Saturday, March 12, 2011

Vietnam & Cambodia: Intro and Comparisons

Bayon face
   The Indochine Peninsula Adventure  was completed (the eastern half anyway) with our recent temple tour of Cambodia and Vietnam.  Add our visit to Laos over a year ago and the whole experience invites comparison of its composite countries.
    There are similarities: the endless grit, rice fields abound,  bicycles as preferred transportation, everyone is short and everything is cheaper than back home-to name a few.  And to the differences...
    Laos. The poorest of the three countries, but with quiet dignity. If a person had only two shirts, one would be clean and that would be the one he would be wearing. After the damage of the Vietnam War (called the American War in these parts) people picked themselves up and got on with life and living in a very resourceful way.  There are some local business initiatives designed to help neighborhoods market their handcrafted goods to tourists. The one national road, as basic and unimproved  as it is (especially in the countryside) goes where people need to go.
Angkor Wat
     Cambodia.  Home to the massive Angkor Wat and a jillion other temples in various states of excavation & reparation all calling the tourists streaming into the country.  Tourism is the second largest industry in Cambodia beaten only by the business of "Being Poor".  From king to tuk-tuk driver, everyone is only too eager to tell you how poor they are.  The beggars, touts and salespeople were persistent to an annoying degree everywhere. Even the post office got into the act by selling bundles of stamps for amounts ($1) greater than face value of the postage. No individual stamp sales.  Sigh.  Get the picture?
     Vietnam.  We walked across the border from Cambodia to Vietnam and the difference was noticeable almost right away.  Vietnam is a much more prosperous nation. It's greener.  The food is definitely better. And it is loaded with shysters who feel that not only should tourists pay more than locals but should get their "heads shaved" (dramatically overcharged) on top of it. Hey, the Communists may have won the war, but Capitalism (Ho Chi Minh-style) Rules the Day. You'll bump into the odd Vietnamese who does not make such a distinction and keeps you from painting the entire population with the same brush. [hint: take metered taxis and if you can't shop at a fixed price store, bargain HARD]  Vietnam also has a serious sleaze factor, especially in tourist areas.
Chinese New Year spread
     You might ask, and I sure wondered, if an American in these parts would be on the receiving end of ill-will or worse because of their citizenship and the war.  The quick answer is no.  That kind of sentiment was only found in parts of government museums. Any tongue lashings I received were from vendors because I refused to buy something they had been hounding me about for the last ten minutes- and that had nothing to do with my nationality.  
     O.K.  from here we go to a few notable bits.   
    

1 comment:

  1. Wow, great stuff, Ms. Pierrot!

    It almost feels like I was there with you.

    ReplyDelete