Saturday, March 4, 2017

Dressed for the beach, unarmed in the Parliament


Homestretch ahead  but still much to do and see in Bangladesh.
This week I visited two iconic, very different places: Cox's Bazar and the Parliament. 


Cox's Bazar is one of the longest sandy beaches in the world. 
The coastal tourist city of Cox's Bazar is about an hour's flight from Dhaka's crazy busy, loud, dusty life. The 120 kilometers long beach area offers fresh sea air, amazing views of the Bay of Bengal and solitude, a seldom luxury in seriously overpopulated Bangladesh.



While my husband was at meetings, I walked hours and hours along the beach, occasionally accompanied by local children and millions of red crabs which very quickly disappeared in their holes when I tried to approach them.



People here seem to enjoy togetherness and large flocks but I deliberately avoided the crowded beaches.
The temperature was about 30+C (85+F) but thanks to a kind sea breeze, it was not hot at all. Not in even in a local beach outfit which has nothing to do with swimwear. People swim in their normal clothes both in the sea and in the pool. 


The magnificence of Cox's Bazar has, unfortunately, a tragic side since tens of thousands of Rohingya refugees from Myanmar land there with traumatic experiences and limited hope for the future.


The transition from the beach to the Parliament has to be fish. The waters round Cox's Bazar are full of fish and fishing boats. The Parliament building in Dhaka is surrounded by a man made lake, home for fish that is served at the Parliament members' club.


The Bangladesh Parliament complex is one of the largest legislative complexes in the world, also one of the most special. Not necessary beautiful but impressive.


The construction of the present Parliament complex began in 1961 by the then President of Pakistan as a permanent building for the federal legislature of both West Pakistan and East Pakistan. Bangladesh became independent in 1971 and the inauguration of the Parliament took place in 1982.


The then government appointed first a Bangladeshi architect to design the building. He wanted to give the task to Alvar Aalto or Le Corbusier. They were not available and finally the task went to Louis Kahn, an American architect.
The result is an enormous concrete palace with regular geometric shapes. 
It was not allowed to bring fire-arms nor to take pictures inside the building.  


In true banglastyle there were a lot of cobwebs and dust, too. Our guide told that the building is rather cold in the winter, with a large mosquito population.
The Parliament chamber had some funny features like a sound proof upper gallery for children and microphones that automatically stop functioning when the allocated speech time is over.

4 comments:

  1. Sincere thank for your kind words.

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  2. I loved seeing the photos, particularly of the parliament complex. Have you seen the documentary done by Lewis Kahn's son about his life? Called "My Architect". I highly recommend it if you are interested in his work (and bizarre life).

    When is your final day in Bangladesh?

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    Replies
    1. Will see the documentary, thank you for the suggestion. We will leave in August.

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