• 10 months ago
In this episode of the podcast, Unpacked, by AFAR, we explore the topic of how to (and how not to) engage in cultural tourism.

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Transcript
00:00 Hey, you're a thoughtful traveler, and we're a thoughtful destination.
00:06 In Asheville, we treasure our natural and wild places here in the stunning Blue Ridge
00:10 Mountains, and we appreciate visitors who share our values of stewardship and sustainability.
00:16 We invite you to explore the cultural legacies shaped by these high mountain peaks.
00:21 Be our guest.
00:22 Together, we can share adventures and preserve the natural beauty of Asheville.
00:27 Learn more at exploreasheville.com.
00:29 This is Unpacked.
00:36 I'm Jennifer Flowers, the Senior Deputy Editor at AFAR.
00:41 Have you ever had an incredible cultural encounter on your travels and wanted to take a picture,
00:45 but you weren't sure if it was okay?
00:48 Or have you ever come across a traditional performance and wondered whether you should
00:51 be there?
00:53 These situations and the questions they raise are forms of cultural tourism.
00:58 Today we're going to explore the answers to those questions and much more.
01:10 I was born a traveler.
01:12 My dad was a hotelier, and as a kid, I lived in Hong Kong, Singapore, the Philippines,
01:18 and the US.
01:19 So naturally, when I grew up, I became a travel editor.
01:23 And over the course of my life, I've had wonderful experiences all over the world.
01:29 But some of the most life-changing moments for me have been the times I've connected
01:33 with cultures that are different from my own.
01:36 I've gone on eye-opening walks with the Sand People in the Kalahari Desert of Botswana.
01:40 I've stayed in a Tibetan family's beautiful home in rural China.
01:45 And I've sipped on yak butter tea with Sherpas in the Nepalese Himalayas.
01:49 I've also had challenging moments.
01:52 I cringe when I remember the day in the Atlas Mountains of Morocco.
01:56 I casually took a faraway picture of a group of Berber people who were standing on a rocky
02:00 outcropping.
02:02 When they saw me take the photo, they reacted with frowns and hand gestures.
02:06 I realized I had invaded their privacy, and to this day, I still feel awful about it.
02:12 I always try to do my best in these moments.
02:15 I also know I can do better.
02:18 And sometimes I just don't know what to do at all.
02:21 So I reached out to a few experts who represent indigenous communities and think about these
02:25 things all the time.
02:28 Kalani Ka'ana'ana is Native Hawaiian, and his family has called the O'ahu town of Kailua
02:34 home for generations.
02:36 He's a hula practitioner, a fluent speaker of the Hawaiian language, and the chief brand
02:42 officer at the Hawaii Tourism Authority.
02:45 Kalani says that he struggles with the term "cultural tourism."
02:50 I think it positions culture as a means to an end.
02:55 It feels somewhat transactional.
02:57 And for me, our culture is our worldview.
03:00 It's the way we perceive things.
03:02 It's how we perceive our relationship to 'āina or to land.
03:08 We believe that we have a familial relationship with land and ocean and all of the elements.
03:13 Now when you put that in the space of hospitality and tourism, I struggle a little bit to translate
03:18 that.
03:19 In its most basic form, one might think cultural tourism is the desire of a visitor to go to
03:25 a place, to be immersed in, to see authentic representation of a culture.
03:31 And that's where I think it gets really gray.
03:33 And I think that's where we're all having these conversations today about what that
03:36 means.
03:38 Kalani and other Hawai'i residents have been asking hard questions about the relationship
03:44 between Native Hawaiian heritage and tourism, which is the state's largest economic sector.
03:50 How is Hawai'ian culture benefiting from tourism?
03:53 And in what cases is it being commodified beyond recognition?
03:58 I think in Hawai'i we have a historical sort of relationship with hospitality, culture,
04:04 performance-based culture, this idea of stereotypes and kichitiki culture, and an industry that
04:12 portrayed Hawai'i in a certain romanticized, hyper-sexualized way, where it was all about
04:18 coconut bras, grass skirts, mai tais, and beaches.
04:21 And really Hawai'i is a place with much more depth and significance and spiritual energy
04:26 and so much more than just the hula girls.
04:30 Kalani's words struck a chord.
04:32 My Japanese-American mother was born and raised in Hawai'i.
04:36 While we don't share the Native Hawaiian experience with Kalani, we have seen the negative
04:40 effects of appropriated cultural displays, the hit HBO series White Lotus being a great
04:46 example of the uncomfortable power dynamics at play, and Hawai'ian culture is not alone
04:51 in the struggle with this.
04:53 According to the World Bank, Indigenous peoples make up 6% of the world's population and
05:00 19% of the world's extreme poor.
05:04 For centuries, Indigenous peoples have faced displacement, discrimination, and violence,
05:09 while often missing out on the economic benefits of tourism inspired by their own cultures.
05:15 However, Indigenous peoples are the biggest custodians of the natural world.
05:20 They own, occupy, or use 80% of the world's most biodiverse places.
05:27 Their ancestry is deeply rooted to the land and can often be traced back for millennia.
05:33 As travelers, of course, we want to explore and engage with those incredible cultures.
05:39 With all of this in mind, what does an experience that truly benefits Indigenous communities
05:43 look like?
05:47 Cultural tourism is important.
05:49 It's important that it's driven from the community, that it's driven from the people themselves,
05:56 that economically that they are benefiting from this, but also that it is done their
06:03 way and the way that they want to share it and how they want to guide people onto country
06:08 That's Frances Rings, the Associate Artistic Director of Bungara, a contemporary Indigenous
06:16 dance troupe based in Sydney.
06:19 Frances' mother is from the Gugada tribe in the west coast of South Australia.
06:24 Frances, who will become Bungara's Artistic Director in 2023, collaborates with Aboriginal
06:31 and Torres Strait Islander groups who give Bungara permission to tell traditional stories
06:35 using contemporary dance.
06:38 We talked about all the different ways a visitor can engage with culture in Australia.
06:42 For a theatrical experience, they can buy a ticket to a Bungara performance in Sydney.
06:48 Or they can go on country and take a guided walk with somebody whose connection to the
06:52 land goes back millennia and learn about the creation stories of that region.
06:58 But the important part of any cultural experience, she says, is that the experiences are driven
07:04 by the custodians of that culture.
07:06 She shared with me the big picture questions she asks around cultural tourism.
07:11 I think those frameworks of how do we do this with integrity, without kind of selling out
07:17 who we are, how do we protect the things that are sacred, that we need to ensure that they're
07:24 protected?
07:25 What is the public domain stuff that we can share, that we can create better awareness
07:31 of who we are, that our young people can see that and they can be like, "Oh, wow, these
07:36 fellows are interested in my culture?
07:39 Wow."
07:40 That also means that jobs coming in economically, the money that comes in feeds back into the
07:46 community.
07:47 They can be better resource, they can grow, they can expand.
07:50 But there are so many benefits from it.
07:54 A culturally sensitive experience takes time to build, sometimes a long time.
08:00 When Frances has been given permission to work on a new piece of choreography with a
08:04 community, it can take months and sometimes even years.
08:08 That's because she needs to build a rapport with them to understand how they want their
08:12 story to be told.
08:14 How we translate that information has to be done with care and with guidance.
08:20 We have over 400 language groups of living song, dance, story, customs, arts, law, knowledge.
08:29 So each community is very distinctive and very different.
08:33 And the way that they want their story to be told, we have to be guided by them.
08:38 You always, it has to come, be driven from the community.
08:41 So we engage with a cultural consultant from that community.
08:45 And they're basically a lifeline.
08:48 When she begins a new piece, she asks herself, "What is the story?
08:54 Why is it important to be told?
08:56 How is it going to help people understand Australia at a deeper level?"
09:01 For Terrain, a nine-part choreographic work, Frances went to Northern Australia to spend
09:06 time at Gadithanda, or Lake Eyre, home of the Arabana people.
09:13 She spent time with Reginald Dodd, an Arabana elder.
09:17 As they sat together, she had a vision that became the inspiration for SpinFX, the third
09:23 piece of choreography in Terrain.
09:27 You're listening to the music for SpinFX by composer David Page.
09:33 I had this moment where I was sitting on the lake and looking into the distance, and it
09:40 was very quiet and it was kind of shimmering horizon and mirage coming off the lake.
09:46 And there were these trees off in the distance and they look like women.
09:52 And they just kind of look like they were breathing and they were arching and they were
09:55 contorting and then they're moving into each other and then moving away.
09:58 And I just had this sense of these ancestral women who were suspended in space and they
10:05 were waiting for water to arrive in this desert and for this life cycle of transformation
10:10 to happen.
10:11 I took that image away with me and I created this piece called SpinFX and these ancestral
10:17 women in the space and they're contorted and they're kind of otherworldly, but they have
10:24 these forms that are distinctly, you know, the female form.
10:28 To celebrate the female form, to celebrate the way that we move, to celebrate what we
10:34 carry from our ancestral mothers and grandmothers.
10:38 What other platform allows you to do that, you know, and to share that?
10:44 Even just describing the scene that inspired her work, Frances gave me goosebumps.
10:50 She offered me an entirely new understanding of the people and landscapes of that region.
10:55 These deeper perspectives are what she intends to bring to audiences who come to see Bangara
11:00 perform.
11:04 Like Frances, Kalani thinks a lot about how Hawaiian traditions are protected and perpetuated,
11:10 especially around hula, the Hawaiian dance tradition that he's been studying and practicing
11:15 for more than 15 years.
11:18 When we think about hula presented in the visitor industry or in hospitality, you have
11:23 to understand that it's being presented in a context that is foreign in nature.
11:28 It was not our practice to share our culture for money.
11:33 And so you just got to understand that we start in a place where it's already weird.
11:38 Is it bad?
11:39 Is it cool?
11:40 Do we have to adapt to the times we live in?
11:43 Yes.
11:44 Kalani took me through the two overarching types of hula found in the islands.
11:49 There's awana, the modern version of hula that's set to music.
11:53 It was created for travelers in the early 20th century, and it's a legitimate art form
11:58 all on its own, and one where visitors can and should feel free to enjoy.
12:05 And then there's kahiko hula, the ancient form that's rooted in ceremony and ritual
12:09 and set to chanting.
12:11 Most of the time, it's not intended for a public audience.
12:15 We have this concept in Hawaiian called aula, and it's things that are withheld on purpose
12:21 because they're sacred, and that there are some things that are meant to be behind that
12:26 veil of sacredness.
12:29 And then there are other parts of our culture that are very open to being shared.
12:32 And I think about more sort of modern hula with hula awana, which was accompanied by
12:37 string instruments, right?
12:39 And it's this more modern evolution of hula and music and dance.
12:43 And it is for parties, and it is for a good time, and it is to enjoy.
12:48 In other words, if you see a hula performance at a hotel, feel free to take pleasure in
12:53 capturing the spirit of that performance in a space where practitioners are delighted
12:57 to share their art with you.
12:59 When people think of cultural tourism, performance art is often the first thing that comes to
13:05 mind.
13:06 But some of the most meaningful connections happen when our communication is unscripted.
13:11 On a trip to Colombia in 2021, I was one of the first travelers to join a new cultural
13:18 experience.
13:19 Colombia-based outfitter Retorno Travel wanted to connect travelers like me with members
13:24 of the Wunan community.
13:28 For the last couple of decades, they've been displaced from their ancestral land in
13:31 the Colombian jungle near Panama, and they now live in Bogota.
13:37 We went to their community center and were invited to participate in a spiritual dance,
13:42 and we dined with them on steamed fish and plantains.
13:45 After lunch, through a translator, some of the elders began to talk about their generations-deep
13:51 connections with the land, and how they had to leave that way of life behind because of
13:55 illegal guerrilla warfare.
13:58 That's when our conversations got really interesting.
14:02 The community healer candidly began sharing his ambivalence about tourism and photographers
14:06 documenting their way of life.
14:09 He lamented that city living was removing the next generation from their cultural roots.
14:15 Soon after that, the schoolteacher placed a black tree seed from the jungle where he
14:20 was born in the palm of my hand.
14:23 I had to hold back tears as he told me that whenever I needed to reconnect with nature,
14:28 I just had to close my eyes and focus on the texture of that seed's rough exterior on
14:33 my fingers.
14:35 I still keep that seed by my bedside today.
14:40 Genuine connections like these lie at the heart of Wild Expeditions Africa, an outfitter
14:46 with experiences in Ethiopia, Madagascar, and Zimbabwe.
14:51 Wild Expeditions runs mobile camps that access rural areas of Ethiopia with no tourism infrastructure.
14:59 One of their permanent camps in southern Ethiopia's culture-rich Omo Valley is called Lale's
15:04 Camp, and it's run by Lale Birwa, a member of the region's ethnic Kara group.
15:10 In this region, many employees come from the village's guests' visit, and they help
15:15 to maintain good relationships with communities.
15:19 Emnet Gizacho is one of the founding members of Wild Expeditions, and he heads up mobile-tented
15:24 camp operations in Ethiopia.
15:28 We try to create a sort of authentic travel experience for the clients so that when the
15:33 travelers visit particular tribes, the ultimate purpose is not taking a good picture and going
15:40 back with that, rather than trying to make some kind of connection, a human-to-human
15:46 connection and learning from each other.
15:49 It's not only the travelers who learn, it's also the tribe who also learn about who are
15:57 the visitors, who are coming to visit us.
16:01 Emnet grew up in Addis Ababa.
16:03 A student of history and literature, he developed a passion for cultures at an early age, and
16:09 that's why he joined the travel industry.
16:12 Over the years as a guide, he's seen tour operators that visit the more accessible villages,
16:18 the ones located near the road, and some of them simply line members of a village up and
16:24 then ask them to make certain poses so that travelers can get the picture they want.
16:29 The idea of interacting with people and their culture this way made my stomach turn.
16:34 The focus of Wild Expeditions is the opposite of this.
16:38 They're all about genuine human connections.
16:42 Emnet and his team tell guests that before they ever think about raising their cameras
16:47 to take a photo, they should get to know the elders and observe day-to-day life.
16:52 Eventually, he says, when you've built a relationship of mutual respect and trust, you can ask for
16:57 permission to take a photo.
17:00 We try to humbly explain for them what's important here.
17:05 If you want lifelong memory, just leave the camera and spend some time with the people
17:11 that you came to visit, rather than taking a picture, making your camera as a barrier
17:17 between you and the tribe that you visit.
17:22 Are you inspired to travel in a more responsible way?
17:38 In Asheville, North Carolina, we believe in the power of ethical travel.
17:43 We care about the protection of our distinctive natural and cultural treasures in these Blue
17:47 Ridge Mountains.
17:49 And we appreciate visitors who share our values of stewardship and sustainability.
17:54 We know travel is transformational, and we invite you to be inspired by the creative
17:59 spirit and local flavors of our mountain home.
18:02 Be our guest.
18:03 Together, we can share adventures and preserve the natural beauty of Asheville, so future
18:08 generations can enjoy these mountains for years to come.
18:12 Learn more at exploreasheville.com.
18:33 Welcome back to Unpacked by Afar.
18:35 Francis, Kalani, and Bemnet all spoke about the importance of two-way communication in
18:42 any cultural exchange.
18:43 It's not just about us as travelers getting something from an experience.
18:49 But it's also about participating in it and sharing a part of ourselves too.
18:55 On a safari in Kenya in 2019, I was determined to learn Swahili, but didn't always get
19:01 it right.
19:03 On a game drive one morning, during a breakfast in the bush, I meant to ask for "coffee"
19:09 or "kahawa," but instead asked for "kuhara," which my Maasai guide Nelson quickly informed
19:16 me was the word for "diarrhea."
19:19 Minutes later, when our laughter died down, I stumbled my way into another faux pas, this
19:25 time by asking how many cattle he had.
19:28 Laughter erupted again.
19:31 This question is the nosy Western equivalent of asking how much money he has in his bank
19:36 account.
19:37 I'll never forget the difference between coffee and diarrhea in East Africa.
19:41 We'll surely never pry into a Maasai person's finances.
19:46 And we'll also never forget the bonds I made on that bright morning on the savannah.
19:51 I was fascinated to hear Bemnet's observations on visitors to the Omo Valley.
19:56 For some tribes, a man's economical status is also measured by the number of cattle he
20:01 has.
20:03 One of their most common questions to male guests is whether they have their own herd.
20:07 Most of the time, you know, they ask our clients, "Do you have a cattle?
20:11 Do you have sheep, goats, oxen?"
20:14 And they say, "No, we don't have."
20:16 Then they say, "Oh, that feels so pity.
20:18 I will give you one so that you can start.
20:20 It's not too late."
20:21 I took so much delight in the idea that a visitor could have as many yachts, mansions,
20:27 and dollars in the bank as they like, but in this part of the Omo Valley, if they don't
20:31 have cattle, they're basically considered broke, to the point where people offer to
20:36 help them with a donation of cattle.
20:39 Sometimes travelers are quick to judge a particular tradition or decide that it's backwards,
20:44 but Bemnet encourages visitors to keep an open mind.
20:47 If you go to the United States, you find a family who has their own culture.
20:53 The same case for the tribe in the Omo Valley.
20:56 So if you go to their place, you have to respect and you have to learn your thoughts about
21:02 the culture, rather than saying, "Oh, this is a bad culture.
21:06 This is backward.
21:07 This is not well-developed," this sort of thing.
21:10 So instead of making a judgment, it's much better to immerse yourself in that culture
21:16 and learn from their perspective rather than from your own, which I think is healthier
21:23 for the travelers as well as for the people who are being visited.
21:28 Bemnet explained the Mercy tradition, where some women decide to wear lip plates, which
21:33 involves the process of cutting and stretching the lower lip in order to fit a disc made
21:38 of clay or wood.
21:40 For the Mercy, the practice is a display of beauty and social adulthood.
21:45 But some travelers tell Bemnet that they should tell the Mercy not to practice that anymore,
21:50 fearing that it's painful or oppressive.
21:53 In situations like this, Bemnet encourages trying to focus instead on learning the reasons
21:59 why the Mercy do it.
22:01 You know, the definition of beauty is different for some people being skinny, having long
22:06 hair, those sorts of things might be the definition of beauty.
22:10 But for those tribes, for the Mercy tribe, that's one of the ways that they show their
22:15 beauty.
22:16 So we have to respect us.
22:18 We are the ones who went there to visit them.
22:21 So instead of making a judgment, just learn why they do this.
22:26 As I thought about all the ways cultural tourism can be approached more ethically, it became
22:32 clear that a lot of the change lies in the hands of the traveler.
22:36 After all, the traveler is the ultimate decision maker on where their travel dollar is spent.
22:42 Kalani elaborated on why this is so important.
22:45 I think the biggest influence in changing how we do tourism is going to come from the
22:51 consumer.
22:52 And so as consumers start to be more aware of their footprint, they're more aware of
22:57 their impacts, and they start asking visitor industry businesses and industry and destinations
23:03 to think about that, I think that's going to be the largest driver for change.
23:08 The more informed we are about travel experiences, the better chance we have at building stronger
23:14 relationships with the people and the places we visit.
23:18 Building that trust can often grant us access to cultural experiences that make travel so
23:24 rich.
23:25 At the end of our meaningful conversation, Kalani invited me, and you too, to hear this
23:33 special chant he composed in 2008 about his home.
23:38 If you want to understand Hawaiians and you want to understand Hawai'i and our language,
23:43 it's really rooted in place, and it's really rooted in relationships.
23:47 And that's not unique to Hawai'i.
23:49 And think about a place that enriches you, that recharges your battery, that inspires
23:55 you, that makes you feel whole, that makes you feel well, that makes you feel healed,
24:00 and whatever that place, person, thing is.
24:04 And then when you think about a trip to Hawai'i, know that you're coming to a place that does
24:07 that for us, and it's my pleasure to share it.
24:11 (Kalani singing)
24:13 (Kalani singing)
24:15 (Kalani singing)
24:17 (Kalani singing)
24:19 (Kalani singing)
24:21 (Kalani singing)
24:23 (Kalani singing)
24:25 (Kalani singing)
24:27 (Kalani singing)
24:30 (Kalani singing)
24:58 Before we go, let's take a look at what we learned about cultural tourism.
25:02 Takeaway number one.
25:07 Read up on your destination and learn about the cultures of the place you're visiting.
25:13 Go beyond the dominating cultural lens and dive deeper into Indigenous histories.
25:18 Then look for ways to connect with that history on the ground.
25:23 Number two. When you're looking at a cultural experience, take initiative to understand the context for how it came into being,
25:32 so you know what you're signing up for.
25:34 Who is in control of the experience?
25:37 Is it the keepers of that culture?
25:39 And is that culture benefiting from the experience they're offering you?
25:43 Number three. Come with an open mind.
25:48 Enter an experience with no expectations and let the custodians of that culture guide you.
25:54 It's not always a smooth road, but being an open and humble guest is often what leads to true cultural exchange.
26:02 Number four. Gaining access to a cultural experience is like entering a friend's home.
26:09 You want to be respectful of that host's space, boundaries, and comfort zones,
26:14 whether that means asking permission to take a picture or wearing appropriate clothing.
26:19 Number six. The traveler has spending power, and that spending power can encourage more ethical cultural encounters.
26:29 Seeking out responsible cultural practices incentivizes outfitters and cultures to offer more of that kind of experience.
26:37 It not only makes your trip better, but it also paves the way for a better tourism industry.
26:43 Thanks so much for joining me on this episode of Unpacked.
26:48 From one traveler to another, I hope to see you out there.
26:52 Follow me on Instagram @jenniferleeflowers and Twitter @jennflowers.
26:56 Ready for more unpacking? Visit us online at afar.com and be sure to follow us on Instagram and Twitter.
27:12 We're at afarmedia. Check out our show notes for more resources related to today's conversation.
27:18 If you enjoyed today's exploration, we hope you'll come back for more great stories.
27:24 Subscribing makes this easy. You can find us on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your favorite podcast platform.
27:31 And please be sure to rate and review us. It helps other travelers find the show.
27:37 This has been Unpacked by Afar, a production of Afar Media and Boom Integrated.
27:42 Our podcast is produced by Aislinn Green, Adrienne Glover, and Robin Lai.
27:47 Post-production was by John Marshall Media staff Jen Grossman and Clint Rhodes.
27:52 Music composition by Alan Koreshia.
27:55 And a special thanks for original music by Kalani Ka'ana'ana and composer David Page.
28:01 And remember, the world is complicated.
28:04 Being an ethical traveler doesn't have to be.
28:07 [Music]
28:11 [BLANK_AUDIO]

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