Category: Cultural Travel

Trooping the What?

Trooping the What?

Not always as calm as this, the elegant streets of Westminster host many different kinds of public celebrations and protests.

Trooping the colour is the biggest annual event in the calendar of royal pageantry. On the second Saturday in June, the entire British royal family gathers in London to celebrate the Queen’s official birthday. The ‘colour’ (the flag of one of the royal regiments) is ‘trooped’ (paraded) along the Mall from Buckingham Palace to Horseguards Parade in a vibrant display of military tradition, impeccable horsemanship and silly hats.

This year’s trooping the colour had the extra benefits of perfect weather and being Meghan Markle’s first public outing since her marriage to Prince Harry. Even non-royalists might find that combination hard to resist. My partner and I, on holidays from Australia, were staying less than half a kilometre from the action – a mere ten-minute stroll away.

The parade we didn’t see. Photo by Katie Chan, CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=69837136

Unfortunately, we didn’t get the memo, and spent the whole sunny morning shopping in Oxford Street. Oops. But we did get to witness a different kind of parade later in the day.

This year, the second Saturday in June was also the day of the World Naked Bike Ride, when thousands of people shed their clothes and take to their bikes to draw attention to the vulnerability of cyclists in our car-dominated cities. Do you normally have trouble noticing cyclists on the road? Not on this day.

The London chapter of the WNBR organized six different routes, which converged on Hyde Park during the late afternoon of 9 June. We found ourselves inadvertently in the thick of one cohort of naked cyclists, when we took what was supposed to be a shortcut along Shaftesbury Avenue, trying to get away from the hordes of pedestrians at Leicester Square. It was a case of out of the frying pan and into the fire.

Lincoln’s Inn Fields with the 2018 WNBR
cc-by-sa/2.0 – © David Lallygeograph.org.uk/p/5806100

Seeing hundreds of naked people in the street without forewarning is startling. There were so many of them, they were all headed our way, and they were, for the most part, so very naked. It was a little bit like the Summer of Love, and a little bit like Hieronymus Bosch’s painting of The Last Judgement.

What with red lights, young men leaving the ranks to pose for selfies with girls on the pavement, and the general quantity of bikes and bodies, the parade made slow progress.

Of the naked cyclists near us, I estimated 90% were male. While many of the relatively few women had chosen to wear underwear or body paint, most of the men had opted for the full monty. It was quite an eye-opener. Who knew the human form came in such shapes and sizes?

World Naked Bike Ride London 2018. Photo by C.Suthorn / cc-by-sa-4.0 / https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=69865650

Later I read that the event meant something, or some things. It was intended to be a protest against our society’s oil-dependency and (also) a celebration of the human body. For an accidental spectator it felt more random than that, a piece of authorized anarchism in the spirit of Carnival. Kings for a day, the naked cyclists ruled the roads by committing a mass act of indecent exposure.

‘Look at us,’ they were saying down on The Mall. ‘We are the British royal and military establishment, and we’ve got tradition.’ ‘Look at us’, the cyclists replied. ‘We’ve got balls!’

Banners over Piccadilly to celebrate the 200th birthday of the Royal Academy. The middle one seems to prophesy the naked cyclists soon to fill the street.

The next day, Sunday, we got caught up with two more parades. In the morning, we followed the sounds of laughter and cheering to Piccadilly, where 30,000 women were marching to commemorate hundred years of British women’s right to vote.

Women of all ages were there, many dressed in the suffragette colours of purple and green. It was a joyous, heartfelt occasion, part celebration, part call to action in the ongoing struggle for gender equality.

In the early evening, in the same part of London, we passed police officers in bulletproof vests, some on horseback, some running, some speaking urgently into walkie-talkies. They were monitoring two political marches that almost crossed paths, but didn’t quite. A small number of anti-Hezbollah protestors were marching under an Israeli flag, while a larger number of anti-Israel protestors were marching under ‘free Gaza’ banners and (controversially) Hezbollah flags. The atmosphere was tense, bystanders looked stressed, and we didn’t linger.

This charming street in St James became, later in the day , the site of opposing marches protesting the situation in the Middle East.

So, all in all, we saw a lot of things trooped in London that weekend – bare bottoms, suffragette banners, warring flags. Smiling faces, scowling faces, pride, mischief, rage.

Just not the famous colours.

The Yodelling Choir

The Yodelling Choir

The turret of Oberhofen Castle extending over Lake Thun, Switzerland.

This is the story of a sound.

While travelling around Switzerland with a group of writers in 2016 I had an encounter with a sound as wonderful as any sight we saw in that spectacular country.

We were in the charming small town of Oberhofen, on the edge of Lake Thun (one of the two lakes that Interlaken sits between), and were walking back to our hotel after having dinner at the restaurant beside the castle.

Oberhofen Castle seen from the water. The restaurant is the glassed-in building on the left.

The restaurant sits on the absolute lakefront, right beside the pretty bridge and turret that extend the castle over the water. At sunset the stonework is bathed in golden light, while tiny figures of paddleboarders and swimmers dot the burnished surface of the lake. To get back to our hotel we had to cross the playground of the local primary school. Night had fallen and the old-fashioned school building stood in darkness, except for one lighted second-floor window. And then we heard the most extraordinary sound.

It was the sound of stately and melodious singing, unlike any I’d ever heard before. The melody unfolded at a slow tempo, supported by solemn, resonant harmonies. These were human voices, but I couldn’t place them as emanating from man, woman or child. We stopped in our tracks. What could be producing this heavenly sound?

We were practically holding our breaths, awed by the majesty of the singing, when the many parts of the harmony started to fill out a vaguely familiar musical shape – something that felt like hillsides and cowbells. At the same moment, two of us exclaimed in astonishment, ‘They’re yodelling!’

The beautiful gardens at Oberhofen Castle.

Yodelling – a style of singing which alternates between the head and the chest voice – is practised in many cultures around the world from Africa to North America. I’m afraid I’ve always thought of it as more or less comic. It tends to be performed by people wearing kitsch costumes, whether dirndls and lederhosen or rhinestones and cowboy hats. You can make any song funny by doing a yodelling version of it, and you can make pretty much anyone laugh by throwing a few yodels into a comedy scene skit.

The seven dwarfs yodel when they sing their ‘Silly Song’ in Snow White, and the sound of yodelling punctuates Goofy’s mishaps in The Art of Skiingand other classic Disney animations. It’s sweet and funny when Fräulein Maria and the Von Trapp children yodel ‘The Lonely Goatherd’ in the Sound of Music, all self-conscious Alpine stereotypes. It’s gross and funny when a yodelling song makes the heads of the alien invaders explode in Mars Attacks, thereby saving the world.

Yet there was nothing remotely comic or kitsch about the singing that floated over the darkened schoolyard in Oberhofen. It had charm, it had grace, and more than anything it had dignity.

The majestic scenery of Lake Thun, with Oberhofen Castle glimpsed in the foreground at left.

My friend Tamara went off to find a vantage point from which she could see into the upper-storey window. She reported back that the singers were all adult males and that they seemed to be having a choir practice. What kind of idyllic community is this, where the children play and learn by day within sight of the castle and the lake, and the adults gather by night to celebrate and sustain their folk heritage? And even if we don’t invest the moment with so much meaning, how interesting it is just to discover how people in different places choose to spend their free time, and what things please and matter to them! I didn’t need to see the singers to be intrigued and delighted by their practice. For me, this was an experience of pure sound.

How do you illustrate sound? To me, the yodelling choir sounded like this.

I feel that in our hierarchy of travel-sense, sound has the middle position. Of course, sight comes first, dominating everything. Then, in our food-obsessed culture, comes taste – people talk about tasting their way around a country – although in the age of Instagram it often feels as if the look of food is becoming more important to travellers than its flavour. And then, just ahead of smell and touch, but not by much, comes sound.

Yet music, voices, calls of birds and animals, the noises of wind and sea and even traffic, can epitomize a travel experience, sometimes better than any picture or view can do. I have a small archive of treasured sound souvenirs from the past couple of years. Cowbells and the rustling of grass in an Austrian mountain meadow. The roar of the Rio Grande hurtling through a deep gorge in New Mexico. Sweet-sad accordion music in a Sicilian street. The liquid call of whip-birds in a sub-tropical Australian rainforest.

And it sounded like this.

I don’t imagine that ‘sound-hearing’ will overtake ‘sight-seeing’ any time soon as our primary travel activity, but here’s a plea for paying more attention to the soundscape when we travel, and maybe even recording some of it. Thank goodness on the evening we heard the yodelling choir, once I’d got past my initial amazement I had the wit to find my phone and turn the voice recorder on. So now I have, preserved forever, an aural memento of that night.

And it sounded like this too.

There’s about sixty seconds of it. The music is just as sweet as I remember, the choral sound swelling and subsiding with the movement of the song. And, unintentionally, I’ve captured other voices as well – our own low whisperings as wonder what it is we are listening to. There’s Kees’s deep voice, speaking Dutch-accented English. Diana and Tamara are conferring in German. Then comes the moment, when the music shifts in tone from its initial unearthly majesty to something more folkloric. Exclamations as we realize that it’s a yodelling choir. Soft laughter, not at the singers but with the delight of discovery. And then, at the end, my own heartfelt sigh of pleasure, inadvertently recorded alongside the music that prompted it.

On your travels, have you had a ‘sound-hearing’ experience that was as memorable as your ‘sight-seeing’?

A Great Filipino Novel

A Great Filipino Novel

Bell ringers of Bohol (photograph by Adam Gibson)

When I visit a country for the first time, I try to read a novel written or set there. For my Philippines trip last month, I chose Noli Me Tangere by José Rizal. I knew nothing about it except that the title kept coming up in Google searches for ‘novels set in the Philippines’. I downloaded it on Kindle and started reading it on the plane going over to Manila.

A few days later I was talking at breakfast to one of our lovely hosts from Tourism Philippines and happened to mention that I’d been reading before bed the previous night. ‘What are you reading?’ she asked. I told her it was a novel called Noli Me Tangere. She looked at me in amazement, her fork poised in mid-air. ‘Oh my god, we read that book at school. Rizal is our national hero. I love that book.’

Our other host (another young woman in her twenties) came back from the breakfast buffet and joined in the conversation. ‘Noli Me Tangere? We studied it at school. Rizal is our national hero. I can’t believe you’re reading that!’ Later in the week I received a virtually identical reaction from the media manager at one of the hotels we visited. ‘We read that at school! Rizal is our national hero!’

José Rizal

It was only after I’d finished the novel, back at home a few weeks later, that I learned the reason for this seemingly universal response every time I mentioned Rizal and his novel. In 1956 the ‘Rizal Law’ came into force in the Philippines, requiring the life and writings of José Rizal, particularly his novels Noli Me Tangere(1887) and El Filibusterismo(1891), to be included in the curricula of all public and private schools, colleges and universities throughout the country. The Act identifies Rizal as ‘the national hero and patriot’ of the Philippines.

The children are the future – that’s the key message of Rizal’s novel.

According to the Rizal Law, compulsory study of Rizal’s novels should promote in the country’s youth ‘a re-dedication to the ideals of freedom and nationalism for which our heroes lived and died’, ‘encourage civic conscience’ and ‘teach the duties of citizenship’. The Act mandated that the novels be translated from the original Spanish into English and Tagalog (the principal Filipino dialect), that they be available in cheap unexpurgated editions, and that there should always be a sufficient number of copies held in school and university libraries. I’ve never heard of any such law elsewhere in the world that safeguards and promotes the reading of particular works of fiction in this way.

Why did the Philippines government specifically call attention to the need for students to be able to read unexpurgated editions of Rizal’s works? Because the Catholic Church was so keen to censor them (if not suppress them outright). Noli Me Tangere is what’s called an anti-clerical novel – it mercilessly satirizes and sharply criticizes the Church hierarchy and its agents in the Philippines, clearly blaming them for the poverty and sufferings of ordinary Filipino people at the time it was written.

Tower of the Baclayon Church on the island of Bohol, Philippines.

Rizal’s contempt for the avarice, dishonesty and cruelty of the priesthood as he saw it is so strongly expressed that of course it influenced my reaction to the religious monuments we visited as we travelled around the country. At the Baclayon Church on the island of Bohol a proud parishioner showed us around a dusty collection of silver chalices and crosses, together with ancient priestly vestments and costly jewels used for adorning the effigies of saints at religious festivals. All I could think was ‘trash and tinsel’. Having read Rizal’s account of the wretched poverty of the people whose labour paid for these things, the whole collection seemed wasteful and pointless – although it was impossible not to be moved by the woman’s obvious pride in the treasures of her church.

We left the church just as the great bells in the tower were being rung, and our photographer Adam captured a lovely image of the boys who were pulling the bell ropes. (He has kindly given me permission to include the picture at the head of this post.) I’d just read, the night before, the chapter in Noli Me Tangerewhere two young boys called Crispín and Basilio, children of a terribly disadvantaged peasant family, are punished by the head sacristan for not allegedly ringing the church bells in the proper timing. It’s a heart-breaking scene, expressing a sense of unfathomable injustice.

Agricultural landscape similar to that described by Rizal.

Not all parts of Rizal’s novel are as upsetting as this chapter. There are some very funny sections that poke fun at the pretensions of the more entitled members of society (both Spanish and Filipino). And there are beautiful, lyrical descriptions of the tropical landscape. But the prevailing sense is of waste – waste of life, youth, hope and talent, all sacrificed to protect a moribund religious and colonial system, regardless of the human cost.

The incredibly brilliant Rizal, who was a doctor and poly-linguist as well as a novelist, was executed by firing squad in Manila in 1896 at he age of 35, having been convicted of sedition because of his pro-independence message. Two years later, Spanish rule in the Philippines ended, although it would take another fifty years before the Philippines was recognized internationally as an independent republic.

The Catholic Church remains a significant presence in the Philippines. This is the carnivalesque atmosphere outside the Basilica del Santo Nino in Cebu.

Rizal called his novel ‘noli me tangere’, Latin for ‘don’t touch me’, referring to the ‘untouchable’ position of the Catholic Church in the Philippines at that time. As we travelled through this beautiful country and saw instances of the poverty that still remains, I thought of another Latin phrase, ‘primum non nocere’– first, do no harm. It’s part of the Hippocratic oath that doctors take before they are licensed to practise medicine, but it seems to me it should be an oath for all travellers to take before they enter other people’s countries.

Small-scale touristic enterprises on the Loboc River in Bohol.

You have to hope that in visiting a place like the Philippines, where there’s widespread poverty and social disadvantage as well as incredible beauty and energy, you are doing more good than harm. You hope that the money you spend is making people’s lives better. That the hotels where you stay and the tours you take are providing employment and income for people who would otherwise be worse off. That tourism means opportunity, not exploitation. And that children just like Crispín and Basilio have more chance of surviving and thriving within a tourist economy than under the old colonial system that Rizal deplored.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Only Royal Palace on U.S. Soil

The Only Royal Palace on U.S. Soil

One of the royal portraits displayed at Iolani Palace

When most people think of Honolulu, they think of Waikiki, surfing and shopping, or Pearl Harbor and the USS Arizona Memorial. I’m not sure that many overseas visitors ever make it to the downtown area, which doesn’t feature strongly in the tourist literature. It’s a pity, because between S. King and S. Beretania Streets is a lovely area of parkland, dotted with buildings that embody the civic history of the Hawaiian capital.

Foremost among these is the Iolani Palace, the only royal palace on U.S. soil. The palace was built in 1882 by King David Kalākaua, the second-last Hawaiian monarch, and expressed his confidence in the future of the royal family and of Hawaii itself as an independent, sovereign nation.

The elaborately decorated exterior of the palace

It’s a splendid building, lovingly restored. The sweeping central wooden staircase, golden thrones, fine ceiling moldings and glittering glassware all suggest power and opulence, but also refinement and good taste. King Kalākaua was a technophile who had his palace fitted out with all the mod cons of the day, including a flushing toilet and dumb waiter. Iolani Palace even had electric lighting installed, earlier than either the White House or Buckingham Palace!

One of the richly furnished rooms at the palace

King Kalākaua and his siblings were creative, energetic, curious people, eager to learn new things and adapt to new ways, without losing sight of their indigenous heritage. Tragically, none of this was enough to prevent the so-called Bayonet Constitution of 1887, whereby the Hawaiian monarchy was compelled to cede most of its powers to members of the American- based business elites that had established a profitable sugar industry in Hawaii.

The perpetrators of the Bayonet Constitution believed they were acting in accordance with the inexorable march of progress, but their critics saw the events of 1887 as a morally indefensible grab for power, an expression of U.S. imperialism. Six years later, a coup d’etat led by the same business interests deposed the last Hawaiian monarch, Queen Liliuokalani, and the overthrow of Hawaiian independence was complete.

The empty thrones of the Hawaiian monarchy

In a cruel twist, Iolani Palace became Queen Liliuokalani’s prison, when she was kept there under house arrest for over a year, after her supporters made a failed attempt to restore the monarchy in 1895. The quilt she sewed to pass the days is on display at Iolani Palace, its homespun simplicity poignantly contrasting with the other textile works on show, the magnificent ball gowns and state outfits she wore as Queen.

In 1993, President Bill Clinton signed ‘an apology to Native Hawaiians on behalf of the United States for the overthrow of the Kingdom of Hawaii’. The document admitted that the acts committed in Honolulu by U.S. citizens in 1893 had been illegal. It also acknowledged that ‘the indigenous Hawaiian people never directly relinquished their claims to their inherent sovereignty’.

Hand-sewn quilt of Queen Liliuokalani

The displays, interpretive boards and sound recordings at Iolani Palace convey strong emotions of sadness and betrayal about the course of events that paved the way for Hawaii’s incorporation into the United States. It’s hard not to come away with the feeling that a vital and resilient culture was unnecessarily destroyed, in the cause of greed and racism.

Queen Liliuokalani’s statue

Outside the palace Queen Liliuokalani’s statue stands proudly. I noticed a bright red fresh hibiscus flower had been placed in her outstretched hand. I also noticed that the inscription at the base of the statue records her reign as lasting from 1891 until 1917 – the year of her death, not her deposition. There are no statues for the conspirators who stole her kingdom.