Monday, March 30, 2015

Sustainable Use of Tropical Ecosystems: Cultural Tourism

Orang Asli village in Taman Negara, peninsular Malaysia




Long House, Sarawak, Borneo Malaysia




Visit to village in Yap, Federated States of Micronesia

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YsEe0EqnY6g



Fiji, Village Visit

http://tv.kilroy.eu/video/814600/fiji-experience-visiting-a



Solomon Islands, Village Visit

http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=endscreen&v=phtg6eHehKw&NR=1



Solomon Island, Music and Dance

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dFbmwD9kaVU



Bad or Good: The Impacts of Heritage Tourism in Developing Nations
http://www.academia.edu/8855103/Bad_For_Good_The_Impacts_of_Heritage_Tourism_in_Developing_Nations

Ecotourism or Ecotrespassing?

Orang Asli village in Taman Negara, peninsular Malaysia




Long House, Sarawak, Borneo Malaysia



Here is a link to an article called "Ecotourism or Eco-Trespassing" that was originally published on the Wild Asia website.  This link is not longer active so here is a copy of the article.

http://www.wildasia.org/main.cfm/RTI/Eco-Trespassing%3F




Ecotourism or Eco-Trespassing


Rick Gregory


Though they live in the remotest parts of the jungle, the Orang Asli


are still not hidden far enough from tourists. Like an elephant in a field


of oil palm seedlings, urban visitors trample on settlements with reckless


abandon. And in both cases the intent is not meant to harm, only to feed a


hunger.




Unlike their Bornean counterparts, such as the Iban and Penan, the


Orang Asli tribes of Peninsular Malaysia are not as well known or identified


by their cultural distinctions. Although strongly tied with the jungle,


they are not seen so much as traditional people rather than another type of


forest animal to gawk at. Good intentions, materialized by tourists


bringing used clothes and candies, do not override good manners. But the current practice

of a flotilla of orange-vested holiday goers off-loaded on an Orang Asli settlement shore smacks

of an invasion, not a cultural experience.


As part of an outing to the unspoiled surroundings of Temenggor Lake in


Perak, Malaysia, thirty of us rode in three boats for almost an hour


through forested hills and dozens of hilltop islands, the land remnants left


after damming the Perak River two decades ago. Along the way we passed by


slopes dotted with thatched roof huts and cassava plants, the mark of


Indigenous communities now settled on the embankments of the 15,000 hectares of  

the man-made reservoir. We finally rounded a small bay with pencil-like


stumps sticking above the waterline to reach Kampung Tebang, a Jahai


community of less than 150 people.




Lead by our nature guide, Haji Silah, whose primary instruction was "to


respect the culture," we gathered together to await the headman to


officially greet us. From the moment I stepped off the boat, I was


uncomfortable. The excitement and anticipation of the tourists were not


reciprocated by the Jahai adults or children. Instead, they stayed at a


distance squatting in the shade of their simple homes. For us it was a


new experience with a new people; for the Orang Asli it was routine.


Calvin, the 31 year-old headman dressed in a tee-shirt and short pants,


fielded the barrage of questions thrown at him like a diplomat: we use


the water from the lake; our staple food is tapioca; health care and


schooling are provided by the government; and yes we still use blowpipes to hunt

small mammals. His calm voice and polite manner underscored his adeptness as a leader.




After the introduction the awkwardness kicked in as we walked around


Giving sweets to shy kids and silent elders. The Orang Asli took the


'goodies' with lagging arms and reticent faces. It looked more like force feeding

than gift giving. One participant, a Malaysian in her 60s, summed up the entire scene

later during a chat session: "I took a spot where I could observe the Orang Asli. At first

I was ashamed. It was like going to a zoo. But then I realized that the Orang Asli were also

watching us as much as we watched them."




Malaysia has a wonderful Open House tradition that accompanies each


Ethnic or religious holiday. These cultural exchanges that infuse each visit


To each others homes, whether Malays, Chinese, Indians or others, keeps


The cultural flame burning and re-establishes respect for all Malaysians.


In sharp contrast, the visit to the Jahai village produced no exchange of


values, nor any respectful outcomes; it was an invasion of privacy.




 No one is really at fault. The treatment of the Orang Asli community


is just not the same as with other Malaysians. They are as remote from our


minds as they are physically distant in the jungle. This circumstance leads to a rather unfortunate fact: 

the Orang Asli are mostly strangers, not neighbours, to Malaysians.




For Malaysia, it is time to rethink these 'ecotourism' visits to Orang


Asli villages. Indigenous forest dwellers already face difficulties to


Provide for their families and retain customary practices amid a settled


lifestyle. So it is unrealistic, if not disrespectful, to swarm these small


communities with hoards of candy bag-toting tourists expecting ritual dancing

and blowpipe demonstrations.




Tourists should meet the Orang Asli on their terms, not on a whim.


Cultural survival first depends on improving community conditions while


respecting traditions. Many of these tribes struggle to maintain a balance in the non-forest world.

If ecotourism is to survive, then tourists have to be prepared to sacrifice as well. Clothing and candies 

are short-term remedies  that satisfy the visitors more than the recipients.




Perhaps tourists should decide not to go visit the Orang Asli. At


least not until we are invited, when we can join them in celebration of their


culture, with dignity in full bloom. As opposed to the parade of boats that


washes ashore with well-meaning visitors that hand out gifts, snap photos and


leave without fully appreciating the goodness of these hardy people or their


contributions to society.





Visit to village in Yap, Federated States of Micronesia

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YsEe0EqnY6g



Fiji, Village Visit

http://tv.kilroy.eu/video/814600/fiji-experience-visiting-a



Solomon Islands, Village Visit

http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=endscreen&v=phtg6eHehKw&NR=1



Solomon Island, Music and Dance

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dFbmwD9kaVU

Articles.

Cultural education or human zoo? A Kayan Lahwi refugee village in Thailand.
http://regionalgeography.org/101blog/?p=3448

Thailand's"longneck" women, a controversial tourist attraction.
http://travel.cnn.com/bangkok/life/gallery-thailands-longneck-women-controversial-tourist-attraction-154136

Ethical Travel: Should You Visit Thailand's Long Neck Women Villages?
http://epicureandculture.com/thailand-long-neck-women/

Kayan Long-Necks and Tiger Kindgoms: tourist entertainment Thailand style
http://www.thelongestwayhome.com/blog/travel-thailand/kayan-long-neck-tribes-tiger-kingdoms-tourist-entertainment-thailand/

Hostages to Tourism
http://www.culturalsurvival.org/ourpublications/csq/article/hostages-tourism


Thai Hill Tribe people? Who
http://wheresidewalksend.com/thai-hill-tribes-debate/

Please set me free
http://www.marieclaire.com/politics/news/a1400/kayan-long-neck-thailand/

Responsilbe tourism??
Thailand Hill-Tribe Tours- this is the group I traveled with while I was there.
http://www.thailandhilltribeholidays.com/

Sustainable Use of Tropical Ecosystems: Ecotourism


Sustainable Use of Tropical Ecosystems: Ecotourism

http://www.slideshare.net/MarkMcGinley/sustainable-uses-of-tropical-ecosystems-ecotourism

15 of the world's best eco lodges- http://www.cnngo.com/explorations/escape/worlds-best-ecolodges-170768?hpt=itr_t1

Wakatobi Resort was ranked as #3 on this list that appeared in CNN last year. Take a look at the list and let me know your favorite.

Interactive Ecotourism Game

http://www.eduweb.com/ecotourism/eco1.html

Is it field trip time?????

Ecotourism


What is ecotourism? (The International Ecotourism Society)
https://www.ecotourism.org/what-is-ecotourism


What is ecotourism? (The Nature Conservency)
http://www.nature.org/greenliving/what-is-ecotourism.xml


Ecotourism: the promise and perils of environmentally-oriented travel.
http://www.csa.com/discoveryguides/ecotour/overview.php


Ecotourism: green problem or green solution
http://blog.nature.org/conservancy/2009/11/04/ecotourism-green-problem-green-solution-matt-miller-nature-conservancy/


Googling  "what is ecotourism", "benefits of ecotourism", "problems with ecotourism", and similar subjects will give you tons of material.

Assignment

Due Tuesday, April 17th

In 2 pages, double spaced with normal margins, .... define ecotourism and discuss two potential benefits and problems associated with ecotourism.

Thursday, March 26, 2015

Lew Kuan Yew, long-time Prime Minister of Singapore, Dies

Singapore Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew (L) chats with US President George Bush in Tokyo on February 24, 1989 after they attended the funeral of Emperor HIrohito. (JEROME DELAY/AFP/Getty Images)

Singpores Economic Transformation
http://www.bbc.com/news/business-32028693


Lew Kuan Yew: How Did SE Asia Remember Him?
http://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-32046144

Lee Kuan Yew, Who Guided Singapore's Transformation, Dies at 91
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2015-03-22/lee-kuan-yew-singapore-s-founding-prime-minister-dies-at-91

Purpose


Habitat Destruction in Tropical Ecosystems





Readings


Hazards to Coral Reefs (NOAA)
http://www.coris.noaa.gov/about/hazards/


Coral Reef Threats (WWF)
http://wwf.panda.org/about_our_earth/blue_planet/coasts/coral_reefs/coral_threats/


A world without coral reefs (NY Times)
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/07/14/opinion/a-world-without-coral-reefs.html


Overfishing (National Geographic)
http://ocean.nationalgeographic.com/ocean/critical-issues-overfishing/


Overfishing (WWF)
http://worldwildlife.org/threats/overfishing






Videos


Protecting Thailand's Mangroves (WWF)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pzYJWRGUSUI


Jeremy Jackson: How we wrecked the planet (TED)
http://www.ted.com/talks/jeremy_jackson


Coral reef fish danger (BBC)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cbN161yBBGA


Temengor- Biodiversity in the Face of Danger

part 1
http://www.youtube.com/watch?annotation_id=annotation_788801&feature=iv&src_vid=dBN7RGa9-f0&v=kBUyCAg2XrI

part 2
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dBN7RGa9-f0

Borneo- Deforestation and Oil Palm Plantations

https://myspace.com/musiconlips/video/borneo-deforestation-oil-palms-plantations/55061197

The Onion's Take on Biodiversity and Extinction






Scientists Find Thousands Of Previously Undiscovered Species Cowering In Amazon Rainforest


http://www.theonion.com/articles/scientists-find-thousands-of-previously-undiscover,28281/


Proud Species Commits Suicide Rather Than Be Driven To Extinction by Humans
http://www.theonion.com/articles/proud-species-commits-suicide-rather-than-be-drive,31449/

Recent articles about Semporna and the Badjau Laut



Here are links to some articles that have come out in the last couple of days.



The vulnerability of Bajau Laut (Sama Dilaut) children in Sabah, Malaysia. A position paper from the Asia Pacific Refugee Rights Network
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B5G-F9HV9j6rUDk4WUkwalhlTFU/view

Fire in Semporna Water Village







Fire destroys over 250 houses at Semporna water village
http://www.thestar.com.my/News/Nation/2015/03/25/fire-semporna-destroys-200-houses/

Thousands homeless in Kg Bangau fire
http://www.nst.com.my/node/77932

More photos from the fire

Photo-credit: 
Azzahar of Nikonian Pro Services. Photos were shot during the unfortunate Semporna village fire. Mr. Azzahar's photo won the best photo of the day in the famous The Star newspaper. http://www.nikonian.com.my/default.asp?contentID=1136













Thursday, March 12, 2015

People and the Sea: The Badjau at Mabul Island



A group of about a dozen boats was anchored off the shore of our resort for the entire time that we were there. People are living on these boats. At least they have a great view of the sunset.


It seems that each of these boats is home to one family. I was able to count two parents and six kids living on one boat.


With so little privacy, I am not sure how the parents have time to make more kids!


When I saw the Sea Gypsys at Sibuan Island during my last visit to Sabah I noticed that many of the women had green stuff on their faces (you can see it on the woman wearing black). At first I wandered if it was some sort of religious ritual, but someone told me that that was some sort of beauty treatment. It apparently works because some of the young women were strikingly attractive. Of course it is possible that some of the "old ladies" are really 20 years younger than I am.


Kayaking.


During low tide, they foraged on the reef. I am not sure exactly what they were collecting. These guys poled (like a gondola) their canoe in search of goodies.


Some of the women collected along the shore. It appears that the "Donald Duck" look is popular with some of the kids.


Many of the women and children waded through the water. There were signs along the beach saying that guests should be careful because the sandy area near the shore were full of stingrays and poisonous scorpionfish. I wonder how often they get stung?




At least they had a short communte from home.


I wish that this picture had turned out better. I was trying to get the Sea Gypsies collecting from the sea in the same photo as the Malaysian flag. Malaysian Prime Minister Najib frequently states that "Malaysia will be a high income nation by 2020". It looks to me like they still have a long way to go. Of course, it is possible that these Sea Gypsys are people without a country who are not actually citizens anywhere. It is not surprising that they are often ignored.




There do not appear to be any child labor laws.




You can see the flames from the fire that is cooking up today's dinner.

Mabul Sunsets

These sunset photos were taken from the patio surrounding the bar at the dive resort where I stayed when I visited Pulau Mabul.  The Badjau boats are in the foreground.


People and the Sea: The Badjau at Sibuan Island





Sea Gypsies of Sibuan Island

One of the best parts of spending a little time on Sibuan Island between dives was that I got to spend some time wandering around the small sea gypsy village located there. What a beautiful place to live, but what a primitive life style! The goal of the Malaysian government is for Malaysia to be a "high income nation" by 2020. They still have a long way to go on Sibuan!!









The man in the blue shirt is "digging out" his dugout canoe.




Because we were there during the middle of the day, most of the sensible adults were either out fishing or were resting in the shade of their homes. One interesting thing was that some of the women appeared to have white or green paint on their faces. You can almost see that in this photo.


Kids of Sibuan

Although Sibuan Island is the classic tropical paradise and I enjoyed seeing the local village, a visit to Sibuan was pretty depressing. We were met on the beach by q bunch of local kids who apparently knew only three words of English- Hello, money. and ringgit (the Malaysian currency). Every kid on the island came up to all of us, held out their hands, and said "hello, money". Eventually, I had to show them that I had no money by showing them what was in the empty pockets of my bathing suit. I worry about the apparently bleak future facing these kids.

"Hello, money"


"Money, money, ringitt, money"


The kids all liked seeing their photos on my digital camera. They also liked taking photos of me. Here is a picture with all of us.


Water Villages

Some people, who I assume are Bajau, live in houses built on stilts in the middle of the bay.

\





People of the Sea: The Badjau



"Sea gypsy" is a term that refers to several groups of peoples living near the sea in various parts of South East Asia. I have run across sea gypsies before in Indonesia and also in the Philippines. The main group of sea gypsies in Sabah are the Badjau who originated in the Philippines. Many Bajau have spread south to Malaysia during the last 50 years.



Sea Gypsys-http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sea_Gypsies
Bajau People http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bajau_people


The Bajau Laut http://theaquaticape.org/sea-nomads/ny-sida-test/


The last of the sea nomads
http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2010/sep/18/last-sea-nomads


Unsustainable sea-farers: the last Bajau sea nomads
http://www.theguardian.com/environment/gallery/2010/sep/20/bajau-sea-nomads


Prezi  (not sure who made this... but it has some nice photos)
Bajau Culture: People of the Sea
http://prezi.com/zfm_vsdhkrun/badjau-culture-people-of-the-sea/


Video


Badjau Laut (BBC)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FaGHjSaCW6A


The Sea Gypsies of Malaysia: Les Stroud
https://vimeo.com/21967412


Indonesian Film


The Mirror Never Lies (trailer)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qAiki5BQRug