Category Archives: Travel

Stop, Look, and Listen

The Other Side of the Tracks

Snow is floating earthward in fat, wet flakes as Train 172 rumbles under the Barry Bridge in Chester, Pa. Harrah’s Casino gleams on one side of the tracks; a state prison glowers on the other. Ironically, gambling and incarceration are the two biggest industries in this downtrodden rust-belt city—by many measures, Pennsylvania’s poorest.

I’m on my way to JFK to catch a plane to Asia, but right now I’m wondering about train tracks—how they both bring people together and divide them. “The other side of the tracks,” a common idiom, is about the divide.

The snow covers up a lot of the ugliness along the Amtrak line—the abandoned businesses, warehouses full of frigid cold air, crumbling walls, rusting cars. But a blanket of white cannot hide the prison or the casino. Rows of houses huddle along the rails, their dirty windows glimpsing us as we hurry by in our cozy Quiet Car. A rich man rarely builds his home along the Northeast Corridor main line, and in some ways these tracks that speed us to our destinations in comfort—with free WiFi and a glass of merlot—are like prison walls, barriers that are dangerous and even impossible to cross.

As I head to Thailand for a few days of sightseeing, then on to Cambodia to build houses for the Tabitha Foundation, I must pay attention to the tracks. “Stop, look, and listen,” the crossing signs once said. Be still, be mindful, with eyes wide open. Listen to the other voices. Find the words. Write.

Here I go again.

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Cambodia 2014

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My son Joseph Lott (right) accompanied me on the 2011 trip.

I’ll be heading back to Cambodia in February 2014 to join a team of house builders under the auspices of the Tabitha Foundation. This will be my third such trip—the last in 2011, which I described in this travel blog.

Tabitha Foundation focuses on personal empowerment and community development in Cambodia, working at the village level to encourage savings; help build wells, ponds, and houses; and support the construction of new schools. In Phnom Penh, the foundation has broken ground on a new center for women’s health, the first of its kind in Cambodia. On my second day in the country, I’ll participate in a walk-a-thon to raise money for the hospital.

I’ll report more about this trip starting the first few days in February.

 

Hong Kong and Shenzhen 2013

Waiting for the ferry from Discovery Bay to Hong Kong.

In November 2013, I traveled to Shenzhen, China, to be at the press for the printing of Swarthmore College: A Community of Purpose, a new book about the college where I worked from 1990 to the end of 2013. The printing went very well, despite the need to translate instructions from English to Chinese.

Shenzhen is a huge industrial and commercial city that hardly existed 30 years ago. Foreign complains were encouraged to invest in this “special economic zone,” which allowed them to manufacture there and export to the world without paying Chinese export taxes. The American printing company R.R. Donnelley has a large book printing plant there.

Mr. Wong Pei Long was among the most skilled press operators I have ever worked with.

Mr. Wong Pei Long was among the most skilled press operators I have ever worked with.

Following the printing, I spent three days exploring Hong Kong and its environs. Visiting Hong Kong for the first time is a little like one’s first visit to New York—a little overwhelming. But the food, culture, and economic vitality was great, as was the spectacular setting of Victoria Harbor.

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