Monday, August 27, 2012

Longhua and The International Symbol for ...

by Steve Reiss (Dalmdad Landscape Photography - www.dalmdad.com and https://www.facebook.com/Dalmdad.)

As I boasted in a prior post, I am a "cultured man of the world."  Heck, when you have experienced sitting in your car at a red light in NYC, and watched someone crossing the street who's pants were so shredded up that his butt was totally exposed, it takes a lot to shock you. My bus ride in Wuhan was not as much shocking, as it was horrifying.  The swastikas in Taipei were briefly shocking as is the following event I will soon describe.

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March 27, 2012: Longhua, China.  After a week in Taipai, it was time to go to our main office in Longhua, mainland China.

Longhua is a "suburb" of Shenzhen (pronounced Shen-jen).  Shenzhen is a fairly new city located just to the south of Hong Kong.  Shenzhen had a population of 352k in 1982.  Today, it has a metro population of over 10 million, from which about 60% are migrant workers that leave the city for their small villages and other cities on weekends and holidays.  The area is a ghost-town during the Chinese New Year Festivities.  Shenzhen's growth (besides for foreigners) is due to the influx of people from all over China.  As most of these newcomers speak Mandarin, there is a modern pressure on historically Cantonese-speaking Guandong province, where Shenzhen is located, and Guandong's largest city, Guangzhou (formerly Canton and population almost 13 million) to swtich to Mandarin as their first language.

While Shenzhen at least tries to be a cultural center of south-central China and has downtown restaurants offering such authentic western classics as real brick oven pizza and Irish bangers and mash, Longhua is often disparagingly referred to as "a backwater town" despite its large population and extensive industry.  Longhua certainly has a wild-west (east?) air to it.

In Longhua (as in much of China), most drivers are new to "driving".  These new drivers don't seem to believe that the pedestrian is always right, are willing to make left turns from far right lanes, and will certainly scare the bejesus out of you whether a passenger or pedestrian.  I also get the impression that bus drivers feel the roads are almost exclusively their property.  Longhua is also known for its heavy industrial pollution.  While Longhua is not quite a company town, if you are at restaurants or stores and mention you work for Foxconn, you will often get a discount.  It was in Longhua that I tried goat, which I now have little recollection of, and was going to try turtle, but they were out of turtle that night. 

Longhua is where most Iphones come from.

Longhua is also known for its rumors of terrible crime.  There are stories of fake buses which pick people up at normal bus stops and then just go off to someplace where all the passengers are robbed.  There are also stories of knife attacks to cut-off arms from which bags are hung.  Cab drivers are usually in a caged off area from the passenger and rear seats.

The Treasure Hotel is where we are put up when we visit Longhua.


Treasure Hotel, Longhua, China


 
View from the hotel entrance of the lightrail station to Shenzhen

When I was there, they had a very young bellman/doorman to help you with your bags.  He wore a uniform out of an earlier era, with the round box-type hat.  If this would have been NY or LA, you would have thought the uniform very corny, if not ridiculous.

Against Longhua's terrible reputation for crime that I mentioned above, the hotel's internal security was quite sophisticated.  Not only did you need your key card to unlock the elevator to take you to your floor, you could only go to your floor.  So, if you were on one floor and a friend on another, you would have to meet the friend in the lobby or arrange some other common meeting place to get to their room.  Furthermore, uniformed guards roam the street and parking areas near the hotel.
***
Anyway and for the punchline to this story, the bellboy carried up my bag and brought it into my room.  Since you do not tip and I could not speak with the guy due to language, I just stared out the window while I expected him to walk out.  However, he seemed to be trying to say something, so I looked at him.  It was at this time that I saw something I have never seen anywhere in the world, including prostitution-crazy Amsterdam.

With a young giggly-nervous laugh, he made a circle with the fingers on one hand and then put his pointer finger from his other hand through the tight circle.  It took me a few moments, but I realized he was asking me if I wanted a prostitute (hopefully that was a symbol for female prostitute).  His signal was not as blatant and obvious as this one.  I said no, without even thinking if I actually wanted one.  I was just in complete shock and regret I will never have any grand-sons to tell that story.  

Sara, my translator and assistant, did not get such an offer from the bellboy.

Sunday, August 26, 2012

Splitting our Blog

by Steve Reiss (Dalmdad Landscape Photography - www.dalmdad.com and https://www.facebook.com/Dalmdad.)

After reading Guy Delisle's Shenzhen: A travelogue from China, a graphic novel describing that author's experiences in Shenzhen and beyond, I decided to split my blog into two blogs so that I more widely discuss both local and foreign travels.


There is now:

Dalmdad's Experiences in China and Taiwan

and

Dalmdad's Photo and Travel Blog


We hope you continue to enjoy our writings...


Steve.

Sunday, August 12, 2012

Along the Coast of...

by Steve Reiss (Dalmdad Landscape Photography - www.dalmdad.com and https://www.facebook.com/Dalmdad.)

March 9, 2008:  California's "Lost Coast" or Big Sur?  Sure looks similar...





Nah, despite the non-Asian walking along the beach, this was in Hong Kong.  Hong Kong?  Yes, the Hong Kong that is the fourth most crowded place on Earth.  Guess it wasn't a big beach day.


"No Smoking" sign in Cantonese and grammatically strange English (chinglish).  Remember, HK does not speak Mandarin.

Jews Visiting China Be Aware (not beware)...

by Steve Reiss (Dalmdad Landscape Photography - www.dalmdad.com and https://www.facebook.com/Dalmdad.)

Continuing with the Asian Leg of the "Shock Steve Tour -2012", I was walking around Taipei when I came across these Jew-jaw-cringing art works at two different Buddhist temples.  I knew that pre-Nazi era, swastikas where not associated with anything bad; rather, they were used worldwide and was regarded as a symbol of good luck and success.  Swastikas were even used by Native American cultures in the early eras.

It was the Nazis that evilly twisted the symbol into one of horror and hate. 

However, I never knew just how common swastikas are in Buddhist temples in China and Taiwan.  I do not remember seeing any during my 2008 trip to Asia.

It was pointed out to me that Buddhist swastikas are left facing while Nazi swastikas are right facing.  However, as that is not so obvious to viewers, it is startling for westerners to see swastikas on products originating from China and Japan.

To Buddhists, the swastika represents eternity.

So, to all my Jewish friends, feel free to visit Buddhist temples in Asia and do so with a feeling of genuine kindness.


In Longshan Buddhist Temple, Taipei.

Feel welcome to enter