Incidents west of Lhasa

by Bruce Ryan

Focus

Vol. 42 No. 1 Spring.1992

Pp.22-27

Copyright by Focus


The road from Lhasa to Kathmandu traverses as remarkable a landscape, both physical and cultural, as any on earth. Its eastern end was completed in 1955 by the invading Han Chinese, after centuries of Tibetan dependence on human porters and yaks, and its western end only by 1966. Since then, despite ironfisted restrictions on access, this passage has become another Golden Road to Samarkand for foreign travelers, "for lust of knowing what should not be known." For 950 km (590 miles), this route could convey many more modestly intrepid travelers along one of the world's great safaris, if only the Chinese administration would afford tourism the same priority as the road's present economic, logistic, and military functions. Such was the conclusion of a geographical expedition which followed this route in August, 1990, under the auspices of the International Geographical Union's Regional Conference on Asian Pacific Countries in Beijing. There were ten of us - from Scotland, Germany, Korea (happily Buddhist), Australia, and the United States - led by four diversely talented guides from the Chinese Academy of Sciences, and a quite crucial Tibetan bus driver. We stopped over night in Gyangze and Xigaze (the largest Tibetan towns after Lhasa), and in New Tingri and Zhangmu (the border control points). What follows are one participant-observer's opinions, pro and con, of the feasibility (and dubious desirability) of encouraging tourism along this marchland between China and Nepal. Encouragements, sensate The attractions of the route are manifold, from views of Mount Everest (80 km distant, but presenting that unmistakable North Face, before which at least thirty photo portraits were taken by our party) to strenuous climbing down avalanches and a gratifying absence of desultory package tourists. At how many airports can the pilot announce, the moment the last passenger is seated, "we will take off immediately," and then do so? Forbidden Tibet is forbidding yet. Dwarfing all else is that extraordinary landscape of huge proportions and overwhelmingly long vistas, with textbook examples of mountain-building and glaciation, all blindingly sharp in the thin air and bare rock surfaces. Our bus wound precariously up one fearfully steep slope, then down another, half the party afraid to look out the window in case their eye movements tipped the bus over the precipice, the other half leaning wildly out of the same windows, snapping dozens of ultimately disappointing photos. There was also the satisfaction of touching the history of inner Asia, of tracing Sir Francis Young husband's treaty expedition of 1904, or passing that succession of mud-built fortified border villages where incursions had been repelled over the centuries. Most gratifying of all, there was contact with Tibetan culture and landscape, and the opportunity to mingle with Tibetans. We were not the first to be swayed by those siren songs, nor the only visitors dumbfounded by yaks and barley-beer, by prayer flags and sacred rock cairns on every mountain pass, by gutted lamaseries and nomads' tents. Part of Tibet's attraction to visitors from the western democracies is the enduring opposition of Lamaistic Buddhism to the often brutally atheistic communism of desecrating invaders, and the self-satisfaction of showing solidarity with the theocratically and culturally oppressed. The same attraction is manifest in the sheer oddity of Tibetan culture itself national costumes like circus attire, and calligraphy like Arabic misplaced. For the geographer, the striking cues are the buildings, fields, and settlements of the cultural landscape. Here yellow fields of rape sway beside green fields of barley and buckwheat. There the ubiquitous monsoonal mud is molded and piled to dry as building blocks, or stacked like packing cases to form supporting columns for electric transmission lines along the treeless valleys. We stopped to inspect a farmstead outside Gyantze and the village of Qiuxu (also called Chusul or Zeng) near Lhasa. Both were brazen, uninvited intrusions into the private worlds of shyly retiring people, yet richly rewarding experiences for us, as they would be for other travelers. The farm patriarch required a bribe, but led us into his carpeted bed-sitting room for a candid disquisition on agricultural practices and policy. He was not a communist, he said, but displayed a poster of Mao Zedong, alongside a calendar for 1986. His house was the traditional truncated pyramid, with battered outer walls, starkly white-plastered, and broad black window frames. It rose two levels above the enclosing mudcemented stone walls of the barnyard. On the parapeted roof deck, his daughter hand-loomed thick woollen cloth. in the smoke-filled, fly-flitting, earth-floored kitchen, his infant's crib stood by the dung-fueled stove, sharing a low mud platform with utensils, leather bottles, and strewn straw. That farmhouse is not yet an approved bed-and-breakfast hostelry for discriminating travelers, but would fit stylistically into the equally traditional Tibetan mud-walled village of Quxu. Straddling a barely trickling anabranch of the Yarlung Tsangpo (Brahmaputra), the village has all I the organic, contextual, vernacular authenticity that delights western planners but escapes their emulation. Its barnyards are bogs, its central lane its drain. Its door lintels are bedecked with prayer flags ("wind horses" strung from thin tree branches) and inscribed with the sun-and-moon or swastika insignia of fortune-craving true believers. its walled alleys and courts are alive with horned cattle, saddled donkeys, black calves, slinking dogs, and bemused or apprehensive Tibetans. Our Chinese guides kept out of sight, leaving the mapping (and salivating dogs) to fearless, ignorant foreigners. Authentic villages like Quxu still need the field anthropologist, not the disruption that tourism brings. Discouragements, logistic Such sights and experiences as these will always attract determined travelers from every corner of the earth, but less resolute souls will be deterred by the impediments. Seasonally, segments of the route are too windy, cold, snowy, or inundated with monsoonal rain for pleasurable travel. Unpredictable delays, which unsettle clock-conditioned Westerners, arise when the bus is bogged down for hours, or overheats its brake linings and axles in sloshing across braided streams and jolting along corrugated roads, emptying overhead storage racks onto the heads of passengers. one prescient traveler with orthopaedic problems brought her own inflatable cushion. Along the last breathtaking descent into Nepal, where the road follows a raging torrent into its chasm, dropping 1,350 meters in elevation over only 33 km, avalanches habitually halt the bus, transferring its passengers and their luggage to barefoot Nepalese porters who sometimes disappear into the forests, taking the luggage (and a thousand mementos) with them. Our last Tibetan night was spent in the border control village of Zhangmu (also known as Dram, Khasa, and Zham), which was then isolated by avalanches both above and below. No motor traffic could enter or leave. Our party took two hours to scramble dizzily on foot down the final three slippery kilometers to the Friendship Bridge, 737 meters (2,418 feet) below, where Nepal meets China and we met our waiting bus. For one incapacitated traveler, our Chinese guides purchased poles and tarpaulin for constructing a litter, and hired bearers. Incapacity discourages tourism in other ways. High altitude sickness thunders through the head for the first day or two in Tibet, leaving the heart pounding and the lungs gasping for oxygen while trying to sleep, disorienting the mind, and plaguing the nose. Emphysema and nicotine addiction beget biliousness. Dusty, slightly bloody snot accumulates, and nose-bleeds occur. our bus carried two emergency oxygen flasks, which occasionally leaked into the cabin and gave us the giggles. How light-headed we felt, staggering around the high passes above 5,000 meters (17,000 feet). Not every potential tourist will accept such contingencies. Fitness does count. When medical attention was mandatory, the hotel physician charged a Chinese guide two yuan (42 cents), but charged a German geographer fifty yuan ($10.62) for the same consultation and another twenty yuan ($4.25) for pills. Those accustomed to the delicacies of West European or North American tourism may balk at the deficiencies of Tibetan food, lodging, and hygiene. In one hotel or another, our party endured toilets that refused to flush, hand basins that would not empty, bath drains that flooded the floor, shower fixtures that defied logical operation, overnight water shut-offs, gas leaking into bedrooms, electrical wiring designed for self-immolation, monkeys peering through windows, and regular power failures for which our reward was a candlelit dinner with troubadours. Hot water became a dim memory. At New Tingri, where we shared barracks with the army, bed linen had not been changed, but bore bodily stains, exudations, and hair. Adaptable colleagues simply turned the sheets, but were asked by others how often they imagined that had been done already. We were well primed for the spittoons at Zhangmu. Guide books routinely advise travelers to carry their own food through Tibet. The availability and acceptability of local food are simply too uncertain. Gourmets and low cholesterol partisans that we were, much that was offered proved inedible, and our picnic lunches frequently ended up in the eager hands of rural Tibetans, who welcomed the tin cans and chopsticks as much as the nourishment. Our Chinese guides regarded them as beggars who disgraced the nation, and tried to shoo them away. We lived on chicken legs, bread rolls, canned fruit, canned drink and plastic packets of pungently emetic plastic vegetables. We did without napkins and utensils, relying on one Swiss army knife (surreptitiously carried by a foreigner) to open all those cans, and a shared supply of moist cleaning tissue. One or two carried personal travel food (mostly noodles, biscuits, and tea), retiring to their rooms at mealtimes, as often as not for the latest dose of antidiarrheals. One traveler suffered from celiac disease, her intolerance of glutin ruling out most wheat breads and leaving her, on occasion, helplessly hungry. Quite a different discouragement for tourists is the paucity of souvenirs for sale. Kodak and Fuji profited handsomely from our excursion, but not the command economy of Tibet. The market stalls of Gyangze- and Xigaze did barter in jewelry, clothing, textiles, and assorted handcrafted artifacts, but only dubiously accepted the FECs (Foreign Exchange Certificates) with which foreign visitors are saddled. Even the communal rug factory in Xigaze, dedicated to lining the monastic coffers of His (Late) Holinesss the Panchen Lama, and where weavers sing as they work like the Seventeen Dwarfs, caught dismayed visitors without the resources to acquire a bargain-nonhunter's oriental carpet. Prior advertising would have obviated this problem, and gilded the holy coffers more amply. Savvy travelers bought turquoise, braided ceremonial hats, and antique wooden prayer-printing blocks, the latter intended for re-sale to European museums. One Chinese crypto-capitalist quietly bought handicrafts for re-sale in Kathmandu. From street hawkers and receivers of stolen goods, others bought ornate silver prayer wheels and bells. Even the government's Friendship Store, nationally dedicated to absorbing loose foreign currency, impeded commerce. Attempts to buy a "uighur" hat were discouraged by the sales assistant, who berated the product, discounted its suitability for the customer, and scorned its non-Tibetan origin. Where else do stores refuse to sell their inventory? Currency exchange is time-consuming and petrifyingly bureaucratic. Cash points are so rare that commerce is crippled. To exchange the last of our FECs into one of the freely traded currencies before leaving China, as the law requires, we slithered up the monsoon-drenched hill to the only bank in Zhangmu by 10:00 a.m., its posted opening time. The building was locked and empty. At 10:10 a.m., our posse fetched the manager from his bed, and by 10:35 a.m. the bank opened its doors for business. Eight tellers and clerks benignly awaited us behind the partition. They completed the first transaction of the day at 10:50 a.m., and the third by 11:00 a.m., using overhead wires to speed enfolded messages and documents across the banking chamber. Panic mounted that we might miss today's bus to Kathmandu. Discouragements, political Perhaps most discouraging for tourism is the visual and emotional impress of Chinese totalitarianism on the Tibetan landscape. New Chinese settlements are sited in brutal, confrontational juxtaposition with old Tibetan settlements. The former are prefabricated from imported sheet iron and other mass-produced materials, drearily adhering to the most basic "socialist functionalism." They serve as construction centers or military command posts, intimidating and unrelated to the historical landscape. By contrast, the Tibetan settlements are shaped from mud blocks and coursed stone rubble in traditionally irregular forms, adorned with religious symbolism. They serve as farm centers. just west of Lhasa, nondescript army barracks stand athwart the lower edge of the vast but depopulated Drepung Monastery, like a junkyard spoiling the view of a castle. Unfortunately, tourists see the foreground first. On the lakeshore of Yamdrok Tso (Yamtso Yumco), another Han settlement not only elbows aside an older Tibetan village but encroaches on its already meager terraced fields. Between Lhasa and Zhangmu, the infrequent motor fuel supply points are effectively controlled by the Chinese army of occupation. Our bus carried its own reserve supply, a plastic pod resembling a 45 gallon garbage bin which seeped into luggage stacked around it. We refueled from bowsers secured inside the walls of army barracks. Photographs were forbidden at the Yarlung Tsangpo bridge, with armed guards at either end, and at one politically sensitive Chinese settlement. Typical tourists resent such restrictions, and would deplore what our expedition underwent at border control barriers - the bag searches (when x-rayed shoes were mistaken for rifle butts), the confiscated camcorder, the detentions for lack of exit certificates (occasioned, in fact, by Chinese bureaucratic negligence at ports of entry), and the passport "accidentally" stolen by a "careless" Australian. Little love is lost between Han Chinese and the dispirited, sullen, angry, rebellious, and uncooperative Tibetans. There are no roadside billboards, but huge ideographic messages assembled with white stones appear overnight on prominent hillsides, suggesting that "Chinese Go Home" or some equally terse Han response. indifferent to the plight of a Tibetan driver Chinese trucks sailed past our bogged-down bus for two hours. At Drepung Monastery, abounding with political agitators of both persuasions, distant lamas shouted, for our benefit in English, "Chinese bitch!" and "Chinese no good ! " At the top-rated Xigaze Hotel, Communist Party officials from Beijing lounged about the lobby with their entourage of uniformed security officers and camp followers, ostentatiously proprietorial. It is hypocritical cant for such dignitaries to publish tourist brochures advertising the "religious-cultural integrity" of Tibet when the Dalai Lama is in exile, and naked children of nomads pelt our bus with stones because we have no pictures of His Holiness to distribute. Only morally ambivalent geographers can grieve over such a predicament while simultaneously accepting the Chinese justification for occupying the Himalayan marchlands near India. Encouragements, planned Despite these discouragements, most of which contain the seeds of their own correction, determined travelers will always want to follow this wonderful road so close to the heavens. Others will need to overcome their aversion to contact with Third World poverty (their chagrin at begging children and brutish lives), and many will question the propriety of dragging a remarkable culture down a developmental highway, probably to its own destruction by tourists. These are policy issues which Han and Tibetan leaders must settle, perhaps by contemplating the fates of American Indians and Australian Aborigines, who are torn between abandonment to their traditional ways (on some anthropological preserve) and assimilation into the multicultural, materialistic global village. A marketing survey might be instructive, before another culture fades into extinction, as would a sensitive appraisal of what roles the National Theatre and Potala Palace could play in fixing Lhasa as a growth pole at one end of the safari. How much friendlier the landscape would look if Han and Tibetan settlements were not juxtaposed. Overland transportation and its infrastructure will obviously need improvement. The existing succession of numbered road maintenance depots, with their yak-hauled snow plows and resident road gangs, is a useful beginning, but not all that seasoned tourists will desire. For the relief of unmentionable bodily functions, our bus stopped periodically where two adjacent clefts in a hillside or cliff afforded privacy. Such locations need to be mapped and signposted, unless the Travel Bureau promptly builds roadhouses selling fuel and refreshment, conceivably in conjunction with the maintenance depots. Until avalanches are forbidden, the descent from Zhangmu to Nepal might be accomplished more majestically by chair lift or aerial cable car. Chinese and Tibetans need also collaborate in operating tours. Our Tibetan driver, though spurned by Bad Samaritans, was our translator, facilitator, and guarantor. Through him, and not our Chinese guides, we penetrated Tibetan culture. He carried a feather duster for cabin cleanliness, self-sufficiently changed a wheel, hosed down the bus each morning, and took care to get a good night's sleep. He drove confidently where others would not have driven for all the yak butter candles in Tibet. Like the rest of China, Tibet keeps Beijing time. During our expedition, the sun rose inconveniently at 9:00 a.m. and set at 9:00 p.m. At pitch black 7:00 a.m., we would place our bags in the hotel corridor for loading. One night, our Korean colleagues rose at 2:40 a.m., showered, lugged their bags into the corridor, and went to the untended restaurant for breakfast. In that black and eerie stillness they realized that their time-keeper had misread the hands of his watch, interpreting 2:40 as 7:10. Tibet certainly deserves a brighter dawn, and the same time zone as Kathmandu. For all its shortcomings, that road still beckons. it demonstrates that place has a transcendent power over people, and that one may love a country, and even travel there, without loving its food, its plumbing, or the system that controls it. Further Readings F. Spencer Chapman, 1938. "Lhasa in 1937," Geographical Journal, Vol. 91, No. 6, June, pp. 497-507. Alexandra David-Neel, 1986. A My Journey to Lhasa. Boston: Beacon Books. First published in 1927 by Harper & Brothers. A journey made in 1923, when the author (aged 55) was the first European woman to enter the forbidden city of Lhasa. Carole Elchert, ed., 1990. White Lotus An Introduction to Tibetan Culture. Ithaca, New York: Snow Lion Publications. Report of the 1988 Cultural Arts Expedition, funded by the Ohio Arts Council and the Ohio Humanities Council. Tomoya lozawa, 1980. Trekking in the Himalayas. Tokyo: Yama-Kei Publishers. Translated from the Japanese by Michiko U. Kornhauser and David H. Kornhauser. Detailed field maps of Himalayan settlements. nal Rural Architecture: A Culture Geography of the Common House. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press. Stanfords International Maps, 1989. South-Central Tibet, Kathmandu-Lhasa Route A Map, London: Edward Stanford Ltd. 1:1 million scale, 2nd edition. The best current touring map of the area. Francis Younghusband, 1985. India and Tibet Hong Kong: Oxford University Press. Introduction by Alastair Lamb. First published in 1910 by John Murray, London. The military expedition of 1904, from the horse's mouth. MAP: Expedition route from Lhasa to Katmandu. (B. Ryan) [SEE IMAGE] SEE IMAGE PHOTO: Yak-drawn snow-plow, at a road maintenance depot beside the Jia Tsua La pass, 32 km west of Lhase. (B. Ryan) [SEE IMAGE] SEE IMAGE PHOTO: Traditional Tibetan farmhouse at Tingri, inside a walled compound, with dung patties and firewood stacked around the parapets. (B. Ryan) [SEE IMAGE] SEE IMAGE PHOTO: Mud-block column supporting electric and telegraphic transmission wire, just east of Gyantzie. (B. Ryan) [SEE IMAGE] SEE IMAGE ~~~~~~~~ By Bruce Ryan -------------------