PBH / colombia (active forums more | travelguide | pictures) / post

 

Colombia: Vacation Wonderland

By Tony

It's all too common in Latin America, where the divide between rich and poor is usually very wide, to hear stark differences in outlook and attitudes at the table. When dining with the rich, the poor are often referred to with varying degrees of fear, condescension, and outright contempt.
Unsurprisingly, conversations at the tables of the poor express an entirely predictable desire to see the heads of the rich paraded on stakes. Seldom do the two strata of society agree on anything beyond soccer.

So, imagine my surprise to hear--again and again--expressions of optimism, hope, good feelings, and a general belief that things were going pretty well--in Colombia. In Medellin, no less, not too long ago the murder capital of the world! In expensive restaurants frequented by the well to do, the kind of people whose cars are bulletproofed, who travel with armed drivers--and later-- in what was the toughest, poorest barrio in the city, I heard the same thing. That the government seemed to be doing a pretty damn good job, that things were getting better and better, that the future looked bright--and that it was very good thing to be Colombian, and from Medellin in particular.

In a world where the bad guys seem to win with a relentless regularity, and where even the presumed good guys appear, usually, to be their own worst enemies, it's really gratifying to see things get so dramatically better somewhere--especially a place where at one time, it really and truly looked hopeless. It is inspiring, when you've gotten used to the notion that some problems probably won't ever be fixed in your lifetime, to see some of the very worst kind of seemingly insurmountable problems so quickly and effectively improve. When you see a real change in the conditions and in the human hearts of a place where just a few short years ago, one neighbor couldn't walk twenty yards over without risking death from another, where drug cartels recruited their murderous young footsoldiers by the hundreds, where even the police feared to tread--it makes one hopeful again--about the whole world.

Colombia. Vacation Wonderland? Yes. Absolutely.

I can't think of another country where the No Reservations crew has been welcomed so enthusiastically everywhere we went. Absolutely everybody we met seemed delighted and proud that we'd come to point our cameras at them. And we were allowed and enabled, I should point out, to point them any damn where we pleased. Someone less...forgiving in temperament, less zen-like than me might feel tempted to point out to some other tourist boards the wisdom of letting us go and do whatever we want--no matter how uncomfortable the official organs might be about some of our interests--compared to the result when officialdom tries to "manage" what we see and don't see. . As it turned out, it was the uncontrollable elements, the poor fishermen, the inner city market workers, the residents of the neighborhood in Medellin with the very worst reputation who did their country most proud.

What you might not know about Colombia is that it's beautiful. That the food is really good--with the same kind of fantastic mix of African, European and indigenous influences that makes Brazilian cuisine so interesting and vibrant. That they actually like Americans down there.

It was against this backdrop of bubbly goodwill, that I watched Ingrid Betancourt and her fellow hostages freed from captivity a couple of weeks ago--in what appears to be yet another in a series of spectacular and effective strikes against the FARC, a particularly unlovely bunch of hardcore commie/narco-terrorist kidnapper/"guerillas" who've been getting knocked back on their heels in recent years.

On one hand, the government seems to be killing and capturing bad guys with skill and vigor. On the other hand, the local government in Medellin (for instance) has been improving transportation and social services for the working poor--and throwing an incredible FORTY percent of total budget at education. It looks and feels like a working combination.

As you watch the episode, the pride you see in the faces of the people I talk to--and hear in their voices--it's real.

By tasco66 on Aug 29, 2008, 11:03 in Friendly Talkzone. AddThis Social Bookmark Button


tasco66 says on Aug 29, 2008, 11:03:

bumpito

Not being bound to swear to the dogmas of any master

0 funny, 0 helpful.

veemoto says on Aug 29, 2008, 11:38:

Very good article, thanks!

0 funny, 0 helpful.

tasco66 says on Aug 29, 2008, 12:29:

you are welcome

Not being bound to swear to the dogmas of any master

0 funny, 0 helpful.

Mononoke28 says on Aug 29, 2008, 12:34:

Nice!!!! Love that guy, love him!

Diana

0 funny, 0 helpful.

tasco66 says on Aug 29, 2008, 12:39:

This is why I love Colombia.

Viva Colombia!

Not being bound to swear to the dogmas of any master

0 funny, 0 helpful.

YankeeInMDE says on Aug 29, 2008, 15:10:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SnIGID8yCCs

here's one of the video clips of the episode. bourdain RAVES about colombia.
great episode.

just search 'anthony bourdain colombia' on google and you can see many clips.

0 funny, 0 helpful.

spy1983 says on Sep 1, 2008, 12:33:

Bombing Wonderland in Cali.

0 funny, 0 helpful.

dwmte7 says on Sep 1, 2008, 16:33:

they just replayed that today....the absolute best. made me so fuckin homesick i wanted to cry. the food, the places that both stella and i know like the backs of our hands, the folks, the barrios......every last drop. VIVA BOURDAIN AND VIVA COLOMBIA

thank's a lot tasco. well done.

dwmte

0 funny, 0 helpful.

More posts by the same author:

The Economist: How to steal an election 3

Government to seize control of Venezuela's largest gold mine 0

DOW already down 350 point after Obama victory 63

Ted Kennedy calling Barak Obama, Osama Bin Laden 16

Who said "I am not a Socialist"? 20

WSJ: How's Obama Going to Raise $4.3 Trillion? 1

Found in a rundown Boston estate: Barack Obama’s aunt Zeituni Onyango 7

Another Obamabot Caught Stealing Property 2

Colombia abate al ideólgo de las FARC 42

Bloomberg: FARC Is a `Paper Tiger' After Offensive, Desertions 11

FARC Is a `Paper Tiger' After Offensive, Desertions 2

WSJ: Barack Wrote a Letter . . . 9

Barack Obama's wife plays race card on '60 Minutes' 15

Los Angeles Times try to bury video of Obama 9

Biden Family Financial Connections Detailed 1

Biden's Son, Brother Named in Two Suits 0

WSJ: Obama's 'Redistribution' Constitution 27

Schwarzenegger on Palin 14

CNN Reporter Backpedals on National Review Misquote 0

Biden Bans Philadelphia Station After Tough Interview 1


Americas:

Mexico

Cuba

Colombia (travelguide)

Venezuela

Ecuador

Brazil

Bolivia

Peru

Chile

Argentina

Africa:

Kenya

Congo

Malawi

South Africa

Asia:

China

Japan

India

Nepal

Thailand

Laos

Cambodia

Vietnam

Malaysia

Indonesia

Philippines

 

Travel:

Travelguide writers

Travelicious

Travel with kids

Around the world trips

Learn travel Spanish

Off topic: your thing

Also:

All forums

Travelers

If you're not a part of this travelicious experiment just yet, just sign up here. It's free & easy.

 

About poorbuthappy | About the travel guides | Travel guide editing | Community rules | RSS feeds

This site in other languages:
Spanish | French | Catalan | Chinese | Filipino | Greek | German | Hebrew | Japanese | Korean | Polish | Portuguese | Russian

© 1998 - 2008 Peter Van Dijck, all rights reserved.