| The Other Side of Tourism - Part
1
By Myrna
Loy (Copyright 1993)
Introduction
Tourism, defined is "the practice of traveling
for recreation or culture".
The other side of tourism, as referred to herein,
is when the objective observer (namely myself) whilst traveling
to Jamaica, for recreation, saw tourism in a different light --
a blatant form of pandering at the expense of the integrity of
ones' own people.
I had visited Jamaica on two prior occasions.
The initial time was 20 years ago. I was meeting my biological
father for the first time, and my extended family. Evaluating
Jamaica in this emotional climate was impractical, besides which,
it never dawned on me to evaluate my experience there. Jamaica
was fun, innovative and interesting.
The second time I visited Jamaica was while
honeymooning. Once again, an emotional time. I was in love, and
one expects to be catered to while honeymooning in an expensive
hotel - everything seems 'perfect' when one is in love, especially
when celebrating such an auspicious occasion.
My most recent journey to Jamaica, however,
was different because I went alone, and spent most of my time
alone throughout the duration of my visit. It is this vacation
that inspired this short story. I believe, as a result of this
visit, I 'saw' Jamaica for the first time.
I traveled, as a tourist, in that I booked into
a hotel. I did not want to feel like an encumbrance to my relatives
and perhaps, more to the truth, I wanted ultimate freedom. However,
I was not treated like a tourist, maybe because of my colour,
or maybe because of the way I was dressed, which, for the most
part, was mediocre.
I do have a Jamaican dialect (when I am ready)
and I used it sometimes hoping not to be exploited as a tourist,
but I found that when I used it, I was either ignored or treated
shabbily.
Spending two weeks in Jamaica was an exhilarating
and enlightening experience that I wanted to share with others.
I am a 41-year-old black woman, born in London,
England of Jamaican parents. Until about five years ago I resided
in London where I was raised, educated and where I received my
working experience. I now work for the United Nations Population
Fund, at their Headquarters Office in New York, in an official
capacity.
I would like to add that it is not my intention
to demean or demoralize the island or its/my people, but to accurately
detail how the experience affected me.
HOW IT ALL STARTED
Retaliation, spite, spontaneity, impetuosity...
Call it whatever you will, but I decided to go to Jamaica alone
and I would not repeat the experience. The faces of the local
people told me that it was not proper, a single woman on the loose
-- what could she possibly want, except our men, our husbands??
My two sisters and I had planned a vacation
in Florida, so I had reserved my vacation days to accommodate
this, however, at the last minute they both changed their minds
for different reasons. They started to make proposals for alternative
places to spend a holiday, nothing definite, just: "I was
thinking of going to... or maybe we'll end up at... I've never
been to... we have to find somewhere to go”… suggestions and ideas
only, nothing conclusive.
This was not the kind of holiday I had been
planning for. I had been so excited; I had never been to Florida
before, and I would be vacationing with women, women after my
own heart. I had been looking forward to this for weeks, and then,
as I was trying to confirm dates and meeting places, I sensed
indecision and abandonment. So, as usual, if I wanted something
to go as planned, I had to organize it myself. I didn't really
want to go by myself, but my peers were unreliable, and experience
had shown me that to have company would only impose limitations,
whether real or implied. I reserved a package deal (no food or
tours included) just hotel room, flight and transportation to
and from the airport -- two weeks in Montego Bay for US$1300.
The flight was smooth. Contrary to what they
show in the movies, the femme fatale was not being wooed by a
super-looking stud. The man who sat beside me had a face as red
as a tomato and continually apologized for belching. I accepted
the blue flannel-type blanket with the compliments of American
Airlines and covered my head with it attempting to minimize the
discomfort, but to no avail... intrepidity seeped persistently
into my ears.
The plane arrived on schedule in Miami, and
the transfer to the connecting plane was straightforward.
JAMAICA, A NEW CULTURE
I had an early flight arriving in Jamaica about
lunchtime.
"Taxi, miss -- Taxi, ma'am -- Hey, miss,
you waan a taxi?" distorted mouths and expressions, moulded
in black shiny faces, spouted from all directions, competing against
each other for a fare. Outstretched palms, ready to snatch reluctant
suitcases from rivals. I followed my nose, which didn't have any
sense of direction and sighed with relief on seeing 'Tourline',
the agency responsible for transporting me to the hotel.
I took out my transportation ticket and waited
(there was one person in front of me). He left shortly afterwards.
I tarried patiently while the representatives engaged themselves
in unofficial chatter and unbefitting bouts of laughter. Intermittently,
I glanced at my watch trying to draw their attention to the fact
that I required attention. After about 10 minutes they asked for
the vacation documents, and instructed me to fill out a couple
of forms.
"Wait, right here... someone in a blue
suit will soon come tek yu to de 'otel".
I lingered. Twenty minutes passed. I crouched
uncomfortably on my hand luggage and then stood up displaying
my presence and agitation with tacit composure. I saw plenty of
men attired in blue suits; so, desperately seeking acknowledgement
from the agents as to whether any of them could be my driver,
I strained in their direction. Involved in indecorous liaison,
they ignored me.
I approached the desk:
"How long do I have to wait?"
"Im soon come, im soon come"
"Never see come see" I mumbled under my breath.
After about ten minutes I heard:
"See im deh" she shouted jubilantly,
pointing to a man in a brown overall. (I don't know how she managed
to see him anyway since her back was turned -- must have been
the smell of perspiration he blamelessly exuded).
"But I thought you said my driver would
be wearing a blue suit?"
"It don't matter, a yu driver dis"
I stood there puzzled. I stretched my neck out to see if there
were any identifying marks on the vehicle... "Line-tours"
was sign-posted on the side of the van. I shrugged my shoulders,
picked up my hand luggage and walked towards the bus.
"Me a come wid you.." she said beaming
(as though I was desperate for her company) I didn't answer. "…Me
haf fe talk to you. Mek sure yu meet me in the lobby at 4 o'clock,
o.k.? It is very important".
I always had reservations about people who wanted
to talk about something 'later' when the opportunity presented
itself immediately, an automatically created an atmosphere of
foreboding.
She bungled herself in the front seat and I
kept a suspicious eye on my luggage.
"No-one else for this hotel?" I asked
wondering if it was indicative of tyranny.
"No, not until tomarrow" she replied,
curbing her lingo.
I kept silent and looked out of the window.
"It's only five minutes fram de airport”,
she offered, as if, after waiting so long it really mattered.
I don't know why I was so aggressive… well I do know. They seemed
to have no sense of commitment or obligation -- it was their nonchalance...
their total disrespect for time and inattention to details.
My eyes peeled the window of the bus... dusky
hills in the background; large stretches of land; bulls grazing;
a young boy walking barefoot, a man riding a scooter, two youths
conversing, (it was a man's world).
We stopped. I was ready to get out when she
told me: "Is me one a get off here you know... you still
'ave a little way to go".
She had previously told me that she was accompanying
me (implying that she was procuring my safe arrival to the hotel)
when it was just an excuse to use the transportation I had paid
for to get a lift to her office.
I reseated myself
"Don't feget... 4.o'clock!" she repeated
with warped rhetoric.
What was this 4.o'clock business? I just wanted
to go into the hotel and lie down. The whole point of me leaving
America to come to Jamaica was that I didn't want to be bothered
with time... I wanted to do things at my own pace... now she was
inflicting restrictions, and I was allowing her to do so. 4 o'clock!
The way I felt, she could wait in the lobby all night for all
cared. It was 2.15 in the afternoon. Almost two and a half hours
to get to a hotel five minutes away!
Part 2 will be published next month....
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