thoughts on Thailand and socially engaged Buddhism

Six weeks in Siam

Thursday, July 06, 2006

first draft of my paper for the nitze journal

comments appreciated. (I personally find it a bit sappy... what do you think?)



How to Escape Your Nationality


One of the enduring images of my six weeks in Thailand is Ronald McDonald. In Thailand, Ronald looks very much like he does in America, of course: tall, big red shoes, goofy yellow, red and white face paint, pleasant smile. But in Thailand, Ronald does the wai, the bow with hands in a sort of prayer position that Thai people give each other upon meeting. As a westerner first arriving in Thailand, the wai was a strange ritual greeting, a symbol of welcome that I saw Thai women with crystal clear complexions and “traditional” dress doing on billboards on the highway into Bangkok, or flier advertisements offering a reduced rate on a stay in some swanky Phuket hotel. As a westerner who was also a student for two weeks in Thailand, the wai was a symbol of respect to my teachers, the monks and engaged Buddhist spiritual leaders who we met with daily. “It’s like a western handshake,” some American expatriate professors told our class during a miniature orientation to Thai customs in the days leading up to our departure. During my first weeks in Thailand, I grew to enjoy the wai, to understand its proper placement and intention, to realize that it was something to be both given and received, always to be reciprocated, a sign of respect and appreciation. This differed greatly from my impression of the wai as I saw it from the perspective of a western tourist, which I was for another four weeks after the Nitze group left. We had been told that if wai-ed, one should always wai back, and this felt natural after several weeks on my own. But when I arrived in an upscale Bangkok hotel for vacation time with my not-traveling-on-a-shoestring-mother, the wai became something entirely different. Everyone was wai-ing us: the porter, the bell boy, the woman at the reception desk, the maid, the waiter, the man guarding the pool… and as I looked around, I realized no one was wai-ing back.

At first, I tried wai-ing back, glancing around at my fellow Americans in confusion. “What are they thinking? That is so disrespectful!” I commented to my mom in outrage. Didn’t they know that the wai was like a handshake, and not reciprocating was like refusing an offered hand? But I soon realized that the wai meant something different here. In this oasis for Western wealth, the wai was no longer a symbol of respect shared between two people, but the marker of an identity of servitude.

It was not long before other qualities began to take on new meanings. Black hair pulled back tightly with a tropical flower carefully placed in the bun was usually a Thai woman working at hotel reception. Impeccable long sleeved silk clothing (even in killer 95 degree heat) could be a hired driver or doorman. Even a precise knowledge of English began to suggest a place few Thais frequented, a hotel room that cost more for one night than the woman at the front desk made in three weeks.

And the markers of my own identity began to bear down on me as well. Of course, the most obvious indicators--my skin and hair, far too pale and light to have come from southeast asia—had tagged me as a westerner since my arrival at the airport. But now it seemed the external characteristics that I had specifically chosen for myself as a traveler were making me feel more separate from a culture I was really enjoying. My backpackers’s pack, my bathing suit, and my requests for tofu instead of shrimp on my pad thai were only further implications of my western status. I began to look for ways to fit in more, ways to seem less like an American tourist. I refused to buy the ubiquitous thai fisherman pants that every backpacker on Khao San Road wears constantly, and I tried to speak Thai whenever I could, learning pretty well how to haggle in a foreign language. I searched for a sense of authenticity, a place where (for once) it would seem that Thai people were making something for themselves, and not simply to satisfy me, to make me comfortable.

I began to wonder why I had not felt a similar desire to be less of a tourist during my time with the Nitze group, and I quickly realized the reason. When I was with the group and with Ted, our identity as students was clear. To be a student in Thailand seemed to me a far less exploitative identity than to be a tourist. As a student, I was there to learn about the culture, to respect my teachers who, more often than not, were rather ordinary Thai people. And they were the people who had fulfilled my desire to create something that was for them alone, not for me. In the Pathom Asoke community, the stores where we bought herbal medicines and natural health foods were created to serve the community of local people who had made a conscious choice to eschew consumer culture by eating locally grown organic foods and living by the five Buddhist precepts. The village of Bo Nok had opposed the construction of a coal fired power plant because it would be harmful to their traditional local fishing livelihoods, not because it would prevent westerners from visiting their beaches.

Indeed, none of these amazing and inspiring ventures could be found in any of the guidebooks I had been treating as Thailand bibles. Lonely Planet couldn’t teach me anything about the destruction of forests in central Thailand the way a hike up a mountain with a forest monk named Phra Paisal could. And the level of corruption in Thai Buddhism became remarkably clear to me in hearing the story of a nun who took the children she was caring for at a Kanchanaburi temple and started her own orphanage after some of the children were sexually abused by monks at the temple and the abbot refused to do anything about it. It was striking to me how a book that every traveler has can leave so much out. And I was fascinated by the idea that even if I had happened upon one of these places, so much of the history of resistance to oppression could be invisible to me as an ordinary westerner. Without the connections and knowledge of a teacher and translator like Ted Mayer, none of our experiences of a Thailand where people really are interested in something other than the tourist economy would have been possible.

In this setting, I was not a backpacker with money to spend on knick knack elephants and Buddhas. I was a student who recognized the inherent value of the knowledge that Thai people had to give me. And because our relationship was not one governed by economics, the external differences became less meaningful. My nationality and the association of Thainess with servitude were non-existent as I slept beside southern Thai farmers and dried dishes with a forest temple nun. It is these moments of human to human interaction that are some of my favorite memories of my time in Thailand, even better than beautiful southern beaches and golden Bangkok Buddhas.

The image of Ronald McDonald pleasantly wai-ing approaching Thais was, to me, a symbol of the way that globalization, and tourism as a part of it, could turn frighteningly wrong. Sometimes during my six weeks in Thailand, it was much like Sulak Sivaraksa warned us on our first days in the country: people were so concerned with learning how to have that they forgot that the most important thing to learn was how to be. At times it seemed that no one wanted anything more than Ronald, complacently bowing to them as they doled out baht for his American burgers. But my experiences during the Nitze trip taught me that there is another side to everything, that of course Thailand could be a lot more than fast food chains, giant advertising parties in front of glitzy Bangkok malls, and the same tailor shop on every corner. With the right amount of cultural and linguistic knowledge, traveling can be much more than whatever they advertise in the guidebook, and getting off the beaten path can mean a new understanding of what it means to be an American.

Saturday, June 24, 2006

last day in Thailand

Back in Bangkok for the... fifth time! Wow. I've arrived here by pretty much every way you can arrive here: plane, minibus, government bus, and trains from the north and south. My trip yesterday was kind of an adventure. I had bought a joint bus/train ticket from a travel agent in Krabi, which is near the south western coastal town of Ao Nang where I'd been for the last week. But things started to get sketchy around the time we left Krabi.. with the bus company shunting people off into minibuses without telling them what was going on. Then when we got to Surat Thani, the town where some other people's buses were departing from and the town nearest to the train station for my train, the bus company people basically refused to take me to the train station, doing all they could to convince me to take their overnight bus to Bangkok. But... I'd paid 600 baht for the train, which in my experience has been far more comfy for overnight trips than the bus, so I didn't want to take the bus, even if it was free... Eventually I phoned the travel agent who I bought my ticket from and he spoke to the bus people and convinced them to get me a taxi to the train station. I seriously don't know why it was such a big problem to take me there... but apparently it was. So they put me in a "taxi," a car with darkened windows and no taxi meter like almost all the taxis in bangkok.. I think all the other people on the bus (all westerners) were pretty scared for me. And that made me scared for myself, being in this city where there didn't seem to be many foreigners at night in the rain, in this car with darkened windows going who knows where.... but I made it. Thank god. I thanked the driver quite sincerely. I probably should have given him a tip, too..

Then, waiting for my train, there was the cutest puppy I've ever seen. It was fluffy and white and had a really pathetic bark but it would chase around people's feet and grab onto this woman's mop with its teeth and then get lifted off the ground by the woman. It was amazingly cute and hilarious. So I guess that kind of made up for the frightening journey.

Went back to the gigantic Chatuchak weekend market today to pick up some last souveniers. It was great to just be able to wander around. I love markets. And I'm definitely gonna miss thailand. OK, final trip update on those missing few weeks when I get home in... less than 48 hours! It's good to be going home, but I do sort of wish I could stay longer. I got complimented on my thai today when I was buying a necklace, which was cool. My new favorite phrase is "lot dai mai" which means 'can you bring it down?'... the price, that is. It's definitely a good first step in bargaining for anything, but then the people think you can really speak Thai so they start talking to you in Thai... and that's kind of hard, even though I do know all my numbers pretty well.

On the bus to Surat Thani yesterday, I was sitting next to a Texan who had just gotten in to Thailand and was considering staying for a while to try to earn some money teaching English or something.. I taught him a few thai words and tried to give him my extra phrasebook that I never used, but it was too crazy with all the weird bus company people not telling us what was going on. As we were driving into what the texan dubbed "the sketchiest bus station he's ever seen" someone in the bus remarked "all in a day of adventures in asia!" and even though the station was kinda scaring me, that made me pretty sad, to think that I was gonna have to go home the next day.. go home to find a job. Boo! Ah, but the rest of the summer will be great. But.. no worries, I'm definitely coming back here someday. You all should come with me.

Wednesday, June 21, 2006

filling in the blanks

So there are several weeks that passed which have not been immortalized in blog form.. how about I highlight some of the best parts? Ok. Cool.

So I left Pai after a day or two.. it was the chillest place I went on the entire trip, and if I was back in the north again and had time to spare I'd definitely go back and do some day trips from there to hill tribe villages and waterfalls. But I had to go get my visa renewed, and I had heard wonderful things about this boat trip down the mekong river in Laos... so I decided to take the few days I had left before my mom came and do that.

Good decision. I spent a day in a minivan riding across Northern Thailand (from Pai, via Chiang Mai) to Chiang Khong, which is on the Mekong across the border from Laos. I stayed in this really rustic and cool place on the Mekong called Bamboo Guest House or something like that. My room was the second floor single room in a tiny A-frame thatched house.. it was basically an over head lamp (read: exposed light bulb), a hard matress on the floor, a mosquito net, and a fan, but I loved it! It's low season now in Thailand, so I think the owners had taken off for a vacation (the restaurant, overlooking the mekong, was closed) and left some friendly thai women who spoke no english to care for the place. They were sweet, and taught me how to say "snail" after I kept watching the gigantic snails that seemed to be taking over the paths after it got dark. So, for future reference, snail in Thai is "huay"... I think.

I only spent a night in Chiang Khong, which seemed relatively deserted in terms of tourists aside from the dozen or so people who came in on the minivan I was on from Pai/Chiang Mai. That night I wandered a few kilometers down river to a restaurant that lonely planet reccomended (I was the only person there, and I don't think the thai woman making my dinner actually knew what pizza was, but there were great views of the river) and stopping in this cool antiques shop where the owner said I was her first customer that month (I think it was about the 6th of June). The next monring I got up early and took a boat across the river, got my visa stamped in Laos, and met up with an English couple about my age to head to the pier for slow boats going down the Mekong.

The Mekong slow boat experience was both awesomely beautiful and off-puttingly touristed. The views were great.. mountains coming right down the the river, lovely limestone cliffs and caves, little straw and bamboo huts perched on hills, fishermen in canoes and longtails picking up their nets from the edges of the river. It was a long trip though, and I and many of the other westerners I talked to on the boat got the sense that our suspicions about the guesthouse hawkers and ticket salesmen were not exactly unfounded. It was a two day long trip, about eight hours each day, but the people who sold us the tickets downright lied about the amount of time it would take on the second day, and convinced me to get a room before I left on the first day because they told me there wouldn't be anything available otherwise. Of course, there were tons of places to stay in the little village that's the stopping point for all the slow boats, and I wish I would have waited to actually see a room before I picked something out cause the place I stayed was the worst place I've stayed this whole trip.. It was funny too, cause the Lao currency is called the kip, and it's about 10,000 kip to the dollar, but since the kip is super unstable and not worth much everyone also accepts dollars and baht, which is the thai currency. So in Laos, a price on a restaurant menu or at a guest house might be quoted in kip, but you'll probably get your change in baht or dollars. And some places dont take baht, only dollars or kip... so it was always so confusing to pay for anything, and there were a few times in the town on the first night of the slow boat trip when I was sure I was getting ripped off when I would pay in dollars and get my change in baht... but oh well. It was probably only a few bucks in the end, if anything. It was definitely worth it overall.

So the slow boat trip ended in Luang Prabang, which is this gorgeous city in the middle of Laos. It's a UNESCO world herritage site, and has a ton of cool temples and architecture. I hung out with the same English couple I had met coming across the border. We walked around the city, hiked up to this Wat on a hill in the middle to get a sweet view of the river and the valley and the mountains all around us, and had lunch by the river before paying a few bucks to go swimming in the pool of some swanky hotel. Swimming pools are awesome when its as hot as it is here, and the one that day was absolutely essential to my sanity. Luang Prabang had a really good number of nice silk shops, and I bought a beautiful scarf, and would have gotten more except that Luang Prabang also has no ATMs! It took me an hour or so to find a bank. I was planning on staying two nights in Luang Prabang and going all the way from Luange Prabang to Bangkok on the day and night of the 9th to meet my mom on the 10th, but I was convinced by a tour agent to take an overnight bus to Vientiane on the 8th, then an overnight train the next night to Bangkok. That all worked out fine except that I had 12 hours to kill in Vientiane, no bed or room to hang out in, and I was totally exhausted cause I didn't sleep on the bus. yeah, so I spent a good part of the day in a cafe with comfy chairs (I think there was literally one of those in Vientiane, cause I spent most of the day scouring the city for a comfy place to sit) reading The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay. Good book, but kind of a boring city if you are dead tired and just want a place with cushions and a good view of the pedestrians and maybe some vegetarian food.. Ok, I guess that's kind of a lot to ask 3000 miles from home, but... what can I say? It's what I wanted.

So that was my week alone in south east asia. I'll write about all the missing time with my mom next, maybe tomorrow.

Monday, June 19, 2006

is it really sunny?

I just looked over my shoulder and saw that perhaps.. finally! the sun has come out! It's been a day or so since it really stopped raining, or at least was bright out. I'm in Ao Nang, a beach in the south on the Andaman coast that was just supposed to be a transit point to a place we were gonna stay in at Railay Beach... but when we trudged thru the waves to get onto a longtail boat to go over to Railay and got to the hotel there, they didn't have our reservation. Plus, it was kind of a backpacker place anyway, so mom didn't want to stay. So we trudged back thru the waves, back onto the longtail, got soaked in a rainstorm, and arrived back in Ao Nang with nowhere to stay. Thankfully, a policeman with not enough to do (I guess) helped us out.. and now we're at this sweet place a kilometer or so from the beach with amazingly comfy beds and a great view of some limestone cliffs.

Mom leaves tomorrow night, while I'm staying at this hotel for another night. Then I have to find a place for two more nights... and I'm off to Bangkok to head to the states. It's monday night there now, so I will be home in.. five and a half days. I guess I'm glad to be going home, though honestly, I'm not sick of traveling yet. Probably if I had been on my own this whole time since the nitze trip ended I'd be more tired of it, but this vacation with mom has been a great break since we've been staying in nice places and taking taxis and all that stuff I wouldn't have the money to do if I were on my own. Honestly, the most expensive part of coming to Thailand is flying here, and knowing that really makes me want to come back to this area. It's a totally different experience than traveling in Europe because you can do it so cheaply.

Something I've been thinking quite a bit about over the past few weeks is the wya that my experience of Thailand while traveling with the nitze trip was so different than my experience of it while I've been traveling as a tourist. As a tourist, I see so much more the way that an economy based on serving touists alters the Thai identity, automatically equating it with servitude. My sense of this might partially be based on the places where my mom and I have been staying for the past two weeks, where the service is really fantastic for the most part. It is the uniforms, I think, that partly give me the sense that something strange is going on here. Often, Thais who work in nice hotels have these uniforms that are long sleeved and made of silk.. the women wear long skirts... it all looks very Thai, very inspired by traditional Thai dress. And why does that make me uncomfortable? It seems that the "servant" can be identified not by a uniform of any sort, but specifically by his or her Thainess.

More on this later. I really should take advantage of the sun right now. Hope everyone is doing great back home, if anyone's still reading.

Saturday, June 03, 2006

Pai is a pretty sweet town

Supposedly its pronounced more like 'bye' than 'pie' but then.. this morning at the guesthouse in chiang mai I told the owner I wanted to go to Pai ('bye') today and she said 'oh, where you want to go to buy?' Yah, I guess the accent isn't quite working for me. But I did use another phrase out of my arsenal today! A Thai lady serving me my lunch asked me whether I speak thai and I told her "nit noy".. a little bit. Huzzah! Three weeks and I have.. what, maybe five or six phrases?

It's really quite ridiculous how pervasive english is here. Basically wherever I've been there's been someone who speaks enough english to be able to figure out what I'm trying to say and respond. I've only very rarely been forced to take out the phrasebook. It seems a bit frightening, doesn't it? That you can travel all around a place and never actually have to learn the language.. that a country that's never been colonized has such a gigantic foreign influence. Of course, on the study tour, in the places where there were absolutely no english speakers, we had Ted, who translated (interpreted) everything for us. There were multiple three hour stretches of straight interpreting on his part, sometimes in the same day. Pretty amazing considering I had a tough time holding my attention to the speaker for a third of that time. But then, it's hard to be attentive to a language you have no idea how to understand.

Anyway, I was gonna write about Pai, which is here, where I am. Compared to Chiang Mai, it's a wonderful escape; very laid back and full of hippie backpackers and awesome handmade clothes. Great setting, too. It's in this valley between not so tremendously tall green mountains (these ones look totally untouched by loggers, unlike the ones near Phra Paisal's temple in Chaiyapoum). Probably the best part of the day today was the bus ride here. I opted for the cheapo non air conditioned public bus where you can put your window all the way down (or up, as it works here in thailand) and let the wind blow over you. It actually got kind of cold up in the mountains, a really nice change from the sticky balm that you usually get pounded with. And it rained on and off til we got over the mountains and were within sight of Pai, when the sun came out and warmed me up. The four hour trip went by so quick.. it was great to just sit back and watch the forest and mountains go by.

I finished my first book (I bought two) and bought another. I highly reccomend Everything is Illuninated by Jonathon Safran Foer. Very excellently written family history shrouded in hilarious and emotive narration and travels throughout Ukraine. Multiple narratives.. oh, it's great, go pick it up. It was funny, I finished it on the bus today and reading about these villagers in Ukraine who the protagonist was meeting.. he talks about this woman who had never heard of America (the last person on earth who could claim that ignorance, he supposes) and all these others. I couldn't get the idea that he was actually describing thai villagers out of my head. Of course, I know that thailand today is so connected to the rest of the world (not as much in the smallest vilalges, but even the hill tribes have their tourist economies) but I guess it kind of made me realize that people are so similar everywhere.. I could imagine displacing Foer's story to thailand with so few changes to the personalities.

righto. So now I have a new gigantic book to amuse myself, and maybe a day or two here.. then I think I wantot go to Laos to get my visa renewed and take a slow boat trip down the Mekong to Luang Prabang (its supposed to be a great trip).. then back to Bangkok to meet mama and live it up.

check out pictures from the study tour on facebook (Karina Karakulov, and Stephanie Isberg) and Meagn's pics here: http://community.webshots.com/user/megowitz

Thursday, June 01, 2006

alone in the north

Showers are kind of useless here. You shower, then you're nasty 30 minutes later. I've definitely come to appreciate the cold shower, though... those things are amazing. Most of the places I've stayed haven't had bathtubs... there's just a shower nozzle mounted on the wall in the bathroom and a drain on the floor. I guess bathtubs are for the swanky spots?

I'm in Chiang Mai, after some troubles with transportation yesterday... turns out the railroad tracks are washed out from the flooding in central thailand, at least for another week (probably two), so the options to get from Bangkok to here were: 7 hour train ride then wait 3 hours in unknown thai city at 3 am for 4 hour bus ride to Chiang Mai, or 9 hour bus ride overnight, or 60 bucks for a 1 hour plane trip. I opted for qucikness and comfort and expensiveness.... yeah, 60 dollars isn't that much, right? Anyway. I'm here, and Jason and Becca were supposed to arrive this morning and call me, but they haven't yet so... maybe they are still in Bangkok? Who knows. I'll call them after I finish up here.

So Chaing Mai is all right. It seems like the night market is the only thing I really want to do here, though.. and I have to wait for night time to do that. So today I got my laundry done and walked all around and ate some food.. I guess it's lunchtime now, but.. well... I guess more food adventures await me. The city has a lot of Wats (buddhist temples) and, you know, street life, but not like Bangkok, and not enough to keep me involved for too long.

There are tons of places here in Chaing Mai to get trekking tours of the surrounding hill tribe areas. You pay 1600 bhat and they take you to a couple villages and on an elephant ride, and bamboo rafting.... it's all everywhere. Everyone is selling the same trip, its weird. I think I want to go to some of the smaller towns and do trekking from there, more independently, cause all this here, it just feels super commercialized, and I'm not sure how good this kind of trekking really is for the local people, or the environment. Not that any trekking is really great in terms of eco-tourism... but I guess I want to support a more independent touring company.. or some individual who will take me out a bit.

There is definitely a northern influence here, though.. in the clothes and the other things that shops sell, its all much more.. hill tribe crafty--as opposed to mass produced cheap cotton pants and stuff that's everywhere in Bangkok.. I can't believe anyone can do good business there, its all the same in every shop. Yeah, I like the clothes a lot, but I think I'll wait til I'm back here with my mom to buy anything.

Anyway, so I dont think there's much else I want to do here, so maybe I'll move on tomorrow morning. It has been kind fo weird to be by myself.. I can go wherever I want and I'm really not afraid at all.. but there is some loneliness, and I kind of wish I had someone else around to just hang out with. I met a french woman last night on the way into town from the airport, and we ended up staying at the same place and eating dinner together. She seemed a little worried about me, cause I was traveling alone. She said a woman traveling alone to asia was a very un-french thing to do.. anmd that even though she was 34 she hadn't told her father that she was alone! I guess that made me a bit more wary about being alone, here, but I really do feel safe everywhere, and that's saying a lot because I'm not the kind of person who is at ease in cities when I'm not with someone else. I think that Thai people are just really friendly and not scarry or intimidating at all. It also helps that almost anywhere you go you can find someone who speaks a little english, or even a lot of english. But, even so.. I dont think that this city is the place for me to be.. I kind of want to just go somewhere where I can hang out in a hammock and read for a few days... but the city is not that place.

yah, so... that's what's happening here. write me emails!! nitzes, I miss you!

Thursday, May 25, 2006

back to bangkok

So... I thought I didnt really want to come back to Bangkok, but here I am on a free day! I guess part of the pull was the awesome hotel... and then there was this alleged mall with incredibly cheap computer software (all bootlegged). So I came and actually, its been a good day off so far.

We went out for a very late dinner last night at an amazing indian restaurant (so full of delicious spices), then went for a drink at this really strange dingy bar with a circus theme (I don't reccomend getting clown dolls and crappy flourescent lights involved in anyone's inebriating experiences.. it gets a little creepy). Woke up this morning to a relly nice buffet preakfast, and Kevin, Jason, and I took a taxi to this computer mall... whoa. It was nuts! Really, its like an outdoor asian market (crowded and loud and disorganized) but in a giant shopping mall with anything you could ever want for a computer, including photoshop for three dollars and movies that just came out in theaters, all sorts of hardware, digital cameras... its pretty wild. It was particularly funny to see monks in there... Kevin suggested that perhaps they were there to get microsoft word to.. type things up? who knows, but especially considering the austerity of some of the monks we've met on this trip, it made me believe the analyses of thai monks as not conservative as people usually think but actually incredibly corrupted by the bureaucracy of the sangha as well as consumerism itself.

So that was an experience. I think Bangkok is kind of an interesting place.. its obviously an asian city, but Kevin and I were talking.. it just doesnt seem like it has that much particularly thai character. My perception of a place like tokyo is that it is specificaly japanese.. but bankok is just gigantic and westernized with the addition of thai massage places everywhere and street vendors seling cheap clothes. Not that its bad, its definitely an exciting place to be.. but it doesn't feel as special as I expected.

The towns we've been visiting, on the other hand, have been really cool. We went to this town called Bo Nok yesterday and the day before. It's a town of 10,000 people that's so thai focused that its not even in my guidebook (I've been refering to lonely planet as my bible). When we told phra paisal we were going there he laughed because aparently almost not foreigners ever go there. But it was an amazing visit! We went to Bo Nok because it was the site of a 10 year long battle over the construction of a coal burning electricity plant that the villagers strongly opposed. They worked on their own (no politician or NGO suport) to stop the plant from being built.. closing down roads and trying to protect themselves from mafia who would shoot at their houses at night to try to intimidate them into accepting bribes to support the plant... after the project was cancelled, the villagers were working on trying to get this large plot of public land back because it had been taken by corrupt local influential people during the fight over the plant, and one of the leaders of the movement was shot seven times in the head and killed. He died about a year ago, and we spoke to his widow (another leader of the movement) as well as the abbot of the local monastery who was his older brother. It was just really inspiring to see such a strong community that fought off such powerful and wealthy governmental, corporate, and private interest opposition to finally get what they wanted, which was self governance, or at least the ability to make the decisions that would drastically affect their lives. It was kind of like how I imagine it would be to go to a zapatista community in mexico... they thanked us so sincerely for taking an interest in their struggle. How amazing, that they would thank us after all they had done. The widow and leader of the movement.. she served us our dinner at the restaurant we ate at.. how humble she was.

I keep remembering what an amazing opportunity this all has been and knowing that it is really all a gift.. its unbelievable the chance we have been given to learn from such fascinating and special people. This probably sounds so corny, but it is kind of renewing my interest in leadership, especially leadership as service and vice versa.

Tomorrow we travel to an orphanage that we raised 1300 dollars for back at school, then we go to Pathom Asoke, the community Erica stayed at last summer (self sustainable liberal buddhists in the sense that they are highly socially active and entirely vegetarian (!!!) but conservative in that they are strict about the division of the sexes and being covered up in terms of clothing... maybe fmore, too... I dont know yet). The next day we go to Bhikunni Dhammananda's temple (shes the first ordained female monk in thailand) and then... I think thats basically the end of the sudy tour. I still have to figure out my exact plans for after everyone leaves... I want to go to the north unless mom wasnts to do the same things up there that I do in which case I will wait for her and go to vietnam on the week off.

hope everyone's doin great back home or wherever you are in the world!