• Smithsonian
    Institution
  • Smithsonian
    Journeys
  • Smithsonian
    Store
  • Smithsonian
    Channel
  • goSmithsonian
    Visitors Guide
  • Air & Space
    magazine

Smithsonian.com

  • Subscribe
  • History & Archaeology
  • People & Places
  • Science & Nature
  • Arts & Culture
  • Travel
  • Photos
  • Videos
  • Games & Puzzles
  • Blogs
  • Shop
  • Travel

Touring Myanmar

A practical guide of what to see in the southeast Asian country, from ancient temples to variety shows

  • By Josh Hammer
  • Smithsonian.com, February 23, 2011, Subscribe
View More Photos »
Shwedagon Pogoda Rangoon features timeless pleasures such as the Shwedagon Pagoda, a thirty-story gilded temple built more than a thousand years ago.

Image Source / Alamy

 
Tweet

Article Tools

 
  • Comments
  • Font
  • Email
  • RSS
  • Print
  • Related Topics

    Tourism

    Burma

    Photo Gallery

    Temples of Pagan

    Touring Myanmar

    Explore more photos from the story

    More from Smithsonian.com
    • Myanmar's Young Artists and Activists

    Rangoon

    Rangoon, also known as Yangon, has changed dramatically from its circa-1980 days as an isolated socialist backwater. Today it is a modern if run-down city, with sushi bars, traffic jams, Internet cafes, and a thriving art-and-music scene. Hip-hop concerts occur throughout the year in both outdoor venues and night clubs, and at the city’s avant-garde galleries –the New Zero Art Studio on BoYar Nyunt Street in Dagon Township, the Lokanat Gallery and Inya Gallery - painters and video artists regularly test the junta’s censorship laws.

    Rangoon also abounds with timeless pleasures, most of all Shwedagon Pagoda, a thirty-story gilded temple built more than a thousand years ago, that is believed to contain eight hairs of the Gautama Buddha. I’ve found the best time to visit Shwedagon is just before sunset, when the complex is packed with pilgrims, monks, and novitiates and the sharply angled light makes the golden spires that surround the pagoda seem as if they are ablaze. Afterward, I wandered the alleys in close proximity to the complex’s western gate, past curbside tea shops and market stalls selling everything from mangosteens and papayas to cheap Buddhist trinkets and soccer balls. The mingling aromas of sandalwood, chicken broth, garlic, and diesel fuel conjure up an exotic world. A long stroll through riverside Rangoon revealed a time-warped quarter of decaying British colonial tenements with laundry hanging from its filigreed balconies. My promenade ended with tea on the terrace of The Strand hotel, a century-old landmark by the river that has been thoroughly remodeled into one of the city’s swankiest establishments.

    Pagan

    Reachable by a one-hour flight from Rangoon on Air Pagan or Air Mandalay is Pagan, the eleventh-century imperial capital of King Anawrahta and the ccountry’s most popular tourist destination. Anawrahta, who is credited with bringing Theravada Buddism to Burma, and his successors built three thousand Buddhist temples across a flood plain on the east bank of the Irrawaddy River; the construction craze ended with the invasion of the Mongols around 1280 A.D. Some structures resemble stepped Mayan pyramids. Others are soaring limestone pagodas oddly akin to the grandiose palaces built by Joseph Stalin in Moscow in the 1930s. To visit them, I hired a rickety one-speed Chinese bicycle from the vendor in front of my luxurious resort, the Bagan Palace Hotel (owned by a crony of General Than Shwe, the leader of the military junta) and wandered with a friend for hours down dirt paths through groves of palm trees and thickets of grass, finding tucked-away stupas at every turn. (Two flat tires later, I realized why most tourists prefer to pay a driver to take them around the temples by horse cart.) After dawn on my second morning in Bagan, I climbed a crumbling exterior staircase to the top of a brick stupa two hundred feet above the plain, and gazed upon a mist-shrouded vista of ruins that extended for miles, savoring the silence.

    Mandalay

    From Bagan I flew south along the Irrawaddy River to Mandalay, the second largest city of Burma and the imperial capital before the third Anglo-Burmese war of 1885 placed the entire country in British hands. Made famous by Rudyard Kipling’s poem, “The Road to Mandalay,” the city is a bustling place of bicycle rickshaws, low-slow concrete-block houses, Buddhist temples and monasteries. It is also the site of the Mandalay Palace, home to Burma’s last King, which was destroyed by a fire after World War II and rebuilt by the junta using forced labor in the 1990s. The main reason for my visit, however, was to see the Moustache Brothers, a world-reknowned comedy-dance-vaudeville troupe that toured all over Burma until they ran afoul of Than Shwe and his fellow generals in the 1990s. Oldest member Par Par Lay and his cousin, Lu Maw, were imprisoned for five years at hard labor after a performance at Aung San Suu Kyi’s villa in 1997; then, during the 2007 Saffron Revolution, Par Par Lay served another prison term for raising money for protesting monks. Today the Moustache Brothers are confined to performing for foreign tourists in a garage-like space in front of their house on a 39th Street. Led by Par Par Lay’s younger sibling, Lu Zaw - a manic, fifty-seven-year old former bootlegger who peppers his English monologue with jokes about government corruption – they are a testament to the spirit of defiance that exists in tucked away corners of this long-suffering nation.


    Rangoon

    Rangoon, also known as Yangon, has changed dramatically from its circa-1980 days as an isolated socialist backwater. Today it is a modern if run-down city, with sushi bars, traffic jams, Internet cafes, and a thriving art-and-music scene. Hip-hop concerts occur throughout the year in both outdoor venues and night clubs, and at the city’s avant-garde galleries –the New Zero Art Studio on BoYar Nyunt Street in Dagon Township, the Lokanat Gallery and Inya Gallery - painters and video artists regularly test the junta’s censorship laws.

    Rangoon also abounds with timeless pleasures, most of all Shwedagon Pagoda, a thirty-story gilded temple built more than a thousand years ago, that is believed to contain eight hairs of the Gautama Buddha. I’ve found the best time to visit Shwedagon is just before sunset, when the complex is packed with pilgrims, monks, and novitiates and the sharply angled light makes the golden spires that surround the pagoda seem as if they are ablaze. Afterward, I wandered the alleys in close proximity to the complex’s western gate, past curbside tea shops and market stalls selling everything from mangosteens and papayas to cheap Buddhist trinkets and soccer balls. The mingling aromas of sandalwood, chicken broth, garlic, and diesel fuel conjure up an exotic world. A long stroll through riverside Rangoon revealed a time-warped quarter of decaying British colonial tenements with laundry hanging from its filigreed balconies. My promenade ended with tea on the terrace of The Strand hotel, a century-old landmark by the river that has been thoroughly remodeled into one of the city’s swankiest establishments.

    Pagan

    Reachable by a one-hour flight from Rangoon on Air Pagan or Air Mandalay is Pagan, the eleventh-century imperial capital of King Anawrahta and the ccountry’s most popular tourist destination. Anawrahta, who is credited with bringing Theravada Buddism to Burma, and his successors built three thousand Buddhist temples across a flood plain on the east bank of the Irrawaddy River; the construction craze ended with the invasion of the Mongols around 1280 A.D. Some structures resemble stepped Mayan pyramids. Others are soaring limestone pagodas oddly akin to the grandiose palaces built by Joseph Stalin in Moscow in the 1930s. To visit them, I hired a rickety one-speed Chinese bicycle from the vendor in front of my luxurious resort, the Bagan Palace Hotel (owned by a crony of General Than Shwe, the leader of the military junta) and wandered with a friend for hours down dirt paths through groves of palm trees and thickets of grass, finding tucked-away stupas at every turn. (Two flat tires later, I realized why most tourists prefer to pay a driver to take them around the temples by horse cart.) After dawn on my second morning in Bagan, I climbed a crumbling exterior staircase to the top of a brick stupa two hundred feet above the plain, and gazed upon a mist-shrouded vista of ruins that extended for miles, savoring the silence.

    Mandalay

    From Bagan I flew south along the Irrawaddy River to Mandalay, the second largest city of Burma and the imperial capital before the third Anglo-Burmese war of 1885 placed the entire country in British hands. Made famous by Rudyard Kipling’s poem, “The Road to Mandalay,” the city is a bustling place of bicycle rickshaws, low-slow concrete-block houses, Buddhist temples and monasteries. It is also the site of the Mandalay Palace, home to Burma’s last King, which was destroyed by a fire after World War II and rebuilt by the junta using forced labor in the 1990s. The main reason for my visit, however, was to see the Moustache Brothers, a world-reknowned comedy-dance-vaudeville troupe that toured all over Burma until they ran afoul of Than Shwe and his fellow generals in the 1990s. Oldest member Par Par Lay and his cousin, Lu Maw, were imprisoned for five years at hard labor after a performance at Aung San Suu Kyi’s villa in 1997; then, during the 2007 Saffron Revolution, Par Par Lay served another prison term for raising money for protesting monks. Today the Moustache Brothers are confined to performing for foreign tourists in a garage-like space in front of their house on a 39th Street. Led by Par Par Lay’s younger sibling, Lu Zaw - a manic, fifty-seven-year old former bootlegger who peppers his English monologue with jokes about government corruption – they are a testament to the spirit of defiance that exists in tucked away corners of this long-suffering nation.

        Subscribe now for more of Smithsonian's coverage on history, science and nature.


    Related topics: Tourism Burma


    Tweet Digg


     
    Comments

    Post a Comment


    Name: (required)

    Email: (required)

    Comment:

    Comments are moderated, and will not appear until Smithsonian.com has approved them. Smithsonian reserves the right not to post any comments that are unlawful, threatening, offensive, defamatory, invasive of a person's privacy, inappropriate, confidential or proprietary, political messages, product endorsements, or other content that might otherwise violate any laws or policies.



    Advertisement


    Popular Videos

    • Newest
    • Most Viewed

    Oasis of the Seas: The Biggest Cruise Ship in the World

    (1:59)

    Where Do Fingerprints Come From?

    (2:30)

    SpaceX Launches the First Commercial Rocket Into Space

    (1:55)

    The Funeral Parade for the Last Veteran of the War of 1812

    (2:41)

    View All Newest Videos »

    The History of English in 10 Minutes

    (11:34)

    What Did the Rebel Yell Sound Like?

    (4:22)

    The Lost Map of the Hindenburg

    (02:57)

    Five Common Historical Misconceptions Explained

    (03:58)

    View All Videos »

    Most Popular

    • Viewed
    • Emailed
    • Commented
    • Topics
    1. The 20 Best Small Towns in America
    2. The 20 Best Food Trucks in the United States
    3. Fire in the Hole
    4. A Journey to Obama’s Kenya
    5. Paul Theroux’s Quest to Define Hawaii
    6. Make Way for the African Penguins
    7. The Romneys’ Mexican History
    8. Nudity, Art, Sex and Death – Tasmania Awaits You
    9. Sleeping with Cannibals
    10. Taking the Great American Roadtrip
    1. Paul Theroux’s Quest to Define Hawaii
    2. The 20 Best Small Towns in America
    3. Fire in the Hole
    4. Nudity, Art, Sex and Death – Tasmania Awaits You
    5. Descending Into Hawaii's Haleakala Crater
    6. Behind the Scenes in Monument Valley
    7. You've Never Heard A Music Box Like This
    8. A Journey to Obama’s Kenya
    9. The 20 Best Food Trucks in the United States
    10. Make Way for the African Penguins
    1. Paul Theroux’s Quest to Define Hawaii
    2. The 20 Best Small Towns in America
    3. Julia Child's Recipe for a Thoroughly Modern Marriage
    4. The Fall of Zahi Hawass
    5. Washington, D.C. - History and Heritage
    6. Indulging in American Basque Cuisine
    7. Mississippi - Landmarks and Points of Interest
    8. Emmett Till's Casket Goes to the Smithsonian
    9. Make Way for the African Penguins
    10. Saving Punjab

    View All Most Popular »

    Advertisement

    Follow Us

    Smithsonian Magazine
    @SmithsonianMag
    Follow Smithsonian Magazine on Twitter

    Sign up for regular email updates from Smithsonian.com, including daily newsletters and special offers.


    In The Magazine

    June 2012

    • How the Chicken Conquered the World
    • The Chicken and the Egg
    • The Perfect Egg
    • The Unified Theory of Gumbo
    • Mrs. Elie's Creole Gumbo

    View Table of Contents »






    First Name
    Last Name
    Address 1
    Address 2
    City
    State   Zip
    Email



    Smithsonian Store

    Hope Diamond Collector Barbie

    Collect this glamorous limited edition Hope Diamond Collector Barbie, plus free book... $89.95

    Smithsonian Journeys

    In the Wake of Lewis & Clark: A Voyage Along the Columbia and Snake Rivers Aboard the National Geographic Sea Bird

    Retrace the western route of Lewis and Clark and discover the Pacific Northwest’s serene landscapes and culinary delights (Oct 9 - 15, 2012)



    View full archiveRecent Issues


    • Jun 2012


    • May 2012


    • Apr 2012

    Newsletter

    Sign up for regular email updates from Smithsonian magazine, including free newsletters, special offers and current news updates.

    Subscribe Now

    About Us

    Smithsonian.com expands on Smithsonian magazine's in-depth coverage of history, science, nature, the arts, travel, world culture and technology. Join us regularly as we take a dynamic and interactive approach to exploring modern and historic perspectives on the arts, sciences, nature, world culture and travel, including videos, blogs and a reader forum.

    Explore our Brands

    • goSmithsonian.com
    • Smithsonian Air & Space Museum
    • Smithsonian Student Travel
    • Smithsonian Catalogue
    • Smithsonian Journeys
    • Smithsonian Channel
    • About Smithsonian
    • Contact Us
    • Advertising
    • Subscribe
    • RSS
    • Topics
    • Member Services
    • Copyright
    • Site Map
    • Privacy Policy
    • Ad Choices

    Smithsonian Institution