Mauritius

Mauritius:

A stop over for just the day at Port Louis on our way from South Africa to India.

Beautiful Mauritius surrounded by a coral reef and benefitting from lush green tropical vegetation covering a series of volcanic hills/mountains down the central plateau of the island is a gorgeous spot in the middle of the sea. Along a line of islands that includes the Seychelles and Madagascar,  Mauritius only is home for 90 Americans among its population of over 1 million.

Nevertheless, it is the destination of many rich Europeans seeking a warm holiday on the beach with snorkeling, scuba diving and sailing as recreational opportunities along with hiking inland among the lush tropical vegetation of the mountainsides.

Well appointed resorts dot the coastline outside of the main town which is filled with little shops and some tall buildings holding banks and IT companies.  People understand and speak English as well as a French Creole. It is said that movie stars like vacationing here because they can be anonymous.

Famous in the past for its sugar industry, today it is an international textile center and its population is doing very well.  In fact, this is the only African country that is doing well with textiles---the rest of the work in textiles has shifted to Asia.  People are hard working and we were told they only take one annual four day vacation at year end. Otherwise, they're at work 7 days a week. It may be because they work so hard, but you do not see the abject poverty of the Townships in South Africa or Ghana in this island paradise and prices are about the same as in South Africa.


We visited Pamplemousses and the SSR Botanic Garden which features a stunning variety of native and exotic plants. Incredible giant Amazonica Water Lilies from South America provided the excitement --- the flowers first bloom white then after one day turn pinky red but, most spectacular, the young leaves unfold from a tight ball into a tea tray shape about two meters in diameter. The Palm display is enormous and we saw an astonishing variety of shapes and forms.




Some of the students went hiking in the volcanic mountains--Black River Gorges National Park is beautiful and provided great hiking opportunities and views. Others went snorkeling along the
gorgeous coast line in the glittering blue waters.












First inhabited by the Dutch in the late 1500s, this island had French and British colonization until independence. Its culture is diverse with Indian, South African, and British and French cultural and social influence. While the diversity of the population is striking, the rain forest plant material is even more so. Biologists and botanists have discovered tremendous diversity among the native plants in Mauritius' rain forests. Now protected, these may hold some new cures for all of us.


From the one day stop in Mauritius we are off again-onward to India.

India

Namaste


A picture of the street sweeper dressed in a sari says it all about India -- the one place where everyone wears a traditional dress that is all at once exquisite, exotic and culturally exclusive ---perhaps this makes it sacred as is so much of what we saw in India.

Street-sweeper in Chennai

An intensely vibrant country of sensory overload----  the chaos of too many people, constant movement of cars and cattle, rickshaws and humanity, horns honking --- constant chaotic movement all going somewhere.  And then the smells...the smells of cow dung and garbage, of herbs and spices, of life on the street, and food that is too wonderful. And all of it wrapped in between a pulsing vibrancy from intensely gorgeous color and the glittering magic of the many Hindu gods and the narrations of their mystical life stories.

In most towns the idea of journeying from one place to another seems more than terrifying. Everything was loud and congested with never any respite from blaring horns and the press of people and cars and tuk-tuks and beggars.

Exotic life surrounds you in India but for Indians all of this seems normal.

Port of Chennai

We arrived in Chennai, formerly Madras ---- a major British colonial port on the east side of India.  Chennai is India's 4th largest city and capital of the state of Tamil Nadu, the largely Tamil-speaking region in south India on the Bay of Bengal.

Street in Chennai


Homes of the fishermen in Chennai

For our first exploration, we went south to the coastal village of Mahabalipuram – known locally as Mamallapuram to see stone carvings and the Dravidian temples and architecture of southern India as well as a wonderful artist village featuring stone sculptors who are recognized world-wide.
                                 
But our initial adventure was simply getting off the boat and negotiating the port gates and then getting out of Chennai. The delays from the bureaucratic Indian immigration/customs provided a constant challenge---it took us over an hour to get beyond port security.  The roads and the traffic out of the city were eye openers as well. So was the garbage along the roadside......food for the cows, dogs and many animals and birds--- but a disturbing counterpoint to all the other beauty. Once outside the city proper we were amongst a steady stream of taxis, buses, auto rickshaws, motorcycles, bicycles, wheeled carts, cows and dogs and masses of people. Our bus driver constantly weaving through the traffic and the animals and pedestrians took us on ride that was more like a Sterling Moss road race through heavy traffic. I am so very glad I didn't have to drive in India - it's daunting even in very civilized and proper New Delhi.

As an art form, stone carving stands out throughout India's centuries old artistic landscape. This is a land blessed with extraordinary rock and extraordinarily artisans who have for centuries skillfully manipulated and carved it. We saw this all over---first in Southern India where much of the carving was done out of living rock,  specifically granite. Then again in the architectural motifs and the awesome built stone structures of the great mausoleums and palaces of the north ----in Agra and then in New Delhi and of course in Varanasi. Stone carvings and modeled/ terra cotta icons of the great teachings and figures of Buddhism, Hinduism and Jainism are national treasures and objects for worship today.

A country with religion so incredibly ubiquitous it is hard not to find statues, reliquary stupas, bas relief and built structures celebrating Buddha standing shoulder to shoulder with great Hindu and Jain temples and their
gods and Islam's rich and fluid iconography and world famous mausoleums and palace structures. This is especially true at Sarnath- the sacred place where Buddha gave his first sermon in the Deer Park delivering the eight fold way of action. Here some of his sacred remains rest in a giant stupa. We spent time there with many pilgrims including the current head of Myanmar who wrapped a celebratory silk around the base of Buddha's gigantic stupa as we watched from a Jain temple around the corner  ---not 100 feet from this most sacred of stupas and the pilgrim/King and his huge worshipping entourage.

Just being with pilgrims--- acknowledging the sacredness of this place and the sacredness of the sculptures of the Buddha we saw in the adjacent museum was awe inspiring.

Sarnath by far is a Buddhist's most sacred place.

Sacred Stupa at Sarnath

Mahabalipuram--a seaport for the Pallavas, a Dravidian people who ruled in southern India between the 3rd and 8th centuries BC also called CE, is an amazing legacy of stone temples and carvings.  The town sits adjacent to low hills of granite from which several generations of kings had monuments and caves carved out of the rock and later built temples from the granite quarried nearby.

The Shore Temple

The Shore Temple with Nandi (bull) sculptures is a legacy site in Mahabalipuram --- the only remaining temple of an original group of seven  --- the rest claimed by the sea in the intervening thousand years.  In the temple are two shrines  -- one to Vishnu, the protector or sustainer god of the "Hindu Trinity" (Brahma – Vishnu – Shiva), and the other to Shiva.  Surrounding the shrine to Shiva are rows of "nandis" – bulls – the traditional mount of Shiva.

I bought an old wooden sculpture of Garuda the eagle -man /mount of the God Vishnu --the preserver.

In Krishna Mandapam & Arjuna's Penance bas relief---the largest bas relief in the world carved in 7/8CE/ BC.--- elephants approach Lord Shiva as Arjuna kneels in penance and the goddess Ganga is represented by a flowing river which empties into a large pool at the base of the massive bas relief when there is water to flow.

Krishna Mandapam and Arjuna's Penance bas relief


From Chennai we traveled north to New Deli and then to Agra and finally to Varanasi.  With its roof at least three stories high, the monumental new New Delhi airport introduces a modern city of elegant, English style government buildings, beautiful embassies and a massive military complex with richly designed residential areas. New Delhi looked so different from the other India we experienced.

 It is almost as if the real India is sheltered behind a veil.

We took a train from Agra to New Deli at night---the train was delayed and, because there were no benches or chairs in the underground station, we waited standing for several hours along with beggars and rats and many street people who were just bedding down for the night. It was here and in so many of the small towns where we witnessed the real India --India with abject poverty and too many people and garbage and beggars in the streets.

But India is struggling hard to move beyond all of the challenges..... she is building a middle class and has focused on educating her people. And she is a vibrant democracy with Ghandi-ji as her sacred legacy and her inspiration.


Wall sculpture showing the mudras -- New Dehli Airport


The Taj Mahal was filled with Indians celebrating and as we witnessed them in all of their splendor, we saw a full moon rise over the exquisite pristine marble complex. It was movingly spectacular --Shah Jahan's mausoleum to his beloved wife is clearly a monument for the world to cherish and call sacred.

The Taj Mahal, the "teardrop on the cheek of eternity" was completed in 1648 by the emperor Shah Jahan in memory of his wife.

It is the most famous example of Mughal architecture, which is a combination of Islamic, Persian, Turkish and Indian influences.

Its longest plane of symmetry runs through the entire complex except for the sarcophagus of Shah Jahan, which is placed off centre in the crypt room below the main floor.

This symmetry extends to a mosque in red sandstone that mirrors the Taj Mahal to the West, facing Mecca.



Red Fort, Agra


Looking out at the Taj Mahal in Agra


Taj Mahal

Taj Mahal at Sunset
 Varanasi --- the city of Lord Shiva and the goddess Ganga, is perhaps the most sacred site of all India.

The placement of the city of Varanasi (Banaras)and its orientation---everything directed toward the Ganges--- serves as powerful ritual progression  --- an inexorable movement forward towards the sacred river. Not really knowing where it is-- surrounded by pilgrims, beggars, lepers, shop keepers, monks, tuk tuks, cows, and cow dung, motor bikes and all of life, we are pulled along this route of seekers pulsating with hope and wonder and awe going in one direction until finally we reach the sacred river.


Varanasi



Tuk tuks in Varanasi


Finally meeting the Goddess Ganga in complete awe and submission we can step back from practical concerns of everyday life and look at ourselves and the world with different thoughts and feelings. And because we have finally reached this sacred place, we can imagine what we might become. And for some, in this pulsating sea of humanity-the very old and infirm- it is a very hoped for final act. They breathe a sigh of relief and can finally die assured they will reach nirvana ---their ultimate goal.

And so it was with this profound sense of awe and wonder and respectful curiosity that all of us immersed ourselves in the sacredness of Varanasi and made our way to the Dasaswahmedh Ghat (ghat is the series of steps leading down to the Ganges for bathing and ritual immersion) for the evening Aarti service.

I don't know if it was that so many pilgrims and faithful surrounded us on the great hejira to Mother Ganga or whether truly this is a holy place----either way-- the experience of Varanasi for all of us was the highest level of sacred.

Finally entering the Dasaswamedh Ghat in Varanasi for the Aarti service at the Ganges River,
we arrived before the ceremonies were to start but already many, many pilgrims and the faithful had gathered.  We had time to simply sit and absorb what was going on around us – though not easily as we were constantly approached by beggars. One young boy became my friend, looked after me and followed me everywhere. No matter where I was he found me and stuck with me. He called me Mama.

 My friend


The Aarti ceremony started at sundown with the faithful bunched together quietly looking out with awe and wonder at seven young Brahman priests as they moved through four cycles, each time lifting a different sacred element to the four directions - a sacred Hindu ritual at the edge of the world' s most sacred river.  The exquisite beauty and mystery of the site, the music, the candles floating on the river, the chanting, the hands clapping, the enormous collection of humanity in great awe produced a powerful sense of the sacred.

The Aarti ceremony by the Ganges


After about an hour it was time for us to make our way back up the ghat steps, past the rows of beggars with outstretched hands and cups ---one of the most difficult aspects of India---- so many fellow human beings are in such need.  After walking for a while we climbed onto rickshaws, wending our way back through the narrow streets, now choked with the hundreds of people who had been with us worshiping at the sacred river.

Before dawn the next day we made our way back, this time to board a wooden boat to look back on the morning rituals from the sacred water and send off our prayers in little marigold covered floating candle cups.

Morning bathing at the Ganges


Incredibly, my little beggar friend found me walking and once again guided me around cow dung, raised stones and holes and the pulsating sea of humanity. With his presence and the sun rising to my back, transformed into a pilgrim, I too made my way to the river to dip my hands into and bless Mother Ganga.  There was both a serenity and the pulsing energy of awe surrounding us. And as the sun came up everything seemed sacred.
 
To the faithful, the purity of Mother Ganga cannot be compromised by human actions (pollution) and the faithful come to purify themselves by immersing in the waters.  Just north of us, at Marnikarnika ghat, we looked at the cremation was under way.  For the devout, dying at the Ganga and having one's ashes released into her waters brings moksha – liberation from rebirth into the cycle of suffering. It is the highest act.

With reluctance we left the Ganges after watching the rising sun through a haze illuminating the ghats and the faithful bathing in the sacred waters. I set afloat special candles surrounded with marigolds with a prayer for each of my children and grandchildren. 

Sunrise



My special candle




With thanks to Professor Dan Spenser and his research/expertise who accompanied me on my trips around India.

Malaysia


Penang --Pearl of the Orient ---Malaysia



Panang Harbor, Malaysia
Crossing the Bay of Bengal from India, passing by the mysterious and remote Andaman Islands, we reached the island province of Penang in Malaysia. A massive bridge connects Penang to the Malaysian mainland.

Malaysia, one of the amazingly prosperous "Asian Tiger" economies, burgeoned during 1980s and 1990s when it diversified its largely agricultural economy with new manufacturing and industrialization. A very a Muslim country, Malaysia welcomes the diversity of tourism and international business as long as it is not outwardly promoting Evangelical Christianity,

In Georgetown we watched craftspeople hand color their famous silk and cotton batik cloth.



On the way from Penang to the beautiful Cameron Highlands, we crossed from Georgetown to the mainland on a twelve mile bridge and then traveled on well constructed  roadways with signage like ours in the US and passed new industries specializing in manufacturing and palm oil production. And in the Cameron Highlands with its unique ecosystem, I saw where those extra  long stemmed( 2- 3ft) flowers are grown just for us and the profitable export market and, of course, witnessed the beauty of the spectacular tea plantations all over the lush green highland mountains. 

The rapid expansion of the Malaysian palm oil industry which has generated controversy over its social and environmental effects is a good example of  a common problem that has developed with rapid globalization and the new consumer economies in many of countries we have visited. We saw it in Ghana as well.

On one side, much of the palm oil fruit is grown by small landholders who are able to stay on their land by selling the produce to the newly developed commercial processing plants. This allows these farmers to collect the necessary cash to support life. But the overpowering monoculture provides a significant environmental threat. We have seen this happen in the US as well. Think about corn production.

Indigenous rainforest peoples' homes
Penang is known for its great food which blends traditions from the Malay people with Indian, Chinese and SE Asian cooking to produce a fabulous cuisine. I loved all Malaysian food – spicy and delicious! Then, of course, there is durian---the smelly fruit that tastes something like parsley and green onions and is banned on all public buses because of its odor. We found some at a roadside fruit stand and had to eat it there so as not to smell up our transport.

The Cameron Highlands are beautiful beyond belief --the famous place where Jim Thompson often escaped the heat of Bangkok and is thought to have disappeared after a walk ....forever. A     nice place to leave from--- I might say.

The steep mountainsides often covered with mist come to life when the sun highlights endless colors of green---from forest to chartreuse--- on the velvet-like strips of the tea bushes trimmed and cultivated with great care climbing in horizontal rows high up the iridescent hillsides. Today, many of the tea farms are still owned by Brits who brought the tea to Malaysia during colonial times.

Tea plantations, Cameron Highlands



Gorgeous tea bushes
  


Tea plantation worker, sorting the tea leaves

With just a taste of Malaysia---- we're off to Singapore through the famed Straits of Mallaca and perhaps another opportunity for pirates before we can fill up again with gas. But beautiful Malaysia is a place I would love to come back to.

Singapore's skyline

          
          

   

Vietnam


  VIETNAM


From India we sailed out of Chennai to Vietnam and Ho Chi Minh City --- old Saigon. In every way this city is impressive---- with modern development, an excitement and vibrancy of  bustling city life -- but most of all in the wonderful resilience of its people.



Mekong River Delta
 



On the surface Saigon appears totally recovered from the devastation and the ravages of many wars although agent orange has seeped into water tables and contaminated soils and rests in the DNA of many of the people. And like everywhere we have been, capitalism is the omni present trump card. The U.S. dollar is accepted and is strong---- everyone shopped 'til they dropped  for shirts, dresses, copies of designer handbags and watches and DVDs etc. and etc.

I saw outstanding art in museums and galleries. Vietnamese artists are using their ancient lacquer techniques and have taken them to new heights! Wonderful artwork. I will do a blog of exciting art we found at every stop if I can in the next few days or perhaps when I return home with journal entries from my classes.



Modern art using ancient lacquer techniques -- Saigon Art Museum


Vietnam was just one more of our visits to countries touched by colonialism. Here we found French history and the old Saigon largely supplanted by new skyscrapers, fancy shopping malls and banks, and high rise apartments. But there was something about Saigon that evoked memory despite it being so very modern. With chaotic traffic and never-ending stream of motor bikes --crossing Saigon's streets was terrifying and an act that only the Gods can bring you through safely. In fact, one of our group was actually clipped. She is recovered but had to go to the hospital with the driver who was obliged by law to pay the medical expenses. In the end, despite the crazy traffic, there is something about the energy of Saigon that is just fun.



Saigon government building, showing French influence.

Interesting though, it was in Hanoi where we saw the beautiful old Vietnam with lakes and the old French architecture still intact.  The main drag in the French quarter is reminiscent of  Paris' Champs Elysee. And in some ways, around the lakes, Hanoi reminded me of Zurich. I did see propaganda posters and billboards and actually bought one---supposedly an original. But then in Vietnam everything is copied and the designation " original" has new meaning which is ever evolving.

I was introduced to Pho and on the streets of Hanoi. David Yu, one of my ship family, and I had a wonderful  bowl of pho on a side street in Hanoi. I loved the the untouched Vietnamese culture still vital in the back streets of this city.

I also had the opportunity of driving from Hanoi through exquisite spring like green rice fields and small towns with tall skinny houses on the way to Ha Long Bay--- a beautiful place that embodies the the perfect elements of a Chinese landscape painting. The rock/mountains of brown/black rise up mystically from the blue waters of the bay. Lazily one day we sailed back and forth in a rustic fishing boat in the full sun. And looking out at the horizon we saw China.... the next stop on our peripatetic schedule of Asian visits. I loved Ha Long Bay---its tranquility and iconic Asian beauty. And I became attached to the wonderful Vietnamese people---so forgiving, so quiet and humble. And the beautiful women are always dressed impeccably.

 
Farmland outside of Hanoi

Ha Long Bay

I had expected to see more signs and symbols of the war years, but apart from the powerful displays in the War Museums in both Ho Chi Minh City and Hanoi and the small marker designating the urban lake where John McCain dumped his plane, they were largely out of sight.  In Saigon, in front of an old landmark, the Rex Hotel, where the foreign press and dignitaries often stayed during what is called the "American war" by the Vietnamese, we all met for our shuttle bus. While on its doorstep, we could stand and contemplate the memories, but the Rex has been upgraded and today anonymously fits into the architectural landscape. So these memories of the war years were clearly in the shadows.


John McCain's commemorative statue in front of the lake where he ditched his plane, Hanoi

Diorama in the Hanoi War Museum

Many of the students visited the CPU Chi Tunnels, a 200 km network of tunnels only 20 miles from Saigon --evidence of how stealthily the Viet Cong infiltrated into the south during the war.  Others went to the "Killing Fields" and Cambodia. All  hard to see and process. With understatement, the Vietnamese have made it easy for foreigners as well as their own population to see and experience the horrors of the war. And now  Vietnam seems to have moved on. They have achieved independence from colonialism and foreign control and have re-unified into one country and are now very capitalist. The Vietnam we discovered  is looking forward--- anxious to achieve 1st world status, negotiating trade agreements with countries like the U.S. and integrating itself fully into the global economy.

Also interesting, I had brunch with an American entrepreneur living in Saigon with his Vietnamese wife and child. He said the incredible growth so evident and the success of  new ruling ideology --com/capitalism  (communism and capitalism)-- is just a facade. He maintains the widespread evidence of growth  was really just made possible by a giant ponzi scheme. Wow! Don't know if this is true.

Either way, we saw how thoroughly communism has embraced capitalism in this first stop in Asia.
And at first blush --- it looks like success. But I am saddened by the resulting emphasis on commercialism so evident in Saigon.

And what is amazing is how far  Ho Chi Minh City is from the South China Sea. Navigation is possible for big ships all the way up the Mekong and Saigon Rivers but it takes about 4 hours to go from sea to city. Close to the sea, we were surrounded by the mangroves and vegetation of the rural countryside of the famous Mekong Delta. Today the Delta is the place for fish farming. Let us hope the aquifers are not contaminated  with Agent Orange. And as we passed the end of the Vietnam coast, it was ironic to see a tall statue of Jesus saying goodbye as we sailed on to Hong Kong and China.

 I hope someday I can come back to Vietnam - a fascinating place and a beautiful people.

   

China: Hong Kong


Hong Kong
Hong Kong Harbor

Small fishing village - a striking counterpoint to the massive urban development

Hong Kong skyline ---


The entrance into Hong Kong harbor from the South China Sea was spectacular. Our landfall at sunrise with misty landscapes of forested hills and islands taking shape was like going through the narrow entrance to unexpected island kingdom ---- maybe Oz. Tucked here and there at water’s edge are small fishing villages, a soft and human reminder of the region’s past and simpler economy.  With the fisherman’s houses as a small counterpoint, our views opened to a stunning modern city of unending buildings soaring tightly shoulder to shoulder in great monolithic formation.


Bright neon on the buildings of Hong Kong Island to the south and impressive structures along the waterfront in Kowloon where we docked welcomed us to the pinnacle of Asian modernization. More than just impressive, Hong Kong rivals New York City in both glitz and splendor. Once docked, we were dazzled by Hong Kong’s skyline glittering across the bay. Filled with the corporate offices and financial centers for many of the world’s largest corporations and advertising with confidence their corporate logos in bright neon on architecturally iconic structures, the view, especially at night, was mesmerizing. While now under a “one country, two systems” policy, Hong Kong largely maintains autonomy from China in both its economy and government as it powerfully showcases an overpowering consumerism and flaunts China’s economic prowess to the world. 

We disembarked through the Harbor City shopping mall filled with the richness and elegance of Gucci, Rolex and Dolce and Gabana and were introduced to Asian consumerism at its height. Another reminder of globalization’s growing impact on China are the number of McDonald’s and KFC’s along the busy streets of Hong Kong, Shanghai, Beijing, and even Xian. In Xian the Chinese amusingly refer to KFC as Kentucky Fried Cat.


The massive residential high rises in Hong Kong

space so very limited

In Hong Kong we visited two art galleries -- Osage and Gagosian, Hong Kong and a design studio, Latitude. All three visits allowed us to see the different parts of this intensely built city, the highly developed infrastructure and to see/ understand what is important to the Chinese artistic community. What was brilliant about Hong Kong’s city planning was the largely undeveloped open space outside main areas of dense population - so people can quickly and easily get away from the city’s intensity to relax and enjoy nature. 

At Osage Gallery we met the Artist ----Li Xinping and Sonja NG, curator of their current show: Machine and the Body. The Osage Foundation, a nonprofit, raises strategic funding and in-kind support for multiple art projects ranging from early childhood art education workshops to controversial thought-provoking performances and installations involving some of the world’s most prominent artists. Its aim is to foster a deeper regional consciousness of the arts in Asia and to increase cultural and artistic dialogue. It was impressive to see this interest and high level of professionalism in promoting creation of art and artistic understanding in China.  

Artist and Curator at Osage Gallery

A work from Machine and the Body at Osage Gallery


Next, with the curator, we toured an exhibit of Zeng Fanzhi’s key paintings from the last twenty years showing the evolution of Chinese art in the post-1989 era at the new Gagosian, Hong Kong Gallery. The pricing for both exhibited bodies of work at Osage and Gagosian ranged from hundreds of thousands to millions of dollars. The paintings shown were museum quality and showcased the influence of European and American painting on the technique and style of modern Chinese works. 

Work at Gogosian, Hong Kong by Zeng Fanzhi

by Zeng Fanzhi

by Zeng Fanzhi


Finally we visited the design firm, Latitude - producing exquisite porcelain ware. Latitude’s production involves dedicated craftspeople located in Jingdezhen, who have helped the designers to delve into China’s history of ceramics. Inspired by the legacy and wealth of knowledge of these artists, they rely on their reinvestigation of a fixed craft and rediscovery of age-old rituals. The delicate celadon dinner service displayed was reminiscent of the great porcelains of the Chinese Royalty. Using the same techniques and craftsmen from Jingdezhen province whose ancestors produced world renown Chinese porcelains for centuries, these craftspeople are rare and highly adept.

 And these are the same craftspeople that Ai Weiwei commissioned to do his famous Sunflower Exhibit displayed recently at the Tate Modern. By doing this, Weiwei  employed many of the skilled craftspeople of Jingdezhen who had been languishing without work as the new Chinese world refocused on mass production and manufacturing—not the legacy of great art and great craftsmen/artists of the past. Sending such a powerful message through his art, perhaps, Ai Weiwei has been heard and China will rediscover her artistic riches.

We were constantly reminded that the Chinese have through history designed and constructed great building projects on a monumental scale. The use of vast public spaces with superb, iconic architecture enhanced by beautiful waterways as seen in the past in the old palaces of the Forbidden City, the great Terra Cotta Warrior mausoleum in Xian as well as Shanghai’s Bund continues as a predominant influence in modern city planning for the ever growing urban centers of Beijing, Shanghai, and Hong Kong and new ones to come.  

Over the last year, the press made us all aware of China’s “miracle city”—Shenzhen-- the home of the infamous Foxconn employing over 400,000 workers. These Chinese work 24/7 on assembling such digital electronic goods that are the rage in America and the world as the Apple’s iPad. Just thirty years ago, Shenzhen was a simple Chinese fishing village. Today its population has reached 12 million. Larger than New York City, Shenzhen is fastest growing urbanization project in the history of the world. But unlike the showcase cities of Hong Kong, Shanghai and Beijing, China’s new industrial zones are not pretty.

This year the worker apartment residences in Shenzhen had bars on the doors and windows installed by Foxcann so that workers would not be able to commit suicide --an emblem of the dark side of China’s fast economic growth and somewhat inhuman urbanization. A small NGO, Students and Scholars Against Corporate Misbehavior, has been monitoring unhealthy labor practices in the Chinese industrial zones and is showcasing the bad conditions at Foxconn . Some of our students traveled with people from this NGO to Shenzhen in an effort to see these practices first hand. Despite having arranged for a tour of Foxconn, they were turned away at the gates.

 China does not want to promote any controversial exposition that would help to start a Jasmine Spring in Asia.

Shenzhen, the city and its manufacturing complex, just as the great cities of Hong Kong, Shanghai and Beijing,showcases in another way China’s growing prosperity and its new consumer economy with underlying goals of economic power and  material splendor. Here and everywhere else in China we saw the government and the Chinese people pushing to become a #1 global player. Modernizing at a dizzying pace and attempting quickly to eradicate massive poverty with infrastructure development and seemingly a new religion of consumerism, the Chinese have let the multinationals come in to help them grow and prosper.  But it is now evident, that while this practice has temporarily helped to grow China’s GDP, today, multinational corporations –like Apple and Wal-Mart- are exploiting the Chinese workers to keep their own production costs low and their corporate bottom lines highly profitable. The unfortunate conditions in Shenzhen seem like a new consumer slavery gripping low wage earners who unknowingly come from rural communities to prison-like conditions in Shenzhen and other manufacturing centers in hopes of making money. At $150 a month, however, the Chinese workers cannot meet the cost of living in Shenzhen today.  

Perhaps, the only solution to this is for countries and multinationals to work together to develop worldwide ethical standards for wages and conditions.