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"So Near and Yet So Far"
Richard Diran
In September 2000, Andrew Marshall a Scotsman and I set out
from Kunming
China, traveling to the Wa Autonomus Region near the border with Myanmar
in search of a fabled lake called Nawng Hkeo on the Burmese side of the
border. This lake had not been seen by any foreigners since V.C
Pitchford, a British surveyor set out in 1937 to find the lake which did
not appear on any maps. It was believed by the Wa people, former
headhunters, and now the world's biggest proucers of opium, to be their
birthplace where they struggled as tadpoles to become the Wild Wa.
Andrew contacted me through my publisher in London because
he knew, that like him, I was an avid reader of Sir George Scott, a
forgotten Victorian writer and photographer who trapsed
throughunexplored areas of Myanmar compiling the "Gazetteer of Upper
Myanmar and the Shan States", a five volume series more than a century
before. Scott's massive ethnographic study became my Bible, the rock of
arcane knowledge which I later based my book, "The Vanishing Tribes of
Myanmar". I held Scott to be a hero and so did Andrew. Andrew planned to
do a book retracing Scott's footsteps and he couldn't find anybody to go
with him, until he talked to me.
Our trip lasted more than three gruelling weeks, and became
one of the most arduous trips I had ever undertaken. Andrew an I had a
tacit agreement that if either one of us were to die out there, it would
be impossible for the survivor to carry out the body of the other.
Although we were only hours from our goal, and could see it shrouded in
the misty distance, we failed. Weeks later Andrew set out again, this
time with a missionary named David. Aremed with the knowledge of our
prior mistakes, Andrew and David reached the fog covered lake which is
recounted in Andrew's book, The Trouser People". published by Viking,
and imrint of Penguin Books, London 2002.
Sometimes failure is as important as success. Perhaps in
the end it is not the goal that matters, but only the journey. The
following is the story of our attempt
The flight from
Kunming in Yunnan
Province to Simao is only 30 minutes by air, or 20 hours by road. During
the 1920's, Simao or Szw Mao's basin was a thriving trade center with
70,000 people. Then it was struck with the Bubonic Plague followed by
Malaria. By the time the People's Liberation Army of China entered in
the 1950's, there were only 3,000 desperate people living in rotting
houses with a 90% incidence of Malaria. From Simao we drove to Jinghong
home of the "Quiet Relsih Fleshpot" whose name is self explanitory,
stayed over night and then drove 7 hours to Lancang. The road was dotted
with small brick buildings with old ceramic roof tiles and tea
plantations cut concentric rings into the mountains with a thundering
brown river below.
The stone cobbled road from Lancang to Ximeng, head of the
Wa Autonomous Region snaked thru lush green mountains which rose
straight up through the fog with jagged sawtooth stones protruding out
from the sides, tearing at the clouds just like the old Chinese ink
brush paintings. After about 4 hours on those hand laid cobble stones we
reached Ximeng, a distinctly hostile town where it was difficult to
raise a smile from anybodys lips. Ximeng had hastily built ugly square
Chinese cement buildings strewn about the saddlebacks of mountains which
raise to 7,800 feet.
Medicine men prowl the streets in groups with heavy strings
of beads around their necks, some wearing animal fur hats of orange and
white with long tails like the old raccoon hats of my childhood.
The faces here are very dark, and the jawbones are very heavy. One
medicne man invited us into his room which he shared with a half dozen
others of the same ilk, who had barking deer penises tied and knotted at
the open window drying. One of these medicinal quacks rubbed my face
with a deer penis. They had a tiger paw with claws and orange and black
fur still attached to a foreleg of bone.
The fog of Ximeng is very thick and the people on the roads
move as vague silhouettes.
Myanmar to the west is
very close. Small curtained three wheel vehicles which are modified two
stroke motorcycles take passengers up and down the steep slopes upon
which Ximeng is built. Night life offers some Karoke places with bored
girls and horrible singers. Drunken men smash glasses on the tables and
floor. I nearly got into a fight twice. Nobody seems friendly. There is
also gambling with three oversized dice painted with various animals
held up on an incline and released at the tug of a string. Crowds swell
around the tables and bets are placed on the tubling dice.
The fog grew so thick that you can't tell the time, except
that it day or night. Then the rains began. I haven't thought of shaving
since I got to
China
and have quite a stubble growing. Iv'e been wearing the same three
layers of clothing for days as it is too cold for bathing. Ximeng has
many Chinese soldiers and people still wearing Chairman Mao caps, long
forgotten in the larger cities.
For days now I have had pink eye, conjectivities and a
large sty growing on my eyelid. Although I use eyedrops, in the mornings
my eyes can't be opened without removing a thick layer of crust. Smoke
from the woodfire below our bedroom drifts up through my window as I
look out over ancient tiled roofs covered in thick green moss. The
toilet stinks and the seat which is disattached , must be put over the
bowl when needed. This hotel, the Ximenggxianwashan Hotel has a
directory of services, but inside all of the pages are blank.
Andrew and I hope to find the ancient lake from which the
Wa people believe they crawled out of as the first poeple on earth,
formed as tadpoles. The lake is on top of an 8,000 foot mountain which
may originate from an underground spring. the lake, Nawng Hkeo is across
the border in
Myanmar and there should be a large river flowing down the side. From
Ximeng we will go Northwest to Shin Chang where according to our maps,
one from the U.S defence department, with large swaths of land marked,
"relief data incomplete" and another World War 2 map from 1943 on silk,
there seems to be a trail into Myanmar.
Up and down the trails are spiderwebs glistening with the
morning dew. In the market of Ximeng we bought blankets to warm
ourselves on the slopes. Young Wa soldiers, kids really in green
fatigues have the rising sun of the UWSA, the United Wa State Army
stiched on their shoulders. Dogs prowl the streets faithfully waiting to
be eatten by their masters. We have learned how to say I don't eat dog
in Chinese. The Wa are dirt poor and having a key worn around the neck
is a treasure because it means you have something to lock up.
I woke up and something had apparently bit me under my ear
as it swelled up but there was no pain and the lymph seems to be normal.
By noon it
seemed to be allright. The bus to Shin Chang was completely full of
people and huge bags of produce. We paid two people to get off the bus
so that we had seats. Until the minute we left, we were struggling to
learn Chinese phrases. On the bus we began to practice some Wa language
with the Wa people copied from Sir George Scott's journals from the turn
of the century. Surprisingly most of the words were still
understandable. Andrew has an uncanny grasp of language.
We passed through mountains of perfectly formed conical
conifers like Christmas trees on winding switchbacks until the road
abruptly ended at a massive landslide, cutting a gorge more than 300
feet across, washing the road away completely. Stones were laid into the
mud traversing the cravass and everyone on the bus as well as all the
vegetable and Lancang Beer was carried across to the other side. Another
bus was waiting, and after another hour we arrived at Shin Chang where
the entire length of paved road was 100 feet long and ended at a beer
shop. "Niplai" is the Wa word for "Cheers".
The mountains rise dramatically shredding the clouds, and a
waterfall in the distance must be well over 100 feet. Temperatures rise
and fall more than 20 degrees F in minutes, baking hot then the fog
rolls in like bales of thick cotton turning everything into mere
shadows. To the West we can see
Myanmar,
and to the North is the village which we will hike to tomorrow if we can
get the two hardy Wa guides we have asked for. That village is Dai Gu La
or Kola on some maps, a Wa village. I am sure that there have been very
few foreigners in these hills for many years. In fact this area of
Yunnan
was only officially opened last year. This is
China
with the kids in the red scarves of the young pioneers. In these
seemingly endless hills and mountains there are only four or five lights
to the North and a few more to the West. We are at the edge of
civilization. Chinese tentacles reach through the whole of China, we
hope it will be different in Myanmar.
WE woke up in Shin Chang at the Wa headman's cement house.
My sty was like a potato blocking the vision in my camara lens eye, but
it was ripe and I popped it, mopped up the puss and slathered the
eyelid in antibiotic. We got two strong Wa porters and headed out for
the march. The rice fields were framed in ferns and the trail was a
combination of slippery mud, buffalo shit, and warm water, and ideal
combination for the dozens of varieties of butterfly. Some were spotted
green velvet with torquoise so bright it made my eyes water. Others
vermillion with serated wings lined with black, white and pink.
A few hours walk from Shin Chang we reached a Chinese
border post where the authorities in green uniforms and red epulets
dotted with brass stars said we could not go on. Across the trail was a
bamboo baracade painted yellow and black. It was the ideal vantage point
over a huge expanse of valley up the slope to
Dai Gu La.
After looking at our passports, and ascertaining that we had not crossed
into China from Myanmar, the Big Boss said that we could continue for
one day. I said that it was not enough so he offered us two. I asked him
for three, and before answering said many times that we must not go into
Mien Tien, Chinese for Myanmar. We lied and said that we wouldn't.
After about an hour and a half more we reached Dai Gu La
village and rested. The mountains are unrelenting rising strainght up,
crisscrossed with streams. A few more hours walk brought us to yung
Gwang, the end of the trail. Apparently the guards at that check point
had notified the police here in Yung Gwang and they met us at the
entrance of the village. Telephone and electric lines extend everywhere
in China to the
furtherest outpost, unlike Myanmar for whom communications in outlying
areas is nonexistant.
There are Wa houses with thached roofs which extend high up
and all the way down, nearly touching the ground. You have to stoop low
to get inside. Andrew was met at the doorway by a very bored cow. There
are a few old Wa women with silver hoops in their ears, wearing hand
loomed red striped skirts, and the lacquored black leggings holding up
strips of cloth to protect their legs from leeches and sharp elephant
grass. Their skin is like creased dark hardwood.
There is only one trail into Yung Gwang made probably by
the retreating K.M.T Nationalist Army who escaped into
Myanmar at the end of
their war in 1949. There is no place to hide. The guards told our
porters whom we had already paid for the day the exorbant price of 130
Yuan each, or $15, not to take us as they had agreed to
Myanmar
and the mountain with the sacred lake which we can see in the distance.
The porters left frightened. Here we are miles from the last bit of
civilization where the trail ends, left with our heavy packs, my camara
bag, and no fucking porters.
To the North is
Myanmar. To the West
is Myanmar. In the distance we can hear mortar fire at what we don't
know. The police that ordered our porters out of here had better get us
new porters to get out of this place because there is no way I can hump
my crap down this mountain. We are disappointed but not yet defeated.
We were given a small room like a jail cell with opened
doors. There is no way to disappear, no way to head Westinto the
mountains of
Myanmar. Above the door is a huge spider and there is a beetle flying
around the room that sounds like a B-52. Andrew and I are together and
the room is lit with our candles. We eat trail mix, instant noodles and
are about half way through the mouldy French salami which is as big as a
canoe, weighs a ton, and has been a joke from the very beginning. it is
wrapped in a plastic bag from every hotel we have stayed in and is a
history of our trip thus far. Still it stinks. i think that i'll never
eat salami again, i'm sick of the shit.
At the open window are a half dozen curious Wa childrens
faces, dark with huge liquid eyes. We passed out balloons and the kids
were fascinated. Two old Wa geezers came in and just sat down on our
beds talking. An ancient crone with a long silver pipe poked her head in
the door. They speak insessantly even though we don't understand a word.
I woke up crusted in brick red mud nearly to my knees. The
march yesterday nearly killed me and today we have to do it all over
again in reverse. There was a Wa woman walking down the hill carrying
two huge ceramic water jugs. She was topless and Andrew looked and said,
"That woman has an incredible pair of jugs". We laughed ourselves silly.
Early the next morning, two porters showed up to carry our
gear. We definately can't trust them as they were certainly sent by the
cops to carry our stuff out of here. The mountain, our sacred mountain
is there in the distance of maybe only ten miles, but it could be the
moon. I went back inside to get my camara just to get a shot as the fog
cleared, but when I walked back outside it was enveloped again. So
elusive.
From Yung Gwang we reached Dai Gu La in about two hours and
had a few welcome warm beers. From Dai Gu La the sun broke out and
hardened the mud. Thats the good part. The bad part is that it is so
damn hot that we are both getting sunburned. I am caked in mud. Between
Dai Gu La and the police check point is a silver mine with a cave
entrance in the hillside near a river. Silver tailings lay in piles and
I picked up a few. There was also
Galena and Marcasite
which are often found with silver. The hike up hill to the police check
point was really hard, my knees ache and my leg muscles are so sore. My
heart is pounding in my ears and the small of my back gets stiff when
ever I sit down.
After another few hours, we again reached Shin Chang. The
porters were paid the outrageous sum of 160 Yuan or $19 each, but we
found cold beer, noodles and hard boiled eggs. Now that we are back in
Shin Chang we are out of the police jurisdiction. We had to ditch the
porters because they are a liability. In spite of the fact that they are
Wa, we are in
China and they can not be trusted. We know that there are no check
points between here and Ximeng.
We got a hotel in Shin Chang for two dollars a night,
double occupancy. I'm reminded of that old song, "all I need is a two
dollar room, and a two dollar broom". I could use that broom now as
whole patches of plaster ceiling are falling on the floor right over my
bed.
According to our maps, there is a bridge several hours from
here over a river. Since we will have no porters and are intent on
reaching some Wa villages and the lake at the top of the mountain, if
even a bit from the South, Andrew and I have again pared down our
baggage to absolute essentials since we will be carrying everything
ourselves and are going it alone. Only one set of cloths, those on our
backs, camaras, short wave radio, batterys, trail mix and our much
despised salami. It was a debate over how many rolls of toilet paper. We
leave all non essentials at the small restuarant across the road. The
people there are friendly and honest. I took a modest bath over there
and was surprised that my feet were still pink. From that bridge over
the river we estimate
Myanmar to be no more
than one hours walk, and the first Wa village to be maybe three hours of
forced march. Nobody will be looking for us and even if there were,
there are many places to go between Shin Chang and Ximeng.
Woke up at
6 A.M in pitch
darkness with the intent of sliding away without being noticed by
anyone. By 6:30 we could see the fog creeping across the mountains
toward us from the Southwest. By 7 A.M when it became rather light, the
rain began. We had no choice but to wait for a break in the weather and
at 9 A.M began to walk down the stone cobbled road to a trail where we
could head West to Myanmar. We decided that if we were questioned, we
would say we were collecting butterflies. After about fourty minutes
there was a trail which led down the ravine to the river. We crossed
over the bamboo fence into a farmers field. The rains began again in
earnest and we walked over mud terraces framing the rice fields. It was
as slippery as hell and I fell many times. At the bottom of the
cultivation we paused for a rest and I noticed that in one of my falls I
had lost my galsses. Christ, now what? Without my glasses I can't focus
properly. My photos might be soft, not sharp. The highlights in the eyes
of my subjects may be out of focus. God, what a nightmare. I cursed
myself for thinking that just strapping them onto my belt was enough to
hold them when I should have zipped them securely into my camara bag.
Andrew dropped his backpack and volunteered to go back up
the hill and see if he could find them. I didn't argue. After twenty
minutes or so, I began to walk up myself searching the foliage, the
bamboo groves, the pines, the rice fields and the prickly thistles. I
heard Andrew call out my name. Somehow he had found them. A needle in a
haystack would have been easier than finding those glasses.
We walked down again to the edge of the rice fields and
jumped over a small stream. The trail became slippery mud and I kept
trying to brace myself with my left leg, sliding down the hillside.
I would hold onto old bamboo which would crack and thick
bunches of weeds which would rip loose from the saturated red earth and
I would slide down the mountain on my ass like down a slide attached to
my leather camara bag which was becoming swollen by the rain and covered
in mud. After two hours of this I was exhausted, completely exhausted.
Finally we reached the gravel banks of the river. The rain increased
and we were muddy and throughly drenched. The river was raging brown,
tearing at it's banks, and we walked to the edge to try and find another
path up and cross to the other side. There was no bridge. On the other
side of the river was a triangle shaped mountain plunging into the river
like a wedge, which was
Myanmar, separating
the two crashing rivers which joined at this confluence where we stood
trying to find a place to cross. At the joining of these two rivers it
was impossible to guage the depth, though we could clearly see the
strength. It would be suicide to make an attempt to cross although we
considered it, and still the rain grew stronger. Squating under the
weight of our packs in a fern covered hollow in the hillside, wee knew
we could not cross. there was nothing to do but to but to turn back.
Shit, to turn back.
I didn't feel that I had the strength to go back up that
fucking mudslide of a mountain, but there was no choice. We had to
return. I was completely exhausted, but there was no other option, we
had to go back. We looked across the thundering river, a distance I
could toss a stone over, separating us from
Myanmar, and our
sacred lake. Andrew and I began to hike back up that mountain. My lungs
were bursting, my heart pounding in my guts as I crawled on all fours
grasping at plants to hold onto like an animal. My hands were pierced by
thorns and stinging nettles. My face was covered in a guaze of spider
webs sticking to my stubble of a beard like a spiny cactus with spiders
scrambling across my face. Some bug flew down my throat and as I gagged
and spit, I hit a crack in the earth where a startled purple worm jumped
out.
Still we had to slog up the mountain. Although I felt as if
I had no more strength we had o continue up through the pounding rains
again crossing that stream balancing on the narrow rice levies, back
through the bamboo and the pines, over the fence to the cobbled road to
Shin Chang. My muscles ached as they have never ached. I was so wet that
were I stepped became even more wet than before I had stepped there. My
green Mao cap dripped like a sponge. The mud I had been caked with had
washed away and I was so cold and hungry and still the rain pounded. The
last one hundred feet, I was ready to drop. When we got back to the
solace of our two dollar room, the neighbors were slaughtering a
screaming chicken and draining his blood into a tea cup. The skin on my
hands and feet were so wrinkled, like when you stay in a bath too long,
and the color a shade of deathly purple, such that if a tag were
attached to my big toe, nobody would question that I was dead.
We had tried, had
given it our best, so near and yet so far, that sacred Wa lake of Nawng
Hkeo dark and hidden remained in our imagination.
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