigned to her temporary house arrest, Kaberi settled back into bed to watch reruns of Alias on the hotel TV and Grey's Anatomy on the trusty Slingbox. By nightfall, she had largely recovered, allowing us to pay a visit to yet another of Shauna’s divine restaurant recommendations, the laughably-misnamed My Humble House.

With many Beijingites out of town for the Labor Day holiday (known locally as Golden Week), the city was relatively-quiet, allowing us to hightail it to downtown in record time and have the swanky restaurant completely to ourselves. Blessed with prime seating directly before an indoor water pond, we enjoyed a scrumptious Asian meal of tuna tartare, white miso cod and spicy noodles (from which Kaberi respectfully excused herself). After dinner, we strode to the nearby Oriental Center shopping mall to see the newly-released Spiderman 3. Halfway through the flick, and no doubt the result of having to stomach Kirsten Dunst’s witless performance, Vik started to feel ill. In an hour, we were both in bed, having self-administered generous doses of NyQuil and very much hoping for the best.

The following morning, Kaberi felt close to normal but Vik found himself much worse for wear. While administering a much-needed doseage of DayQuil, we remembered that we needed to start taking anti-altitude sickness pills in advance of our impending Tibet trip. After doubly medicating, Kaberi exchanged places with Vik by hanging out with Shauna and attending to the final details of the Tibet tour. In the interim, Vik stayed in bed and caught up on episodes of Lost and 24 on the Slingbox. Kaberi made her way over to Beijing’s weekend antique fair and refrained from buying anything, so as to not sap Vik’s strength further. From the antique fair, Kaberi moved on to the Na-Li district, boasting one girlie shop after another, where her best purchasing effort was thwarted by the availability of 0 and 2-sized clothing.Vik roused himself in the afternoon, and we had an early dinner at Alameda, an upscale Brazilian restaurant in a hip eastern Beijing neighborhood.

Upon returning to the hotel, we discovered that we had inadvertently taken Kaberi's anti-inflamatory medication earlier in the day. To compensate for Kaberi’s oversight, Vik gave us a double dose of the anti-altitude sickness tablets while concurrently administering a long rant on carelessness and irresponsibility. Exhausted and grumpy, we both fell asleep early at about 9 p.m. The next morning, we were surprised to be awakened by Michael, the assistant manager, who was calling to make sure that we were okay. Puzzled by his concern, we wearily peered at the room clock and discovered that it was almost noon! Apparently, anti-altitude medication is also a strong sedative that is never, under any circumstances, supposed to administered in a double dose. After being informed of this, Vik was astonishingly silent on the matter.

Despite the late start, the day ended up being relatively fulfilling. We first ventured over to Silk Road where Vik used his bargaining skills to secure us inexpensive t-shirts to replace thoroughly worn-out predecessors. When we returned to the hotel a few hours later, we found Shauna and her travel agent waiting for us with Tibetan entry permits, plane tickets and a confirmed trip itinerary in hand. That evening, we introduced Shauna to a fellow Beijingite, Werner, who we had befriended on our Yangtze River cruise. Shauna identified another amazing dinner venue, and the four of us enjoyed an pleasant and authentic Chinese meal at an open-air courtyard table.

Before we left the next day, Shauna told us that we felt like family to her. As we bid Beijing farewell for the second time in two weeks, the feeling for us was very much mutual. Our much-anticipated journey to Tibet was next on the agenda.

Friday, May 4, 2007

Start The Presses

Management is pleased to report that our work stoppage is over and all efforts by any employee or employees to form a union have been summarily quashed. We would also like to make clear in the strongest terms that the timing of the work stoppage exactly correlating with our fabulous two-week holiday in Bali are entirely coincidental.

Thursday, May 3, 2007

An Update

Given the explosion of interest in this blog (total readership now stands at 5), an explanation of our virtual absence is long overdue. Truth be told, we are experiencing a work stoppage. Vik has formed the Hindu Blog Editors Guild (Local 99) to collectively bargain and raise awareness of the deplorable working conditions (forced unpaid overtime, etc.) to which he is currently being subjected. Management and labor are currently at an impasse. We are now in the process of conducting lengthy negotiations, with Mssr. Jason Heeney serving as a somewhat-but-not-really impartial arbitrator. These meetings are being held in Bali. We hope to come to an amicable resolution in short order so that we can assume full operations. We apologize for any inconvenience this has caused the five of you (actually, make that four of you since Jason is here with us).