![]() |
|||
|
|||
|

Happily arriving to Dhaka at dusk via Biman's older Fokker 28 (note the oval windows), Bangladesh June 2004
বাংলাদেশ
I wish you could see the plane I flew on to get to Dhaka ঢাকা. It was a 1970s Fokker 28 a plane from a company that no longer exists. The seats would fall back, the overhead compartment wouldn't shut, the food trays would fall open, the thing was louder than 3rd row at a U2 concert, but the plane took off like a rocket ship from Yangon, the capital of Myanmar, and landed in Dhaka with no problem at all. Unbelievable. |
| Bangladesh | ||
|
My Itinerary ![]() |
|||||||||||||||
![]()

Rush hour, Dhaka, Bangladesh June 2004
![]()

Rush hour, Dhaka, Bangladesh June 2004
![]()

Painted wall advertisement, Dhaka, Bangladesh June 2004
![]()

Rickshaw art, Dhaka, Bangladesh June 2004
![]()

Street market, Dhaka, Bangladesh June 2004
![]()

Jackfruit, Dhaka, Bangladesh June 2004
![]()

Some guy carrying boxes up the stairs of my hotel, Dhaka, Bangladesh June 2004
![]()

Boat wallas, Dhaka, Bangladesh June 2004
![]()

Shezan soda, Dhaka, Bangladesh June 2004
![]()

There are an estimated 600,000 rickshaws in Old Dhaka, Bangladesh June 2004
![]()

Old Dhaka street scene, Bangladesh June 2004
![]()

Rush hour, Dhaka, Bangladesh June 2004
![]()

Rickshaw walla, Dhaka, Bangladesh June 2004
![]()

Old mosque, Dhaka, Bangladesh June 2004
![]()

Proud butchers display four lamb chops, Dhaka, Bangladesh June 2004
![]()

Night market, Dhaka, Bangladesh June 2004
![]()

Night market, Dhaka, Bangladesh June 2004
![]()

Squatter toilets for sale on the streets of Old Dhaka, Bangladesh June 2004
![]()

Labels, Dhaka, Bangladesh June 2004
![]()

Nothing is unordinary in downtown Old Dhaka, Bangladesh June 2004
![]()

View from my hotel window, Dhaka, Bangladesh June 2004
![]()

Rickshaw art, Dhaka, Bangladesh June 2004
![]()

Old Dhaka alley, Bangladesh June 2004
![]()

The friendliest airline in the sky: Biman Bangladesh (Airbus A310-324 - S2-ADK), BKK, Thailand May 30, 2004
| Bangladesh Journal Entries | ||
I can't stop talking about it interestingly, the head of state of Bangladesh (in 2004) is a woman named Khaleda Zia she is the widow of the Bangladesh National Party founder, President Ziaur Rahman. The opposition leader, Sheikh Hasina, is the daughter of Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, the nationalist leader and first president of Bangladesh. Can you imagine: two women running a country of 130,000,000 religious Moslems? Personally, I think it is great because the country sure needs a lot more feminine energy. And check this out I wish you could see the plane I flew on to get to Dhaka. It was a 1970s Fokker 28 a plane from a company that no longer exists. The seats would fall back, the overhead compartment wouldn't shut, the food trays would fall open, the thing was louder than 3rd row at a U2 concert, but the plane took off like a rocket ship from Yangon, the capital of Myanmar, and landed in Dhaka with no problem at all. Unbelievable. And other than two Portuguese people and one US marine I met on the flight, I didn't see ONE foreigner the entire time I was in Old Dhaka, NOT ONE. I did meet some exPats in New Dhaka, the good part of town, and they couldn't believe I was a tourist. They took me to a special club to get me a beer (they don't server beer anywhere else in the dry country) and all the exPats began calling me “the Tourist.” No one believed I was in Dhaka “touring around.” Well, the question I have is: “Why aren't people going to this final bastion of true urban wildness, a place that even Hollywood could never recreate? Why aren't people coming to fantastic Dhaka?” I simply don't know. Kashio, the Japanese girl that so gratefully opened her home to me in Tokyo was the one responsible for me going to Bangladesh, and apparently the Japanese are the only tourists that go to the country en mass because all the Bangladeshi locals asked if I was Japanese. “No, no, I am Canadian.” (Didn't want to reveal the US passport.) But finally, I succumbed. I guess I am now (partly) Japanese. “Yes, from Japan.” :). |
| Bangladesh Itinerary | ||
23 - 29 June, 2004
|
![]()