|
River Trip
Richard Diran
I woke up at 4:30 AM to catch the flight
on Myanmar Air from Yangon, capitol of Myanmar, to Sittwe in Arakan State which
borders Bangladesh. Only 45 minutes later we arrived at the small airport with
the crumbling blue sign proclaiming “Sittwe
Airport.” Locals pay the equivalent of $10 for this flight, while foreigners
pay $90 one way.
We caught a truck down Main
Street and passed the hundred-year-old Victorian clock-tower near huge shade
trees in which hung upside-down by their hundreds fat, black fruit bats wrapped
in their leathery wings, and on to the jetty where my friend Kway Win had his
boat waiting for us. The boat was painted a garish red and bright blue with
flowers tied to the bold prow. Here at the banks of the Kaladan River
stand bamboo houses built
high on stilts in expectation of the annual floods.
As we got underway, some
small boats hollowed out of a single log sailed past with a taut cotton sail.
We are going to Myauk-u, the ancient capitol of Arakan State in the 14th
and 15th centuries. There are no roads to Myauk-u other than the Kaladan River.
We traveled against the current with purple mountains in the distance to the
west, their peaks overhung with steely pink clouds, mountains which mark the
border with
Bangladesh. At the
river banks, black water buffaloes are submerged up to their nostrils, and women
in colorful skirts push nets webbed on bamboo against the current to catch
prawns.
On board my friend Kway Win
is returning home with his new bride of three weeks named “Pan Wai Pyone,” or
“Small Lovely Flower.” Although she is Arakanese and was born here, she has not
returned to Arakan
State since she was seven years old. She was raised in Yangon and is very much
a city girl. Kyaw Win's mother is aboard and cooking at the back some fresh
prawns, chicken and fish. She seems more thin than I remember her, perhaps
from worry over her first son, who died a few months ago. The last time I had
seen him it was evident that he had not long to live.
I was well-prepared for the
journey with four liters of Laphroaig single-malt scotch whiskey, my favorite, a
huge wheel of edam
cheese, a two-foot-long salami, and four packets of Italian spaghetti with
tomato paste and various nuts. I bought a long fishing pole with an impressive
reel and lures of squiggly rubber worms with hooks and weights.
Kyaw Win, his bride and his
mother sit opposite me in lounge chairs. Although I don't understand much
Burmese, and certainly not the Arakanese they are speaking, there is an obvious
tension in the air. After a few minutes, Kyaw Win’s mother goes to the top deck
to pray. Win's brother-in-law hands me a soccer magazine in Burmese with grainy
pictures of people I don't recognize. Emerald-green rice stalks close to being
harvested grow on the river banks, so rich is the soil. It is easy to see why
empires flourished here for centuries.
The Kaladan is too muddy to
fish. Before there was a breeze, cool and refreshing, but now the air refuses
to move even though we plow against it. Mom is kneeling on the top deck, hands
clasped together, eyes tightly shut before an image of Buddha.
Sometimes we come to within
sixty feet of the riverbank following a deeper course that only the boatman
knows. The clouds have become a billowy cumulous with gray frying-pan bottoms.
Any rain will be light. Win goes to sleep in a lounge chair while his mother
still kneels and prays above. The bride offered me sunflower seeds, and I gave
her some sugared figs.
She told me that she
actually believed she would be back in Yangon for her English test
at the American Embassy. I told her to forget it, as in the first place, there
was no way we would be back in time, and secondly, the embassy was now closed as
well as the roads leading to it due to the events of September 11th to all but
American citizens.
She is excited, but seems
to have no idea of where we are going. The boat travels slowly upstream and it
will take about six-and-a-half hours to reach Myauk-u. Finally, we pulled up to
the dock at Myauk-u and the rains began. Naked children frolicked in puddles
and a woman walked by with a huge load of firewood on her head balancing an
umbrella on the edge of the pile, keeping her hands free. The thunder actually
seems to shake the earth.
I checked into the Paradise
Island Resort, which has many amenities. Upon my checking in, the staff who
appeared from the shadows gave me a bundle of candles because there was no
electricity and a box of mosquito coils. I remember from the last time this
place had become
completely inundated by
floods and washed away. It was also inhabited by screeching rats. I registered
in the book and noticed that the last entry was August 8, 2000, a year and
two months ago. I knew that this is a popular place.
I had ten candles burning,
fixed to the bedposts, which dripped with hot wax. Although the walls are
bamboo, they are painted an army green, perhaps the only available color, and
the plaster, a tone of green that can only be found on death row. I am
sleeping with my knife open. Outside my door near the river I can hear pigs
either fighting or being slaughtered. I am too exhausted to care. Turning out
the lights is like a birthday party where I just walk around the room and blow
out the candles.
Early the next morning,
Win, his wife, his father and I left Myauk-u by two horse-carts. The road east
across the plains could not be passed with any vehicle although we had crossed
this same road three years before in a jeep, as it had completely deteriorated.
The walls of the
ancient city could be seen,
as they were five miles square on each side, despite their now being completely
overgrown.
The wooden spoke wheels of
the horse-cart were nearly 5 feet tall. The cart plunged into deep puddles and
lurched from side to side and many times the cart driver had to get off and lead
his horse around the craters as we walked along side. After about an hour, we
came to a small market at the banks of the Lemro River. Below was our
boat looking very much like Bogart's African Queen. We loaded up our gear,
cranked up the engine, and were off.
Several dangerous-looking
wasps flew in the window, hovered around and flew back out. Near the river
banks bananas grow, and young girls swim in their cotton wrap-around skirts,
filling them up with air like balloons, and float around together laughing. My
black shirt has irregular white lines on both sides where the salt in my sweat
has crystallized. The Lemro is no more than a half mile across, and we are
going up river against a strong current. The water is rather muddy from the
rains and the silt.
We stopped the boat amid
mountains so dense with bamboo that you could never penetrate by foot, and
picked up a kid, a relative of the boatman, to bail water out of the boat. He
seems absolutely terrified of me, as if he expects me to eat him. It seems
difficult to elicit a
smile. The river narrows
to a few hundred yards and I can gauge by the plants growing out of the river
that we are moving upstream about as fast as a man can walk.
After some six hours on the
Lemro we stopped at a village where Win's father had a friend. Unfortunately,
he was away. The village was Laytoo Chin, as three of the old women had the
rising-sun tattoo between their eyes and the spider-web design on their cheeks.
The headman's house had a wild boar skull on the wall, complete with long,
curved tusks and an animal-skin drum. We were in southern Chin State. We returned to
the boat, and every now and again my eye would catch a flash of bright yellow or
brilliant turquoise of some elusive jungle bird.
There was a small, clear
waterfall which poured off the hills draped with bright green leafed tendrils
and wispy ferns.
All at once there was a
horrible grinding noise and the propeller shaft broke. After some discussion
and the realization that it could not be repaired, the boatman began walking
downstream to try and find another boat. Essentially, we were stranded. The
cooking pots were brought off the boat, a few stones piled up, old bamboo
collected and split up as we started a fire. Water-Bailing Boy began peeling
potatoes. The sky burned orange-pink as the sun set. To look up at the sky
here is to know the brightness of stars before the advent of electricity.
A few hours after dark we
could hear the lonely chug, chug of an engine. Somehow Boatman had managed to
find another boat. Because the shore was endless round stones, we would sleep
on the boat.
We woke up before sunrise;
the mountains were draped in fog but above is the first thin crescent moon and
bright beside it is Venus. After an hour on the river there were dozens of
silver flying fish skimming over the river surface. Win's wife cried out with
delight, for she had never seen fish fly.
Win's dad figures we have
traveled at least sixty miles up the Lemro. We stopped at one Chin village for
lunch: slices of
edam cheese, fried salami, noodles with tomato paste, a huge cucumber which is
orange on the outside and yellow inside. This seems to be a prosperous
village. There is never a shortage of food. Some of the old women here have
tattoos similar to the Laytoo but no sunrise between their eyes. Their ears
were distended but the silver, drum-shaped earrings were missing. These people
are called the Kuttu Chin. This village is at the junction of the Lemro and
Waakchaung Rivers. The Waakchaung is perfectly clear and we all take a bath.
Reboarding our boat, we rounded the bend and continued up the muddy Lemro.
In the afternoon we crossed
a wide creek flowing into the Lemro, stopped, and went swimming. Up in the
hills was an M'gan village. We hiked up the banks and found another prosperous
village with various kinds of chicken, goats, black-bellied hogs and healthy
dogs. There were only a few women in the village as the more able ones had gone
off to tend the fields several hours’ walk away. The older women who remained
had three rings of tattoos around their calves composed of dots, and faces full
of black dots interspersed with squares.
I sat down in a chair and
drank amber scotch. I tried counting the varieties of butterfly, but lost count
at about twenty-five. The skies thunder and echo between the mountains. Dragon
flies hover very low just above the tree tops anticipating the rain. A kid
comes by with a bird he had caught and tethered to a string. He tosses it into
the air and the bird flies the length of his string.
To the north of the
headman's house is a cairn piled high with flat stones which must be a grave.
At the top of the mountain to the east appears a rainbow which has the most
intense colors, absolutely pure pigment right out of a paint box. As the
intensity pales, the rains
begin.
We retreated into the
headman's house. There are a half-dozen dried gourds slightly smaller than a
basketball with long necks. It is in these gourds that water is stored. A
tall, black, unglazed ceramic jar with a very thin curved, elegant lip is
brought out. This is where the
liquor called “Kongye” is
stored. Kongye is made of fermented rice, various grains, and some type of tree
bark. At the neck the black vessel is plugged with leaves. Water is added from
the gourds and long, thin bamboo straws are plunged through the leaves. These
straws are ingeniously notched at the end to form a sharp point and bored in
three places. The bore holes are smaller than the grain so that the grain does
not go into the straw. Depending on the length of fermentation, the kongye is
like a yellow beer at one month, and like white lightning after one year. This
kongye was young and the taste fruity and pleasant. The M'gan are obviously
happy; that I enjoy.
In the mid-1970's, Ma Sa
La, the socialist government of General Ne Win, ordered the Chin to stop the
practice of tattooing the women's faces. Except for a few elderly women in the
village, everyone else is working the fields three mountains away. We have
asked the headman's son-in-law to leave tomorrow at daybreak to bring back at
least ten tattooed women to photograph. The youngest woman with facial tattoos
is said to be 37 years old. We will buy the son-in-law two pots of Kongye.
Win's father and I sleep outside on the
headman's verandah while
Win and his bride sleep inside.
The next day around noon, the son-in-law came
back to the village. With great difficulty the headman was able to get together
twelve tattooed women. When we would go out to scout a sight where the light
was right, they would all disperse and go home. Again the headman would have to
go house to house and gather them all together again. The light came in patches
between the tree limbs, making the pictures very spotty. I had to move the
whole troop, along with every kid and curious adult down to the shore of the
Lemro. It is very hard to elicit a smile; these seem to be very reticent
people. The light was at least even, and after awhile I got a few of them to
laugh.
The facial tattoo of the
M'gan is first squares overlaid with a series of dots which cover the entire
face. The tools must be long and blunt, as the tattoo holes are quite large.
Around their calves these women also have three rows of tattoos. The process
would begin for the girls when they were between the ages of 11 to about 13
years old. It is said to take several days and must be very painful. The dress
is home-spun black and red cotton. Around the village and inside their own
homes the women are topless but if I came upon them pounding
rice they would shyly cover
up. If seen from a distance returning home from the fields with a bamboo pack,
strapped around their foreheads, they are topless.
Meanwhile, I will go for
another swim in the river. Everywhere I go Bailing Boy follows with my scotch,
some pure bottled water, and a real glass. The red ants around here are a
half-inch long, and if they bite you, you swell up even if you are a Chin. I
sent one hardy lad up a tree to retrieve coconuts and he returned with half a
dozen coconuts and a hundred red ant bites. Two hours later his swelling had
completely subsided.
Later some of the boys came
to the headman's house with a long drum, several gongs, and a pair of cymbals.
A few jars of kongye are in the courtyard. The people are incredibly shy and it
takes a few sessions together to get them loose. The women, unless summoned,
are nowhere to be seen. The men are incessant chewers of betel nut and
constantly smoke. Every single boy has a sling shot around his necks that he
learns to shoot at birds with deadly accuracy. The boys bring spears into the
courtyard which are maybe six or seven feet long with an iron tip on each end.
One tip is blunt for wounding or breaking a bone, while the other end is maybe
ten inches long and very sharp, for piercing man or beast. The shaft is hard,
black wood.
The second photo session
was perfect. The light at 4:30 in the afternoon was
long and orange against the river with the opposite banks green and yellow. I
assembled twelve of the M'gan on the stones and used every lens, including the
macro, for shots of their eyes and close-ups of their tattoos. A couple girls
too young to have tattoos are giving me the eye, and without the tattoos, their
skin is quite fair. The features of the Chin are quite proud and beautiful,
their eyes huge, watery
almonds.
That night the whole
village of maybe 75 people turns out at the compound of the headman. A fire is
built and the animal-skin drum still having hair attached is set in front of the
fire to have the skin drawn tight. Every few minutes somebody pounds the skin
to see if the heat has produced right tone. Then the men came out with their
heads wrapped in cloth, stamping the earth in front of the drum. Dancing one by
one, they picked up their ox-hide shields and hefted their spears, dancing
various dances which were like martial arts. They would charge at me, peering
over the shield, and thrust out their spears. The men, who had large disks in
their ears, wore the purple-and-green striped Chin blankets around their
shoulders, and a
wrap around their legs. As
the gongs rang, the drum bellowed, and the cymbals trilled, the warriors gave a
fierce display. When the party was over, and the kongye drunk, everyone broke a
section of flaming bamboo to light the way home.
We had arranged the
previous night to assemble some of the Chin warriors to take some photos of them
in the daylight. Again, everyone went down to the Lemro, where I knew from
yesterday the light would be even. One man has classic Chin features, the round
disk earrings, purple blanket, spear and ox hide shield. To the beat of the
drum he does a war dance. Everyone insisted on shaking hands before we boarded
the boat and headed north. The headman has warned us that it may not be safe
up-river.
Surely I am the first
foreigner to have reached this far into southern Chin State
and the upper Lemro River. From the boat I can see trails straight up the
mountain where a Chin would have to walk maybe three miles over a mountain to
come back down to the river only a
few hundred yards
upstream. We reached another junction and left the Lemro for the clearer waters
of the Thannchaung
River. After an hour or so the boatman became worried that the river was
becoming too shallow and indeed we stopped and walked about a half-mile upstream
where the river was only a few feet deep. I cut my foot on some sharp stones.
I convinced them to return to the fork and continue up the Lemro. After the
junction, the Lemro was moving really fast, churning up and twisting with
whirlpools. Win's wife put
on a lifejacket. The
engine is at full bore but we are barely moving. The power of the river is
increased as it is squeezed between sheer stone mountains covered in moss,
bamboo and, higher up, huge shade trees. On one bank are a type of deer, both
with horns, a male and female as one was larger, but the color was more orange
than brown.
The river became even
stronger and we nearly stagnate. The boatman wants to turn around before the
engine burns up but I can see one trail on a distant mountain and urge them
ahead. They are becoming nervous, as we have traveled nearly 100 miles
upstream, further than they have ever been. The sense of fear from the boatman
becomes palpable; we are in uncharted waters. We are way beyond any
administered area.
There was one bamboo house
on the side of the mountain. We landed at the beach and sent the boatman up to
find out what to expect. A few minutes later I could hear dogs barking at him.
We were close enough that I could see kids at the windows. The boatman returns
and says there is no village ahead but I don't believe him and send Win and his
father to inquire.
When Win and his dad
climbed up to the house, they called down to me to come up and to bring my
camera. I got off the boat and sank into deep silt. I walked up through the
peanut plants on the bank, through the fields and up to the house. From the
top of the notched-bamboo stairway, blood flowed down. Literally the stairway
was stained and dripping with blood. Climbing up the stairs, I saw four Chin
men working with a dah, the sharp knife of the hills, cutting, slicing and
gutting a huge gaur, the world’s largest bovine, which can stand six feet at the
shoulder. The head was severed and nobly standing, its black, thick horns
stretched out. His penis was two feet long and drying in the sunshine. We
bought a few kilos of beef to cook for lunch. The Chin know that the gaur likes
salt and so set out a salt lick while they patiently waited. A herd of about a
hundred gaur had come down from the mountain and the Chin were able to spear
this beast.
When we continued upriver,
the current became too strong, so even I had to agree we had no choice but to
turn around and head down-stream. Going with the current for a change, the wind
was refreshing as we sped along, stopping at the clear Thannchaung River to cook
lunch and bathe. Bailing Boy had become my friend and I gave him slices of
salami and took his picture. Now when I looked at him he smiled. Somewhere
while we were stopped he had managed to catch a plastic-water-bottle-full of
long grasshoppers. As the fire was started, he tore the wings off and we fried
them in olive oil. Delicious.
After lunch, once we had
gotten underway, a huge wind storm kicked up a blinding sandstorm from the dry
silt on the river banks. Behind us, the clouds turned black as we tried in vain
to outrun the rain. Within a few minutes the rains began, and a group of
monkeys
howled and sprang through
the trees.
The next day we picked up
the boat with the broken propeller shaft and lashed it beside us. Now Bailing
Boy had two boats to bail as he jumped from the end of one through the window of
the other.
I am sunburned, the soles
of my feet are cut from sharp stones, I am a landing place for flies, and my pen
is running out of ink, but at least the rains have stopped. Suddenly there was
a huge clap of thunder. Soon we will be traveling downstream in complete
darkness, guided only by the beam of a flashlight.
Three hours' motoring
downstream in the darkness with Win's father at the prow with a flashlight beam
scanning the rushing waters, trying to avoid dangerous sandbars, flotsam, and
approaching boats finally brought us to the jetty from which we had departed
several days before. We were satisfied; we had accomplished what we had set out
to do. I had film stock of a tribe of Southern Chins, a stock I believe to be
the first complete photographic record of the isolated M'Gan.
|