Tuesday, December 3, 2013

The Beaches in Bali Belong to All

The Beaches in Bali Belong to All

Bali Hotels Not Allowed to Deny Access to Beach Front


Bali News: The Beaches in Bali Belongs to All
(12/3/2013)

The chairman of the Indonesian Hotel and Restaurant Association for Bali (PHRI-Bali), Tjokorda Oka Arda Sukawati, has warned hotels that they are not allowed to infringe on the public space along all shore lines in Bali.

“I recommend to all PHRI members to communicate (with their surrounding communities) on this problem. What’s more, Bali’s traditional fishing communities are one of the natural attractions of the Island. Like in Sanur, the fishermen and tourism operators have discovered a shared synergy,” explained Tjokorada.

The PHRI chairman and former regent of Gianyar reminded that hotels built along beaches in Bali are not allowed from monopolizing or blocking beach access under the regulations set forth in the provincial zoning law (RTRWP).

Tjokorda claimed many conflicts over beach usage arise due to miscommunications and encroaching beach erosion shortening the distance between the sea ad the hotel.

The official zoning laws for Bali prohibit the construction of any permanent structure within 100 meters of the high water mark.

The secretary-general of the PHRI-Bali, Ferry Markus, is encouraging fishermen in Bali to approach hotel encroaching on their access to the beach and ocean to seek a win-win solution.

© Bali Discovery Tours. Articles may be quoted and reproduced if attributed to http://www.balidiscovery.com.

Saturday, October 5, 2013

Intolerable



Intolerable: Growing Up Gay in the Middle East

In this exclusive excerpt from his powerful debut, Intolerable: A Memoir of Extremes, gay Arab author Kamal Al-Solaylee reflects on the first time he discovered the underground gay scene in Cairo.

Kamal Al-Solaylee is the youngest of 11 children, as he writes in his affecting memoir, Intolerable: A Memoir of Extremes. He was born in Yemen to "an illiterate shepherdess who was married off at 14, and had 11 children by the time she was 33," according to the book. Al-Solaylee's family moved from Yemen to Beirut to Cairo, then back to Yemen seeking political and ethnic stability and safety throughout the latter half of the 20th century. While the Al-Solaylees sought shelter and security, Kamal was waging his own internal war as he came to terms with his sexual orientation.

But coming out as a gay man in the Middle East in the early 1980s seemed an almost insurmountable hurdle. So Al-Solaylee sought out and received a scholarship to attend college in the United Kingdom, and from there emigrated to Canada. As a Canadian journalist, Al-Solaylee has written for The Globe and Mail, the Toronto Star, Xtra! and The Toronto Post, among other publications. He currently serves as the director of the undergraduate journalism program at Toronto's Ryerson University. 

After an exile from their home country of what was then South Yemen and a few years in pre-civil war Lebanon, the Al-Solaylee family moves to Cairo, Egypt, in the early 1970s in search of a safer life. It’s there that the young Kamal realizes he’s gay in a society where homosexuality is taboo. In this exclusive excerpt, the author talks about discovering Cairo’s underground gay scene in the early 1980s, a period that coincides with the early AIDS epidemic and the rise of political Islam in the Arab world.
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CHAPTER SIX: Cairo

The visit to England gave me a confidence boost and I found the courage to call the Liverpool gay helpline and ask for information on finding other gay men in Cairo. Much to my surprise, the helpful operator said that the international gay guide Spartacus listed some bars in downtown Cairo as meeting places. “Are you sure?” I asked in disbelief. It was hard for me to imagine the possibility of meeting other people publically who felt the same way that I did, given how isolated my early years as a gay teen had been. “Well, the Tavern at the Cairo Nile Hilton comes up in various guides,” he replied. I knew the hotel but had no idea where that tavern was, or what to do when I got there.

Though I was already twenty, I was very naive and inexperienced. But even in the Cairo of 1984 the possibility of meeting gay men, particularly Westerners, was too big an attraction for me to miss. I remember going to a fancy hair salon in Cairo and asking the stylist to straighten my long hair with a flat iron. I wore my best wool sweater and cotton pants — I was anything but fashionable — and walked to the Nile Hilton in Tahrir Square, a landmark in Cairo since 1959. Once I identified the Tavern pub, I circled its doors a few times before I walked in. When I did, I had no idea what to expect. There was an Australian lounge singer doing a version of “Don’t Cry Out Loud,” a few leather seats, a big screen that divided the place into two and a rectangular bar with a terrifyingly stern-looking Egyptian barman. I had never until then consumed any alcohol, and when I found a seat at the bar, I couldn’t think of anything to order except a gin and tonic because I’d heard of it in American movies. I had no idea what it would taste like. I began sipping it — it didn’t taste so bad — and looking around. To my horror I immediately spotted a family friend, who either didn’t recognize me or chose to ignore me. I began to connect the dots. So, lots of men on their own or talking to other men. Very few women, Egyptian or Western. The men were all trying to catch each other’s eye. Older white men. Younger Egyptians. Lots of furtive glances and nervous laughter. The lounge singer started humming “Sometimes When We Touch,” which I had never heard before but immediately thought the most romantic song ever.

Then it happened. A Swiss businessman said hello and raised his glass. I thought he’d probably mixed me up with the waiter and was just ordering another drink. I don’t remember how we got talking, but it would be the very first time I ever chatted in person to another human being who identified himself as gay. It would be the start of many Thursday-night encounters at the Nile Hilton Tavern. I loved nothing more than being chatted up and seduced by older Western or Egyptian men. It became a sport, and I’d always felt I’d lost the game if I wasn’t invited back to a hotel room or at least got a ride home and a fondle in the car with one of the Egyptian businessmen, who were almost always married and couldn’t take me home anyway. Not that it was always that easy. I had nightmares about being caught or contracting HIV, which was just beginning to be the great epidemic that would define sexuality in the 1980s. But the pleasures outweighed the restlessness and fears — including the very real threat of being arrested and charged with sodomy. Building a network of Egyptian and expatriate gays changed my life. I wasn’t alone, and even if I still lived a secretive life, I had some older men to guide me through it.

Ahmad, a tailor, and his boyfriend, Bill, an American high-school teacher, took me under their wing. Both were in their late thirties and communicated largely in broken English and Arabic. Ahmad came from a poor working-class background and his English was largely picked up from previous sexual encounters with other Americans and Brits. Occasionally, I’d act as a translator between the two. I couldn’t have been happier. They introduced me to Cairo’s authentic gay scene — as opposed to the one based on meeting foreigners in hotels — which centred around a seedy part of the city known as Haret Abu Ali. Of the many chapters in my life, this one seems the most surreal to me now. It was like discovering that a lost city we’d only heard of in fables existed all along and was just a cab ride away. Belly dancers who’d seen better days had ended up there performing in cabarets for a clientele of wisecracking tough Egyptians and groups of gay men. Westerners would come as guests of the Egyptian gay men for the novelty factor, but you had to understand Egyptian Arabic to make the most of the comedy acts or the music. Even though I hated that kind of music, I quickly appreciated its camp value and its meaning as part of the Egyptian gay experience. I’d always loved belly dancing anyway and the religious crackdown in Egypt meant that there were fewer and fewer dancers. For a brief moment, I was living in a Cairo that recalled the golden days of the 1950s and early ’60s that I saw on TV.
Of course it wouldn’t last.

In 1986 Mohamed insisted on relocating the remaining members of his family to Sana’a. Keeping two households had become too big a financial burden for him. I didn’t need to visit Sana’a to know I wouldn’t be happy there — not after I’d finally settled into Cairo’s underground gay scene. I saw what living there was doing to my sisters when they visited the family home in Cairo on their summer vacations. For one thing, they complained about life in Sana’a all the time. After the relative freedom they grew up in, they were having to adjust to a society where women had to cover their heads and wear an abaya — a black, loose-fitting coat to hide the contours of the body. For the first time, they experienced full-blown misogyny and discrimination, both as women and as Aden-born Yemeni citizens. Sana’a of the 1980s was a very closed society and rarely welcomed strangers. To the average Sana’a male, women from Aden who were educated in places like Beirut and Cairo were loose by definition. I don’t think that attitude has shifted much in the past thirty years, despite all the uprisings and anti-government protests.

On a political level, President Saleh ran the country like a private club and a police state. My sister Ferial was under security investigation for many months and denied an identity card — the most essential document a Yemeni citizen needs — because she was more outspoken and independent than my other sisters. The rest experienced various but milder forms of intimidation and harassment before they could work legally.

The combination of living in Yemen, an extremely conservative society, and being under my father’s and brother’s thumbs, both of whom were equally rigid by now, meant that my sisters had to internalize the dominant culture’s attitude towards women. “What’s the use?” Hoda would tell me when I suggested she should relax a little now that she was visiting Cairo, “I’m going back to prison in a few weeks.” It was both a physical and psychological prison. When we went out for lunch or dinner in Cairo, I noticed that my sisters left it up to me to do all the ordering and talking with waiters. Just a few years before, I’d left those decisions to them. They surrendered their voices to the nearest male relative, which on those occasions meant me. When we went shopping, they’d gravitate towards the most conservative clothes and avoid items that could give the wrong signals — high heels, bright colours — even if they covered whatever they wore with the abaya. How different were these shop- ping trips from the times we looked for bikinis for the summer sea- son together.

As a man, I knew I’d probably fare better than my sisters in Yemen’s male-dominated society. It’s a privilege to be a man there, period. But not a gay man. Leaving Cairo now would be one thing; leaving it for Sana’a another.

I didn’t have a choice. I’d failed to secure any scholarship to complete my studies abroad, and all the flirting and sleeping around hadn’t landed me a partner who might whisk me off to somewhere in the West. I had flings and silly crushes but no relationships.

After fifteen years it was time to say goodbye to Cairo. My mother flew back from Yemen to help with selling the furniture and to pack years and years of clothes and collectables. When she and my sisters had departed for Yemen a few years earlier, they had left most of their belongings in Cairo. Perhaps they were secretly hoping they’d return after a year or two of Sana’a. Maybe if they left some clothes in Cairo, Yemen wouldn’t seem so permanent.

Wahbi and I were responsible for arranging the furniture sale and using the proceeds to buy our plane tickets. Neither of us was any good at that sort of transaction and the shrewd second-hand furniture dealers saw through us. One after another they made lowball offers — everything for three or four hundred Egyptian pounds — hardly enough to pay for one ticket, let alone two. It was a handy reminder of the gap between us as Yemeni expatriates and Egyptians and, to my brother, another reason why we should leave. We saw ourselves as part of Cairo society, and they saw us as rich Arabs to whom a few hundred pounds would make no difference.

Back then, you didn’t just call a second-hand store and ask them to come and have a look; you actually had to go there and bring the owner or an employee home. When I was asked to bring back a furniture seller from the working-class neighbourhood of Imbaba, I took a taxi there and expected a ride back in the shop owner’s truck. I did get a ride back. On a donkey cart. I had seen them on the streets of Cairo before and in movies but never expected to ride in one. I don’t know if I ever told any of my friends in Cairo about that experience. To me now, it’s just another quirky Cairo story. At the time, I was mortified. When we eventually made it to our street, the salesman, as expected, made an even lower offer than the rest.

That’s when my mother stepped in. Safia may have been illiterate, but she knew how to bargain, having shopped in Cairo’s food markets for years. When the salesman was about to stage the first of his many walkouts to force us into accepting his offer, Safia made him a counter-offer. I can’t remember the exact figure, but it was above what we told her two airline tickets to Sana’a would cost. She asked him to accept it now and she’d throw in some clothes —  including some of her fur coats, which she hadn’t worn since the early 1970s — or he could leave right away and not come back. A minute or two later we had a deal. Cash in hand. For about a week or so, we had no furniture except the beds, which the seller returned to pick up on the day we left for Sana’a.

I’ve taken many plane rides before and since and have moved from continent to continent in the last two decades, but nothing came close to how frightened I felt holding that one-way ticket from Cairo to Sana’a. What would I do in Yemen, and what would Yemen, a country that punished homosexuality with public hanging or lashings, do to a twenty-two-year-old gay man like me?

Thursday, September 19, 2013

... but Thailand has some horrifying stories too !!!

Penis Enlargement Attempt Fails Horrendously


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A man whose attempt to enlarge his penis horrendously failed, he couldn’t stop bleeding and fainted before he could reach the hospital.

CHONBURI – September 17, 2013 [PDN]; Volunteer Rescue Officers were informed that a man was found injured bleeding in front of the Bang Pla Soy Post Office. A emergency response team called to the scene to bring him to a hospital.
At the scene, Mr. Chumpon, aged 40, was found lying on the road. He was reported to have a wound on his penis and that was bleeding heavily. He was then brought to local hospital in order to treat his rather shocking wound or injury.
Mr. Chumpon, who was known as a fisherman, had a few drinks with fishermen. He was so drunk that he had the thought of enlarging his penis, he then grabbed a knife and sliced open his penis, which of course led to the reported injury.
He is now in the hands of doctors at a local hospital. Doctors have now declared him to be in a safe state, but his penis was infected with bacteria. It was suggested that he’d have to stay at the hospital a little longer in order to see whether he fully recovers or not.

Monday, August 26, 2013

embracing diversity and cherishing tradition: Indonesia and Bali, a strange marriage

I'm puzzled and happy at the same time. Indonesia is a multi-culture country, and although most of its inhabitants are muslim, other religions are not only allowed but have national status.

Take a look at the calendar of national holidays in Indonesia (the whole country):

Holidays in 2014

Schedule of Indonesian National Holidays Announced for 2014


Bali News: Holidays in 2014
(8/25/2013)
 
National holidays set by the government for 2014 have increased by one day over 2013, totaling 15 days due to the addition of May Day. Shared public holidays, introduced by the government to create long holiday weekends, will total 4 in 2014.
 
In announcing the official holidays for 2014 theCoordinating Minister for the People’s Welfare, Agung Laksono, set the following schedule of official holiday on Wednesday, August 21, 2013.
 
Official National Holidays for 2014
 
January 1, 2014           
New Years Day 2014
January 14, 2014
Birth date of the Prophet Muhammad
January 31, 2014    
Chinese New Year (Imlek 2565)
March 31, 2014  
"Nyepi" Bali Hindu New Year (Saka 1936)
April 18, 2014    
Good Friday
May 1, 2014   
International Labor Day – May Day
May 15, 10214   
Buddhist Holy Day of Waisak 2558
May 27, 2014 
Ascension Day of the Prophet Muhammad
July 28-29, 2014  
Ascension Day of Jesus Christ 
May 29, 2014     
Lebaran  – Hari Raya Idul Fitri 1435 Hijirah
July 28-29, 2014  
Shared Public Holidays
July 30-31, 2014 
Lebaran  – Hari Raya Idul Fitri 1435 Hijirah
August 17, 2014 
Indonesian Independence Day
October 5, 2014   
Idul Adha 1435 Hijirah
October 25, 2014
Islamic New Year 1436 Jijirah
December 25, 2014   
Christmas Day
December 26, 2014
Shared Public Holiday

One can see that - although the majority of national holidays have a muslim background - the other groups in Indonesia also get national recognition. This is something to admire.

However, in the case of Bali, I wonder what is going on. Bali was a Hindu island (actually, the Hindus ran away from muslim Indonesia to build a Hindu society in Bali), but rapidely in our days there is a substantial Muslim immigration in Bali. Is this a good thing? I'm puzzled.

I have a soulbrother in Bali, let's call him mr. W, he's Hindu. He's a permanent resident in Bali. He struggles regularely with his Muslim neighbours. They show absolutely no respect for his Hindu belief and traditions. He reacts against it.

I have a very dear friend in Bali, let's call him mr. D, he's muslim. He's a temporary resident in Bali. I think he's trying to keep his muslim traditions alive in the Hindu society.

I see mosques building here and there in Bali. They install loudspeakers that fill the air with their religion. Louder then my ears tolerate.

This is a weird evolution. On the one hand, I want my very dear friend, mr. D., to be in Bali, where he's happy, and where he contributes to the economy of the island. At the same time, I want my soulbrother, mr. W., to be respected in his Hindu belief and in the conservation of Bali as a Hindu island.

I know that the cast of the priests (the first cast in Bali) is concerned about the balance of religions on the island; it's a regular point of discussion. Obviously, they think that the balance is not yet disturbed. Let's hope the priests look at the topic very closely, and that they take whatever measure that is needed. One wouldn't want Bali to become mainstream Indonesian. It would rip the soul out of the inhabitants of the island. Diversity is nice, but authenticy is nicer.

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Friday, August 16, 2013

exam-fashion


We know there are special clothes for special occasions. The newest hit is the exam-fashion. Cute, isn't it? Like little robots sitting and writing :-) Does the teacher provide each student with a carton box, or do the students have to bring their own?

Guess what country this picture is from?

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Wednesday, August 14, 2013

Water in Bali - a story of thousand years


You know I'm already many years fascinated by Bali. Only recently, I decided to spend more time there.

One of the things that fascinate me there (apart of its people, of course, more on that topic in a following blog) is the magnificent water system in Bali. In one way or another, the upper class (the priests) have built a system that the whole of the island is provided with fresh, fertile water for agriculture. Wherever you walk in Bali, you will find water gushing down in canals, made out of stone (see above picture). It must have been a tremendous task to build this water-system, and it proves that the upper class is really taking care of the interests and well-being of the lower classes. 

It is this deep feeling of harmony and mutual taking care that so much attracts me to Bali. Even though it's modernized and youngsters no longer follow all the rules, the island is a remarkable example of how things were done in the past, and we should seriously consider if modern life is really so much better.

Instead of providing you with a link, I decided to fully copy the following article: read it if you have the time. It gives you an insight in a thousand years old system that is close to perfection.

My discovery of Bali continues! Stay with me :-) and by all means, visit me when I'm in Bali!

hugs,
PB

Direct Water Democracy in Bali


The Indonesian island of Bali, with around 1.6 million estimated farmers, has a direct democratic system of water distribution despite its irrigation system being completely hierarchical. Water governance is deeply intertwined in the rituals, the belief-system, the identity, the infrastructure, and even the notion of time. With channels and canals that are often over a thousand years old, the agricultural system and the ecology of the island have become deeply intertwined, acting as one organism. Efforts to drastically change Balinese agriculture in the seventies during the Green Revolution in Indonesia wreaked great havoc on the ancient and sophisticated system, and over the years the modernization efforts were withdrawn.

Location in Indonesia

The island of Bali, 90 miles longest end-to-end
Infrastructure
While one might be surprised at the deeply democratic nature of the island, despite it appearing rigidly hierarchical, the reasons behind the intense cooperation would be even harder to pick up on. Interestingly, it is the threat of pests that holds everyone accountable. As pests are deterred when fields are flooded, if an upstream neighbor decided to take more water, and diverted less to the downstream neighbor, then pests would attack crops upstream. Stephen Lansing, an anthropologist who spent years studying the water system and Balinese society, developed a computer simulation of the system on a large scale, and described how it worked, adjusting variables to show how the system would develop, optimize, and collapse. As he and his colleagues ran the simulation, they determined that as farmers would observe their neighbors farms, they would copy and synchronize each others cropping patterns, and a synchrony would develop across the whole island. While the model showed mathematically how the infrastructure self-organized, Lansing observed and studied the superstructure of Balinese society to explain much deeper synchrony. While the belief-system, rituals and time-keeping systems of the Balinese might seem cumbersome and superstitious to outsiders, Lansing showed how they have deep functional significance in the island-wide production system.

Subak system. Each temple serves a subak, and temples further upstream serve the subaks further downstream
Superstructure
While they are identified as Hindus, the Balinese call their belief-system* Ä€gama Tirta, or “Belief-system of Water”. Along every major point of diversion along the irrigation system is a water temple devoted to the Water Goddess, Dewi Danu. All the farms downstream of a temple form a Subak, the most basic self-governing unit in Balinese society. The temple is the public space where gatherings happen constantly, whether for practical matters or for festivals and celebrations. When agricultural matters are discussed, all farmers participate and must abandon all rules of interaction based on caste or be reprimanded with fines. The Balinese devote tremendous amounts of time to temple activities, where everyone expresses themselves and the arts flourish to an unparalleled degree, and around 50 holidays and more festivals happen in a year.
In a yearly holiday, farmers across the entire island gather at the temples upstream. People from over 200 villages gather at the temple furthest upstream, the supreme temple of Dewi Danu. The temple sits on the edge of a Mount Batur, an active volcano, flanked by Lake Batur, a massive freshwater crater lake. Mount Batur is key to the ecology of Bali, as rain dissolves phosphate along the edges, and enters the water, which combined with the nitrogen-fixing azollaprovides constant sustenance for agriculture throughout the island. Visitors collect holywater from the steam of the volcano, which is brought back to their respective villages, where more rituals are performed. In this way, each subak and the entire island maintain ongoing synchrony. While in the Western calendar there are two concurrent layers ofweeks and months, in the Balinese calendar there are 8 concurrent weeks that correspond with rituals, markets, and even social identities. As the solar cycle is of little relevance in the perennially warm climate, the 210 day growing cycle of rice forms the basis of a year. Their calendar is in turn synchronized with the Indian Ashaka calendar, and the modern Western calendar.

*While some people use the term science or religionbelief-system was chosen because it does not carry controversial preconceived notions of the exclusive distinction of science vs. religion rooted in the Western tradition


Balance and perfection is a deeply ingrained aesthetic in the Balinese psyche, which they seek in art, agriculture, and spirit. Well maintained rice terraces are likened to jewels, representing purity that one also likewise strives for within.

Traditional Balinese Calendar, painted onto fabric

Modern Balinese calendar, synchronized with modern Western calendar
Coming Around
Though the Indonesian Green Revolution ripped and tore the complex fabric of Bali’s agricultural system, the island retained enough cohesion and rhythm to survive the onslaught. For good intentions, the Green Revolution was pushed throughout Indonesia to feed its expanding, crowded population. The use of chemical inputs was pushed on Bali as a patriotic duty, and farmers were advanced inputs. As the farmers used the inputs, the land became dependent on them, which in turn made them dependent on using the chemicals. This caused great harm to the ecological balance throughout the island, and offshore coral reefs were poisoned and suffocated. As the agricultural planners observed the sophistication of the ancient system and that fertility could be naturally maintained by the geology of the island, they withdrew aggressive promotion, and many now hold the traditional system in high esteem. While some farmers continue to be dependent on expensive expensive inputs, the use seems to be gradually reducing.
Bali is a lesson learned in that there is much more than meets the eye, and one must not judge until a society is understood wisely. The example that Bali demonstrates, that a hierarchical system does not imply a hierarchical society, carries profound meaning that we can all learn from. It also demonstrates that societal balance can exist for hundreds or thousands of years, and only deepen and grow richer with age.
J. Stephen Lansing: A Thousand Years in Bali
The Long Now Foundation

A must-see video. Though long, extremely interesting and full of good detail. Divided into small 1-5 minute chapters.
More multimedia and writing from Stephen Lansing on his website:
http://www.u.arizona.edu/~jlansing/J._Stephen_Lansing/Welcome.html

One Response to “Direct Water Democracy in Bali”

  1. grittee Says:
    I emailed Stephen Lansing about this blog post, and he replied saying that there is a proposal in the works to make the irrigation system a world heritage site. On his website it says:
    Rice Terraces and Water Temples of Bali:
    A Proposal to create a UNESCO World Heritage Cultural Landscape
    (This proposal would establish a World Heritage site in Bali to support and protect Balinese farmers, subaks, water temple networks, lakes, rivers and forests)
    The “Nomination Dossier” explains the system at length, and among other things, gives information about some subaks, and gives lists of the temples and information and their coordinates – a great project for a public google map.

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Monday, July 22, 2013

The Russians are coming!


Imbeciles Abroad

Estonia Couple Who Had Sex in a Balinese Temple Continue to Cause Anxiety and Hardship on Balinese Community they Despoiled


Bali News: Imbeciles Abroad
(7/19/2013)
 
The impact of the unthinking act of two Estonian tourists to Bali, Urmas Silman (43) and his wife Katrin Silman (32), caught In flagrante delicto performing public sexual acts in Pura Mengening, a Balinese temple located in the traditional village of Sarased at Tampaksiring, Gianyar, last March, continues to be felt.

In an attempt to restore the sanctity and purity of the temple viiolated by the two Estonians, an elaborate Tawur Agung Ceremony was conducted by village members on Wednesday, July 17, 2013.

As reported by The Bali Post, the Tawur Agung ritual was the culmination of a chain of sacred and costly rites, including pacaruan tingkat nista andrsi gana ceremonies. As explained by a community chief, Wayan Candra, the Tawur Agung was performed to restore the purity of Pura Mengening.

Requiring the participation of numerous priests performing prayers over a month-long period, the final rites will only be completed on August 15, 2013.

The time-consuming and costly Tawur Agung process has been borne by local villagers who have received an indication that some amount of reimbursement may eventually be provided by the Regency of Gianyar.

In all, 283 households have sacrificed time, materials and money to permit the Tawur Agung to be conducted.

According to The Bali Post, the lasting effect of the outrageous behavior of the two Estonian tourists has been formally advised to the Foreign Ministry of that country through the Consulate in Bali.

The Estonians were not charged with a crime in connection with their defilement of a Balinese temple, but were required to make a nominal contribution towards the cost of the required ceremonies then advised to leave the island.

Tuesday, July 2, 2013

India: the upcoming tiger!


Tonight, I found this short video. Nothing much, one might think. At the same time it tells a story with far-stretching conclusions.

The video is about a guy taking a shower in India. Look at his shower place, very humble. He's clearly not rich. Nevertheless, he has all the modern technology to make this video of him showering.

He's not ashamed, he shows his body. Nice body, by the way! I like it when a guy is not shy, when someone just shows the reality. Just plain who he is.

This little video is an example why India will be the next tiger in the world economy. They don't care how humble it looks. They just go for it. Admirable.

Looking forward to seeing more of India!
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Wednesday, June 26, 2013

the need of change


One of the things I fear the most, is to become someone who's stepping in the same treadmill - even a comfortable one - day in day out, without change. It's the danger of routine, it becomes so normal that one doesn't think of other things then the usual ones.

That's why, for me, it's necessary to break the routine from time to time, and to do something totally different, out of the box. It also means that I have to leave my normal surroundings, and go to a totally different place, a totally other environment then what I'm used to.

Last weekend, it was a short break to Berlin. Lovely city, so much is going on there (see the pix on https://plus.google.com/photos/118368231017162743201/albums/5893536286312066577?gpsrc=gplp0&partnerid=gplp0 ). Even a short weekend away makes me a new person. I can highly recommend it!

How about you? Do you fancy the comfort of the daily treadmill, or do you want to break free from time to time?
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Wednesday, May 29, 2013

up up and away ... the naked consumer. Out Micro$oft, in Linux!



The German city of Munich (together with many other cities, see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LiMux) decided in 2003 to switch all its computers from (paid) Microsoft platform to (free) Linux platform.

The switch took them 10 years, and is now complete.

The city saves yearly 10 million euros in costs of licences. That is an enormous amount of money for most of us.

The funny thing is, that Microsoft hired HP to conduct a study how much the cost of the switch from Microsoft to Linux platform would be (hoping that this cost would be too high to make the switch).

HP calculated that cost at an extra 44 million euros (http://www.solv.nl/weblog/munchen-bespaart-10-miljoen-per-jaar-met-linux/19429). The city replied that this also would have been the cost  if they would switch to a new Microsoft platform.

I think that the existing free open-platforms are really starting to bother Microsoft. Especially since now the new Windows 8 is getting harsh critics, not to mention the dreadful TV-publicity that Microsoft is worldwide airing.

Interesting times ahead, folks!
.

Tuesday, May 28, 2013

colorful kids in Bali



On May 1, 2013, the unique “Ngerebeg” ceremony, held once every six months, was again celebrated in the traditional village of Tegallalang, north of Ubud. The actual date of its celebration is determined by the convergence of several cycles of months, weeks and days in the Balinese calendar, or, put into local terms, on “rahina budha kliwon pegat uwakan.”

The “Ngerebeg” is generally reserved for teenagers who decorate their bodies and faces using water-based paints. The resulting looks are, to say the least, extreme with teenagers, primarily young men, resembling punk stars, ghosts and menacing demons – all temporary members of platoon in the service of the ancient Balinese king I Gusti Ngurah Gede Pecangakan who reigned in the 15th century - seen as a heroic protector of Bali.

The colorful parade begins with lunch at the local temple followed by a processional parade with the grotesquely painted participants carry flagstaffs of penjors for a distance of 2-3 kilometers, the distance between two local temples.

The parade participants, in keeping with local tradition, make offerings at designated points along the route intended to protect the village and its inhabitants.

Local village officials in Tegallalang insist that villagers hold the event year after year, frightened that a failure to honor the tradition would bring misfortune upon the community. On a more basis level, "Ngerebeg"observances are seen as purifying the local people and their surroundings prior to piodalan ceremonies marking the anniversary of the village’s main temple. 

Thursday, May 2, 2013

A thai chat ...

evening in Bangkok. The laptop is on; Romeo is running in the background, for friends to chat with; suddenly a guy pops up and starts the following chat.

Received and sent messages

1. nice-fun 01. May. 2013 - 20:16
hello how are you
2. paulbavo 01. May. 2013 - 20:17
hello dear! all well here. How are you?
3. nice-fun 01. May. 2013 - 20:18
where u ??now
4. paulbavo 01. May. 2013 - 20:20
in hotel in Sathon. According to Romeo, we are 800 m. away from each other hehehe
5. nice-fun 01. May. 2013 - 20:22
ok soo what u think iam ?do you like to have sex with me??
6. paulbavo 01. May. 2013 - 20:26
I don't know who or what you are, sweetie, we just started to chat :-) Maybe you can tell me some more about you? Where do you stay? What do you do in life?
7. nice-fun 01. May. 2013 - 20:29
i stay at sathon soi 1 near 10minut in my life it very nice to be come soon .
8. paulbavo 01. May. 2013 - 20:30
it's good to know that your life soon will be very nice, dear! What do you expect to happen?
9. nice-fun 01. May. 2013 - 20:32
what for i have to tell to anyone to know about my ??what i can get if i tell you or what it batther for you to know about me ?? what about you ???? do you give me when i fuck you ??some????????????????
10. paulbavo 01. May. 2013 - 20:34
oh, does that mean you're a moneyboy?
11. nice-fun 01. May. 2013 - 20:35
what it moneyboy ??i do fuck with some what i like and what i dont like money boy how mach u can give for the can i know??
12. paulbavo 01. May. 2013 - 20:36
very sorry, krub, I don't understand: you want me to pay you money to fuck me?
13. nice-fun 01. May. 2013 - 20:39
if i want i tell u how much i want .but i ark u if some boy fuckwith u or sex with you what do you can give to the boy ?some money??
14. paulbavo 01. May. 2013 - 20:41
no dear, I don't give money. I only have fun with friends and with my boyfriend. Friends help each other, they don't expect something in return, other then friendship.
15. nice-fun 01. May. 2013 - 20:43
and you and u friend happy with you when there are have sex with you ???
16. paulbavo 01. May. 2013 - 20:48
yes dear, we are happy to have fun. It makes life nice. It's pleasure.
17. nice-fun 01. May. 2013 - 20:51
and now u get some one to have sex with u yes ?? how old it him ?? are you u belive yung boy it like sex with .....??u belive that ??and i want to see who it happy when u have sex with boy and boy happy with sex can i have see that
18. paulbavo 01. May. 2013 - 20:54
no dear, I'm not hungry for sex :-) but when it happens, I like it.

I only have fun with younger friends who like to have fun with older guys like me. There are many. 
19. nice-fun 01. May. 2013 - 20:59
55555555555555555 who is it??????????????it 100%boy it have about 1-3 boy like that 100% but when and where it that boy to become to u?? not just one old man yes i know fun but it very nice and good when u can give there are some money for taxi or some think out there are nice boythat u can have like old man but i see yung man or old man it very nice when we meet and help some togetthe
20. paulbavo 01. May. 2013 - 21:04
I like your thinking.
21. nice-fun 01. May. 2013 - 21:06
yes i want to tell u more but my englih not good and to tell u and xpaen to u to know and all i think and tell u it not mien i bad guy but i have see and hapen to me before and i know some
22. paulbavo 01. May. 2013 - 21:09
I know, sweetie. I think the sex business in Bangkok is very bad. It's not about friendship and feelings.
23. nice-fun 01. May. 2013 - 21:14
yes friend ship but money it number 1 and here bisines yes but it not much for $$$$$$ or baht but esy to get that if in you home u think u can get yung man at u home for fun or not ???and if pay it how much for the man and that why there come to here buy tacket and get fuck it more esy and happpy or baby u can get love i hope u can fun some one and fun with u with out %%%%%%%%%%% if i same u i just pay boy and fuck and for get and i do also
24. paulbavo 01. May. 2013 - 21:16
yes dear, in my home I have friends too. We enjoy each other.
25. nice-fun 01. May. 2013 - 21:18
and u bevive that him anjoy for 100and u not give them any think ??????it here have yung farang and old nice guy and there know there come here and buy me tacket go to him home
26. paulbavo 01. May. 2013 - 21:26
yes dear, I know. If you like young farang, then go for it :-)
27. nice-fun 01. May. 2013 - 21:28
yes i do and come and soon there are come i not say i like yung or old i like pelper nice man and there know me more i very good and nice guy
28. nice-fun 01. May. 2013 - 21:28
and i am not looking guy for money i looking alll
29. paulbavo 01. May. 2013 - 21:31
yes, I can sense that you're basically a nice guy. A bit difficult hehe, but nice :-)
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and this is where the chat ended :-)