Monthly Archives

June 2011

Glimpse into North Korea

June 25, 2011

The waiver in front of me was ominous.

It said that I understood I was entering into “a hostile area with possibility of injury or death as a direct result of enemy action … The United Nations Command, the United States of America and the Republic of Korea cannot guarantee the safety of visitors and may not be held accountable in the event of a hostile enemy act.”

After scribbling my name at the bottom, I was off into some of the most dangerous territory in the world.

North Korea.

 

My tour took me through the demilitarized zone, Camp Bonifas, Panmunjom and the joint security area. I didn’t venture deep into the country — I only had access to the no man’s land that straddles North and South Korea.

There’s a dress code that all visitors must follow. “Business casual,” said the woman on the phone, as if I was headed off to a party with crackers and cheese balls. Visitors are not allowed to wear military-looking clothes, see-through garments, athletic clothing, faded jeans, short skirts or anything that displayed any affection for the United States. For instance, the New York part of an “I heart NY” shirt would have to be covered with duct tape.

The dress code extended to shoes. I could not wear slippers, flip flops or anything else that lacked straps. According to my guide, straps were a necessity in the event I should have to run for my life.

“We are still at war,” she reminded me. “We’re just taking a break.”

Our convoy passed through several checkpoints, including fences swathed in razor wire, punctuated with guard posts every 100-200 meters. The river here is filled with spikes and nets. My guide said she often sees floating dead bodies.

“You know, if we see a North Korean drowning, we aren’t allowed to help them,” my guide said. I asked how she can distinguish between a drowning North Korean from a South Korean.

“We just know,” she sniffed.

 

The road is outfitted with the occasional “tank trap,” what looks like a concrete overpass over the highway. These are actually filled with explosives. During an attack the trap is detonated, collapsing over the road and effectively cutting off transportation.

First stop on the tour was Camp Bonifas. Some 400 soldiers are stationed here, including about 50 from the U.S. In exchange for their work, they can enjoy use of what Sports Illustrated has called the world’s most dangerous golf course. Supposedly at least one shot has exploded a land mine.

I was accompanied by a UN security guard. He was there for my protection, of course, but he was also there to enforce the rules. No hand gestures. No pointing. No waving. No photography. No venturing out on my own.

It took everything I had to restrain myself and not run around in circles like a pointing, gesturing, waving tasmanian devil.

At that point I was taken to the border, which is straddled by conference buildings that have doors on each side of the border. It reminded me of those hotel rooms where you share a bathroom with someone on the other side. When North Korea is inside, they lock the South Korea door. And when South Korea is inside, they lock out the North Koreans. God knows what’ll happen if someone forgets to unlock the door for the other.

That concrete slab on the ground out there is the border.

 

Soldiers surrounded the buildings, facing off in the world’s greatest staring contest. On the other side, a group of North Korean tourists took photos of us taking photos of them.

Nearby were two villages, one north, one south, separated by fields of land mines. About 200 people live in the southern village and nearby farmland. They don’t pay taxes, they receive hefty benefits from the government, and they are paid handsomely for the ginseng and crops they produce. They are also protected by guards and cannot walk anywhere at night.

The northern village is known as Propaganda Village, although I’m sure the North Koreans call it something else. The buildings are tall, sleek high-rises. They are also completely empty, allegedly constructed to create an illusion of progress and modernity. Until a few years ago, loudspeakers blasted messages that proclaimed Kim Jong-Il to be the greatest leader of all time.

The two countries also have rival flag poles. Apparently the South Korean flag pole was 100 meters high, which chapped North Korea’s ego. In retaliation, North Korea constructed a 160-meter tall tower, thus dwarfing the South Korean flag pole. (When will they learn size doesn’t matter?)

My tour included some incredibly grim sites, like the Bridge of No Return, which was used for prisoner exchanges during the Korean War, and the place where two U.S. Army officers were axed to death while they were trimming a poplar tree.

 

In the rare moments when I was allowed out of the bus, I was instructed to leave all of my possessions behind, including my passport, which made me incredibly uncomfortable. I was only allowed to travel with a pocket full of money, probably because my tour ended at the Korea demilitarized zone souvenir shop, which featured an array of pricey North Korean souvenirs.

 

In the end, the border tour had the disturbing quality of a North Korean amusement park, shuffled from one line to another, wrangled into a cafe for lunch, then dumped at a gift shop. Borderline weirdness — but with a gun pointed at me.

Probably the most powerful part of my tour was when it was over, and a North Korean defector was on my bus. She told me that she was smuggled over the border to China where she was sold into marriage — and slavery. She hid for three years in China, constantly afraid that she would be discovered and deported back to North Korea. She gave birth to a daughter there but had to leave her behind during her escape. Then the woman walked through Vietnam into Cambodia, eventually making her way into South Korea.

She has a job now and is saving up money, plotting a way to get her daughter back and help the rest of her family defect to South Korea.

Obviously that’s the biggest casualty of this war: Entire families divided by razor wire and concrete slabs, separated by soldiers who stare at each other all day long.

Bowled over in Laos

June 20, 2011

Laos has this informal curfew that is more of an irritant than a strict law.

I never saw police enforcing the rule. However, all the bars close up shop early. Bartenders tip your bottled beer into a plastic cup and shove you out the door around 11 p.m. Generally everybody is off the streets by midnight.

That’s when the taxi drivers creep up to you on the street corners and whisper, “Bowling alley?”

My friends and I thought it was secret code for “opium den.” And so we jumped into a taxi, of course, headed straight into the unknown.

About 20 minutes later, the taxi screeched to a halt in front of a dark building.

A bowling alley.

Now this is right up my alley.

 

This, it turns out, was the epicenter of Laotian nightlife.

There were two drink selections on the menu. Beer was 20,000 kip for a large bottle — nearly double the price of what you’d pay at a bar during normal hours. But a full liter of Lao whiskey was just 30,000 kip, which is less than $4. Our choice was a no-brainer.

Then my friends Sam, Rose, Nick and I started throwing around gutter balls.

King pin.

 

The funny thing about bowling in Laos is that nobody wears the questionably stylish shoes — which is, in my opinion, half the fun of bowling. We simply shucked our flip flops and skidded around in our bare feet.

Shoes to spare.

 

We stayed out until 2 a.m., though the bowling alley keeps rocking until 4 a.m.

I don’t even remember who won. (Perhaps my mind was curdled from all the whiskey?) But bowling in Lunag Prabang ranks at the top of my list for wacky fun in Southeast Asia — breaking the law, Dude-style.

 

Luang Prabang is fabu-Laos!

June 17, 2011

During this trip, there have been a few places that crept into my bones and became another home. Dahab, Egypt. Kigali, Rwanda. Every bit of Cambodia. India.

Now I can add Luang Prabang, Laos, to that list.

With a strong cafe culture, a distinctive arts scene and a laid-back vibe, the city feels like the New Orleans of Southeast Asia. There’s also water, stunning architecture and food you won’t find anywhere else.

It’s the kind of place where you want to curl up and die — but first you want to crack open a cold beer, sit on a patio and watch the river flow.

It was love at first sight. See for yourself.

 

Tidings of joy

June 15, 2011

Every morning in Luang Prabang, as earliest dawn winks at the navy-hued sky, monks prowl the neighborhood like an orange-clad street gang.

Their alms bowls are slung over bare shoulders, empty vessels waiting to be filled.

On the road, the devout unfurl bamboo mats and squat on their haunches. Vats of sticky rice are ladled into woven containers. Plates of fruit are arranged.

The monks wag their way down the street, a caterpillar made of robes. The air is electric, but silent. I think the birds even stop chirping in a display of respect.

The people fill the alms bowls with fistfuls of warm sticky rice and bananas the size of thumbs. Along the way, others toss in packages of instant noodles, candy, juice.

The Buddhist monks exist because of what is given to them. They live off these alms, eating only until noon each day, eating only the things that end up in their bowl.

If there are no believers on the pavement, the monks go hungry. But day after day after day, they are always sustained.

The daily ceremony is a perfect symbiotic moment. Where giving and receiving are the same. Where offering becomes accepting. Where everything is one.

 

Snoop smoggy smog

June 12, 2011

I’ve been traveling with two shirts that must be washed by hand. That isn’t a big deal. In addition to regular loads at a laundromat, I end up doing a sink of hand washing every so often anyway.

But Vietnam gave me a nasty surprise.

In Saigon, I set those two shirts to soak in the sink and walked away for a couple minutes. When I came back, it looked like someone had replaced the water with hot cocoa.

Brace yourselves …

Blergh.

 

This is some serious pollution, people.

Even in the dustiest parts of Africa, even after the sweatiest treks in Peru, my clothes were never this filthy. And all I did in Vietnam was simply walk around the city. Yuck.

I’m curious if my clothes are embedded with filth in the U.S. too — but I just never have to see it, thanks to the “delicates” setting on my washing machine.