Mandalay,
Bagan, Yenangyaung and Yangon (or Rangoon) in Myanmar
(or Burma)
We
thought it would be easy to get a visa in Singapore. We applied
for the application via internet, received a number, the forms
and a time slot for 8:00 in the morning three days ahead. The young,
beautiful and charming lady at the counter looked at us and asked:
“Isn't there a Myanmar Embassy in your country?” There is,
but if you want to travel during the cold and dry season starting in
November, it could take a few weeks, before you get your passport
back. Bad luck, if your flight takes off before. The embassy in
Singapore only hands out visas to people living there permanently.
We
spend two days in Bangkok, obtain visas without any problem and fly
into Mandalay.
If
you think there are a lot of pagodas and temples in Thailand, you
have not been to Myanmar. Do you want to improve your karma and live
a better life next time round – build a pagoda, become a monk,
donate money and food or simply buy thin gold leaves and stick
them onto the next buddha.
We hear they scraped tons of gold off
the statues recently – but we cannot find out what happened to it.
The famous Buddha in Mandalay still carries his precious coat – 6
inches thick around hips and waist. Women are not allowed near him,
they have to watch from a distance. Men climb onto the narrow base
and apply the gold on the body risking to be pushed down two metres
by others. It is Sunday and very busy.
Before
we get to the Buddha statues in the centre of the temples, we follow
hordes of visitors pushing themselves through long alleys with stalls
on both sides. I often think of Jesus driving the merchants out of
the temple in Jerusalem – he did not get that far East!
Sorry,
Buddha statues do not appeal to me that much, whether gold plated,
painted or simply marbleous – standing up, sitting or declining.
Dressing them (maybe because of the cold season?) does not help
either, although the frocks in my opinion are prettier than the
statues themselves.
As
we cannot decide to get up early and miss breakfast, we also miss the
sunrise at
U
Bein Bridge, the longest teak bridge in the world. We miss the monks
crossing it, a pretty scene photographed against the sun, to be seen
in all the guide books about Myanmar. Arriving late on a Sunday has
the advantage that the bridge is empty of tourists and full of local
people visiting it – how wonderful and spectacular. Families,
groups of girls and boys, young lovers – they are all there,
finding the sight of us equally exciting as we enjoy theirs. We
exchange Mingalaba all the way, smile and laugh.
The Burmese are
the friendliest and most gentle people we have ever met. We walk
slowly as this bridge is eight metres above the water, hardly three
metres wide, and has no railing. The planks are by no means regular.
Most of them are frightfully old, lots of them have been nailed onto
the teak later to cover the gaps and are therefore a few centimetres
higher.
The
monks have all gone, they are probably all at the monastery nearby,
where thousands of tourists watch 1.200 monks, most of them young
boys or even kids, line up to receive food and eat what they have
collected begging in a huge open hall on the compound. We do not get
it! What are we, the tourists, doing here?
We
talk to Myanmar people who describe monks a parasites. It is often
the poorest of the poor who are pushed to donate. During the
light festival – full moon, beginning of November, we stay with
Eric at Lei Thar Gone (see previous post). During night (and day) it
is difficult to catch some sleep. Constant music blares from
aching loudspeakers, artists sing and play, comedy shows and
theatre performances all through the night until the break of dawn.
Not sleeping, we can see light in all the villages below and a
constant flow of people going to and coming back from the temples in
and around town. The sounds come from several temples around Lei Thar
Gone's island of peace. At first we imagine the loudest temple only a
couple of hundred metres away – mistake, it is on the Hill next to
us! The sound machines must be enormous. All days long during the
festive week those loudspeakers announce endless lists of names of
those who donated, to remind the ones who haven't to do so. To
encourage people and give an additional incentive, lottery slips are
sold at the temples.
Despite
these critical remarks about the obscurities of Buddhism it is
fascinating to experience this devotion – was it not our South
American Pope who said: “There is nothing wrong with religious
faith, it is the Church which has to change!”
Fascinating
was the boat trip on this mighty river between Mandalay and Bagan,
with views of hundreds of pagodas on the Sagaing Hills and all along
the river. It is like watching a film of rural Myanmar for ten hours
– it does not get boring: villages, little towns, individuals
houses and huts, people working on fields, women doing their washing
in the river, little fishing boats, ships carrying logs of wood and
other goods, ferries and every now and then a boat with tourist. It
is so peaceful, calm and relaxing.
The
hotel informs us the boat would leave the jetty at 6:30 am. The taxi
picks us up at 5:45 and drives through the nearly empty city. We
drive through thick clouds of dust – women are sweeping the roads.
Myanmar looks tidy and well kept despite the poverty – also due to
sweeping. It is still pitch black, we can hardly make out the ship.
And we are an hour early! At the jetty local business is booming,
women offering fresh fruits and all sorts of sweets, biscuits, chips
and other junk food, carefully wrapped by multinational companies,
contributing to a growing plastic waste problem. We carry our
styrofoam breakfast boxes provided by the hotel and enjoy its
contents sitting on small plastic chairs on the dimly lit jetty –
early morning mosquitoes having a go at us.
We
love the architecture of most temples and even more of the pagodas
(maybe because we cannot go inside, but have to climb them instead –
beautiful views). Visiting Bagan with its 3.000 ancient buildings is
a must, do not miss it, it has to be seen to be believed. We spent
several days there wandering, cycling and horse carting – enjoying
the place in total amazement.
For rest and enlightenment in
between we found the garden restaurant and bar of the Thande Hotel in
Old Bagan, not under the Bodhi Tree, but under the huge and shady
acacia, right on the bank of the Ayeryarwaddy.
Because
of the main holiday season, we have problems booking a hotel in Bagan
and a flight to Yangon. Bookings are not accepted unless you pay on
the spot. We are running out of cash as ATM are rare in this still
young holiday destination Myanmar. One has to carry wads of cash.
300.000 Kyats (EUR 240), the maximum we get out of the machine
(credit cards only!!!), is supplied in brand new notes of 5.000 Ks =>
a pack of 60 notes. Also accepted are US$ notes, providing they are
brand new and definitely have not been folded before. Even better
hotels sometimes will not take credit cards. So unless you do not
want to carry bank loads of Ks into remote corners of the country,
unspoiled US$ come in handy.
Our
plane to Yangon is operated by Mandalay Air. Our travel guides
regards all Myanmar Airlines as not quite up to standard – amongst
them Mandalay Air is the worst. We survive the 70 minute
flight with one of those ancient turbo-props.
Yangon
is big, six million people live there. Do not go there first, because
the outstanding Shwedagon Pagoda on a hill just outside the city
centre might spoil the fascination visiting all its smaller sisters
all over the country, even that of Shwezigon in Bagan. The ninetynine
metre high building in sunset and all lit up later on and all through
the night, makes our hearts jump. We soon ignore the masses of
temples around it and only remember that some of them where so full
of buddha statues of all sizes, that at first we mistook them for
showrooms selling them!
The
city is bustling, the markets are full of stalls and people, narrow
and absolutely splendid. Used to highly sterile butcher's and
fishmonger's, we would probably become vegetarians, but still buy
at the markets if we lived in town.
Thank
you Myanmar for a lovely holiday, your friendliness and thousands of
smiles. May you develop slowly and not make the mistakes of so
many other countries. The temptations of mass tourism and money are
strong, please resist them as long as you can.