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Laos -
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Stories Travel Stories I traveled to Laos to find
something I thought I had lost Article by Siamphone Louankang 
Former
Royal Palace (now National Museum)
I spent nearly two years
focused primarily on one thing: to travel to Laos for the first
time. When I finally went this February, I felt like the whole of my
life had built up to that moment. I don't know how I can describe
the enormity of the experience with only words, but I want to try.
In the months prior to my travel to Laos I became very interested in
current events there. I did a great deal of informal online research
and listened to Lao language radio broadcasts. I grew up in a very
close-knit Laotian community in California and fell in love with the
big parties and great music, so in preparation for the trip I also
researched modern Laotian music. Thanks to You Tube I was able to
watch endless videos clips. Over the years I read and acquired
several books on Laos, but a compact travel guide and a Lao-English
English-Lao Dictionary were the only ones I finally packed.
My meticulous preparation and self discipline was in many ways an
attempt to minimize the most significant event in my life until that
point -- my mother's passing about two years ago. Her absence left a
gaping hole inside of me and I felt I needed to find her. I needed
to find who she was before I knew her, and I needed to know what she
felt each time she returned to Laos. Prior to that point, I never
felt quite ready to go. I always felt an enormous need to be
accomplished in some way. Time was not waiting for me to feel ready.

My first impression of Laos was Luang Prabang. The people of
Luang Prabang speak with a different
accent than people from southern Laos, where both sides of my family
are from. Nonetheless, they recognized my every word and I felt
immediately at ease with theirs. Luang
Prabang has a very important place in the history of Laos, and
the entire city was appropriately designated a World Heritage Site.
Luang Prabang is home to the former
Royal Palace (now National Museum), amazing Buddhist architecture,
and is surrounded by lush mountains, rivers and waterfalls. Luang
Prabang is also a city experiencing rapid growth. New construction
projects are everywhere. Visitors hail from all over the world. At
the night market village vendors and tourists pack the streets. I
enjoyed the historic sites and natural beauty, as well as meeting
genuinely friendly people. I noticed many young people working in
various positions throughout the city. They were all very welcoming
and helpful, often referring to me as "older sister" -- a familiar
term of respect that really touched me. 
Growing up in America and being old enough to recall the cold war,
anti-communist sentiments were firmly imprinted in my mind. As a
student of history I came to Laos with all the baggage of the
Vietnam War. Although my parents traveled back to Laos many times
before, I felt that my western education put me in a position of
responsibility to help make progressive change happen. I was very
moved when a taxi-cab driver said how important it was for people
like me to come back to visit Laos. He reassured me that I was doing
the right thing.
In Vientiane I met up with my cousin and his fiancée who were
working and studying in there. My boyfriend and I received a tour of
the capital city on the backs of their motor-scooters, shooting
through traffic, circling government buildings, temples and historic
monuments. That Luang was much larger that I had imagined from the
pictures. In fact the entire city felt larger and more real than any
of the countless pictures I had seen or books I had read. When a
family friend joined us one evening and the conversation veered into
current events and politics, I started to feel tremendously
self-conscious. We talked about the recent military coup in Thailand
and the role of their King. She pointed out that Laos was a more
true democracy of the people. I could have mentioned the hypocrisy
of their single party dictatorship and the need for a multi-party
system in a true democracy. Yet, at that moment I could not find the
words to counter her. In contrast with Thailand's troubles, Laos did
seem more level.
My final destination in Laos was a few hours outside of Pakse. I was
to visit with my paternal grandmother, who lived with my family in
the U.S. briefly, but chose not to stay. Her return to Laos had
always puzzled me, until now. As we traveled south, my
Anglo-American traveling companion became sort of a celebrity for
the day. Women and children looked on with gentle curiosity as we
crossed the Mekong River by ferry and traveled on dirt roads. I had
stressed out over how my relatives would receive my unmarried status
and American manners. There was so much I wanted to explain. There
was so much I wanted to tell them. However, seeing my grandmother
again only brought a flood of tears from both our eyes. None of the
other business mattered. There was nothing I needed to clarify. I
was just coming home.
Even though it was a home that I had never been to, I was welcomed
at every corner by familiar faces. Everyone in town seemed to know
each other well. Coffee was served with complementary tea. Rice wine
was served with almost every evening meal. Shopkeepers delivered
packages to homes without address details. Postal mail did not even
require a last name. While plumbing and electricity was not always
reliable, almost everyone had access to satellite TV. I was caught
by surprise one night when Global Warming became a casual late night
debate. I started to mention the burning of trash and forests in
less developed countries, but my relatives quickly reminded me of
the industrial pollution caused by U.S. corporations. As I listened
to my aunts concerns about America's intrusive military presence in
Iraq and other parts of the world, I soon lost the heart to advocate
any sort of western model of so-called progress.
It was not that I was discouraged from wanting things to be better
in Laos, politically and economically. It just became apparent to me
that change in Laos was
already happening, with the impetus coming from within. Rapid
exposure to international media and interaction with people visiting
from abroad effected enlightened discussions in all parts of the
country. The Laotian people I encountered were all well informed,
open minded, and far from naive. I realized that my responsibility
was not to help them understand the outside world, rather it was to
help myself understand their world. I always envied Thais, Europeans
and others who traveled to their ancestral homelands without fear of
persecution or attack. Now it was finally my turn. Traveling to Laos
this time was just the beginning.
I traveled to Laos to find something I thought I had lost. What I
discovered was an expansive place where people shared my culture and
heritage. The cabbie had it right. I do need to go back, even if
just to proudly speak mother's language in my father's country once
again.
Other stories: The road to Long Cheng | Sticky Rice | Re-visiting war grounds carries on brotherhood legacy | The dogs of Sanglaburi | Vientiane on bended knees | I traveled to Laos to find something I thought I had lost | Laos the tranquillity | What a difference a Camera makes |
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