Monday 26 November 2012

"The gladdest moments of human life"


“Of the gladdest moments in human life, me thinks, is the departure upon a distant journey into unknown lands. Shaking off with one mighty effort the fetters of Habit, the leader weight of Routine, the cloak of many Cares and the slavery of Home, one feels happier. The blood flows with the fast circulation of childhood. A journey, in fact, appeals to Imagination, to Memory, to Hope – the three sister graces of our moral being.” ~ Sir Richard Francis Burton


I first saw his portrait hanging above the entrance of the Ondaatje lecture theatre in the Royal Geographical Society Building in Kensington Gore last year.  I was there for the very rewarding London Trauma Conference but to me the building itself was reason enough to go.  This place was an Aladdin’s Cave of unpublished pictures, maps, and journals of generations of explorers.  On the walls were the names and pictures of great journeymen, the stuff of childhood heroes:  Cook, Livingstone, Falcon Scott, Shakleton, Hillary.  This one portrait seemed out of place.  The face and the style of painting was western but the setting hardly one of glorious accomplishment. The figure wore a tattered cloak similar to the ones I had seen among the beggars of Mumbai and was hunched in a corner of a dilapidated indian hovel.  His face was one that seemed to have a hard life stamped on it by a rather large boot. Slightly asymmetrical and a lower cheek bone on the left, thin, straggly black hair and a huge scar below the left eye that I learned later was from a Somali bandit’s javelin.  Most noticeable were the eyes.  Not the eyes of the down – and – out; these were fully engaged, interested, watching, wary.  So this was Richard Francis Burton.

He seemed to have lived several lives.  It was not a cushioned existence. He had been thrown out of Oxford, the army, various expeditions into India, Arabia and Africa.  He was the first westerner to see Mecca.  He spoke over twenty languages and managed to pass off as an Arab among Arabs for years, enabling him access to the lives of locals that can only come with having lived among them.  He was a prolific writer, romantic, poet, explorer and cartographer, and probable spy.  His experience among these peoples led to his publication of Arabian Nights and, later more infamously, the English translations of Perfumed Garden and the Karma Sutra.  His life seemed illustrative of Bilbo Baggins’ warning: “it’s a dangerous thing, Frodo, going out your front door. You step onto the road, and if you don’t keep your feet, there’s no knowing where you might be swept off to.”

One of the aims of the Long Ride from Singapore to Sweden (hereafter the LRSS) is to give singaporeans especially a taste of this sense of adventure.  We want as many people on board as possible to see and feel some of the things we pass through. Some of it will be breast cancer related, a lot of it will not.  But it will be an adventure – a journey of no predetermined outcomes and unknown experiences.  How to do this?  Well we’ve spoken to seasoned documentary writers from the major  television channel, who are thinking of coming on board.  It’s all about two main ingredients – the message – which is what you’re trying to convey – and the narrative – the means of keeping the story going. In our case the obvious narrative is two mad men on bikes.  And this week we’ll be having our third meeting with a prominent international foundation. They have an agenda of trying to broaden the horizons of singaporeans and also to make them realize a quality I’ve just learned about called CQ – cultural sensitivity.  Something we will have to put into practice every moment from the time we leave our own shores.  The notion that others may be given to consider adventures of their own from our little outing is actually quite exciting.

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