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Voyage by Dhow av Norman Lewis
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Voyage by Dhow (utgåvan 2003)

av Norman Lewis

MedlemmarRecensionerPopularitetGenomsnittligt betygOmnämnanden
462550,626 (3.2)1
Consummate travel writer Norman Lewis's most remarkable travel essays, collected in one volume "You'd find it of immense interest, I assure you, and full of amazing adventures." So says a British colonial official to Norman Lewis while imploring him to visit Yemen at a time when the country is rarely visited by Western travelers. And indeed, this splendid collection of Lewis's travel essays is full of amazing adventures. Spanning sixty years and many countries, Lewis's writing dives deep into the cultures he visits and brings them to life with eloquent depictions of his personal experiences--from the Huichols of western Mexico to the hunter-gatherer-poet Indians of Paraguay; from the streets of Naples to the steppes of Russia during the Soviet era; and more.… (mer)
Medlem:jcm1
Titel:Voyage by Dhow
Författare:Norman Lewis
Info:Picador (2003), Paperback, 224 pages
Samlingar:Ditt bibliotek
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A Voyage by Dhow av Norman Lewis

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It looks like one is a member of a rather exclusive circle when one reads books by British author Norman Lewis. On the Bibliophile network LibraryThing, which boasts 1.5 million members, only an average of 30 people, with some exceptions, have any of his works on their shelves. This is surprising, for Norman Lewis, who passed away a few years ago at the age of 95, was a very prolific writer and although he published his first book at the mature age of 41, he left us a legacy of 13 novels,15 works of non –fiction and many articles.

According to Graham Greene, Norman Lewis was one of the best travel writers, not only of the post – war decade, but of all the decades of the last century. The Telegraph, in their 2003 Lewis obituary, added that not only was Lewis indeed the best, but also and certainly the most underrated English travel writer of the last hundred years.

Not having read Norman Lewis is a pity, for he is an interesting and talented writer, but it is also a bit of a shame, for this sensitive and discreet gentleman, had some intelligent things to say about quite a few dreadful matters. It is he for instance who in February 1969, in his article “Genocide in Brazil”, published in the Sunday times, first alerted the world about the communities of Amazonian Indians, who were being exterminated in a genocide, orchestrated by the very organizations whose task it was to protect them.

Lewis was fascinated by cultures untouched by our so-called civilization and disgusted by how the advancing Modern world, was pushing the tribal people into extinction. In “A voyage by Dhow”, which is a collection of stories, written between 1970 and 2001, several chapters describe such cases: The Uzbeks plainsmen who receive communist suits from the central Russian administration instead of the coloured textile they need to make their traditional dresses, the Mexican Huichol people cornered and endangered by organised mass tourism and worst of all, the activities of fundamentalist Protestant missionaries, who willingly and effectively destroy the last South American tribal societies, small communities on the brink of extinction, like the The Panare in Venezuela or the Guyaki in Paraguay.

When accused in 1974 of killing the forest people trough abuse and neglect, a grave and proven case of ethnocide, the representatives of the US based Missionaries of the “New tribes mission” defended themselves by chillingly stating that they believed in “ the unending punishment of the unsaved”…

The general outcry that followed Lewis’ articles brought a few culprits to court and led to the creation of such organizations like Survival international, an organization dedicated to protect the last surviving “tribal people”.

I ordered my first book by Lewis, “Naples ’44”, an account of his experiences during the Allied occupation, after reading Malaparte’s “The Skin”. Malaparte’s cimmerian description of the people of the liberated city of Naples is so shocking and grotesque, that I needed a less artistically manipulated version of the same period to confirm its factuality. Lewis’ book, too my despair, contained the same shocking and grotesque anecdotes as Malaparte’s book, albeit recounted in a different and more believable way.

But Lewis, as a writer, caught my attention. His exact and concise prose peppered with irony and now and then an extremely funny anecdote, makes his book agreeable readings.
Both truthful and entertaining without the cumbersome embellishments we come to associate with more famous travel-writers, they harbour in their core the spirit of a true reportage.

He reminds me at times of Kapucinsky, and occasionally he catches the peculiar detail just like a Chatwin, like when for instance, he describes his visit to Tamerlane’s tomb and adds that he has to cover his mouth with his hand in order to keep silent and not disturb the death King, one can still hear whispering through the sarcophagi of Jade.

Lewis physical appearance was innocent and inoffensive. With his toothbrush moustache, and retired schoolteacher looks, he could blend into any scenery without attracting attention. His biographer Julian Evans, called him the Semi-invisible Man. These features combined with his knack for foreign languages made him an ideal spy. And that he occasionally was. His colleague at the Sunday Times, Ian Fleming, sent him to Havana, to check out Castro’s intentions for a “coup d’état”. Lewis met Ed Scott, the “real” James Bond, in secret, in a lurid bar. Unbeknownst to both of them, Graham Greene was there too, who, witnessing the scene, immediately scribbled down some ideas for his “Man in Havana”.

Lewis is on a secret mission too in the title story “A Voyage by Dhow”. Together with two other men, a senior from the Foreign Office and Ladislas Farago, a notorious Hungarian double-agent, he tries, in the spring of 1937, to enter Yemen, a country completely closed to foreigners by their suspicious and xenophobic rulers. Entering the desert country by road or by air is completely impossible so they decide to travel by Dhow from Aden - city, then a British protectorate, to Hodeidah, Yemens only port.
They can join with a number of Arab pilgrims, who are returning home by sailing up the Red sea coast.

Their dhow, aptly named “El Haq”, the truth, does not inspire much confidence. The ship is badly in need of repairs after being hit by bad weather. She can not sail for the next weeks…

“It smelt of bad breath, and a man in a yellow jacket of the kind in compulsory use where outbreaks of plague were suspected, was splashing the deck with disinfectant from a can, while another had withdrawn to a corner for evening prayer”

Delays in departure, problems caused by off-season sailing and the hostility of the Yemenites all contribute to sabotage the attempts to safely disembark in Hodeidah.
In fact Lewis and his companions will completely fail in their enterprise.

While the progression of the three men towards Hodeidah slows down to a standstill under a fierce light and a blazing heat of the wind still days, it is Lewis’ descriptions, of the many details of life on board which makes for compelling reading. Images out of the 1001 nights came to my mind. This is how we imagine scenes of the real Simbad the Sailor. Men and women with their children, animals and belongings sleep on deck. Invariably at night someone is humming an old song or playing an instrument to ward of homesickness. On departure, the pilgrims braving the sea for the first time, wrap cloth over their mouth, to avoid that their scared spirit leaves their body. People also cover their faces with blankets at night so as not to be touched by “moonlight”. The days are scheduled with prayers and orchestrated by the Nakhoda – the captain. Lewis fellow passengers are a colourful bunch: a restaurant owner, a magician, a pearl merchant, a tribesman on his way to fight for free Abyssinia and a circus performer riding his unicycle over deck. There is also, and surprisingly, a prostitute on board, a young girl who attends to the sailors from time to time. While Allah and superstition seem to tolerate such practices, the women on board do not, and one night, they attack the girl by dousing her with a bucket full of piss.

The passengers will endure long days of heat, restricted rations of water and boredom until finally when they reach Hodeidah, their destination.

As negotiations between the captain and the city-officials, about the three foreigners on board turn sour, unexpectedly a shocking message is played out on the shore: A mob drags a crying man onto the beach, to a spot just in front of where the dhow is anchored. While Lewis and his fellow passengers look on, under shouted approval of the crowd, the poor fellow's head is chopped off by a dancing executioner.

On board, everyone is struck by the ghastly scene and a silence creeps over the ship.

The captain turns to Lewis. “You must understand that these are not cruel people. All people in Hodeidah are kind. Only God is cruel”

And so does Lewis’ story acquire the power of a parable.

A parable of forbidding shores, hostile strangers and monotheistic Gods, who are invented by the wicked, to amplify and manipulate in an evil way the few unimportant differences that separate us from our fellow men. ( )
12 rösta Macumbeira | Oct 18, 2012 |
By no means, perfect sailing, this collection of articles contains some powerful writing along with short pieces, with abrupt endings, that leave key questions unanswered.

Several pieces written by this enormously well travelled author were powerful enough to bring about truly dramatic changes – one published in the Sunday Times in the UK, on the genocide of the tribes in Brazil, led to the creation of the Survival International, a charity dedicated to protecting “first peoples” around the world. Lewis considered this his best achievement in a long life (he died recently at age 95). In this collection he writes of pure horror in Paraguay with man-hunting of literally thousands of the Guayaki people who were then (1974) sold into slavery for as little as $1.50 each. These were “recruited” for the missions established by the New Tribes Mission (which is headquartered in Sanford, Florida) by professional man-hunters (known as senuelos; lures) including notorious slave owners, one of whom was at one stage was officially managing the mission. Denials from the New Tribes mission may be read on-line but do not extend to the enforced conversions as their mission statement is not to leave any tribes outside of Evangelical Christianity because they then endure “the unending punishment of the unsaved”.

The book includes Lewis on his first trip for the “Home Office” into the Yemen to spy for Great Britain. This is the voyage by Dhow of the title, so these pieces span much of his travels from 1937 to the 1980s including an adventurous trip into Russia.

An enjoyable book for the arm-chair traveler and student of social history, sprinkled with the author’s dry wit, This may well be the best book – because of the chronology – for a reader new to this author to enter his enchanting web of great prose, well researched history and great travel narratives.
3 rösta John_Vaughan | Aug 13, 2012 |
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Lewis is always a superb story-teller, and he had some unusual stories to tell. In Aden, even before his journey had really begun, he met and photographed the celebrated outlaw, El Hadrami (celebrated, at that time, for having just beheaded four of the King's guards who had been sent to arrest him); and at the bar of his hotel, he met Joseph, self-styled (on his visiting card) "Senior Officer's Pimp." And these first novel experiences were just a taste of things to come. His journey was eventful and uneventful by turns until, after being stranded for several days on the tiny island of Kamaran and then negotiating a passage aboard a small cargo ship, Lewis and the others finally arrived in Hodeidah to be greeted by a ceremonial execution designed to deter the "foreigners aboard the ships offshore" from spying.
tillagd av John_Vaughan | ändraEclectica, Ann Skea (Aug 8, 2012)
 
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Consummate travel writer Norman Lewis's most remarkable travel essays, collected in one volume "You'd find it of immense interest, I assure you, and full of amazing adventures." So says a British colonial official to Norman Lewis while imploring him to visit Yemen at a time when the country is rarely visited by Western travelers. And indeed, this splendid collection of Lewis's travel essays is full of amazing adventures. Spanning sixty years and many countries, Lewis's writing dives deep into the cultures he visits and brings them to life with eloquent depictions of his personal experiences--from the Huichols of western Mexico to the hunter-gatherer-poet Indians of Paraguay; from the streets of Naples to the steppes of Russia during the Soviet era; and more.

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