Travel dispatches from a shrinking planet

Travel dispatches from a shrinking planet

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As a Woman, Can I Really Travel Without Much Fear for my Safety?

Vagabonding traveler Rolf Potts answers your questions about travel

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Inside Slum Tourism

With mixed feelings, Rob Verger recently signed on for a tour of Rio de Janeiro’s favelas. He looks back on the experience—and the photos he was allowed to take.


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Break Bread and Brie in France

Great cheese abounds in the land of Gaul, but dig in and you risk committing any number of faux pas. Terry Ward explains how to partake of the nation’s famed fromage with savoir faire.

THE LIST
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10 Wanderlust-Inducing Summer Concerts

Call it world music or global pop or the sound of the world hum. Ben Keene reveals 10 acts on tour that are sure to transport you. Plus videos.

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Bryan Mealer: ‘War and Deliverance in Congo’

The former AP correspondent traveled up the Congo River. Frank Bures asks the author of “All Things Must Fight to Live” about following in the wake of Joseph Conrad. 

SPEAKER'S CORNER
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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.

BOOKS
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‘The Worst Guidebook Writer Ever’?

Lonely Planet author Robert Reid reviews Thomas Kohnstamm’s “Do Travel Writers Go to Hell?” and weighs in on the controversy surrounding it

TRAVEL BLOG
1.22.08

‘49 State Capitols’: A Tale of Travel and Suspicion

imageI feel for Ramak Fazel. Not just because he ran out of money and couldn’t reach Juneau, Alaska, the 50th and final capitol in his quest, but because of the maddening difficulties he encountered as he trekked to the other 49 U.S. state capitol buildings for an art project that makes its debut tomorrow in New York City. 

From a New York Times story by Kathryn Shattuck:

[H]e set out on a photographic and philatelic odyssey from his mother’s home in Fort Wayne, Ind. His mission was to photograph each of the nation’s 50 state capitol buildings and dispatch a postcard from each city, using postage stamps from a childhood collection. Each postcard would be mailed to the next state on his journey, where he would pick it up, continuing until he had gone full circle back to Indiana.

Simple enough. But Fazel, an American citizen of Iranian decent who lives in Milan, Italy, and who, by his own account, is “vaguely foreign looking,” was apparently photographed by a fellow air passenger while he slept during one of the legs of his trip. That passenger, who had heard Fazel’s description of his project, subsequently reported him “as suspicious—perhaps to the pilot or the Transportation Security Administration,” writes Shattuck.

Fazel believes that the report set off a chain reaction that has put him on “the list,” and he claims he has been repeatedly questioned and detained at many of the state capitols he visited. FBI authorities won’t verify if Fazel or anyone else is on a watch list, but a New York State Police investigator confirmed that he had “raised suspicion.”

He persevered on his trip until he ran out of money. Though he justifiably could be offended, Fazel says he isn’t.

In any case, his 17,345-mile, 78-day trip inspired an intriguing piece of art about America and what it means to an American. Images of his postcards and a four-minute video can be found with Shattuck’s New York Times story.

Related on World Hum:
* Oprah Winfrey, Amanda Congdon and the New Golden Age of the Cross-Country Road Trip
* Surfing U.S.A.: Australian Duo Getting Stoked in All 50 States
* TSA Deploys ‘Behavior Detection Officers’ at U.S. Airports

Photo of capitol building in Annapolis, Maryland by Michael Yessis. 

Posted by Michael Yessis • 1.22.08
Categories: WeblogAudio/VideoRoad Trips

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COMMENTS

I feel for the guy, too. It’s sad that terrorist paranoia has come to this. But come on, Fazel needs to be honest. Forget the airplane snitch. He didn’t know sending a postcard featuring “11-cent stamps...arranged in the shape of the twin towers — one toppling over, the other being pierced by a commercial aviation stamp” would put him on the list? A US postal clerk doesn’t see this as art. They see it as crazy.

By  on  1.22.08  at  04:54 PM


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