These days, the only basic training you’ll need for a tour in Vietn
Here, in disjointed narrative, unverified notes, and hazy recollection is my dispatch from
“Hello, welcome to my hotel!” said a smiling pimply boy who couldn’t have been more than sixteen. Factor in Asian youthful countenance and twenty-one, max. He was waiting for us on a busy street in the old quarter of
Groggy from the airport and fresh to the country, I took the young man for some sort of Vietnamese hotelier wunderkind. Then the porter came for the bags. “Hello sir, welcome to my hotel!” Only once we got past the doorman and the concierge did we realize that every employee of the
Little else in
In the center, at least,
This image flits before your eyes millions of times a day in Hanoi, always to the sound of blaring horn, and often while you are attempting that most daring and death-defying of feats—crossing the street. But, miraculously, in only four days, parting the sea of motorcycles went from seemingly impossible to second nature. No less miraculous was how the traffic in a city that appeared to be utterly devoid of stop signs, and with only the occasional traffic light, managed not to pile up accident after accident. Americans drive according to abstract principles, while much of the world drives according to the empirical reality of the road. But the empirical reality of
On the taxi ride from the airport, our driver pointed to a policeman on the highway shoulder and said “wrong way,” and then tried to tell us about the problem of wrong-way drivers on the highway. Why do they drive the wrong way, I asked, thinking I was misunderstanding him. “They bad man, sir, I think.” I was left puzzled, until a few minutes later, sure enough, along came a motorcycle on the four lane highway—on the wrong side—going the wrong way—weaving his way through the congested traffic. Bad man, indeed.
Traveling on foot on the sidewalks of the old quarter was no less of an adventure. The narrow sidewalks, when not buried under parked motorcycles, played host to every activity of daily life imaginable, with eating and loitering chief among them. Unlike the old quarters of European cities, Asian ones don’t seem all that old (on account of the high turnover rate of wooden architecture). But, in contrast to the Euro tourist playgrounds of cobblestoned shopping malls and wax museums, they house real people doing real things. In
Which is exactly what we did when we first arrived. Bia Hoi (fresh beer) was apparently introduced by the Czechs in the spirit of cold war camaraderie. It consists of small kegs of unpasteurized beer served cold and watered down in little outdoor stalls all over the city and costs about 8,000 dong (40 odd cents) a glass. It brings much needed relief to the sweltering exhaust-filled streets, which sizzled at over 42 Celsius when we were there.
Even better than Vietnamese beer is Vietnamese food. Our first night for dinner, we went to a tiny restaurant up some rickety wooden steps called Cha Ca La Vong. Like a lot of restaurants in
The next morning, with dill and turmeric oozing from our pores, we paid our respects to Ho Chi Minh. Inside his marble sanctum, sleeping the dreamless sleep of the embalmed, protected by crimson-backed gold star, hammer and sickle, and a cadre of white-uniformed soldiers resembling the humorless stewards of a
The adjacent Ho Chi Minh Museum had some interesting documents and photographs from the leader’s long and dedicated life— from his down-and-out days in Paris and London as a dishwasher to his final years as a national hero against the American imperialists. The exhibit did a good job of convincing me Uncle Ho was a great, perhaps admirable, person. Of course, I had little evidence to consider other than the authoritarian government-sponsored portrait of their patriarch. “If you want to reap the fruits of your labor in ten years,” Ho said, “then plant trees. “If you want to do it in 100 years, cultivate human beings.” Kind of inspiring, kind of scary, depending on your mood. But one thing is indisputable: he had a refined yet austere taste when it came to architecture. Next to the museum was the stilted wooden house Ho lived in during the 50s after getting rid of the French. The house looked like Southeast Asian traditional with a touch of Mies van der Rohe. Certainly, there was a lingering hint of an elegant Parisian aesthete in the Spartan communist.
We ate lunch at a place called Koto—a nonprofit restaurant that provides vocational training in hospitality to
After lunch, we visited the
On the way back from the temple, a man stopped me on the street and began pointing and yelling at my shoes. Before I had even broken stride, he grabbed for my shoes and started dabbing glue on them. He was an itinerant shoe cobbler who saw in my tattered shoes a day’s wages. I figured I’d make it easier on both of us by removing my shoes, at which point his partner showed up, gave me a foot stool to sit on and a pair of slippers to wear, and both of them went to town on my shoes. Ten minutes later, I was wearing renovated footwear. He assured me the new soles he glued on would last me at least five years and then demanded I pay him 500,000 dong (about 27 bucks). I told him my shoes hadn’t cost me that much to begin with and told him I would give him 100,000 at most. They looked at me like I was spooning shit into their mouths, so I threw in an extra dollar for their wretchedness. Three days later, my new soles fell off.
The soles of my running shoes almost melted off, too, trying to run in the Hanoian miasma. The city is marked by lakes, which I imagine make for fine oases in more temperate weather. We got up at 5:30 one morning and were at the lake by six for a jog. Already in the weak dawn light, it was like trying to run through gravy. But it was worth the sweat to witness the geriatric carnival around the lake—droves of oldsters engaged in group exercise from tai chi to go-go dancing to vigorous crotch-stretching. They must have been getting ready for a long day of sitting on tiny chairs.
Our eating exploits over the next few days continued to deplete the city. We devoured grilled ostrich and bitter herb, squid with dill, garlic, and Vietnamese celery, deep fried squash, bun cha (a meal of pork meat balls, rice noodles, fried spring rolls, and a colossal mound of raw herbs and greens), snail soup, pho, steamed crab, whole sweet and sour fish, and in a buffet finale, an arsenal of coconut- and taro- based desserts.
Only twice did we turn away from the food in front of us. The first was when we asked our bicycle taxi driver to recommend a restaurant, after the one we tried to go to was closed. Thinking he would take us to a true grit locale where he went to nourish his calf muscles, we were disappointed to arrive at a restaurant with linen table cloths and no people. Not wanting to be rude, we went in and politely pushed around dessicated octopus, raw pork spare ribs, and sliced bitter gourd on a bed of ice—so bitter that you had to immediately stuff the accompanying dried shredded beef into your mouth in order to neutralize your gag reflex. The second time we declined was in an outdoor market, where a woman tried to sell me roast dog head. There, sitting upright on the hot grill staring at me was a small miniature Pinscher-like decapitated dog head.
After a couple days, the streets of
We escaped