Wednesday, March 02, 2005

United Religions of Ceylon - part II - Buddhism


Monk Child in Kandy City - Sri Lanka - Feb.2005


Monk Child in Kandy City - Sri Lanka - Feb.2005


Two Monk Boys in Kandy City - Sri Lanka - Feb.2005


Monk in Hikkadwa (southwest coast) - Sri Lanka - Feb.2005


We are leaving - Kandy City - Sri Lanka - Feb.2005


Take me with you - Kandy City - Sri Lanka - Feb.2005


The door is closed now - Kandy City - Sri Lanka - Feb.2005


I have to go - Kandy City - Sri Lanka - Feb.2005


Good Bye - Kandy City - Sri Lanka - Feb.2005

Tuesday, March 01, 2005

United Religions of Ceylon - part I


Buddhist monks in Kandy – Sri Lanka – Feb. 2005


Muslim students in Galle Fort – Sri Lanka – Feb. 2005

Curious religious moments in Colombo, Sri Lanka:
- A buddhist mong walking ahead of a muslim couple.
- A muslim women walking by a catholic church.
- Ate a Nossa Senhora de Fatima e os 3 pastorinhos por la' andam!

Formosa Tour de l'Île

Aproveitei o fim de semana grande para dar uma volta pela ilha de Taiwan.


Comecei aqui na terra, cidade de Tainan, onde ocorre o principal evento do festival das lanternas (do 23 Fev. a 6 de Mar.).

Tainan Lantern Festival

Segui para Kaoshiung para apanhar o comboio para Taitung, no sudeste de Taiwan.

Taitung Coast

A costa de leste de Taiwan e' bastante montanhosa e cheia de termas de aguas quentes:

Jhihben Hot Springs


De Taitung segui para norte, para Hualien, parque nacional onde residem tribos de nativos de Taiwan.
De Hualien segui para Taipei, pela rota considerada a mais picturesca da ilha de Taiwan.

Hualien Coast

Acabei o fim de semana a rir em Taipei com uma comedia de Singapura, o filme

Rice Rhapsody:

Rice Rhapsody looks into the delicate art of making Hainan chicken rice and mother-son relationships. The film can be seen as a twist on Ang Lee's Eat Drink Man Woman and The Wedding Banquet.
Jen (Silvia Chang), a mother of three sons, is an expert at making Hainan chicken rice and uses her mother's secret recipe to open a restaurant and raise her children alone after being abandoned by her husband 12 years earlier.
Jen's older sons, Daniel and Harry, are gay, causing Jen to worry whether she will have grandchildren if her third son, Leo, turns out to be gay too.
She and her best friend, Kim Chui (Martin Yan, a famous TV chef) devise a plan to keep Leo straight by bringing a French exchange student to live with them. Leo develops a strange but intriguing relationship with the French girl named Sabine, which greatly pleases Jen.

Taiwan, 228

Ontem, dia 28 de Fevereiro foi feriado aqui em Taiwan.
Neste dia (conhecido por 228) ha' 58 anos, o povo de Taiwan foi massacrado pelas tropas do KMT, provocando um numero incerto de vitimas, entre 10000 a 30000 pessoas. Ver resumo dos acontecimentos aqui.

photo: Sean Chao, Taipei Times
A man yesterday pays his respects to victims of the 228 Incident at an altar set up at the 228 Peace Memorial Park in Taipei. Displayed on the wall are pictures of some of the victims.

Friday, February 25, 2005

O sabor das cores

Para se ver, cheirar, saborear e sentir um pais, nao havera' talvez sitio mais indicado que um mercado: uma orgia de cores, de sons, de sabores e de aromas exoticos, que nos envolve de forma quase violenta e nos embeda docemente.

...about Sri Lanka: "This colourful collection reveals its richness and beauty and the intensity of the affection it evokes in its visitors."


Verde e Amarelo - Limao!


Red Hot Chili Peppers


Verde e Amarelo - Banana!


Lilas sem gengibre


Green Hot Chilli Peppers


Fruta do joao


ciclo de vida: do verde ao vermelho


Bacanal de bananas


Cocos amarelos


Serial cereals

(fotos: mercados do Sri Lanka - Feb.2005)

Thursday, February 24, 2005

Pelos mercados do Sri Lanka...


Welcome - Ambalangoda Market - Sri Lanka - Feb. 2005


Vegetable Man - Ambalangoda Market - Sri Lanka - Feb. 2005


Pineapple Boy - Colombo Market - Sri Lanka - Feb. 2005


Vegetable Boy - Ambalangoda Market - Sri Lanka - Feb. 2005


Lemmon Man - Colombo Market - Sri Lanka - Feb. 2005


Banana Man - Shop in Colombo - Sri Lanka - Feb. 2005


Coconut Lady on the road - southwest coast - Sri Lanka - Feb. 2005


pineapple and coconut juice on the road - Colombo - Sri Lanka - Feb. 2005


At the end of a market day in Colombo - Sri Lanka - Feb. 2005

Wednesday, February 23, 2005

Sorrisos com Azul 'a moda do Sri Lanka


School Children in Colombo - Feb.2005


Beach Boy in Colombo - Feb.2005


Lighthouse Boy in Galle Fort - Feb.2005


Marine in Colombo - Feb.2005


Blue smile behind the green in Kandy - Feb.2005

Tuesday, February 22, 2005

Relações com o Mar / Closure with the sea


Como se nada tivesse acontecido
As if nothing had ever happened
Colombo, Sri Lanka - Feb.2005


mas assim nao foi... o pior aconteceu
but it wasn't the case... the worse did happen
Colombo, Sri Lanka - Feb.2005


porquê?
why?
Colombo, Sri Lanka - Feb.2005


porquê?
why?
Colombo, Sri Lanka - Feb.2005


porque nao nos avisaste?
why didn't you warn us?
Colombo, Sri Lanka - Feb.2005


O silencio da resposta
The silence of the answer
Galle Fort, Sri Lanka - Feb.2005


é preciso recomeçar
we need to restart
Colombo, Sri Lanka - Feb.2005


porque amanhã começa outro dia
because tomorrow is a new day
Colombo, Sri Lanka - Feb.2005


como se nada tivesse acontecido
as if nothing had ever happened
Colombo, Sri Lanka - Feb.2005

Monday, February 21, 2005

Some ways of helping…

There is still a lot to be done in Sri Lanka’s tsunami affected areas.
Any means and ways of helping are more than welcome to those in need.
Some people help through donations to ONG or others; some prefer to go directly to where the help is needed and this is what I decided to do:
I flew to Colombo with some school material (in case it wouldn’t be easy to buy it locally).
Two days in Colombo was sufficient for me to get a better idea of the situation, and concluded that it would be no problem to go down the coast on my own. So I rented a car with a driver (30 to 35 US$ per day) and drove along the coast.
I drove along the coast from Colombo through Galle until Hambantota and concentrated my little help at Galle area.
Galle has a fort (built by the Portuguese in the XVI century and completed by the Dutch) that didn’t suffer any damage and therefore the old town inside the fort was completely untouched.
I based myself in Galle, shopped for school material in a local market and went with the driver to some camps north and south of Galle.
In Galle I met 3 other individuals who were doing excellent jobs on their own:
- Kevin, an electrician from Ireland who was buying and giving boats directly to the families in need. He had a driver who would walk with him on the beaches, spoke with the people, accessed their real need and if judge that they were in need of a fishing boat he would then proceed and buy the boat from Colombo and get it shipped it to the fishermen’s beach. I will do a post on Kevin’s great help soon.
- Jo, a Hong Kong who was visiting the children and asked them to do drawings which she would take back to Hong Kong, organize an exhibition, sell the drawings and bring back the money to these children;
- Ineke, a dutch women who was collecting money from her country to look after the set up of a local orphanage.

The above 3 examples are anonymous individuals working on their own and helping directly those in need. Sometimes I think that they are far more efficient than big organizations but unfortunately they are not too many and therefore, just not enough.
As for the ONG’s although I support them and I sure think that they end up helping the masses, I am quite sure that a great amount of the money donated to them is absorbed in “administration” expenses.
In Sri Lanka, more specific in the Colombo’s 5 star hotels, I got the impression that the ONG’s could be more efficient with a simple change of their behaviour.
I sure didn’t like to see some of the ONG’s staff behaving as if they were in luxury extravaganza holidays, staying at 5 star hotels (in Colombo) and dining lavishly by the sea. After all its our money and we sure tdid not donate it to offer these people this free treatment.
Although, I’m sure that they have provided a great help, I failed to see these ONG’s staff down in the south in the destructed areas.
I will not develop on this sad issue here as I have not devoted my time investigating the actual situation but was certainly not happy to observe and been told by locals how some of these big organizations operate.
I just leave one question, is necessary to lodge volunteers in 5 star hotels?