"Av og for intellektuelle vagabonder" - NettGuide
Travel dispatches from a shrinking planet

Travel dispatches from a shrinking planet

RECENT SPEAKER'S CORNER
8.27.08

A Tourist With a Shovel and a Hoe

When she arrived in Kenya to volunteer with the Maasai, Daniela Petrova looked down her nose at tourists there to have a good time. But was her own motivation much different?

7.31.08

Affairs to Remember—On-Screen and Off

From “Roman Holiday” to “Before Sunrise,” Hollywood has understood the appeal of the overseas fling. Eva Holland explains the staying power of the big screen Euro-romance.

5.22.08

A Journey Into ‘The Second World’

Some bureaucrats joke that they would never claim expertise about countries they had not at least flown over. In an excerpt from his new book, Parag Khanna argues that real global understanding can only come from serious travel.

TRAVEL BLOG
ASK ROLF
image

How Should I Spend My Time in Spain?

Vagabonding traveler Rolf Potts answers your questions about travel

Q&A
image

Paul Theroux: Invisible Man on a Ghost Train

Jim Benning asks the author of “Ghost Train to the Eastern Star” about his new book, aging and the challenge of disappearing in the age of the BlackBerry

HOW TO
image

Eat Ceviche in Lima

Grab a Cusqueña and get comfortable. As Nicholas Gill explains, a trip to a Peruvian cevichería can be an all-day immersion in good conversation and raw seafood.

BOOKS
image

Unsentimental Journeys: Wrestling With Paul Theroux

Bronwen Dickey considers “Ghost Train to the Eastern Star: 28,000 Miles in Search of the Great Railway Bazaar”

AUDIO SLIDESHOW
image

My Travels, My Feet

After taking one too many headless torso shots of herself, solo traveler Sophia Dembling started snapping photos of her feet around the world, from the Grand Canyon to Red Square


THE LIST
image

Seven Reasons to Have a Foreign Fling

Sure, having an overseas romance is fun. But Terry Ward points out seven other benefits to cross-border love, mon petit chou.

SPEAKER'S CORNER
1.30.05

Tsunamis Bring Out the Best in Travelers

In much of Asia, Western tourists are best known for frittering away time on beaches and haggling over the price of $4 hotel rooms. But when the tsunamis struck, Jim Benning writes, many visitors proved worthy guests.

Amid the devastation of South Asia, where the earthquake and tsunamis have killed more than 140,000 people, a striking story is quietly emerging. Western tourists—those better known for frittering away the day lounging on the beach, sipping tropical drinks, and haggling over the price of $4 hotel rooms in poverty-stricken towns—are doing some good.

Proclaimed Reuters: ‘’Tsunami turns tourists into aid workers.”

Declared The Independent in Britain: ‘’The tourists still come—only now they want to help.”

Instead of fleeing the devastated areas, some Western travelers are actually seeking them out, offering to lend a hand to overburdened relief agencies and local officials. The phenomenon is repeating itself, according to reports, in Thailand, Indonesia, and Sri Lanka, in some of the hardest hit areas.

As one aid worker in Sri Lanka told The Independent: ‘’We have people coming in daily and telling us that for 24 hours or so they thought they would forget about [their] holiday. But then they realize that far from getting in the way, they can actually be vitally important players in this fight to save and rebuild shattered lives.”

So these tourists—men and women who haven’t lost loved ones and who may not have even been on the coast when the waves swept through—are trading flip-flops for sneakers and getting to work, collecting bodies, funneling aid money to the needy, picking through the rubble.

The fact is, Western travelers to South and Southeast Asia, like travelers to other developing regions, often get a bad rap. Critics accuse budget-minded backpackers of flitting through the poorest nations with a slash-and-burn mentality, cutting costs at every turn and putting frugality ahead of generosity, even as locals struggle to keep roofs over their heads.

We hear about the popularity of sex tourism in nations like Thailand and Cambodia, about children being recruited into the trade, about Westerners exploiting the needy. Too many travelers, we are told, export their own culture when they go abroad, bringing Western demands with their dollars and Euros, encouraging old worlds to abandon traditions prematurely.

Those of us who travel often know that these criticisms, if sometimes valid, are far from the whole picture. Long before last week, last month, last year, a subtle shift was occurring in the aspirations of many travelers. More travelers than ever are seeking meaningful cultural exchange overseas. They are searching for ways to see the world, if only briefly, through others’ eyes, to understand foreign cultures in a way they hadn’t before. They are signing on for trips with organizations like Global Exchange, a San Francisco-based nonprofit group that leads trips to Iran, Afghanistan, and Bolivia to promote education and cross-cultural understanding. They are paying their own way for ‘’volunteer vacations,” working in remote regions of Africa.

Those Westerners remaining in South Asia to help didn’t bargain for a disaster when they set off on their winter trips. But their willingness to help instead of immediately returning home or setting off for carefree climes demonstrates a fact that too often gets overlooked: Travelers are capable of great good. On CNN Tuesday night, Larry King asked a couple of Americans what they were still doing in Thailand, more than a week after the tsunamis had struck. Why hadn’t they come home from their disastrous vacation?

They stood against a backdrop of verdant hills, blinking, as King’s query bounced by satellite across the globe. Then they explained patiently that the Thais had been kind and generous ever since the waves hit. The two wanted to help in any way they could. So, they said, they had been carrying bodies and coffins through the tropical heat. Friends back home had been wiring money to them to help, and they had been distributing it, operating their own mini-relief agency.

Rebecca Bedall told King, ‘’I think our plan is to stay at least a week or two.”

The two are far from alone.

At its worst, travel can highlight the disparities between haves and have-nots, no matter that in both the developed and the developing world, tourism is a crucial source of income for cities and nations and even some of their poorest citizens. But travel can also forge connections across great economic and cultural divides. It just usually doesn’t make headlines.

* * * * * *

Jim Benning is co-editor of World Hum.


WEBLOG CATEGORIES

Adventure Travel
Afghanistan
Air Travel
'Airworld'
Africa
Alaska
Albania
Antarctica
Architecture and Travel
Argentina
Asia
Audio/Video
Australia
Bali
Bookstore Tourism
Belize
Ben's Place of the Week
Bhutan
Bolivia
Botswana
Brazil
Brand That Nation!
Budget Travel
Burma
California
Cambodia
Canada
Caribbean
Celebrity Travel Watch
Chile
China
Colombia
Costa Rica
Cruising
Cuba
Denmark
Czech Republic
Dominican Republic
Dubai
Eco-Travel
Ecuador
England
Egypt
El Salvador
Estonia
Ethiopia
Europe
Family Travel
Fiji
Finland
Florida
Food: The Moveable Feast
France
Geography for Fun and Profit
Germany
Georgia
Global Village
Ghana
Greece
Greenland
Guatemala
Guest Blogger: Thomas Swick
Guest Blogger: Michael Shapiro
Haiti
Hawaii
History Travel
Holland
Honduras
Hong Kong
Hot Americans on Television Botching Geography Questions
Hotels
Iceland
Icons: Ernest Hemingway
Icons: Che Guevara
Icons: Jack Kerouac
Icons: Mark Twain
In the News
India
Indonesia
Iowa
Iraq
Iran
Ireland
Islands
Israel
Italy
Jamaica
Japan
Jordan
Kenya
Kosovo
Las Vegas
Latvia
Life of a Travel Writer
Lebanon
Libya
Literary Travel
Los Angeles
London
Malaysia
Mali
Media Addict
Mexico
Moldova
Mongolia
Morocco
Moscow
Movies and Travel
Music
Nation Branding
Nepal
New Orleans
New Travel Books
New York
New Zealand
9.11.01
Nicaragua
North America
North Korea
Norway
Outdoors
Page Turner
Pakistan
Paris
Peru
Planet Theme Park
Poland
Portugal
Puerto Rico
R.I.P.
Road Trips
Romania
Russia
San Diego
San Francisco
Saudi Arabia
Scotland
Shameless Self-Promotion
Shanghai
Shrinking Planet Statistic of the Day
Singapore
Somalia
South Africa
South America
South Korea
Space Travel
Spain
Suriname
Sweden
Switzerland
Syria
Taiwan
Tanzania
Technology and Travel
Thailand
The Critics
Thomas Swick on Travel Writing
Three Great Books
Three Travel Books
Tibet
Tokyo
Top 30 Travel Books
Train Travel
Travel and Security
Travel Disease du Jour
Travel Fashion
Travel Headline of the Day
Travel Lexicon
Travel Photography
Travel-Terror Fatigue Index
Travel Tips
Travel Writer Book Tours
Tres Loco
Turkey
Ukraine
United States
Venezuela
Vietnam
Voluntourism
War and Travel
Washington D.C.
What We Loved This Week
What Would Edward Abbey Think?
Where in the World Are You?
Why We Travel
World Hum Travel Zeitgeist
Zambia