As I noted on the home page, this site was started 8 years ago
to talk about Bali and to offer information about Bali for tourists
interested in the island and the cultures there. Since I now live
in Sumbawa and have spent most of the past four years in Pakistan,
the kind of information - hotels, restaurants, weather, and the
like - that I was putting up on the site or planning on putting
up really isn't any more timely than what you find in paper travel
guides.
There will be some general things about Bali that I notice when
I am on the island, but the focus of cyberbali.com will no longer
be life in Bali. So with that said, here are some reflections
and observations on the island of Bali.
Bali. For some people the name says it all - warm seas, soft
sands, cold beers, vibrant colors, exotic sounds, friendly people,
large smiles, laughing children, a multitude of inexpensive small
hotels and homestays. This is perhaps more true for Europeans
and Australians than for Americans. For Australians, Bali is a
relatively short flight over to a world which is different, but
not too different, in order to taste something of the exotic and
leave inhibitions behind in Perth, Sidney, Melbourne or Cairns.
Europeans, particularly the Dutch, may have read of Bali in school
books or heard stories of Bali at the knees of their grandparents,
or in the case of some of my friends, spent their early years
there in the days of
the colonial government. Americans, for the
most part, know of Bali from their introductory anthropology courses
or a special on the Discovery Channel.
Bali. A land of wonder and magic set in the warm waters of the
Bali Sea and the Indian Ocean. Bali. The tourist-ruined, money-soaked
island sucking in foreign dollars for the Indonesian government.
Hand planted rice, homemade religious offerings, vibrant cloths
used in ceremonial clothes. Noisy motorcycles, howling dogs, pesky
sellers, a glut of guides speaking broken English. Gamelan orchestras
practicing in the warm nights under a brilliant moon, fishing
in a traditional prahu chasing tuna and tongkol, the mystery of
a wayang kulit in a village with the children laughing, the men
gambling, and the women making comments on their husbands' performances
or lack thereof. A busload of drunken tourists on a bar hop in
Kuta puking out the bus windows, fake gold and silver, more cheap
watches than you could wear in a lifetime, the inevitable Bali
Belly. A quiet walk through luxurious ravines teeming with birds
and butterflies, the hypnotic chant of the village priest, the
cry of the jamu seller in the tropical sunrise, the aroma of sate
sizzling over charcoal-filled grills.
Bali. Which one is it? The answer is that there is no answer
- it all depends on what you bring to Bali and where you take
it. There are foreigners who have come to Kuta and have never
left. The excitement, opportunity and midnight rush have seduced
them into finding a way to build a life there. Sanur, a twenty
minute ride from Kuta, is a more relaxed village catering to generally
more upscale tourists. Then, too, there are the tourists who come
and drink, dance, spend and flee looking for one more country
or island to "do." Come up to the north
and you might find boredom or bliss. Quiet sunsets on Lovina or
Anturan Beach, serene walks in scenic villages. Try Ubud, the
fabled center of Balinese 'culture," and you may find fantastic
artists and musicians, thrilling performances of ancient dances
and plays, or you may find rabid dogs, muddy pathways and cold
showers.
Have the Balinese sold out? Depends on what you mean. They like
motorcycles and tvs and t-shirts and jeans. Western music is
quite popular but so is dangdut, Indonesian pop. But the Kuta cowboy singing the latest MTV hit is going to know a few good
gamelan tunes as well. Is Bali pristine? Is Chicago or London
or Phuket? It's a real place in real time with real people who
generally want the little pleasures of modern life. Even in the
village where I first settled fourteen years ago, they now have
electricity and television and a paved road. Bali is part of Indonesia,
and Indonesia is a developing country with all of the developing
country problems that you might want to find - incipient pollution,
too much traffic, unsafe drinking water and suspect meat and dairy
products. I spent three years in Bali before I finally picked
up dysentery.
A village scene of the woman who puts up with me taken in 1990
while Su and I were both still young.