So much of my own life is
history now. I was listening to a podcast about Kunming, the capital of the
Chinese province of Yunnan, which lies north of Vietnam and east of Myanmar. Two
millennia ago, it was an important city on the southern Silk Road. The podcast
was an account of how the city had changed rather violently in the last decade after the city’s planners instigated an epic modernisation programme of
street-widening to make way for cars. New roading, I heard, has ploughed right
through historic neighbourhoods. And the old quarters had been pulled down and replaced with apartment buildings and shopping centres. That means I wouldn’t recognise Kunming now. In
1984, my then husband and I spent several months travelling independently
through China, returning from Sydney to our London flat. It was quite an
undertaking in those days. There was little tourist infrastructure. And the
week before we left on the trip I discovered that I was pregnant. But I was
young and strong and I figured it would be fine – and so it proved.
An old quarter in Kunming. |
We stayed in Kunming and
its vicinity for about ten days. In 1984, the medieval town structure and rows
of historical housing around the bird market were still extant and traffic
consisted mostly of bicyclists. I have only a few photographs of my time there.
It was before phone cameras, of course, but even so – when I was travelling I
often didn't take many photographs. I told myself it was because I didn't want
to look at people and things through a lens, that I wanted to Be Here Now, and
that these experiences would live in my memory. But I did not realise when I
was a young woman how undependable memory can be. Fortunately, I always kept a
journal.
A Yi woman walking down Dongfeng Road |
MONDAY 27 AUGUST, 1984. I
walked down Dongfeng Road East this morning, following a Yi woman to see where
she would go. As I made my way, I noticed a surprisingly large number of
elderly women hobbling along on tiny feet encased in black bootees. Their feet resembled hooves and I supposed them to be among the last of China's foot-bound women. The Yi woman entered a dimly lit haberdashery and I
did too. I tried on a black velvet beret that was too small and watched her while
she bought a length of braid. There were bolts of fabric and racks of padded
Mao jackets in the store and creased western-style suits. There was a poster on
the wall of the ideal one-child family – a fat-cheeked boy perched between
smiling parents. Next to the poster were diagrams of uteruses and a
cross-section of a penis being vasectomied. The shopkeeper and the customers
gawked at me as well they might.
I was pregnant on this long trip through China and I did a lot of sleeping. |
TUESDAY 28 AUGUST, 1984. I
slept late, until eight-thirty. The cleaner in the guesthouse was not pleased with this decadent behaviour and roused me so that she could get on with not cleaning the
room. I woke with the desire to add some calcium to my diet. A German tourist had told me the day before of a
shop that sold goat’s cheese. I walked along Dongfeng Road again, passing the tall hemp plants that seem to perform the role of municipal shrubbery here. I couldn’t find the shop, but I liked wandering around
the old quarters with their two-storied red and green wooden buildings. Every
so often a whitewashed alley intervened and led me down cool, quiet
passageways that arrived at maze-like courtyards surrounding small houses.
Other doorways, back on
the main street, offered glimpses of scary dentist’s rooms with
foot-pedal drills and ancient equipment.
A dental surgery. |
In the evening we were joined by C and V, two students from St Martins art school in
London. We went out to a food stall in a marketplace we had spied nearby, and
ordered a dish of diced potatoes, steamed green beans and chilli. It cost about
eighty pence. As we were eating, at a trestle
table under a droopy canvas awning, an elderly man approached us with one of
the cooks from the stall at his back. He said in British-accented English, ‘The
cooks want to know what you think of the food.’ We answered that it was delicious,
which it was.
He pressed his hand to his
chest. ‘It is Yunnan food. Will you order another dish?’ We agreed to that and
presently a plate of sliced egg and tomato and sweetcorn arrived, accompanied
by two small bowls, one of salt and the other of crushed, dried chilli. We
asked the old man to sit down with us. He asked where we were from. He had a
way of repeating our answers as if they were a delightful revelation.
‘Ah, you’re from London!’
He was a railroad engineer
who had learned English at university in Shanghai. He had been assigned (he
uttered this word with a raised eyebrow as if we might get its import) to
Kunming in 1976. ‘The dialect here is particularly impenetrable,’ he said. We
called for the bill and a cluster of people came forward to speak to the old
man. He satisfied their curiosity about us and then said, ‘It is a pleasure to
practise English. Usually I have to rely on Voice of America broadcasts.’ He
waved a hand at the marketplace. ‘This has only been here for a month. They
tore down the Working People’s Cultural Palace, which was erected during the
Cultural Revolution. The Cultural Revolution is over, you know.’ He asked us if
we would accompany him to an ice cream parlour. ‘There are young people there
who would like to talk to you.’
Our entrance caused a stir
at the ice cream parlour. A group of
young people, about ten of them, shuffled towards our table. The engineer invited them to sit down. He turned to us and said, 'They are glad to have the opportunity to ask questions.' They wanted to know: where we were
from, the average wage in Britain, our impression of China, an account of the
weather in London, the incidence of typhoons in London, and the difference
between public architecture in Britain and in China.
But the subject they were
most interested in was our appearance. C wore over long and one short earring
(it was the eighties!) and we were both dressed in black. Our interlocutors
wondered if we women belonged to a sub-group of society – they had not seen
other tourists dressed as we were – and if this was a particular London style?
We replied that it was and other westerners might recognise us as belonging to a sub-group. I
saw that our style intrigued this group just as we were fascinated by the
appearance of minority tribespeople with their striking costumes. They saw us, in our fashionable outfits, as anthropological or sociological constructs.
They wanted to know the significance of everything. What did C wear one long
earring and one short earring? Did it matter? Why was I wearing a hat and C
not? Did this denote that one of us was married? Why were we wearing black? What did it mean? When C explained that she
tinkered with her look just to be different, to express her individuality, some of our questioners indicated that it was a lot of effort for such a trivial outcome.
Did low-class people, they
inquired, eat while they were drinking or was it only high-class people who
took food with alcohol? They asked us if we ever drank champagne. When we said
that we sometimes did, they sucked in their breaths and nodded knowingly.
And the end of the
evening, everyone in the group thanked us. They wished us a long and happy
life. One young man said he hoped that a typhoon would not strike London and
laughed to indicate that he knew he was making a joke.
It all seems so distant now. The ice cream parlour is gone without a doubt, the people scattered, the engineer long dead. But I like to remind myself as often as I can of these small human-to-human encounters. Those young workers in their Mao jackets and we tourists in our western costumes, somehow managing to become if only fleetingly a part of one another's history.
4 comments:
Wonderfully evocative - thank you!
Fabulous! Much enjoyed your story and pictures. I was in Kunming in 1983 and had no camera and kept no diary. Like you I was in the Here and Now. I stayed for three weeks just in Kunming and enjoyed going to hear story tellers in the evening. And roamed around. Those were the days!
What a fascinating glimpse into another place and time!
Lovely to hear your stories. I can totally understand the not wanting to take photographs and just be 'in the moment'... but I'm glad you recorded your experiences in one way!
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