FIBONACCI POETRY

VIRGINIA GOW

Tuesday, June 26, 2012

HOOT OF A HORNBILL


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HOOT OF A HORNBILL                                               
A sultry haze settles over Kuching, capital city of Sarawak largest of the Malaysian states. Early morning hunger is sated by a bowl of mee noodles with chicken and chilies, just the thing to spice up the blood and allow the brain to focus on a forthcoming journey up the river in a dug out canoe.
Sipping the strong black coffee straight from the first class Hilton breakfast bar, Ginny’s gaze lingers across the Sarawak River to the ruins of the Brooke mansion. The history of a white Rajah featured in Joseph Conrad’s book, “Lord Jim”, held a fascination for a much younger Ginny. Here, in Kuching, she is able to experience a sense of place about this exotic tale. Also across the river is a golden domed building, Islamic in design. This is the new award-winning House of Parliament splendidly mirrored in the river.
Sawarak was a gift by the Sultan of Brunei to James Brooke of England in the 19th Century. From a huddle of primitive huts, the village of Kuching rose to be a gentile city. Three generations of Brookes, white rajahs, ruled an independent Sarawak. They established law, banning headhunting, slavery and piracy. They also banned Christian missionaries and established schools where Malay and English were acceptable languages. The White Rajah abdicated in 1946 ceding Sawarak to Britain as a crown colony. In 1963 Sawarak joined the Federation of Malaysia.
Rumours of headhunters living in teak longhouses whetted Ginny’s appetite for a trip down the river.
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 When travelling alone in a strange land, she tries to stay at a good hotel aware that a hotel’s reputation depends on the safety of its guests. Her guide brings along two other guests of the Hilton, Dutch nationals who look like they have come straight from a physical training camp. They walk with a military swagger and display arrogance towards the locals that Ginny finds unpleasant.
Heading down the dusty road, they leave the city far behind. The guide relaxes as he drives them at a leisurely pace past a Malay fishing village where pole nets are set at the mouth of the river to catch fish on the incoming tide. He teaches them about his country’s culture. He is a river Iban, one of the five types of the Dayak indigenous people of Borneo and he is taking them to visit his wife’s relatives.
At a country market where barbers shave young men’s heads whilst they balance on stools in the dust, they purchase trussed up chickens, lollies and gardening implements as presents for their hosts up river.  Along the way they take a walk through a rainforest to find the world’s largest flower, the rare Rafflesia. Over a meter in diameter, it is in bloom.
Finally they arrive at a simple river jetty where a colourful, wooden canoe with its outboard motor is moored. Their guide advises “ Wait till you get to the river before you take off your shoes”. It is polite to take off your shoes when entering a Malaysian house, but a boat? What type of adventure was unfolding here?  
As the group glides up river in a leaky boat they are glad that their shoes remain dry. The guide, the boat owner, and the three travellers take turns ladling water out of the boat. Ginny sits on a life jacket because the boat seat is just bare board.
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The journey takes hours. She feels that she is moving through time in the jungle heat. Through the tropical rainforest where orangutans find sanctuary, she realizes that this is a rare experience.
If the rich palm oil planters have their way, then it is an experience that will vanish in the mists of time.
Round a bend in the river, the boat party arrives at a tiny cove where a rope ladder hangs down the bank. Children splash naked in the river. Their dark eyes and sparkling white teeth beam a warm welcome. They laugh to watch the visitors navigate the rope ladder up to their jungle home.
The longhouse is a whole village under one roof.  It is built up high, on poles, overlooking the river.  One climbs up a wooden ladder that is flanked by totemic wooden guardians. Once at the top to one side are flat wooden balconies where black peppercorns, spread out on rattan mats, dry in the sun. The other side opens onto a wooden verandah. This is called the ”spirit road”, the heart of the village. The eaves of this spirit road are decorated with shrunken black skulls.  Apartments for each family lead off from this general meeting place.  
The visitors are taken into some of these homes and are offered hospitality. “You may stay here for the night”, says a charming woman with a Kuching haircut and many gold necklaces.
A feast is prepared and everyone is invited to partake of this meal.  Freshly killed chickens are stuffed into bamboo stalks with field mushrooms and lemongrass. Grilled over an open fire, the chicken is accompanied by jungle ferns fried with
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garlic and the fried rice of the region, nasi goring. Suckling pig is served on a bed of stewed melons. Although this is a predominantly Muslim country, most Iban are Christian and enjoy pork.
Musicians play, dancers twirl. The tribe sings a haunting melody. Ginny sings and dances as custom dictates a return gesture. The Dutch lose their arrogance.  Despite their towering strength this may well be their cover for fear. They relax in the ambience of the night as the Iban shyly show off their wooden carvings and batik cloth.
The visitors present gifts to the tribe. The Headman brings forth the local firewater, tuak, distilled from rice and made on the premises and langkau, iban whisky, for the adults to sample. Ginny thinks of the brown water from the river and hopes that no ill will come of this sharing. To refuse would be insulting and the height of bad manners.  Rolled tobacco leaves straight from the jungle ‘supermarket’ produce a spat of coughing from the visitors and everyone joins in the merriment and laughter. A shaman, spiritual doctor, enters the spirit road. He has the utmost respect of the whole group. He sits down next to Ginny.  Barely five feet he has the eyes of Yoda, from Star Wars.  She wonders what visionary wisdom will he impart? He wears the distinctive tattoo between the thumb and forefinger of a headhunter.  He has one English sentence for Ginny, ‘Kiss me, baby”. She has only to answer, “Behave!” and all is well.
All visitors decide to stay in the guesthouse, a bamboo structure built over the pigpen closer to the new cement ablutions block.
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 Partitions of wax dyed batik cloth separate cubicles. Each cubicle has a mattress on a raised rattan platform covered by a mosquito net. Ginny makes sure that she has the middle cubicle. She has a fairly unsettling waking sleep.  Sighs and sounds are carried in the night wind.
A soulful hoot of a hornbill awakens the visitors. This mighty bird, the symbol of Sarawak, is the size of a swan. Once hunted for its brilliant tail feathers worn in war headdresses of the Iban, this bird represents a powerful omen. In an animistic world, a world where there is no separation between the spirit and material world, it is a call to be answered.  It is time to go into the jungle to pay respects to the spirits of the place.  It is time to learn to hunt and gather.
Separate to the longhouse, the bamboo guesthouse also has a spirit road.  On this bamboo road the visitors are instructed how to use a blowpipe. The pole is about 2 m long, the middle of which has been hollowed out by a sharp iron rod leaving a hole 10 mm across. The darts are splinters of palm wood, 20 cm long, fixed to the end of a piece of soft wood or pith. These fit exactly into the tube. Darts have notches on them so that the poisoned end will stick into the victim’s body when the pith portion breaks off. The poison comes from plants that make medicine for muscular relaxation. A target is set up at one end of the road. Gourds, made from carving out a dried large melon, carry the pith bits. These are brought up for the visitors to use with their blowpipes.  Before setting off into the jungle a blood sacrifice is offered to the spirits of the land. This is in the form of a cockfight. The owner of the winning cock has the right to choose the jungle leader.
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The Headman’s son is the chosen one.  His grandfather, the Yodic spirit doctor, presents him with a ceremonial jacket of Ikat fabric. These textiles are purposely made to be beautiful to attract the favour of the spirits. They are hand woven threads of gold and silver, laced with shamanic symbols for protection and are beaded with precious stones.  The young man is very pleased to be wearing it.
The young man tells Ginny that he wore his grandfather’s jacket once before. When it is time to gather the honeycomb from wild bees, a hunter is sent out. As soon as he locates an old tapang bee tree, he marks its trunk with a cross, and builds a simple hut beneath the tree. The honey is his to claim. On the night of the last day of the lunar month, or the first night of the new moon, he climbs the tree chanting the bee song, and collects the honeycomb. The young man collected much honeycomb wearing the jacket. This he shared with the members of the longhouse.
He does not bear the tattoo of the headhunter. “How can I claim the mantle of manhood without a head to nestle in the eaves of the longhouse?” he asks the visitors.
The Iban lands by the rivers are ancestral lands; their blood and flesh belong here. Everything needed to sustain life is available and is governed by the laws handed down in hereditary line from father to son. Spirit doctors hand down secret medicinal herbs and chanting sounds. Stories of lineage and history are sung and passed down in the oral traditional. Wrong doers who provoke the wrath of the spirits are required to pay a fine.
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In more serious cases, a blood sacrifice of pig or chicken is demanded by the tuai rumah, the longhouse Headman. 
The moon and stars signal time for planting rice, corn and sago. Omens also come with nature’s blooming. From childhood the Iban learn to read the landscape. Farmers stuff their ears with grass so they will not hear the omen bird come planting time so that the crop will be abundant.
Part of initiation into manhood is the ritual placing of a shrunken head into the eaves of the longhouse. A special mark is tattooed between the thumb and forefinger. The Headman and the spirit doctor both have these marks. They tell the visitors that the last time a head as gathered was in the border war in 1964 between Indonesia and Malaysia. Called Operation Claret, British and Australian troops fought in this secret war. Headhunting was a reprisal for a very serious offence against the people of a region, like the stealing of land. Who decides where to place a border on a map? This always opens a can of worms.
A sliver of light splashes across golden threads of the ikat jacket worn by the young Iban man. This bejeweled jacket, handed down from father to son, is his license to walk through the ancient jungle to the sacred burial grounds of his ancestors. It is his protection from the harmful spirits that lurk in the tropical rainforest along the riverbanks of Sarawak.
Iban belief is that if one lives in harmony with one’s neighbors and the earth, then one will find favor with the spirits. When one is mean, then one calls down upon oneself the wrath of the spirits. Misfortune may stalk the jungle path. Vines
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may trip the unwary visitor. Dangerous predators may lie in wait for the unprepared.
“Tread softy on this jungle soil,’” he tells the visitors, ’”we are going to pay our respects to the ancestors.” He stands facing the Dutch woman, who has been loudly singing a pop song. In his hand is a machete, its blade gleams in the sun.
Her silence is achieved and her spirit is awakened by the hoot of the hornbill.
There are many mysteries to be learned in the jungles of Sarawak. These are secret and are hidden from the uninitiated.
There will be a new skull to be placed under the eaves of the longhouse. The young man will receive his tattoo, the mantle of manhood. The world flutters and turns in the spirit road of time. Jungle breathes in its quiet memory.
Back from the jungle walk, the same leaky boat that had brought them to this village conveys Ginny and her guide downstream. Crocodiles laze on riverbanks and blink as they pass. They bail out the brown water at the bottom of the boat and this beats a rhythm that suits the journey.
It’s time to stay at an altogether different longhouse. They arrive at the shores of a wide lake. A ferry lies slumbering against a crumbling wooden jetty. A cheery fellow, who greets the guide with a hearty hug, captains this dainty yellow and red craft. They are cousins and swap news of family while lorry men load supplies from Kuching onto the ferry. With only a few people on board, the ferry starts up and heads for the only destination possible, Batang Ali Long.
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Deep jungle surrounds Ali Longhouse Resort. On the edge of the Indonesian border of Kalimantan, it is a Hilton Hotel of distinct quality. Constructed of teak, it is vogue sleek and often features in fashion magazines. Out of a dream, it sits in tranquility and splendid isolation.
This hotel boasts a Michelin Star French Chef, and one English book to read from its library, “Heart of Darkness”, by Joseph Conrad. Someone has a sense of humour.
Crisp white sheets on a king size soft bed are a far cry from sleeping on home made batik covers stretched over rattan floor mattresses. Cool breezes blow through the windows. Weird jungle noises echo through the modern spirit road and there is a hush of expectation in the outdoor dining area. Vivid white of the chef’s tall hat stands out in contrast to an ultramarine dusk.  A thousand jungle eyes watch as barbeque flames leap up and dance with the crescent moon.
There are no skulls lurking in the eaves of this teak longhouse, but there is a feeling of deep respect for the custodians of this land. The indigenous architecture is honored by this new structure. So too, any who seek to know the Iban would appreciate both modern and ancient ways. This rite of travel can expand life’s reality and is truly a gift enhanced by contrasting experiences                                                                                                                       
Virginia Gow
20/06/12

Friday, June 1, 2012

ONCE UPON MT WILSON


ONCE UPON MT WILSON                                                            Virginia Gow 29/05/12
Sunlight splits the dew from yellow leaves and draws forth a brilliant day out of folds of fog. Silver suburban train whistles a Sunday holy hello as it rumbles over the railway crossing at Blackheath. It’s on its way to Sydney town filled with happy holidaymakers. Bellbirds chime in the morning as Ginny and The Visitors climb into a large, black four-wheeler and head off to explore Mt Wilson. It is a fine day for an autumn picnic.
The Visitors are intrepid travellers and have explored the heritage garden village before. ‘Autumn is the vey best time to visit Mt Wilson’, they say. ‘There is no town water supply. People are requested to bring their own drinking water. The residents gather their household needs from water tanks.  Gardens are fed from dams and streams.’  They know to bring their own food, water and wine because there are no shops in Mt Wilson’s village.
Fresh buns from the Blackheath Bakery still carry their early morning ‘hot out of the oven ‘ smell. Sliced ham ‘off the bone’ from the butcher’s, smoked salmon from the fishmonger’s lie between slivers of white paper. Fresh iceberg lettuce and roma tomatoes have just been gathered from the greengrocer’s. Homemade chutney, stuffed olives, soft Brie and tasty hard cheddar from the deli now nestle down in the picnic basket on the back seat. A thermos of hot water for tea or coffee holds its own basket, with mugs, on the floor. Ginny brings a bottle of local Mudgee wine, along with water and milk, in a cooling bag as her contribution.
Up the airy mountain they ride with gaiety and song. As the basalt-capped peaks on the northern edge of the Blue Mountains come into view, the road is a carpet of orange, yellow, red and brown leaves. Autumn tresses of the weeping cherry and liquid ambers are magnificent in their hues having fed off the rich volcanic soil of this cool temperate rainforest. These deciduous trees delight in shedding their treasures, warning of winter’s chill.
The land is sprinkled with world famous gardens. Charles Moore, a Director of the Royal Botanic Gardens in Sydney, created one garden in 1877. This colonial garden, set on 20 acres, surrounds a classic old colonial sandstone homestead. Bronzed ‘ bird of paradise’ fountain leads to a leafy avenue. Purple Sycamore weeps in splendor. There is an ‘old man’ cork tree peeping out at the waterlillies. Imagine standing in a grove created by the one giant redwood and feeling the hush of a sacred space. This giant Sequoia is over a hundred years old and in its branches a boy’s midnight dreamings are protected. Walk down to a sculpture garden where bronze nymphs hide in a waterfall glen. Shift along a high stonewall to discover an elaborate 15th Century Spanish doorway leading to a secret garden. ‘Peek through the ancient Spanish iron barred window at a walled world of verdant green grass, a wisteria arbour, a thriving herbaceous border’, says the mistress of the house. ‘Catch a sunbeam dancing on the handsome ornamental pond’. The owner of this splendid heritage garden attends life-drawing classes with Ginny. This elegant lady escorts them around her beloved garden then invites them for tea. Thus an extra layer is added to the enjoyment of Mt Wilson as The Visitors sip warm sweet tea inside the solid sandstone walls, warmed by the kitchen hearth.
Mt Wilson is where, as a boy, Patrick White kicks a stone along the road. Hands in pockets, he is already storytelling. Follies sit in splendor, a wedding couple gambols over lawn, and a photographer arranges his child model on an old wooden fence.  Film stars shoot the latest Gatsby movie in a summerhouse. It is all about the dapple of the leaves.
At a fork in the road a wooden picnic table stands with its attendant benches ready to receive a cloth, picnic baskets, cooling bag, The Visitors and Ginny. A gentle wind plays a melody with the fallen leaves. They dine in a manner rather refined, and bask in the rays of the noonday sun. Laughter and chatter mingle with bird song. Time allows the shadows to lengthen and friendship deepens with them.
The journey over, Ginny waves farewell to The Visitors. She settles down in the cosy cottage at Blackheath and plays a video of Mt Wilson inside her mind. She fiddles in the melody of leaves with wind over the layers of graceful images and reminds herself to press the save button.

ONCE UPON A MOTHERS' DAY


ONCE UPON A MOTHERS’ DAY

A shaft of light draws the onlooker towards the glowing circle on the gallery floor where colourful patterns slowly merge and change. 
“Art like this inspires others to expand their horizons”, said the woman to her son on Mothers’ Day. 
His gift to her is a trip to Manly Art Gallery to view the exhibition Markers for the Journey.
The subtle use of sound and light blend with the artist’s brilliant photographic imagery and carries the viewer into timeless places.

A ‘toran’, the traditional welcome banner of India, leads the viewer into the darkened projection area but in this case, the artist has cleverly created her own toran. 
Using found materials, she has stitched stories that ‘mark’ the key people and events in her journey.

This remarkable exhibition by Manly artist, Carole Douglas is an account of her personal experiences in remote Kachchh in North Western India where, for the past 15 years, she has recorded the lives of pastoral communities. 
The result, a collection of sound, images and textiles, offers a unique perspective on India.

“Wait till you get to the river before you take off your shoes” could well apply to this exhibition.