Hello everybody!
On March 14th me and Keef were a little tired and took the first half of the day off.The next day was DOTSO day and we wanted to save our energy for that.
But we couldn't waste the entire day, so at 1 pm we took off. We took the bus to Esplanade, the subway to Mahatma Gandhi Rd and walked into the mayhem of the mighty Burrabazar (sometimes called Bara Bazar).
We had some good shooting, but the energy wasn't quite there. We had planned a dinner with some of the other DOTSO photographers at 6 pm and we got to Nizam's restaurant 20 minutes ahead of time. Myriam Aadli and Patricia Kerkhofs were already there and we had good chat before more people started to arrive. Lil Steinberg, Anat Shushan, Victor Shohet, Shimi Cohen, Miki Schauder (with the little whisky shots), Amit Alony, Limor Zadok and Gershon Gilat. So 12 people all in all. So very nice to meet all of you. It was a long taable and I was at one end of it, so I got to know some people better than others, but it was still a nice experience!
Me and Keef took a shortcut to the bus on Lenin Sarani Rd through, what I call, the laundry alley. And there I got what I feel is the best shot of this day! So shortcuts can be good!
March 15th was DOTSO day. DOTSO stands for Day On The Streets Of and in this case Kolkata should be added at the end of it.
I had asked for the 6 am to 12 noon shift anbd went off at about 5:30 am. I had a cold shower feeling when I realized I had forgotten to aske the building janitor to unlock the gate early, but fortunately someone had unlocked it. I found a taxi quickly and went off to Maidan metro station. Arriving I saw there were new instructions and went into the park to meet the others in my group. I said hi to Amit and Limor, who then went off to start shooting. Indian photographers were still arriving and I stayed so I could say hi and shake hands with all of them. Talked a few words more with Santanu Dey and got a tip where to shoot from him.
I had a good 6 hour shoot in Maidan, at the Babughat bus stand, along the Strand Rd with some detours. At the MIllennium Park, I was feeling my hip a little and got on a bus to Howrah Bridge and the flower market and the adjoining ghats. It was my third visit there, but I found some places a little north of the bridge, that I hadn't explored before. Burrabazar is quite close and was the last area on my assigned route. I spent quite a lot of time there and got some good shots. It was my third visit and I realized I was recognizing some faces even though the crowd there is huge! Suddenly, while in the orange part of the market a man said "hey there, I want to talk to you". We chatted a bit and then it happened! Suddenly about 100 people started cheering loudly. I looked around to see what all the fuss was about. They were all standing up and looking at me and I realized they were giving me a standing ovation! I waved to the crowd and got two more cheers! The man I chatted with told me they flet honoured by me coming there several times to take pictures of them. A bit shaken and emotional, I mumbled that it was all my honour and pleasure.
After resting a couple of hours in the flat, I went for an afternoon photo walk in the alleys near our place, southwest of the Moulali Crossing. Had some good shooting there.
All the photos here are from the 14th. The DOTSO day photos are reserved for that project for a while.
Take care people!
Niklas
Greetings from India 12
Hi everybody!
March 13th was our fourth day in Varanasi and also travel day,, since at 6 pm we were going back to Kolkata.
We had a slow morning and checked out from the hotel at 11. The suitcases stayed in the hotel, while me and Keef walked the ghats of the Ganges river and the alleys above for another three and a half hours. We had a good walk, lots of interesting subjects, places and friendly people.
At 3 pm we walked through busy streets to where the taxi (organized by the hotel) was meeting us. Traffic was intense, so the ride to the airport took a full hour.
The check-in, security, flight and the taxi from Kolkata airport was all uneventful. We came back to our flat with an hour to spare before the main gates were locked.
Take care, guys!
Niklas
Greetings from India 11
Hi guys!
I'm writing this from the comfort of my home after a 32 hour trip. I'm lagging behind quite a bit with this travel blog, but I hope you will find something interesting anyway!
On March 12th, Keef and I decided to go to Varanasi's alleys and small streets, rather than to the river. As we walked further and further from the tourist areas, the streets felt more and more genuine. Two alleys away from the ghats, there were already no tourists, except us. We had a good flow and were happy out shooting, talking to many nice people who all wanted to know where we were from. In the evening we felt we needed to take it easy, so no walk along the Ganges that night.
Be well everybody!
Niklas
Greetings from India 10
Hello everybody!
March 11th was our first full day in Varanasi. We had a slow morning and chatted over a breakfast of toast and tea. We walked away from the river into the town. We quickly lost each other in the masses of tourists, but shooting worked fine anyway and afterwards it turned out we had gone to just about the same places. I had wonderful lunch on my own in an air conditioned restaurant. A very tasty dal, which was like a thick spicy lentil soup.and some beautiful two-layered kulcha bread, which had onions and coriander leaves as a filling.
In the afternoon we went down the steps to the Ganges again. I tried an experiment and shot with my 85mm f/1.8 lens. Streeting with a short telephoto felt very different and difficult. But it was good for shooting the monkeys who had decided to show themselves out in the open!
Both walks were about 3-4 hours, so all in all a good days work.
Be well guys!
Niklas
Greetings from India 9
Hello everybody!
On March 10th at about 8am, I and Keef Charles found a classic 1940s yellow Kolkata cab in our street, that took us to the airport.
It was quicker than we thought, so we had some waiting time before our flight to Varanasi. I made good use of the time and did some photo editing.
The flight was an hour and a half, so we had time for a late afternoon and evening of shooting along the famous ghats after checking in at the hotel.
Varanasi is very beautiful, especially along those ghats on the banks of the river Ganges. But we quickly discovered an annoying side to this city. Its beauty has made it a major tourist attraction with all the hustlers, the sellers of boat rides, souvenirs, snacks, you name it. And it's absolutely packed with tourists.
Some photos could be had, but patience was required to get a clean shot. I hope you like what I got on this first day in Varanasi!
Take care guys!
Niklas
Greetings from India 8
Hi guys!
On March 9th, me and Keef had a long chat over breakfast and then went out to the market for some supplies and some street shooting for about an hour and a half.
In early afternoon, Shubhodeep Roy showed up and he brought us to a very nice restaurant where we got a wonderful meal. Shubhodeep had also arranged for us to get the special seats on a beautiful river cruise on the Ganges, going under the Howrah bridge and back.
I will save the river cruise photos for a coming article, so this is the whole edit for the day's street shots.
Be well, everybody!
Niklas
Greetings from India 7
Hello everybody!
March 8th was the day of Keef Charles' arrival to Kolkata. Since we are sharing a large airbnb apartment for the duration of his stay, I moved from "my" small place into the new one at 9 am. The airbnbs are very close to each other, only about 250 meters. Keef came with his taxi from the airport soon thereafter. He was tired after the overnight journey, so he took a long nap while I went out on the nearby streets for some snaps. This was the last day of Holi and the party was still on in some places. Even where things had calmed down, the colourful traces of Holi in people and on the ground could be seen just about everywhere.
I got a lunch of chicken biryiani before going back and by then Keef was awake. At about 4 pm, Shubhodeep Roy came and picked us up for an afternoon and evening of shooting. First we went to College street, where used books are sold in many many stores. Keef had a meal in the beautiful old coffeehouse where Shubhodeep used to go during his college days.
Then he took us to the Kumartuli area where gods are made. Made of straw and clay, that is. Interesting and visually striking, it was hard to not just keep shooting the clay figures and remember to get some street shots as well. We continued towards the Ganges before getting an Uber to our airbnb.
Thank you Shubhodeep, for showing us your city, the City of Joy!
Be well, guys!
Niklas
Greetings from India 6
Hi guys!
On March 7th, I had a slow day, still resting my bad hip and updating my blog with text and photos from the previous days, Shubhodeep turned up at around 4pm. He took me to the Ganges river near the 2nd Hooghly Bridge. We did some shooting as the sun was slowly setting. Colourful Holi revelers washing up in the river, lovers walking hand in hand or sitting on benches. Small boats taking people for a quiet ride on the river.
A two hour walk was all I dared to do and afterwards we went to my airbnb for some great discussions on photography. My airbnb host joined us and it seems the two youngsters might be friends!
Take care everybody!
Niklas
Greetings from India 5
Hi everybody!
On March 5th my plan was to go early to the Gallif Street Pet Market, which is only open on Sundays. The very good streetie Santanu Dey had given me his secret tip: - Don't miss it!
After my now regular bus ride to Esplanade, I realized the metro wasn't open yet. Maybe it starts later on Sundays...
I got a cab instead, going past some sidewalk markets with wares mostly on the ground.
The pet market turned out to have flowers, too. The most common pets being fish and birds. I walked through it slowly, twice, venturing out to some adjoining lanes as well.
By now I thought I would go to the Barabazar area, where I had made plans to meet up with Progressive-Street photographer Shubhodeep Roy.
We had a good long walk and talk together going towards where the Rolls Royce Holi parade was supposed to be coming from. It was supposed to start at 11 am, but it was a bit of an anti-climax, since it didn't turn up before 4 pm. By then we were so hungry we had to go eat before Shubhodeep had to go back to work.
I was also really tired and dehydrated by then and even worse: my hip trouble from back in 2020 was coming back with a vengeance.
So on March 6th, I just rested, took some anti-inflammatory painkillers and did a few very light exercises. By evening I felt a bit better and could make it down the five flights of stairs and go get some dinner and supplies.
Today is March 7th, the hip is better still, although not well yet. I will now go out and get lunch and later meet Shubhodeep for a shorter photo walk and a chat afterwards.
All the photos are from the pet market area. I will save my moments with Shubhodeep for a later episode.
Be well!
Niklas
Greetings from India 4
Hello friends!
On March 4th, I got up at 5:30 am and went out the door towards the Mullick Ghat flower market at about 6:15. It's located near and even under, the classic Howrah bridge which crosses the Hooghly river Took the bus to Esplanade and caught a yellow cab there. With streets almost empty it was a quick ride to the market.
I shot at the market, both outdoor and indoor and went down to the river at the ghats. They are very beautiful here, with the backdrop of the bridge close by. I met a young guy with a camera, who turned out to be a fellow street photographer! We talked some and discovered our mutual admiration for the great Vineet Vohra.
All photos today are from the flower market and the ghats.
Afterwards, I walked up the stairs to the bridge and walked across. On the other side were some more ghats and the Howrah Railway station. Unfortunately, it seemed to me you need a ticket to get into the platform area. I was feeling tired and a bit worn out after some long days of shooting and decided to go back to the Airbnb and chill for the rest of the day, since I knew the next day was going to be busy. I found a bus to Sealdah station, which is not too far from my place. On the bus I chatted with a very nice young man, who was travelling with his wife from his native Madhya Pradesh. They were visiting the wife's family over the Holi festival.
Take care, guys!
Niklas
Greetings from India 3
Hi guys!
Thursday March 3rd, I started off by taking the bus to Esplanade. I shot at the bus station for about 20 minutes and then walked to the New Market area. I wasn't really that impressed with it (my new friend Arnab even warned me it isn't as good as the guide books say). I continued to the famous Park Street, but it's famous for it's nightlife and during the day, I found it uniteresting. From there I ventured northeast and found a wonderful neighborhood with friendly people, street markets and cows and goats in the street. Mostly muslim people seemed to live in this neighborhood, I talked to two young men who were both from Bangladesh. The call from the minaret gave me flashbacks from my trips to Istanbul.
Coming out onto a big road, I realized it was "my" big road, only about a 10 minute walk from "home". By the I was hungry and stepped into a small hole in the wall restaurant and got a mutton biryani. With a litre bottle of water it was less than 2 euros. Tasty spices , with cloves and cardamom and just a hint of chili. About a 5 hour walk.
After a bit of rest (no nap though), backing up of photos etc, I got a bus and the metro to Mahatma Ganhi Rd metro and walked into the Barabazar market area. Oh wow! This is THE place to go! Saying that I realize I feel that way about many of the places I've been on this trip... :-)
But the intensity here was on another level. Photos to be shot just about everywhere. The main distraction being avoiding to get mauled by trucks, bikes, motorbikes, handcarts and everywhere men with great big loads on their heads.
This was too good to leave anytime soon, so I kept soldiering on until I felt I was about to drop. Fortunately, I found a nice, air conditioned, restaurant to rest legs, back, eyes and mind after all those impressions and get a wonderful meal as well. Butter Masala Chicken and a garlic naan to die for!
By now I wasn't entirely sure where I was, but asking friendly people for directions can actually work! A young guy I asked spoke perfect English and we chatted for about 20 minutes. Very nice! It became another 5 hour walk, including the stops, which left my body quite sore.
The photos here are actually mostly from the way to Barabazar, an editing accident, since I started off in the beginning of the folder and found quite a few I liked... There are two from Esplanade bus station and some also from the bazar.
Be well everybody!
Greetings from India 2
Hi!
I wrote the first blog post during my mid-day break on day 2.
After my nap, I got out for a stroll in the back alleys and markets near my place.
I thought I would walk winding lanes in the general direction of the New Market and do some shooting there.
After an hour and a half of alleys, I came to a market - but it was the much smaller Entally market, just a few blocks from my airbnb. I had made a circle with all that winding.
Coming back to the hotel after a three hour walk, I still had energy to some photo editing. So the photos you see here is actually a complete edit of yesterday's evening shoot.
Today I slept later than planned, since I was so energized last night I had trouble falling asleep.
I had plans to meet 26 year old street photographer Arnab Mondal at around 1:30 pm. I went by bus and metro to Shobhabazaar some time before and did an hour and a half of streeting before meeting up with Arnab. We had a four walk in the alleys and along the ghats at the Hooghly river. I'll tell the story of me and Arnab's afternoon more in detail at a later date, together with what I captured and some of his shots as well I hope.I had a great time, Arnab is a very nice guy!
Take care everybody!
Niklas
Greetings from India!
Hi everybody!
Greetings from India!
This is Progressive-Street photographer Niklas Lindskog back on the road again after the pandemic stopped me from roaming the planet for a while.
To be fair, this is actually more of a widening of my circles. I have been shooting first in my native Sweden and then in various European countries before doing this trip to India.
I arrived yesterday morning and had some adventures right away. My phone didn't connect to a network and I couldn't find wifi either. So I had no way to reach my Airbnb host to get access to my little flat. After a taxi to Sealdah station I thought I'd walk to the Airbnb and see if that would help. Even though I had a map and had looked a bit at street view beforehand, I managed to take a wrong turn somewhere and got lost. Street signs are scarce in this town, it seems. I tried getting a cab, showed the driver my map, he nodded and off we went. Turns out he had no idea where my address was any more than I did. He did find it eventually though, after stopping four times asking people for directions. When I got out of the car, one of those 1940's style yellow cabs typical for Kolkata, my phone had connected to a network and I could call the host.
He turned out to be a very nice young man of 18 who had started Airbnb as his first business. He told me all about it as a maid cleaned out after the previous guest and I lay down on the bed, almost falling asleep despite the activity in the room.
I got a good long nap which gave me enough energy to do a three hour photo walk getting to know my immediate neighbourhood a bit.
It turns out it's a great place for street photography. I've been to places like New York, Bangkok, Hanoi, Beijing, Rio de Janeiro and Tokyo and thought they were pretty bustling places. After a few hours here, I realize I didn't know the true meaning of the word "bustling" before coming to this city! I just had to look it up properly and got "busy, crowded, swarming, teeming, buzzing and hectic". They all fit well to the feeling on these streets.
After a really good night's sleep, I got out at 7:45 to get some Indian breakfast and to get some supplies for my flat. camera in hand of course. This turned into a 5 hour photo walk, combined with some long taxi rides and a visit to a Kali temple watching a goat get sacrificed and a Hindu priest praying for me and my relatives.
I'm writing this from the calmness and ac-coolness of my flat after backing up my photos and doing some editing.
Until next time, take care!
Niklas
Call me nomadic by Michael Kennedy
Whenever I find myself growing desperately bored with life; whenever there is a bone-chilling Siberian wind descending over Seoul in winter; whenever I find myself involuntarily thinking of buying more camera gear; whenever all this conspires to get the upper hand on me, it’s time to hit the road.
Ah, Melville, that giant of American literature.
If Hamlet had told Ophelia: “Get thee to Bali,” and she had split the depressing scene at Elsinore Castle for the island paradise near the Equator in the Indian Ocean, her life would have been far more cheerful than how she ended floating face down in a brook.
Some things you don’t have to tell me twice.
Plague Year Number Three
After a long hiatus from international travel because of the Wuhan virus, I recently split the scene in Seoul with my wife for a week in Bali. When we left this city of 10 million-plus people, it was -13C (8F), and when we hit Bali about seven hours later, it was 27C (82F).
What’s not to like?
Bali has a two-season climate: hot and hotter. As card-carrying septuagenarians, we are still kicking it, and to walk together along Kuta Beach in sandals on the southern coast of Bali in mid-January made me inexpressibly thankful for the privilege of being alive.
Eat, Sleep and Chill Out
This trip marked my fourth time to Bali since 2013, yet the most recent occasion was a decade ago. In the interim much has changed. Some of this can be attributed to the natural march of time. Then there is the ongoing plague and how this has impacted the world, especially international travel and tourism.
To visit Bali means an arrival and departure from the Denpasar International Airport on the southern coast of the island. Most tourists stay in hotels or private villas around Kuta, about 10 minutes from the airport – depending on traffic. There are also choice places in nearby Jimbaran and Seminyak, considered the best neighbourhood in Bali to stay for a vacation.
Since I’m part of an international couple, the approach to leisure travel centers on language. Neither one of us is truly bi-lingual, though my wife comes genuinely close because she was a longtime high school French teacher in Seoul who can hold her own when we are in Paris. She has an interesting grasp of English – though with many “lost in translation” moments, and a pattern of sentences that begin in English, slide quickly to “Konglish” and finish in Korean.
My grasp of foreign languages is absolutely pitiful, and barely covers some basic salutations and menu items in Arabic, French, German, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Spanish and Yiddish. That all sounds better than the reality because I have a greater command of vulgar obscenities in these languages – perhaps excelling in Chicano Spanish.
Over our 10-year history, we have collected a few travel experiences on Korean Tours. While I understand more of the language than I can speak, I’m decidedly an outsider and tend to stray from the group with a camera, wandering about like a curious Beagle.
Most of the time we go it alone, and arrange for day trips through the hotel. The idea of Bali this time, any time, all the time …. is to relax.
What distinguishes Bali from other travel destinations, especially in Southeast Asia and parts of the Orient – like Hong Kong and Macau, is the lack of hustlers.
Men who are ready to be a driver for the day are in abundance. Yet a simple: “Thanks, but I’m good,” and end of conversation. None of that: “My friend, I offer you best price. I take you anywhere.”
For the longest time, Nathan Road was the heart-and-soul of Kowloon in Hong Kong. This may have changed by the end of 2019, after Chinese leader Xi Jinping wiped his feet on The 1984 Sino-British Joint Declaration that formally returned the city to the Chinese in 1997 – with the pledge that the city would retain its high degree of autonomy, rights and freedoms for 50-years after the handover.
Jinping crushed the student-led Pro-Democracy Movement in August, 2019 and started jailing people by the dozens without trials.
Yet – up to that point, as I was on Nathan Road for the last of the Pro-Democracy demonstrations, I was prevented from leaving Hong Kong for an extra day because demonstrators shut down the airport with a classic sit-in strike … Pakistani hustlers were stationed all along Nathan Road trying to sell cheap knock-off watches from China. Sometimes the hustle did not end with a simple “no,” and it seemed like one of the desperate men would clutch your ankle for the hard sell.
Bali is a breath of fresh air, and people leave you alone on the streets.
If the tourist experience in Bali involves a stay at an affordable four-star hotel, with breakfast included, there is always a poolside lounge chair calling your name. Cast off your worries and forget about the wage-slave routine. Relax in the sun with palm trees coaxing a temperate breeze from the Indian Ocean that is never far away.
There is a fair chance by mid-morning of being flanked by a tourist from Australia on one side, and a Chinese tourist on the other side. No conversations; at least nothing beyond superficial pleasantries. And no politics.
Everyone wants to sidestep the atrocities in Ukraine, the impending invasion of Taiwan, and America’s descent into madness with mass gun shootings every other day.
I will always be American wherever I may live or travel, but I can’t explain the trainload of Spam-sucking white trail trash that just showed up to serve in the U.S. Congress. How can one explain professional ass-clowns like Matt “I want to date your daughter” Gaetz, Marjorie “Jewish lasers fried my brain” Taylor Greene, and Lauren “motor mouth” Boebarf, who allegedly talks like a gerbil on speed during orgasm.
Didn’t See You in Ubud Yesterday
Ubud is a laidback art colony about 35 kilometers – or 22 miles north of Kuta Beach, and costs around 350,000 rupiahs one-way – or $23 in a Bluebird taxi. Through the hotel around Kuta Beach, it’s easy to arrange for an all-day driver to take you to most of the traditional sites - and linger in Ubud as long as you like. The fee is around 520,000 rupiahs – or about $34 for everyone.
To say “all day” implies at least 10 hours. Some of the stop-off points are free; others charge a modest fee, which by both Oriental and Western standards is not much more than tip money at a neighbourhood restaurant back home.
For people from Japan and Korea, North America and most of Europe – these societies put a high premium on public education, funded by property taxes. It’s easy to take this for granted, yet most people in Southeast Asia – and other parts of the world, are lucky to graduate high school and they remain a distinct minority. Most people have nothing more than a fourth or fifth-grade education and ride the train to nowhere every day for the rest of their lives.
On the first time classic tour of Bali, between Kuta Beach and Ubud, it is standard to see a traditional dance performance enacting some of the origin myths of the culture, handed down through the generations. There are options to visit a Batik workshop – a literal workshop where clothing is hand-painted to reflect Balinese tradition – and not some quaint Kumbaya feel-good meeting of educators or musicians.
There is also the option of visiting a coffee farm to see how the Balinese plant, cultivate and roast the beans – offering, if you like, a pricey coffee based on beans digested by monkeys that have – to put it delicately, passed through their intestines and out the last exit.
All of this is worth mentioning as a reminder that for all the people playing these different roles, this is as good as it gets, and the work week is seven days long, and no holidays. No vacations. No health insurance. And no retirement.
In places like Bangkok and Manila, it’s routine for young women – who often look a decade older than their birth certificates, to sell themselves around Nana Plaza or Makati Street for the price of a trashy McDonald’s Happy Meal.
There is something about the Balinese that elevates most people from being the “Wretched of the Earth” that French West Indian Frantz Fanon (1925-1961) wrote about with such heart-aching eloquence.
Whatever collective force marks the Balinese as inspirationally proud – without arrogance is truly remarkable.
I stayed outside Ubud when I last visited Bali in 2012. At the time, the town had a very special charm that set it apart from that strip along the ocean that stretches westward from Jimbaran
Beach-to-Kuta Beach, with a lively nightlife between both points A dozen years ago, Ubud folded by 9 p.m. and shop owners returned home to be with their families.
This time Ubud had changed so much that everything I had previously told my wife no longer applied. The place seemed completely re-made with a huge nod to tourism. What once served as the traditional market in the center of downtown had been erased. Now there were the sights and sounds of serious construction, with new office buildings and hotels rising up to overshadow the cityscape. Busses filled with Aussie and Chinese tourists navigated through narrow streets as a small army of people on Japanese motorbikes manoeuvred through this scene with nonchalance.
It takes a lot of pluck to get across the streets around the Old French Quarter in Hanoi because of the torrent of people zipping by on motorbikes – a family of three in some cases.
This is not the case in Ubud, or anywhere else in Bali.
Cows meander aimlessly through the streets of Pushkar in India, shitting and pissing all day long.
This is not the case in Ubud, or anywhere else in Bali – which is also a Hindu culture.
Bali By The Numbers
Between the Indian and Pacific Oceans, and directly over the Equator, is the nation of Indonesia, considered the largest archipelago in the world to form a single state.
Based on 2021 figures, Indonesia has a population of 273.8 million.
The country consists of five main islands and some 30 smaller archipelagoes, totalling about 18,110 islands and islets of which about 6,000 are inhabited. The five biggest islands are Sumatra, Java, Borneo, Sulawesi, and New Guinea.
Bali doesn’t make the cut as one of the bigger islands in Indonesia, yet it is by far the most well-known because it is so beautiful and enchanting.
Islam is the main religion of Indonesia, and with its nearly 274 million people, this makes it the largest Muslim country in the world.
And then there is Bali, with a population of 4.3 million people that is unique for its adherence to the Hindu religion. Allegedly, 87% of Balinese are Hindus.
Hinduism stands among the largest world religions alongside Buddhism, Christianity,
Islam and Judaism. Combined, there are over one billion followers of Hinduism in the world with more than 97% per cent living in India.
The other countries with large Hindu populations include Nepal, Bangladesh, Pakistan, Sri Lanka and … Bali, which features numerous temples, and sculptures depicting scenes from the Hindus' famous myths, and deep-rooted Hindu traditions across the majority of the island's native population.
For those American students who first learned about world geography in fourth grade during SY61-62, a common reference was the East Indies and the West Indies. This was how Columbus’ blunders finding his way to India were explained. Of course, Columbus never made it past the modern day Gulf of Mexico, and yet his misnaming of the inhabitants of the Western Hemisphere as “Indians” has screwed with us all ever since.
At one time, the East Indies were regarded as the Philippines, Indonesia, Malaysian Borneo, and New Guinea. The West Indies included Cuba, Jamaica, Hispaniola (Haiti and the Dominican Republic), and Puerto Rico; the Lesser Antilles, including the Virgin Islands, Anguilla, Saint Kitts and Nevis, Antigua and Barbuda, Montserrat, Guadeloupe.
American writer Gertrude Stein (1874-1946) is noted for the phrase: “A rose is a rose is a rose.” Perhaps Stein had too much wine that day and was riffing off Juliet’s swooning over Romeo with that famous adage: “A rose by any other name would smell just as sweet.” The story behind this is probably far more interesting.
The point is the currency of Indonesia is the rupiah, and whether the spelling is more commonly rupee in India, Nepal, Pakistan, Mauritius, The Seychelles, and Sri Lanka – it is still coin of the realm in each location – with different valuations. These countries act as if they’ve never heard of the European Union, and the ease of using the euro in all member countries.
The term “dollar” is hardly exclusive to the United States, and is the name of official currency in too many countries to mention – though Australia and Canada are certainly prominent examples.
Under the category of FYI for older Americans who feel they are living the opening lines of Allen Ginsberg’s Howl (1956): “I saw the best minds of my generation destroyed by madness, starving hysterical naked …” El Salvador, Panama and Ecuador use the U.S. dollar as their official currency. These three countries attract more and more American Gray Panthers who feel safer in these locations for retirement than in the U.S. without the worry about currency exchanges.
Yet the rupiah is the official currency of Indonesia, and the exchange rate against the currencies of travellers from the Orient – China, Japan and Korea, and down under in Australia, make for a very inexpensive vacation in Bali, which attracts the bulk of tourists to the country.
Passports, Politics and Visas
If leisure travel involves a passport, the issue of visa requirements cannot be ignored – especially since there is no uniformity. My wife and I have different nationalities, so this frequently adds to the mix because of politics.
As a Korean, my wife can visit China for 30 days at no cost. As an American, it costs $140. The Grand Game is still on, and the Chinese get soaked on tourist visas at the same cost to the U.S.
As a Korean my wife can visit Vietnam for 30 days at no cost. As an American, it costs nearly $87 and involves pre-approval paperwork.
Someone has to pay for the Vietnam War and 50 years on an American is a choice candidate.
It is a fairly standard policy that no international travel can occur on a passport that is set to expire within six months of arrival at the destination point. There are a few exceptions to this policy, yet these countries are an extreme rarity.
A former colleague was prevented at check-in from departing from Seoul for a one-week vacation with his wife because his passport expired four months later. He had to eat the cost of two round-trip plane tickets and hotel costs.
Ten years ago, a traveller to Bali paid about $25 for a 30-day tourist visa upon arrival at the Denpasar International Airport. And then paid about the same fee to depart. When I left Bali in the spring of 2013 to return to Seoul, the airport was a quaint affair. Now known as the Bali Ngurah Rai International Airport, it was rebuilt in the same location shortly after my departure and it is world-class.
It is still possible to pay a tourist visa fee upon arrival in Bali, yet the Indonesian government strongly encourages travellers to satisfy this policy online. A cost of about $34 includes both entry-and-exit fees. Health-related policies for entry to Bali are easily satisfied with an official record of COVID vaccinations at the point of origin airport.
Since we always use Korean Air for international travel, check-in was a matter of ticket, valid passport and an official record of COVID vaccination. Without all three documents, we would have been turned away immediately.
Did Bruce Chatwin and all the other great British travel writers of the 20th century – to include Somerset Maugham, Robert Byron, Graham Greene, Evelyn Waugh, and Patrick Leigh Fermor – have to endure all these hoops? Whatever they endured, the journey is what matters. Buy the ticket, take the ride.
The F-Stops Here
During my misspent youth, I briefly pondered what seemed like the big questions in life. For instance: Why am I here? What’s the purpose of life? Why did I get stuck with my goofy parents? Why can’t I have the talent of Jeff Beck on guitar? These questions only produced existential angst and made me neurotic.
My Beagle had a cool Zen acceptance about life that I envied. No reason to waste money on a pipe-smoking shrink just to kvetch about the cards a celestial totalitarian had dealt me. The fact that this deity had a thing for a Jewish woman married to a carpenter never made sense to me.
So, when I picked up a camera for the first time at age 22, I didn’t get bogged down by reasons. It was simply liberating, and that feeling has never left me after a half-century.
I never leave home without a camera. For my recent trip to Bali, I relied on a nearly 10-year-old black Fuji X-E2 camera – with either a 27mm pancake lens with an aperture ring, or a 16mm wide-angle for a photojournalism approach. The range-finder body makes for an easy fit in almost any pocket.
On the Fuji X-E cameras (both the E-1 and E-2) I leave the ISO float as high as 3200 and do not shoot anything under 1/500. I keep the aperture at f 11 and exposure compensation usually at -1 and a third. I ride the shutter between 1/500 and 1/2000 depending on the light - and I do prefer bright light, protecting the highlights and letting the shadows plug-up if necessary.
Ritchie Roesch, of Fuji X Weekly, is the guru of Fujifilm simulation recipes, and he does a masterful job of both creating new effects and sharing them with one and all. Check him out.
However, I use only one film simulation recipe (the Q Menu) that is meant to approximate a Joel Meyerowitz look. I use a back button approach to establish focusing, but work the lens for the ultimate composition. For post-production, I use LR because I’m lazy and stick with a Pro Negative High look. Any other modifications in LR are exceedingly rare.
I try to keep things simple. I’ve known since a very young age that multi-tasking is not my forte. Besides, as the one-time Poet Laureate of LA Charles Bukowski told me in correspondence: “Don’t ask me too many questions. Hell, I still have trouble finding my way to the bathroom in the middle of the night.”
Regarding the X-E2, the old X-Trans Sensor II is so damn good that Fuji is wasting its time trying to re-invent the wheel.
This helps explain why the interruption in supply chains for brand new Fuji models has made the used market price for an X-E2 jump by $150 over the past 18-months.
But disregard this information, and stay away from the X-E2 camera because I want to buy one or two more as backups.
The fact that I shoot exclusively in color makes no sense, since I spent 20-years as a B&W newspaper photographer using Tri-X, developed in D-76. The truth is I’m slightly color-blind – yet not enough to qualify for special parking at Costco.
The motivation for working in color is the result of Batsceba Hardy. She made the suggestion in the fall, 2017 – as I was on my way to India for the first time. As a result, I changed and have not done any B&W in over four years. It just doesn’t appeal to me anymore.
The mark of a good leader is the ability to bring out the best in us, and to make us believe in a vision that makes this world a better place. She is a very fine photographer. Yet her greatest talent is bringing people together and joining in her vision of exciting visual creativity that celebrates the human experience across borders and cultures and race.
Have passport, will travel.
Have camera, will celebrate life.
Kuta
Ubud
Batik
The coffee process
Pro-democracy demonstrations in Israel
By Corinne Spector, January 2023
In the past weeks, there have been mass protests as many citizens fear for the democratic character of the State of Israel. Every weekend, people have taken to the streets, in the cold and sometimes rain, under very crowded conditions, to protest potential harm to the resilience and independence of the Israeli Judicial system. This time the protests are not a matter of right- or left-wing politics, or of supporting one party or another. The proposals of the newly-elected government call for constitutional changes that some feel will undermine the democratic and egalitarian character of the State.
As was written in the Israeli Declaration of Independence in May 1948:
"The State of Israel will be based on freedom, justice and peace as envisaged by the prophets of Israel. It will ensure complete equality of social and political rights to all its inhabitants, irrespective of religion, race or gender. It will guarantee freedom of religion, conscience, language, education and culture."
Democracy is not simply rule by the majority --through the principle of Separation of Powers, democracy attempts to ensure the protection of minority rights, in Israel mainly via the judiciary. Here there is no constitution and there are no two Houses of Representatives. The result is therefore that the judiciary is the sole gatekeeper against tyranny by the majority, and follows the Basic Laws enacted during the state's 75 years, as in the Declaration above.
Citizens, who now feel that the regime is threatening democracy by challenging rulings of the Supreme Court, are going out en masse to demonstrate in the streets. Demonstrations are intended to be peaceful; many people even bring their children along, and some even attend in their wheelchairs. Nevertheless, they feel that this a struggle for the very substance and character of the State of Israel.
Says the Leader of the Opposition, Mr. Yair Lapid: “What you see here is a demonstration in favor of this country. People who love this nation have come here in order to protect it, to protect Democracy and to save its Judiciary”.
Said another demonstrator: “I’m not willing to have my children grow up in a country that is no longer a Democracy. My father was killed in the Yom Kippur war – and not for what’s going on here now”.
David Grossman, a well-regarded author says: “Israel is in a fateful fight for its very character, its democratic nature, human rights, freedom for art and creative people, and for freedom for public broadcasting.
I am very sad about the political situation. I feel that we are going backwards a hundred years
Koreans Still Take It to The Streets Against Moon
People in the Republic of Korea – better known as South Korea, enjoy an amazing degree of freedom compared to their neighbours in both North Korea and China. The story of the country’s rise from the political and social struggles in the first half of the 20th century is stunning. It is really the story of the Rise of the Phoenix of ancient Greek and Egyptian mythology.
Perhaps a fundamental reason that South Korea dominates the world stage now with its cultural accomplishments in fashion, film, food, hi-tech and music is because Koreans demand the best of themselves – and this means the best business models, the best education and the best leadership.
Political accountability is taken very seriously in Korea and – until recently, two former Presidents served prison sentences for corruption – for betraying the people’s trust.
Moon Jae-in served five years as President of the republic, stepping down in early May of this year. As a result of his policies – considered too liberal and too accommodating to both North Korea and China, a great many people voiced their displeasure through political dissent – and marched through the streets of downtown Seoul without any civil disobedience.
The public criticism of Moon Jae-in has always occurred in a peaceful manner. Political change is seldom driven from the top-down. History shows that most fundamental political change comes from the bottom-up, and that means taking it to the streets.
The right to vote is still a powerful force for change in a free society, and Koreans elected Yoon Suk-yeol as the new President on May 10, 2022. He represents goals and policies that differ significantly from his immediate predecessor.
And yet criticism of Moon Jae-in lingers among many Koreans who staged a large peaceful rally Saturday in downtown Seoul, that stretched nearly 10-blocks from Gwanghwamun Square-to-Deoksu Palace across from City Hall Plaza.
In South Korea, guns are outlawed and the police do not carry such weapons.
All photographs were taken with a Fuji X-E2, and the equivalent of a 24mm lens.
The Pride 2022 Tel Aviv by Shimi Cohen
The Pride 2022 Tel Aviv by Shimi Cohen
The roots of Pride date back to June 1969 when the Stonewall riots erupted in New York’s Greenwich Village. A year later the first Pride march was held in NYC.
Today, Pride events take place all over the world. Some are massive celebrations.
Some are small underground gatherings.
Some take place with the support of local authorities.
Others face a violent backlash.
What they all have in common is a purpose: fighting for the equality of LGBTIQ people everywhere.
Pride is also a time to shine a spotlight on LGBTIQ issues and uplift and amplify the lives and contributions of LGBTIQ people.
Around the world, lesbian, gay, bi, trans, and intersex (LGBTI) people continue to face widespread stigma, exclusion, and discrimination, including in education, employment, and health care – as well as within homes and communities.
Many LGBTI persons face targeted physical attacks and extreme violence—they are beaten, sexually assaulted, tortured, and killed.
In many countries, discriminatory laws criminalize consensual same-sex relations and trans people, exposing LGBT people to arrest, blackmail, extortion, stigma, and in 5 countries, even the death penalty, for consensual same sex relations.
In most countries, trans people have no access to legal recognition of their gender identity, or face abusive requirements to obtain such recognition.
Intersex children and adults may be forced or coerced to undergo medically unnecessary interventions, in violation of their human rights.
Dispatches From Seoul by Michael Kennedy
“Good-bye, Moon”
The Gray Panthers on Saturday 7 May 2022
A week ago Saturday, about 500 energetic people staged the last Anti-President Moon Jae-in rally across the street from the historic Gwanghwamun Square in downtown Seoul. This was the culmination of five years of near weekly demonstrations against the unpopular South Korean President.
The demonstrators who worked peacefully to hold President Moon accountable for being too soft on both China and North Korea were almost all retired senior citizens who had come of age during the deprivations of the post-Korean War era, and have no interest in forfeiting the Phoenix-like economic miracle that allows for the prideful reference to the country as The Republic of Samsung.
The older generation of South Koreans has no interest in appeasing either China or North Korea, and the example of what British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain offered Adolf Hitler in the Munich Agreement on September 30, 1938 is not lost on anyone.
A year after Chamberlain had announced: “We have peace in our time,” the German Nazis launched WWII in Europe with the invasion of Poland.
Geography is destiny, and the Korean peninsula is an extension of China, a country that has dusted off Japan’s playbook of power politics from the last century, and is poised to bring Taiwan to heel – just like Hong Kong two years ago.
After Taiwan, the Korean peninsula will likely be the next target.
Seoul, a city of almost 10-million people, is 952 km from Beijing, less than two hours by flight.
The distance to Tokyo is 1,159 km, slightly more than two hours by flight.
And the distance to Vladivostok is only 746 km, just under two hours by flight.
Calling John le Carré.
Seoul is at a pivotal intersection in the Orient, and one may be certain that agents in the lingering Great Game of politics are still doing fieldwork on the streets that no amount of high tech surveillance can quite match. The Cold War has never ended. Just ask George Smiley.
The Korean War, a civil war, is regarded as lasting from 1950-1953, but no official peace treaty has ever been signed.
Under the present constitution, a South Korean President can only serve one five-year term. When Moon was elected President as the Democratic Party candidate in 2017, he vowed to work toward closer ties with China and reunification with North Korea.
To say that the group of retired Seoul seniors who demonstrated regularly was dismayed with President Moon is understatement. They quickly denounced him as a Chinese lackey, a North Korean stooge, and a black-belt loser.
However, an equally serious grievance against Moon was his unwillingness to pardon the recently impeached Park Geun-hye, the former President. She served as the first female President of South Korea starting in 2013, and fell spectacularly from Grace by early 2017. Shakespeare could not have written her tragedy any better.
The 70-year-old Park Geun-hye is the daughter of Park Chung-hee (1917-1979), who ruled briefly as a military dictator (1961-1963), and then President from 1963-1979.
Kim Jae-gyu, the Director of the Korean Central Intelligence Agency, shot Park Chung-hee dead on October 26, 1979 following a banquet in Seoul. Afterwards, Kim Jae-gyu and several co-conspirators were tortured and executed for the assassination.
Park Geun-hye’s mother, Yuk Young-soo, was killed on August 15, 1974 by a North Korean sympathizer who intended to assassinate President Park during an Independence Day speech at The National Theatre in Seoul. He missed and shot the President’s wife instead.
During a trial, the assassin expressed regret for not killing President Park and was executed by hanging in a Seoul prison
Park Geun-hye’s presidency ended in her impeachment for corruption in 2016 and removal from office in 2017. She was sentenced to 24-years in prison on April 6, 2018. yet finally pardoned by President Moon and released in 2021 from the Seoul Detention Center.
President Moon’s pardon of Park Geun-hye was a transparent effort to win the support of his many critics for bungling so many things during his presidency. Yet this political gesture was too little, too late and maverick politician Yoon Suk-yeul of the People Power Party won election as the next South Korean President.
Last Saturday, the demonstrators across from Gwanghwamun Square who marked Moon’s demise had even more to celebrate after Yoon Suk-yeul announced that Park Geun-hye would be a special guest at his inauguration on Tuesday, May 10 at The National Assembly.
The 300-seat National Assembly is an obvious source of pride for South Koreans. It was built between 1969-1975 in Yeouido, a large island on the Han River in Seoul. Yeouido is the Wall Street of Seoul, and serves as the main finance and investment-banking district of the country.
From 2004 to 2009, the assembly gained notoriety as a frequent site for legislative violence. The Assembly first came to the world's attention during a violent dispute on impeachment proceedings for then President Roh Moo-hyun, when open physical combat took place in the assembly.
Since then, it has been interrupted by periodic conflagrations, piquing the world's curiosity once again in 2009 when members battled each other with sledgehammers and fire extinguishers.
The National Assembly since then has strong measures to prevent any more legislative violence.
Yoon Suk-yeul is politically conservative and has expressed no interest in reconciliation with North Korea that would lead to reunification.
Kim Jong-un, the third-generation dictator of North Korea, has continuously demanded the withdrawal of all U.S. military forces from South Korea before he would even consider reunification of the Korean peninsula.
Former U.S. Secretary of Defense Mark Esper in the Trump Administration, recently revealed that the American Commander-in-Chief was prepared to order all U.S. troops out of South Korea on very short notice because President Moon balked at a 400% increase in payment for hosting the American forces. Esper and others persuaded Trump to postpone the idea. Esper has now gone on record as describing Trump as the biggest threat to American democracy.
“Hello, Yoon”
The scenes outside the National Assembly on Tuesday 10 May
President Yoon may be a political maverick, the classic “outsider,” yet as a former star prosecutor, he helped imprison two former presidents, as well as the head of Samsung, and a former chief justice of the country’s Supreme Court on charges of corruption.
Moon’s popularity among South Koreans began to dwindle quickly when both his government and his Democratic Party were rocked by a series of scandals that exposed ethical lapses and policy failures around sky-high housing prices, growing income inequality and a lack of social mobility.
The middle-class in South Korea is also being crushed by exorbitant property taxes - in the face of ever-changing pandemic polices and food and energy-related inflation like the rest of the world.
For President Yoon, some of the top issues facing him are:
· Political Polarization;
· Gender and Generational Gaps;
· The Metaverse;
· New Leadership and Korea-Japan Relations;
· U.S.-ROK Indo-Pacific Cooperation;
· North Korea and the Pandemic.
Political Polarization
South Koreans are becoming more polarized. A local government survey in 2019 revealed that Koreans viewed political affiliation as the source of the most severe social conflict.
Gender and Generational Gaps
Gender stratification is becoming an increasingly serious issue in South Korea. While the country has made great technological and economic advancements, it ranks 108 out of 153 on the World Economic Forum Gender Gap report. Women earn less than men and are poorly represented in positions of political and economic power.
The Metaverse
With continuation of the pandemic and people spending more time online, utilization of the virtual space, metaverse, became a buzzword in technology and business, including in South Korea. As global tech companies such as Facebook (now Meta) and Microsoft expand their investment and resources in the metaverse, South Korea is also eyeing on becoming the next global leader in this new territory.
New Leadership and Korea-Japan Relations
After a series of incidents starting in 2018 caused Korea-Japan relations to plummet, the resignation of former Japanese Prime Minister Abe Shinzo and inauguration of Suga Yoshihide in September 2020 slowed the freefall in ties last year.
The Japanese Occupation of Korea from 1910-1945 remains a sore point between the two neighboring countries. There is also the painful tragedy of “Comfort Women,” when young Korean females were forced to be sex slaves for the Japanese Army during WW II. Some of the women are still alive.
North Korea and the Pandemic
After two years and massive amounts of money spent on missiles capable of reaching the U.S,. Kim Jong-un has finally admitted that the COVID-19 pandemic is poised to ravage North Korea.
Both Shanghai and Beijing have been in near total lockdown, as the Chinese struggle to contain the latest outbreak. The industrial-strength coiled barbed wire that signifies the DMZ on the Korean peninsula is not going to stop the spread of the virus southward to Seoul.
Geography is destiny, and President Yoon is about to be tested.
Letter from Seoul by Michael Kennedy
Police do not carry guns in Korea. This would be especially poor optics for a Pro-Life demonstration in downtown Seoul.
It’s never good to display symbols of violence while people advocate the sanctity of life.
Hundreds of people demonstrated recently near Gwanghwamun Square in downtown Seoul against a new law that legalizes abortion after being banned since 1953.
The three-year Civil War fought between the North and the South on the Korean peninsula from 1950-53 – known as the Korean War, left the South free to pursue democracy.
Seoul is the crown jewel of South Korea, officially known as the Republic of Korea – and as a measure of its miraculous rise like the Phoenix of Greek legend, it’s also known informally as The Republic of Samsung.
If the military of a nation-state shoots people dead for trying to leave the country, then they are truly living in a vast prison camp. This describes North Korea perfectly, a gangster state run by Kim Jong-un, a textbook sociopath.
There is only one Korea, and Seoul – a city of nearly 10-million people on the mile-wide Han River, is literally the heart of the country.
When Koreans want to leave the country, they head for Incheon International Airport, a world-class facility about 30-miles southwest of Seoul, near the Yellow Sea. There are no worries about being shot dead by the military.
When Koreans want to express opinions about important political and social issues, they frequently gather in downtown Seoul, and march to Gwanghwamun Square – considered the heart of Korean history. There are no worries about being shot dead by the police.
When political passions are displayed in the streets of Seoul, the public does so with a level of respect for protocol that is to be envied. Differing viewpoints are the hallmark of an open society, yet there are no opinions among Koreans so strong that violence is the last word.
Groups like the Pro-Life demonstrators last Saturday obtain a parade permit ahead of time through proper authorities. After approval is arranged, a contingent of Seoul police is assigned to “serve and protect,” and maintain basic order. While the police take these responsibilities seriously, the level of respect among Koreans for tradition and group conformity almost translates into the uniformed officers serving as chaperones.
In Korea, compulsory military service applies to all men between the ages of 18 and 28, and they are required to serve about 18-months. If the military branches have met their quotas, young Korean men often serve as auxiliary police officers.
If, however, you are a member of BTS, the wildly popular K-pop sensation, you might be exempted from this obligation. There is both an exemption and an alternative service system for athletes and artists who are recognized for promoting national prestige - winning designated international awards or national contests.
In American street vernacular, this is expressed as: ‘Money talks, and bullshit walks.”
The status of BTS and compulsory military service remains an unresolved issue – for now.
When older groups of demonstrators march through downtown Seoul, the auxiliary police are often young enough to be their grandsons. And, as politically-minded senior citizens everywhere need to rest and enjoy some refreshments and snacks, even if the agenda is serious, the optics often suggest that grandsons as auxiliary police are simply making sure the grandparents do not exert themselves … too much
During outgoing President Moon Jae-in’s term in office, there was no mainstream media coverage of political demonstrations in Korea. Yet this did not discourage his critics and others from “taking it to the streets” nearly every week until the COVID-19 pandemic changed so many things.
Korea sits at the intersection of tradition and liberal ideals, and the issue of abortion is guaranteed to be divisive in nearly every culture.
As for tradition, a monarch of the Joseon Dynasty ruled the Korean peninsula from Seoul for 750-years, starting in 1392 – a century before Columbus screwed up on his way to China, and encountered the Western Hemisphere. The Japanese put an end to the Joseon Dynasty in 1910, when they invaded the peninsula.
The last Joseon Emperor, Yung-hui, refused to sign over control of Korea to Japan, but the Japanese forced Prime Minister Lee Wan-Yong to sign for the Emperor instead.
The last century brought unimaginable changes to the Korean peninsula – and yet Korea has emerged from countless upheavals to become a fledgling democratic republic influenced by the ideals of the United States.
Yet the increasingly activist U.S. Supreme Court has a six-seat phalanx ready to dismantle the liberal ideals of post-1960 America – especially the abortion rights guaranteed by Roe v Wade. This has the potential to set off conflict in America that will make the social turmoil of the last decade look tame.
To say Korea is a fledgling democratic republic in no way diminishes how the country has adapted to the fast-paced challenges of The Information Age and become an economic powerhouse with the world’s 10th largest economy.
In case anyone is wondering about the status of the Joseon Dynasty heir, His Imperial Highness King Yi Seok has his Samsung cell phone on stand-by for the call back to Sedong Palace.
Yet in 2018, the 77-year-old Emperor wannabe, who had lived in a run-down van for years, named the 34-year-old Prince Andrew Lee as his successor. However, the current Crown Prince is a Korean-American who lives in the Sodom and Gomorrah of Nevada known as Las Vegas.
Not to be outdone, the current heir to the Stuart Dynasty of England is a chap who calls himself Franz, the Duke of Bavaria. He’s also waiting by his cell phone for the call from London. And for Russians who may find Putin deranged, morally repugnant and embarrassing, Grand Duchess Maria Vladimirovna Romanova is hanging out in Madrid, waiting for that special call back to the palace in St. Petersburg.
Yet in Seoul, there has been a significant changing of the guard - called the popular vote in a democracy, and political maverick Yoon Suk-yeol from the conservative People Power Party will succeed President Moon Jae-in on May 10.
Yoon has no policy or governing experience and was HYPERLINK elected last month with the narrowest margin in the nation’s democratic history. He faces the test of rallying the opposition-controlled National Assembly and a divided nation weary of income inequality, soaring housing prices and empty promises of hope.
Central to Yoon’s foreign policy is “rebuilding” Korea’s alliance with the United States, a nod to Washington’s frustrations with the outgoing government of President Moon Jae-in, whose foreign policy ambition of brokering peace with North Korea made him wary of jeopardizing relations with China and Russia, North Korea’s allies.
Korean presidents serve a five-year term with no possibility of a consecutive second term. During Moon Jae-in’s presidency, there were regular demonstrations against him through downtown Seoul to Gwanghwamun Square, where he was routinely denounced as a Chinese lackey, a North Korean stooge, a Communist, a putz, a clown, and a hundred-proof fool. The new President will eventually face his share of dissent, as well.
Korea may sit at the intersection of tradition and liberal ideals, but geography is destiny, and this country is a peninsula of China, with Japan only 575 miles away - and Vladivostok even closer at only 464 miles.
By plane, Seoul is an equal distance from both Beijing and Tokyo. During the Korean War, General Douglas MacArthur never spent one night on the peninsula; he always commuted from his Command Headquarters in Tokyo.
Everyone knows that as Ukraine goes, so go the Baltic States in Europe. Everyone knows that as China has already brought Hong Kong to heel, Taiwan is next.
Koreans do not want to talk about the fate of this peninsula once Taiwan is crushed by the People’s Liberation Army of China – yet Xi Jinping would like nothing more than to drive the U.S. military out of South Korea and bring the entire peninsula under Chinese control.
With this scenario a possibility, it’s not surprising that a good many people here have U.S. dollars stashed in the major banks of Seoul, or beneath mattresses at home. The Korean banks even pay interest on U.S. dollars – at a rate comparable to stateside banks.
When the going gets too shaky here, Koreans will take their U.S. dollars and head for Hawaii or California. There’s always Joseon Crown Prince Andrew Lee in Las Vegas.
In this world anything is possible.
* * *
All photographs are from a Fuji X-T2 with a 27mm lens, set at f11 for 1/1000.
Romania-Ukraine border
on the right side of history by Bruno Lavi
About three weeks after the start of the war in Ukraine, I had a call with FLORIAN SALAJEANU, a friend who coordinates the refugee reception activity in SIGHETUL MARMATIEI on the Romanian-Ukrainian border.
The phone call dealt with details about the influx of refugees flooding the Romanian border, the difficulties of the refugees, the coping of the supporting teams, the spirit of volunteering, and other humanitarian issues that FLORIAN deals with. By the end of the conversation, I decided to experience and take pictures of everything that could be documented there.
I went out there on 17.3 along with COSTAS DUMITRESCU, a friend, a gifted photographer of the National Geographic Romania who lives in Bucharest.
After a long drive of about 9 hours, we reached the border. First of all, we were impressed by the entry flow and reception processes of the refugees. Everything is neat and organized by the book. With the entry of the refugees through the SIGHETUL MARMATIEI border crossing, they are greeted by volunteers with food, hot drinks that calm the unusual cold for this season, children's toys, phone cards, physical help to carry the refugees' belongings, warm clothes and other important items for a man who ran for his life and left everything behind from the horror of fear.
The local volunteers, international volunteer organizations, the police, customs workers, first aid personnel and everyone else there, are working, showing endless patience, warmth, hugging, strengthening, and listening.
I am listening to the horror stories of those who speak, and feel the silence of those who do not speak.
The immediate impression is that most of the refugees who have left the war zones already suffer from initial signs of post-trauma syndromes. There are those who speak nonstop or those who sit in heavy silence. Sometimes a hug or an accurate word of the support teams can unleash a volcano of pain and crying.
I'm among them, shooting pictures and trying to get the exact frame. Every now I stop shooting and I’m just listening to stories.
A woman around the age of 40 talks about the fighting of Chechens in her city who use children as a protective wall against Ukrainian fighters. Around her are several volunteers, priests, monks, police officers with the shock and outrage on their faces, alongside the warmth and empathy directed at the poor woman.
Most of the refugees are women and children, with very few men. Florian tells me about a guy who managed to cross the border with his little brother at 11:40 P.M., 20 minutes before his 18th birthday. For him, it's the 20 minutes that might have saved his life from the war.
After the Romanian crossing point, I notice an impressive bridge, through which the refugees enter after passing the Ukrainian checkpoint. The commander of the Romanian border station is taking us there. Notices that half of the bridge is filled with dolls and toys on its sides. He talks about the initiative of several people to scatter the toys on the bridge, thus a happy and colourful reception for the children of the refugees. Of course, any child could take what they wanted from the scattered toys.
The station commander tells us endless stories about the refugees, the volunteers, the police, and himself. Notes his around-the-clock investment, with high adrenaline, and shares with us his reaction at the beginning of the crisis, his crying and pain he felt towards the refugee children, in parallel with thoughts about his own child. No doubt, a sensitive and proud person of what he does and his mission wherever he is.
Looking around and seeing a lot of kids of all ages. All in a quiet, unnatural manner for children their age. The mothers are focused on the logistics issues, feeding the little ones, conversations with the volunteers and other mothers.
There's not one direction everyone's going on. There are those who continue to Bucharest where they will stay or continue to other countries with the immediate intention of obtaining refugee status so that they can first work. Others travel towards the Czech Republic, Poland, Germany and more.
Some prefer to stay close to the border and wait for the winds of war to stop. From here they will be able to return faster to their home country. To complete the picture, we decide to visit Romanian families and other organizations that host refugees near the border.
First, we arrive at the home of a man and his mother who host two girls aged 12 and 13. They're alone in Romania. The mother of the girls works in Italy, the grandmother who brought them to Romania, went back to Ukraine to finish her arrangements there. She will return to them of course. The girls rarely speak. One draws without a break, the other dreams of returning to skiing. I ask the hosts how much longer they can host them? The answer is short and simple: as much as the guests want.
Moving on to the next house. The hostess is a nurse at the hospital. They have three women and two young children in their home. My first question is why is she (the hostess) doing this? Her answer is also very simple: someone must do it. I’m asking her: is it difficult? Not simple, suddenly she takes care of another 5 people, and not only for their usual logistical needs but also for their so vulnerable souls.
Suddenly I feel like in front of me is sitting a great woman, like the women we read about and talk about them in the news, in history, in books or in movies.
The next visit is at a spiritual centre of the Greek-Roman Christian Church, a part of Catholic Christianity, the centre is operated by nuns who every day deal with spirituality, taking care of the soul of the believers, helping people and the needy and the centre's housework.
In the centre are hosted by several dozen women and children. The accommodation conditions are of a high standard, like a nice hotel. Everyone is running around, the energies in the air are positive, feeling that the refugees have found a corner of Eden Garden. I knock on a door and walk into the room. Ask permission to take pictures, the woman agrees but asks that her face not be seen because … she hasn't had time to wear makeup yet – suddenly there's a moment and a place of returning to the daily sanity of life.
In front of the room there's another room where an old lady refugee can't open the door from the inside, two nuns solve the problem. The nuns stay a few more minutes for conversation and communication with the lady refugee. The communication is difficult, the nuns don't speak Ukrainian and the refugee doesn't understand any other language, the warmth and empathy are felt in the air, and that's enough for everyone...
I'm starting a conversation with the nuns. There are no dilemmas or questions here. Everything is simple, you must help and give from yourself. This is their Christian life from abstinence to the end of life.
The next morning, we decide to go to the train station, which at the height of the influx of refugees has become a major transit point towards the south and western Romania. This time the station is quiet with a small number of refugees continuing to the unknown. The train station is small, simple, probably from before WWII.
Before we leave for Bucharest, we decide to pass through the MONASTERY of PETROVA, located about 30 km from the border crossing. The monastery is located on the mountainside, with beautifully magnificent valleys. We are greeted by the abbot
AGATON OPRISAN. We hear the story of the monastery, about the dozens of refugees who are hosted for different periods. The refugees are in constantly dilemmas when to leave and where to go. Father AGATON is constantly engaged in making everything easier for them, that the food will be delicious for them, that the children will continue to receive an education and that they will not stop studying, organizing plays for them in the nearest city and of course taking care of each one's medicine. All the time the children run to the father AGATON, hug him. The father does not remain indifferent, pays attention to each child as if he has all the time in the world.
Father AGATON takes us to the room of ANASTASIA who left Ukraine along with her son and mother. Before the war, ANASTASIA dealt with journalism and public relations. Proudly tells us that during the election period, her company provided public relations services to President Zelensky. Talks about the president in terms of admiration laced with pride and love. ANASTASIA, an eloquent English speaker, tells of her husband who remains on the front lines of the fighting, tells of how he is the only one who volunteered to enter with his bus to Mariupol to get children out of hell. She did not know that he (her husband) is so brave, smiling and saying shyly that he had fallen in love with him all over again... We are sitting in her room with her mother, son, and the abbot. She continues to tell us about her family, the war, and her deliberations for the future. Talks about everything in full self-control, points out every detail and in a sequence of neat documentation, exactly like a professional reporter she is. Then comes the breaking moment - I ask her what she left behind? Suddenly her eyes fill with tears when she shows me the pictures of the beloved dog that remains with the neighbors there in Kiev. Begins to cry as she repeats the phrase: “In my dog’s last pictures, after we left Kiev, his eyes are saddest”.
Later, we meet Tania, the mother of two children who are with her. Her husband stays to serve on the front lines, and it really bothers her that she's not there with him to fight back. She comes to terms with reality, as she cares for her two children who are Ukrainian and who will grow up to be proud patriots in their own country.
Before leaving the Monastery of Petrova I ask the abbot how much longer can he host refugees and how many more can come? His answer was also quite simple: as much as necessary and as much as God would like and send.
After 48 hours of visiting the Sighetul Marmatiei border, we decide to return to Bucharest.
It's hard to sum up a visit so short that it's a drop in such a great sea of this irrational war, in 2022 in the heart of Europe. Since time was short and the coverage was scant, I would not summarize anything related to the refugees, they had just begun their difficult journey. I will only refer to the Romanian people. As one who was born and lived there for a while, I was most moved by the spirit of giving and volunteerism that is displayed in every corner of Romania, nonstop around the clock.
A huge thank you to FLORIAN SALAJENU for getting us into the wonderful world of giving and caring for others and for introducing us to the wonderful human beings of kindness and voluntary endeavour at Sighetul Marmatiei of the Romanian-Ukrainian border.
Great appreciation to abbot AGATON OPRISEANU for his divine work for humankind and a lot of thanks for his precious time spent visiting us.
A lot of thanks with great appreciation to the people hosting refugees who patiently let us into their homes with endless patience for the questions and time we were there.
On a personal level, I’m most proud of my belongs to the Romanian people, that in this humanitarian crisis is on the right side of history.
I fell in love with photography at the age of 50 and consider it a great gift for me!
Photography for me is actually a multi-layered journey of material and human environmental discovery.
As with every journey, I enter into known or unknown areas, sometimes alone sometimes accompanied but always with the dream of discovering something else in the realm of creativity.
Most of my work is about people and contact. In general, the humanistic ethos is at the centre of my interest where the human being with his attitudes, attributes, activities, or thoughts is always at the centre.
The psychological, historical or geographical view of mankind inspires curiosity and interest in examining it in the purest way I would like it to be reflected in everyone.