Random Bits
I’ve been taking more photos than I have been writing, but I want to share some random thoughts, along with photos of some of the lovely places we have been in this incredibly picturesque country.
Spring
It’s been wonderful to see some of the fields that surround Paro and Pangbisa, where the law school is, turning green with the spring rains and warmer weather. We do a lot of walking through the outskirts of Paro town, and it’s so nice to see people out planting in the fields. Often women, planting rice. There is not yet much in the way of spring vegetables in the markets, but there is lots of wonderful freshly-harvested asparagus. We have been happily living on asparagus for the last few weeks since the harvest has become more plentiful. It's been a very welcome addition to our diet.
Dzongkha
This language sounds wholly unfamiliar to me. I think by the time we first went to Cambodia, I had heard a lot of Khmer already, so it was not impossible to start picking up words and phrases the more time I spent there. But Dzongka is so unfamiliar to me that I have a hard time hearing specific sounds and groupings of letters. So I mostly just listen to the rhythm of it, but I have learned a few things. Kuzuzangpo is hello, and you can amend it with the honorific la, which is just a word of respect (much like bong in Khmer, for my Cambodian friends), so the more respectful hello is kuzuzangpola. Thank you is kadenchey, or kadencheyla. I’ve also learned that ama is mother, and apa is father. I was told that the matriarch of the animal rescue project we visited, which is run by an amazing European couple, is known as “dog mother”, or rochiama, which helped me figure out that rochi is Dzongka for “dog”. Probably one of the more useful words to know after hello and thank you.
Dzongkha and Tibetan are very similar, and many of the Buddhist texts in the temples and monasteries are in Tibetan. I’ve been told that if you know one language you can easily pick up the other. I just don't know either.
The Randomness of Global Development
In a country which had no paved roads until the 1960s, and first got TV and the internet in 1992, there has been a lot of technological catching up, and I am surprised when I come across highly developed technology. I think it has as much to do with what other countries think Bhutan needs to have, or what help Bhutan asks other countries for, and what they will pay for. So sometimes we come across very weird contradictory processes that keep my head exploding. Like the biometric fingerprinting at Immigration that is similar to what is done in the US, in the midst of a convoluted process that relies on hand-written pieces of paper being carried from office to office, from floor to floor, and goodness knows what happens if you lose one of those papers. Or mBob (mobile Bank of Bhutan), the very sophisticated app that nearly every merchant uses for transactions, even taxi drivers and market stalls, while doing business at the bank itself depends on carbon copies and glue sticks. I was told that the mBoB came into existence in response to Covid, and it’s the perfect response to the desire to eliminate contact, but why stop there?
The SDF
Bhutan controls tourism through the use of a Sustainable Development Fee, which is a daily fee that visitors pay to both help fund the tourism industry and limit the numbers, and types, of tourists. In tourist season, which we are now in, the fee is $250 USD/day. Which means a week-long trip costs an additional $1,750 on top of plane fare and all of the expenses of traveling around. Before Covid the SDF was lower, and you were required to buy a tour package, but all meals hotels guides transport etc. were included. You can still book a tour, which many people do, but you have to pay the more expensive SDF on top of that.
But apparently you are still expected to have a guide if you are a foreigner. Because we are working and have work permits, we don’t have to pay the SDF, but we are always asked “where is your guide” whenever we go anywhere that charges a visitor fee, as many of the temples and parks do. We say, “we don’t have a guide, we live here, we work at the Royal Law School (as if that should mean something)” and pull out our hard-won work permits, which draw puzzled looks without fail. The guard at the entry gate will look at the card, ask us what it is, we explain, they will stare at it some more, then say they have to call a supervisor. The supervisor comes, we go through the same thing, they get on the phone, maybe someone else comes out, we stand around some more, and eventually they let us pay the foreigners fee and let us in.
We have debates about whether this is about not wanting us to get away with not having to pay the SDF, or not paying to hire a guide, or whether it is as much about control. This is a very regimented country - neither of us has written about that very much yet - so sometimes it is unclear what processes are about control for the sake of control, or unwillingness to take responsibility for making a decision to let the chillips (foreigners) into a controlled place, or just obeisance to hierarchy since that is what has been the controlling structure of the country for so long and what most people are used to and comfortable with.
Our work visas also restrict our travel around the country - to go anywhere outside of the Paro district, where we live and work, and the Thimphu district, which is the capital, we need a pass. This involves getting a letter from the dean of the law school granting us permission, and then having someone take the letter and copies of our visas and passports to some office in Thimphu and getting a letter that grants us permission to travel. Then when we pass into a different district, we have to stop at the immigration checkpoint and get the letter stamped; on return we hand the letter over to immigration. Makes spontaneous day trips nearly impossible.
There is so much more to tell, and plenty more to show, but I'll stop here for now.
Thank you for this! Love the photos. They help me visualize my wonder and put your adventure in perspective. You look like a couple of twenty somethings enjoying spring travel. Wish you everything well! Sue P
ReplyDeleteWhat, you mean we're not?? Thanks for your kind words xoxo
DeleteOh! those skies! Love, Chris
ReplyDeleteLove your random musings. And the PHOTOS! (esp the one of you two - good to see your smiling faces.) And the scenery. Amazing place.
ReplyDelete-Jackie
Kuzuzangpola, Dori and Jay! Stunning photos and fascinating commentary. Every place, it seems, has its own special bundle of contradictions. I have just completed a trial that sidelined me from many pleasures, so I am looking forward to now reading your earlier dispatches. Keep them coming! This is Chuck Throckmorton, I cannot for the life of me figure out what constitutes a "valid url" for purposes of "de-anonmyzing."
ReplyDeleteKadenchey la! Congrats on finishing your trial, now you can go back to playing pickle ball and reading Dr. Seuss to the kiddos :)
DeleteI love the stories and the photos and seeing how buildings are constructed, but I don't think I would like it ten feet from my home. I hope your next quarters are quiet,
ReplyDelete