Sunday 23 November 2014

Day 35-40: Vientiane, COPE, weaving & dying


Mon, Nov 17 – Sat, Nov 22

Pleased to find Vientiane a more warm and welcoming place than when we were here last, 10 years ago, with a long pedestrian walkway and park along the riverfront and many appealing cafes and restaurants.  (This blog is mostly Jenny’s exploration while Mark was busy reading and preparing for interviews.)

Visited the Morning Market, which is mostly an indoor mall with a small outdoor market where I was appalled to see rhinoceros horns (adult & baby) for sale alongside traditional medicine herbs and various bark and dried plants.  Where are they sourcing them and who is buying them?!? Makes me angry enough to start throwing things so I joined ‘Sabai Disc’ for an Ultimate Frisbee pick-up game – always a good time.

Next, I went to the ‘COPE Visitors Centre’, alongside a Rehabilitation Centre for ambulatory needs and prosthetic limbs, that has a very well put together exhibit of how Laos people have suffered due to UXO from the US Secret War.  “From 1964-73, the US dropped more than 2 million tons of ordnance on Laos during 580,000 bombing missions – equal to a planeload of bombs every 8 minutes, 24 hrs/day, for 9 years – making Laos the most heavily bombed country per capita in history. The bombings against the Pathet Lao and along the Ho Chi Minh Trail destroyed many villages and displaced hundreds of thousands of Lao civilians. Up to a third of the bombs dropped didn’t explode, leaving Laos contaminated with vast quantities of unexploded ordnance (UXO). Over 20,000 people have been killed or injured by UXO in Laos since the bombing ceased in 1975.  Each year there continue to be over 100 new casualties in Laos. Close to 60% of the accidents result in death, and 40% of the victims are children.  The U.S. spent as much in three days bombing Laos ($51M, in 2010 dollars) than it spent for clean up over 16 years ($51M).”
Wow, appalling statistics of suffering that need to be talked about.
Metal sculpture of family running from bombs
Prosthetic legs
Legs falling like bombs
Danger UXO!
Went to Phou Khao Khouay National Park for 2 days of trekking and a homestay in Ban Na village where they specialize in bamboo basket weaving.  Amazing the work that goes into every step of these intricate baskets that they sell for $1.25.  Trekked with a guide for 2 days in the park seeing many iridescent scarab beetles and butterflies.
Bamboo sticky rice baskets
Lao woman weaving baskets
weaving a bamboo basket
Iridescent scarab beetle
 Went out to Houey Hong Vocational Centre for Women for 2 days of learning traditional weaving and dying. They use only natural materials for dying such as indigo, jackfruit & mahogany bark, Thai ebony, onion skin and stick lac resin (left from insects).  I tie-dyed a silk scarf using indigo and wove 2 silk scarves.  Many women were there – some with small children – in a warm, friendly environment.  At lunch one day one of the guys was roasting a rat over the fire – presumably to eat.

Indigo dyed silk thread hanging to dry
Marigolds, seeds and bark used for dying
Silk scarf that I tie-dyed and indigo thread
Silk scarf that I wove on the loom
Rat roasted over open fire
Spellcheck

















 

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