Like many of you, I too have a passion for travelling. By age 21 I had
travelled to more than fifty countries and even managed to put myself
into debt. Luckily this debt was not great and I was able to land on my
feet immediately following my education.
I write to address a growing trend you should be aware of, a problem
that deals with the simplest of questions: Why do we travel? What is the
purpose of taking-off valuable time and spending great sums of money to
venture into new lands?
Here's my answer: We travel to have an adventure, to escape the mundane,
to witness another way of life, to see the extraordinary, and to
challenge our way of thought.
And with that answer in mind the problem is that many miss the point.
Too often do those who profess to be avid travelers simply find a new
location to drink, join prepackaged tours, and relax in Western
accommodation. Too often do their greatest adventures abroad merely
consist of the consumption of too much alcohol, experiences that in
truth closely mirror their lives at home.
In reality, they were travelling to a place within the bounds of Western Culture.
This place exists in just about every country now, and caters to the
masses that often spend big and experience little. In this place nearly
every young local you will meet has a Facebook, has watched American
television and movies, and wants someday to own a big house and drive a
luxury car.
This Western area is not unlike the real West, where not everyone speaks
English or lives in affluence, yet they are part of a culture largely
formed in the West through decades of unadulterated capitalism. These
Western places are filled with familiar corporations and washed-out
junkies, loads of travel books, and conveniently placed accommodation
for English-speaking travelers.
For those who travel this way, they often enjoy luxury hotels, even
though they provide the exact same standards of hotels at home, yet they
are impressed simply because it happens to be in a different country.
Many of these people save themselves from the challenge of having to
learn the basics of another language, settle for non authentic food, and
don't sacrifice their standards of comfort.
They often return home bragging about their adventures to those without a
passport and others will be impressed simply because of the trip
abroad. Main stream tour books will provide all the depth they ever need
to call themselves avid travelers.
But there are also those who are like myself that are searching for more
in our traveling experiences and perhaps more authentic travel
adventures.
Avoiding the spread of common Western Culture is getting harder all the time.
The populations of the world are shifting into one mega-culture of
shopping and entertainment, and the traditional cultures are being
forgotten with the passing of one generation to the next.
The peoples in villages for the first time become poor as for the first
time they are compared to those in affluence in the West. Money trickles
in slowly by slowly, so that they can get a Western education, so that
they make money in the cities, so they can forget the old ways and
become like us.
I see this quite often as I look for African tribal art during
my ventures in the Africa bush. Villages where the new generation laugh
and mock me for my interest in their old carvings, villages where the
new generation understands nothing of their ancestors devotion to their
artistic carvings and traditional artwork the powerful meanings behind
them, African villages where the new generation only understand the
language of money and sell their valuable art as if it were worthless. I
lived in Africa for many years before I had the opportunity to step out
of Western Culture.
The deeper into the wilderness you venture, where the new roads and
electrical polls cease, on the far reaches of the African frontier,
there the old ways are still practiced and believed. Here is where you
will be challenged, if not by how different they see the world than you,
then merely by where you will sleep and what you will eat. This is
where the greatest stories are found, and where adventures are so common
and grand you may get bored with life when you return home.
So how do we fight this? The answer is that we don't. We let the masses
talk big about their so called adventures and we simply do not rain on
their parade. Besides, the West will soon engulf the cultures of the
world that are left, and the longer these areas are kept secret and
visited by few, the longer they will remain.
In documenting the fast disappearing cultures of Africa, we also work to
preserve the tribal art they created, often before contact with the
outside world, the most pure art on the planet. To follow us and have a
chance to acquire some of this art.
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