The cooks were busy, but without interrupting their work managed to smile for a quick photo. I tried to imagine the scene in 2001 when the restaurant was given three hours notice that former U.S. President Bill Clinton, and his 130-strong entourage, was going to have lunch at Koto. As an added challenge, the VIP group had to be fed during the 25 minutes allotted in their tight schedule. Clinton asked his trainee waiter, 18 year-old Phung Van Hai, what was good. The president, known for his love affair with food, ordered grilled vegetables and humus in a baguette, washed down with a banana milkshake, a café latte and a Diet Coke. Clinton left satisfied; Phung Van Hai now has a steady job at the Hanoi Sheraton.
Chapter 18
SEARCHING FOR ORWELL
A backwater town in Upper Burma was the site for Orwell’s Burmese Days, a book that takes no prisoners
KATHA, Burma
There are worse travel strategies than to visit places with evocative names.
There’s Timbuktu, Congo and Okavango in Africa; and Salvador de Bahia, Darien and Patagonia in Latin America, names which purr with history and poetry.
But Asia’s resonant place names beckon to me above all others. There’s Sumatra, Java and Borneo; Malacca, Vientiane, and Makassar; Kelantan, Kathmandu and Ayudhya. Not to mention the rivers: Ganges and Yangtze, Mahakam and Mekong. And the one I was headed towards: Ayeyarwaddy.
My destination was Katha, a small town on the Ayeyarwaddy (Irrawaddy) which has achieved a modicum of recognition. It was here, between 1926 and 1927, that a British policemen named Eric Blair spent six months as one of 90 British police officers in Burma. Eric Blair, who subsequently took the pen name George Orwell, based his 1934 novel Burmese Days on a fictionalized version of Katha that he dubbed Kyauktada (which is derived from the name of a district in Rangoon).
I started my journey by flying to the northern town of Myitkyina, then driving six hours to the river town of Bhamo where I boarded a “speedboat”, a 60-passenger vessel ten-meters wide and some 40 meters long, for the six-hour journey downriver to Katha.
The arrival of the boat in Katha is one of the high points of the day for small traders, porters and trishaw drivers, who politely (this is Burma, after all, not Egypt) vie for the custom of arriving travelers.
The river here is about a kilometer wide, placid, with exposed sandbanks that can hinder big boat traffic during the dry season.
After clambering up the dirt river bank I was relieved to see that there wasn’t a taxi in sight. Just a couple of horse carts and a handful of trishaws – not the mechanized tuk-tuks of Bangkok but old fashioned man-pedaled three-wheelers, calmly waiting in front of a large Buddhist temple.
There has been a mini-tourist boom in Katha in recent years, largely comprised of folks looking for Orwell. The Ayeyarwaddy Guest House, which seems to get most of the foreign visitors, receives about 200 travelers during the peak season, according to the owner, Soe Than Shwe. Reflecting this trend – or perhaps leading it, one never knows – the 2005 edition of the Lonely Planet guide, which in the edition of 2000 did not even mention Katha, currently devotes two pages to the town.
The tourist boomlet was partly spurred by Emma Larkin’s 2004 book Secret Histories: Finding George Orwell in a Burmese Teashop. In her book, Larkin (a pseudonym) makes the argument that Burmese Days “was the beginning of Orwell’s uncanny and prophetic trilogy [Burmese Days, Animal Farm and Nineteen Eighty-Four] which told the history of present-day Burma.”
Her argument goes like this. “Burmese Days…chronicles the country’s period under British colonialism. Not long after Burma became independent from Britain in 1948, a military dictator sealed off the country from the outside world, launched ‘The Burmese Way to Socialism’, and turned Burma into one of the poorest countries in Asia. The same story is told in Orwell’s Animal Farm…. Finally, in Nineteen Eighty-Four, Orwell’s description of a horrifying and soulless dystopia paints a chillingly accurate picture of Burma today, a country ruled by one of the world’s most brutal and tenacious dictatorships.”
Regardless of whether her theory holds water, it is certainly intriguing; no doubt Orwell would have recognized the “Newspeak” – like mentality behind a 1989 Burmese government statement that “truth is true only within a certain period of time. What was truth once may no longer be truth…”
To a casual visitor, the oppression of Burma’s military-run State Peace and Development Council (which indeed could be a parody name derived from Nineteen Eighty-Four) is not apparent. But if people in Burma decide to trust you, and you give them an opening, they will first look over their shoulder to see who else might be listening, shake their heads and say something like “we pray for a change, but what can we do?” Indeed, one young man in a teashop in Katha, much like Larkin’s friends, unhesitatingly declared, not terribly sotto voce, that “we have no human rights, no power. All the power is held by” – here he patted his shoulder to indicate military epaulettes – “the men with the stars.”
Regardless of the politics of Burma, Katha is a delightful place to spend a few days and visit Orwell-sites.
The tennis court features in Burmese Days as a place that most of the British characters avoided whenever possible – they were too enervated with heat and gin (“the cement of Empire”, Orwell writes) to undertake any exercise. Foreign visitors to Katha several years ago wrote about the disgraceful state of the court. Today the court has been renamed the River View Tennis Club, and it boasts an all-weather surface, a new net, and local players enthusiastically working on their backhands.
About a hundred meters behind the River View Tennis Club, towards the river, but not on it (as the book’s fictional geography has it), sits the old English club, whose building and goings-on served as the model for the stubbornly all-white Kyauktada Club, the fictional focal point of Burmese Days. Indeed, so much of the book’s action takes place in and around the Kyauktada Club that the book could easily be transformed into a stage play, with the Club serving as the main set.
Orwell decorated his fictional Kyauktada Club with “a forlorn ‘library’ of five hundred mildewed novels and…a mangy billiard-table.” The “unhomelike” lounge was adorned with dusty skulls of sambhur deer. A frequent sound was colonial whinging when the ice ran out. It was a tatty gin-soaked-refuge for heat-rashed Brits who had little better to do than dream about “home”, and reminisce about the good old days when one could send a misbehaving servant to the jail with a note reading, “Please give the bearer fifteen lashes.” Orwell said of the Club that “People thoroughly on each other’s nerves meet night after night in a desperate effort to forget the boredom of their own existence…. The Club is not alone a place of enjoyment, it is a symbol of racial solidarity.”
On the afternoon I visited, in the lower part of the building, two part-time teachers were giving after-school tuition to young students. One teacher was writing a lesson in English verb tenses on the blackboard – “U Win [clean] his compound yesterday”, while a second teacher was putting her young charges through surprisingly complex algebra challenges.
After class the English teacher introduced himself; U Pe Aung, whose day job is manager of the agricultural cooperative which now has ownership of the building. On the large main floor U Pe Aung gave me a tour. The teak floor is undoubtedly the same as decades past, but the walls have been stuccoed and whitewashed, and the tiled roof has been replaced by tin. On one of the seven empty desks stood an ancient Olympia typewriter, and on another rested a Gestetner 145, a stencil duplicating machine from the 1960s.
“Yes, we get quite a few visitors,” U Pe Aung said. He estimates that some 4,000 tourists visit Katha during the period November–February, a number that sounds high, but which he says includes people who are cruising on one of the luxury live-aboard boats plying the Ayeyarwaddy which make a quick stop in the town-that-Orwell-made-famous.
I can only sightsee for so long, and asked whether there was a golf course nearby.
Soe Than Shwe, the owner of t
he Ayeyarwaddy Guest House, picked me up in a meticulously-maintained World War II-era Willys jeep, one of the few cars in town, and took me to Katha’s Ayar Shweli Golf Club. “Orwell didn’t play golf,” Shoe Than Shwe asserted, probably accurately, since the game is not mentioned in Orwell’s various Burmese writings based on his five years in the country.
He added “Orwell didn’t like Burma,” a declaration shared by many of the relatively few Burmese who have actually read Burmese Days.
Emma Larkin heard similar criticisms and defended Orwell to one of her friends who said that Orwell was anti-Burmese: Orwell’s ability, Larkin wrote, “was able to voice what he saw as the truth no matter how painful or awkward it might be. In Burmese Days, Orwell was simply painting a picture of how he saw things in Burma. It is not that Orwell disliked Burma or the Burmese, I said: it was the system he disliked. He was condemning a political framework that made good men – both Burmese and British – do bad things.”
Indeed, the book is cynical about virtually all of the virtue-challenged players. Larkin recounts the list of “repellent” characters: “Flory’s Burmese mistress is sluttish and desperate, his servant is obsequious, and a corrupt Burmese magistrate attempts to scheme and blackmail his way into the British-only club,” which is a key plot line in the novel.
Orwell is, refreshingly, an equal-opportunity misanthrope. The British in Burmese Days are desperately lonely, borderline alcoholics, backbiting, racist prigs, who mouth platitudes about bringing civilization to the savages but whose real sentiment lies closer to that of one character who raves: “No natives in this Club!…we’ve ruined the Empire. This country’s only rotten with sedition because we’ve been too soft with them. The only possible policy is to treat ‘em like the dirt they are.” The unlovable British in the book are angry to be in Upper Burma, realizing that they were stuck in the humid backwater because they had no home left in England.
Orwell’s fictional Kyauktada had a population of 4,000; today’s Katha has about 80,000. It seems a prosperous town, spread for several kilometers along the west bank of the river. Money comes in from trading in sugar cane, beans, peanuts and timber. The markets are full and animated, and dozens of shops, many of them charming wooden buildings, sell everything from homemade cowbells to brightly packaged Chinese rice cookers and DVD players.
I would have enjoyed another day or two in Katha, but the ferry was leaving for another mellifluously-named town where Blair/Orwell lived – Mandalay, some 320 kilometers to the south.
SARAWAK, Malaysia.
A grandfather and his granddaughter of the Iban tribe face an uncertain future. Their challenges include deforestation, changing cultural patterns, and a government which is reluctant to recognize traditional land rights.
Photo: Paul Sochaczewski
IV.
BRUNO AND THE BLOWPIPES
NATURE CONSERVATION
Chapter 1
BRUNO AND THE BLOWPIPES
Who will determine the future of Sarawak’s isolated Penan?
BAREO, Sarawak, Malaysia
Bruno Manser has disappeared in Borneo and is feared dead.
Manser, 47, was last seen in May 2000 in the isolated village of Bareo in the Malaysian state of Sarawak, close to the border with Indonesia. The controversial Swiss had illegally entered Sarawak to rejoin his tribal friends the Penan, with whom Manser had spent some six years fighting the timber operators that natives claim are destroying their forest home.
I’ve met Manser several times. We are not close, but I respect his understanding of the realpolitik that is at the heart of most fights between native peoples and paternalistic governments.
He achieved worldwide recognition from 1984-1990 when he lived in the rainforest with the semi-nomadic Penan of Sarawak. Malaysian officials saw him as a fugitive and a provocateur and called him an “enemy of the state number one.” Manser constantly avoided arrest with the panache of a Swiss Robin Hood, zigging and zagging through the forest when police were on his trail, even once escaping after he had been captured. When he left Sarawak, through Brunei, he returned to Switzerland to create the non-profit Bruno Manser Foundation. In 1999 he returned to Sarawak and, in a made-for-media stunt, paraglided onto the front lawn of Sarawak Chief Minister Tan Sri Abdul Taib Mahmud. Bruno Manser, like other campaigners, say ultimate responsibility for the poor treatment the state’s indigenous people receive is due to Taib Mahmud’s attitudes and links to timber companies. Bruno Manser offered Taib Mahmud a truce in exchange for the government creating a biosphere reserve for the Penan. The Swiss man with the impish grin and John Lennon glasses was quickly deported.
Manser has arguably been the most potent catalyst for media coverage of the fight by the Penan, and other Sarawak natives, to protect their forests against what they say are insensitive governments and greedy timber barons.
Defensive Sarawak government officials note that 95 percent of the state’s substantial oil revenue goes to federal coffers, leaving Sarawak little choice but to earn money from natural products, of which timber is by far the most profitable. “Where are we to get money except through the forest?” asks Dato James Wong, former Sarawak Minister of tourism and local government and one of the state’s leading timber concessionaires.
Malaysia is the world’s leading exporter, by far, of tropical logs, tropical sawn wood, and tropical veneer, and second, after Indonesia, a far larger country, of tropical plywood.
According to Bruno Manser Foundation, more than 70 percent of Sarawak’s rainforest has been cut during the past 20 years. Today Malaysian companies run timber operations and plywood mills as far afield as Guyana, Suriname, Papua New Guinea and the Solomon Islands according to a report by Nigel Sizer of World Resources Institute and Dominiek Plouvier, an independent forestry consultant.
I served in the United States Peace Corps in Sarawak, not too far from where Manser has disappeared. For my job (and pleasure) I travelled to isolated longhouses, occasionally running into Penan, who appeared like a breath of wind, shared some food, gratefully accepted some tobacco or salt, and then went about their business.
During those admittedly idyllic days in the late 1960s we would throw a circular fishing net into rivers and come up with more than enough fish for dinner. We would go out at night to hunt wild boar and more often than not return with a hairy pig on our shoulders. The rivers were clean, and jungle gibbons hooted their morning call behind the longhouses.
On subsequent trips back to Sarawak I was angry by the desolation of the landscape by timber operators, and heard complaints from dozens of people in dozens of longhouses. Their homes were being destroyed and they weren’t getting anything for it. Fishing and hunting was terrible. The rivers were dangerous places, muddy and filled with debris from timber operations. I visited Penans who had been resettled into government-built longhouses, ugly structures with standard government issue architecture similar to army barracks or timber camp housing. Tin roofs amplified the heat, making the residences uninhabitable during the day. The Penan I saw were listless, with vacant eyes. True, they now had access to basic health care and simple schools, but it seemed as if all the energy had been sucked from their thin frames.
When I discussed these issues with Malaysian officials I got a common defensive response, basically, “don’t tell us what to do, we know what’s best for the Penan and the forests.”
“Look at this map,” notes Chris Elliott, director of the WWF-World Wide Fund for Nature Forests for Life Campaign. He points to an amorphous shaped illustration published in the Bruno Manser Foundation newsletter that indicates the territory of nomadic Penan and remaining virgin forest in Sarawak. “The foreigners were telling the people in Sarawak what to do and how to do it,” Elliott said. “Bruno backed the Sarawak authorities into a corner by telling them what they should do. Even the slightest whiff of Western lecturing will put them on the defensive,” he adds, noting that you’ll find similar conflicts and reactions in places like British Columbia in Canad
a, parts of Australia, Indonesia and Brazil.
Perhaps it was a sloppy tactic – using western style confrontation to get policy changes in an Asian country.
Certainly, Malaysian officials resent being told what to do by pesky foreigners. During the height of Manser’s long Sarawak escapade in the 1980s, Malaysia’s Prime Minister Mahathir bin Mohamed had this testy exchange of correspondence with young Darrell Abercrombie from Surrey, England.
Using his best penmanship, the boy wrote:
“I am 10 years old and when I am older I hope to study animals in the tropical rain forests. But if you let the lumber companys [sic] carry on there will not be any left. And millions of animals will die. Do you think that is right just so one rich man gets another million pounds or more. I think it is disgraceful.”
The prime minister replied on August 15, 1987:
“Dear Darrell, It is disgraceful that you should be used by adults for the purpose of trying to shame us because of our extraction of timber from our forests.
“For the information of the adults who use you I would like to say that it is not a question of one rich man making a million pounds.…
“The timber industry helps hundreds of thousands of poor people in Malaysia. Are they supposed to remain poor because you want to study tropical animals?….
“When the British ruled Malaysia they burnt millions of acres of Malaysian forests so that they could plant rubber…Millions of animals died because of the burning. Malaysians got nothing from the felling of the timber. In addition when the rubber was sold practically all the profit was taken to England. What your father’s fathers did was indeed disgraceful.
The Sultan and the Mermaid Queen Page 13