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The small, single engine plane carried only a few
passengers. We arrived mid morning. While coming in for
the landing I was startled by a strange wailing siren. I
looked out the window and saw several men running around
a grassy meadow shooing away a herd of cows, while
another man cranked an old siren. After the cows were
rounded up we made a rather bumpy landing in Pokhara
valley.
This isolated valley lies 3,500 feet above sea level and
96 miles NW of Kathmandu in an area known as the
“Switzerland of Nepal.” From Pokhara, if clouds don't
obscure them, one can see the entire Annapurna range,
Machhapuchhara (the fish-tail mountain), and even Mount
Everest. I was fortunate to visit this beautiful valley
in 1962 when I was on vacation from my State Department
assignment in Dacca, East Pakistan (now Bangladesh).
The Royal Nepalese Airlines stopped there twice a day –
once in the morning en route to Mustang on the Nepal
Tibet border, and again in the afternoon before
returning to Kathmandu. The only other way to reach this
isolated area was by foot or horseback, a trip that took
several days. With neither cars nor electricity, Pokhara
sounded like a modern-day Shangri-la. I was determined
to see it.
Beside the "runway" was a small, corrugated tin shed
over which flew the Royal Nepalese Airlines flag.
Next-door was a mud and wattle structure, which turned
out to be a livery stable run by a Tibetan family. These
two buildings and the water spigot they shared were the
only signs of civilization. Off in one direction ran a
well-worn path. Fanning out across the meadow several
other paths, less well defined, meandered who knows
where?
I was excited as I got off the plane. I love mountains
and a chance to see some of the world’s highest had
drawn me to this very place. However, I also felt
somewhat frightened as I watched the plane take off
again for Mustang. I was alone, didn't speak the
language, and was not sure what to do next. Would the
plane come back? Would I be OK? Would I find my way to
the village and back? Screwing up my courage, I headed
down the path the pilot had assured me led to the
village.
After a short walk I came to a cluster of charming,
mostly 1-story houses. A couple of simple shops selling
basic supplies made it clear Pokhara was no tourist
town. Colorful flowers twined around the old wooden
doorways and the rock and mud buildings with their
simple thatched roofs made wonderful subjects for my
camera.
I noticed some children playing on the steps of one of
the houses. With a start, I realized they were playing
jacks. Instead of balls and star-shaped metal jacks they
were using small pebbles, but it was clear that their
game was the same I had played as a child back in
Tacoma. Nepalese children are beautiful with round happy
faces, honey colored skin, and sparkling brown eyes.
While these children's clothes were quite ragged and
worn, they were charming and seemed as curious about me
as I was about them. Before long a gaggle of children
followed my every footstep but no one asked for bakshish
as they always had in Dacca. I felt like the Pied Piper.
After a couple of hours of wandering about and
picture-taking, I headed back to the "airfield." I did
not want to miss that return plane to Kathmandu. Peeking
through the window of the small tin shed beside the
"runway," I could see a narrow charpoy or cot was the
only piece of furniture. It did not look very inviting.
The shed turned out to be a rest house for airline
pilots grounded by bad weather, a fairly common
occurrence so high in the Himalayas.
Squatting against the rock wall beside the livery stable
were several fierce looking Tibetan men. Tibetan women
with their shiny black hair pulled back in braids, heavy
coral and turquoise jewelry, and wearing colorful
patchwork aprons over long traditional dresses are quite
lovely. While Tibetan men also wear colorful clothing,
they look fearsome with their large mustaches and
piercing black eyes.
I was surprised to see a western woman and a little girl
seated on the rock wall apparently also waiting for the
plane. The woman said she was an American photographer.
She and her daughter had just returned from visiting a
Tibetan refugee encampment about a 2-hour hike up the
valley. One of first groups to escape the Chinese
invasion, they had arrived just a few days before me.
The more she talked the more excited I became about the
possibility of visiting them. Ever since I was a kid, I
have been fascinated by Tibet. I clearly remember
hearing Lowell Thomas announce on the radio: "This is
Lowell Thomas broadcasting from the top of the world." I
had planned to travel there but the Chinese invasion in
1959 had squashed that dream. "It would be the chance of
a lifetime!" the woman said, urging me to stay and take
the plane back the next day. She and her daughter had
stayed in the rest house and taken a meal with the
Tibetan family at the livery stable and she convinced me
I should do the same.
If she and her daughter had stayed in that shed
overnight, surely a healthy, thirty-year-old woman like
me should be able to do it as well. I was only wearing a
light cotton dress, but luckily I had bought a large
pashmena shawl in the bazaar the day before. Fearing the
plane ride might be chilly, I had brought it along.
Since I now had a "blanket," I decided to stay. The
wailing siren announced the arrival of the plane as I
dashed up the hill to the livery stable to make
arrangements. Later, watching the plane take off, I
nervously waved goodbye to the woman and her daughter
and turned to settle into my new accommodations.
My evening meal consisted of Tibetan tea (a spicy brew
of milk, tea and pepper), chapattis, and boiled potatoes
eaten with the Tibetan family while sitting on the floor
around their communal cooking pot. I relished the plain
but filling meal because I was hungry. While the modest
meal was not memorable, the rest of the night was. Until
the sun went down and the birds found a place to roost
it sounded as though they were tap dancing in wooden
shoes on the corrugated tin roof of the hut. Huddled
under my shawl trying to keep warm, I did not sleep
much. It gets cold at night at that altitude.
The dancing birds awoke me the next morning at sunrise
and I hurried outside to try to spot the mountains. The
valley was beautiful in the early morning sunshine, but
the mountains still lay hidden in the mist. I washed my
face and hands at the water pump and headed to the
livery stable for a breakfast of more "chapattis" and
Tibetan Tea. I was getting to quite like that spicy
brew.
The man who ran the livery stable spoke some English and
agreed to rent me one of his ponies. He suggested it
would be better, however, if his young son led me to the
refugee camp. He was afraid I might get lost. His wife,
concerned about my lack of trousers, loaned me a pair of
baggy green cotton drawers with a drawstring waist. She
also insisted I carry her big black umbrella to protect
my fair skin from the sun, which is fierce at those high
altitudes. As the day wore on, I was very grateful for
her thoughtfulness.
Dressed in my red and white checked cotton shirt dress
over the green baggy drawers and carrying the big black
umbrella, I must have looked quite a sight perched atop
the colorful Tibetan rugs which served as the small
pony's saddle. In addition, since I am pretty tall my
legs dangled down the pony's sides and my feet nearly
touched the ground.
As the boy and I slowly wound through the lovely
countryside, occasional glimpses of Machhapuchhara and
the Annapurna range appeared as the clouds cleared. Once
I even spotted the tip of Mt. Everest – at least I think
that's what the boy said. We made many stops along the
way to photograph the colorful flowers crawling over the
crumbling stonewalls which flanked the path beside a
crystal clear brook. The clopping of the pony's hoofs on
the stone path through the village announced our
presence. Our little caravan must have been quite an
unusual sight, as villagers frequently ran out of their
huts to wave.
After a couple of hours, I spotted several white Tibetan
prayer flags waving from long bamboo poles perched high
on a hillside. I dismounted from the pony and started
walking towards the flags just as a crowd of women and
children came running towards me. When we met they stuck
out their tongues and bowed deeply from the waist, which
is a traditional Tibetan greeting. The children grabbed
my hands and the bowing and giggling women seemed
thrilled to see me. I felt like an honored guest. A
white-haired woman in a nurse's uniform stepped out of a
nearby tent and introduced herself. This kindly-faced,
Swiss woman was the manager of the camp. She invited me
to explore wherever I liked.
Suddenly a group of fierce looking men came running
towards me. Many had huge beads of turquoise and coral
clasped around their necks and threaded through their
earlobes. Instead of the traditional brightly-colored,
pieced-leather boots, dark red woolen jackets thrown
over one shoulder and clasped around the waists with a
wide leather belt, many wore camouflage jackets and
pants along with western-style boots.
I was even more startled when they lined up like
schoolboys indicating they wanted their picture taken.
Obediently I whipped out my camera. After several
snapshots, they crowded around demanding to see the
results. I realized that the American woman photographer
who had visited the day before must have had a Polaroid
Instamatic. I was hard pressed to explain why my camera
didn't produce similarly amazing results. They must have
thought I was holding out on them, as several got quite
angry. Given their already wild appearance, their fierce
scowls made them look even more formidable. The Swiss
woman came to my rescue by explaining the difference in
the cameras and assuring the men that I was not cheating
them.
While she gave me a tour of the camp, she explained that
after the Chinese invasion of Tibet in the late 1950s,
receiving areas like hers had been set up near the
Tibetan border in both northern India and Nepal. This
particular group of refugees—who had been herdsmen and
nomads—were going to be trained to weave rugs. She hoped
to eventually relocate them as a group closer to
Katmandu.
The repression of the peaceful and gentle people of
Tibet was a sad chapter in the world's history. "Over 1
million people out of a population of 6 million died at
the brutal hands of the Chinese and Tibet's vast forests
were cut down and the wildlife almost totally massacred"
according to Sogyal Rinpoche, author of The Tibetan Book
of Living and Dying. "The vast majority of its six and a
half thousand monasteries lie gutted or destroyed, and
the Tibetan people face extinction, and the glory of
their own culture in their homeland has been almost
entirely obliterated. Spiritual masters, monks, and nuns
were their first targets, because the Chinese Communists
wanted above all to break the spirit of the people by
wiping out all traces of religious life."
Today thousands of Tibetans live in exile, with hundreds
right here in the Seattle area. According to the Dalai
Lama, there are now more Tibetans living outside their
own country than within its borders. While my story
takes place 46 years ago, hopefully the world will never
forget what was done to these people by the Chinese.
Thinking back to my adventure off-the-beaten-path in
Nepal, I realize whatever dangers were present evolved
mostly out of my own fear of the unknown. Admittedly, it
was harder in those days to let people know where I was
or call for help since there were no cell phones and
email did not exist. However, there were usually radio
hookups in remote villages like Pokhara. I also knew the
Embassy staff down in Katmandu would respond if I got
into real trouble. But, of course, that resource is also
available to travelers today. Restaurants and motels
were non-existent but I have always found there are kind
people and make-do accommodations if you look for them.
On the other hand, guerillas and pirates who kidnap
travelers for ransom are a new phenomenon. Sometimes,
however, these stories are really just overblown
accounts from some reporter's vivid imagination and need
to be carefully checked out. I remember dozens of
occasions when I had to reassure my mother that I was
safe after she had read some scary article in the paper.
In the sixties Americans were pretty much admired in
most parts of the world, which made travel to remote
places less risky. While this is not universally true
today, most people still like Americans as individuals.
They just do not like our politics.
The things that make travel really dangerous are war and
disease—elements that one cannot really control. I
always carefully research the situation and avoided it
if the risk seems too great. That is a lot easier to do
today with using the Internet. Dangers that are mostly
in the mind—fear of the unknown, fear of feeling
foolish, and fear of being seen as "different"—hold many
travelers back from the possibility of a great
adventure. I try to go with what I call a "vacation
mindset, not some preset idea of what I want to happen."
For me, the real fun of travel is keeping oneself open
to possibilities.
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