MYANMAR -
ONE OF MY FAVOURITE PLACES
G'day folks,
I had planned to return to Myanmar on my recent overseas trip, but medical problems prevented me. However, this is still a wonderful country to visit, especially if you love food and enjoy taking photographs.
For 58 years, between 1962 and 2010,
Myanmar (alternatively known as Burma) was pretty much inaccessible. Though
efforts were made in the 90s to encourage tourism to the Southeast Asian
country, the prospect of visiting a harsh military dictatorship
widely-considered to be one of the most repressive in the world did not quite
appeal to a lot of tourists.
Following the democratization of the
country in the early 2010s, things aren’t perfect yet, to say the least, but
people have steadily come to discover the wonders that Myanmar has to offer. Of
course, those tourists did not discover the beauty of Burma; Rudyard Kipling,
the author of the Jungle Book toured Burma for 3 days all the way back in
1889 and fell in love with the beauty of the land, the majestic temples, the
good humor of the natives and the Burmese women, who he thought were
particularly beautiful. Some 130 years later, we must say, we can relate.
The majority of the people in Myanmar are Theravada
Buddhists, the oldest extant school of Buddhism and one that spread to
Southeast Asia from the isle of Sri Lanka. Two of the major cultural exports of
Burma are rooted in this religious tradition: mindfulness meditation and
the Vipassana Movement.
The most important and striking Buddhist temple in
Myanmar is the Shwedagon Pagoda in Yangon (Rangoon), a complex of beautiful,
gold-plated stupas (dome or bell-shaped shrines containing holy relics), with a
tremendous stupa in the center, which is said to contain the hair of the
historical Buddha (Siddharta Gautama), as well as relics of three Buddhas that
preceded him.
The complex is
“guarded” by giant Chinthes, leonine statues that have a similar role to the
Chinese “lion dogs”. Within are eight shrines dedicated to each day of the week
(Wednesday is split in two) and it is customary for visitors to pray at the
shrine dedicated to the day they were born by washing a statue of the Buddha in
that shrine and giving a tribute of flowers. Be advised there is a dress code
for visitors.
Also in the former
capital city of Yangon are dozens of street markets where you can find a large
variety of fresh produce, fish, clothes, crafts and delicious street food.
There simply is no better place or way to experience the vibrant city life and
culture of Myanmar than to literally breathe in the scents of the marketplace.
Guided boat tours are available around Inle Lake that will
take you to some truly amazing sites around the lake, including the ancient
pagoda city of Shwe Indein, the Nam Pan market with peddlers bringing their
wares in by boats, floating gardens and Pindaya Caves, a series of caverns
densely-populated by statues of the Buddha.
The ancient and ruined city of Bagan used to be the
heart and capital of the empire that would become Burma. At its height, the
city was so rich that it housed about 10,000 temples and pagodas, of these,
more than 2,000 still dot the plains of Bagan and can be visited.
The many temples, differing in architecture, size
and style can either be visited on foot or appreciated from above in a hot air
balloon that affords a vista of the entire lost city in all its grandeur.
Myanmar is located
between India, Thailand, and China, and you know just from its
geographical location between these three culinary empires that the local
cuisine is going to be great. Here are three dishes you have got to taste in
Myanmar.
Clancy's comment: I can only urge you to visit this country. The people are awesome.
I'm ...
Here are three dishes you have got to taste in Myanmar....? I was expecting recipes.
ReplyDeleteYep, I skipped them. Apologies. Better to be there and taste the real thing.
DeleteCT