What Bangladesh can offer tourists
Tanveer Ahmed
If
Robert Frost, the man who wrote "Two roads diverged in a wood and I took
the one less travelled by," was looking for a modern holiday destination,
he may have considered a trip to Bangladesh.
There
is a sense of status when travelling in Bangladesh, of a high place in the
pecking order of intrepid travellers. In a world of cheap airfares and a
plethora of resorts, those who dare to travel around Bangladesh are
communicating that they shun the world of mass market packaged tourism. They
are the rebels of the tourist trail.
The
data analysis group Priceonomics, engaged by the World Bank, has studied
statistics about numbers of tourists per head of population and found
Bangladesh as the "least touristy" destination in the world. By this
term, the group says Bangladesh and other countries in the top ten, such as
Moldova, Sierra Leone or Papua New Guinea, are destinations where you are least
likely to encounter tourists from other country.
It
was this long realised trend that sparked a recent slogan for Bangladesh's
tourism industry: "Visit Bangladesh, before the tourists come." The
originator of that slogan, Geeteara Chowdhury, an entrepreneur who also owns a
tea plantation in Sylhet, told The Guardian that the line came to her as she
lazily walked the serene surrounds of Cox's Bazaar, the longest beach in the
world, to find that there were very few people there. But she also lamented
that, unfortunately, tourists are yet to visit the place.
An
obvious market to tap is the Bangladeshi diaspora and it is exactly this group
being targeted by Yasmin Chowdhury, a British woman of Bangladeshi origin.
Having barely taken an interest in the birthplace of her parents, the death of
her father a decade ago aroused a wish to reconnect with her heritage, which
she did through her organisation, Love-Desh. It aims to help diaspora
Bangladeshis travel to their ancestral home.
Interestingly,
one of the biggest barriers she faces is the perception of people; but it's not
the perceived notion or natural disaster, poverty or Islamist violence that
she's talking about. The perceptions she has to fight are the childhood
experiences of travelling in Bangladesh that her target market have, that of
endless visits to relatives, being force fed mountains of food and sweets they
didn't like and encountering unwanted marriage proposals. This has left an
association of stifling boredom that detracts them from viewing the country as
a tourist destination.
This
is a shame, because the behaviour is at odds with a growing interest among the
diaspora in reconnecting with their roots. They are more likely to channel this
interest through sponsoring a child through an aid organisation or attending a
protest about exploited labour in garment factories. They want to feel good
about themselves via doing good.
In
a world of hollowed out identities, particularly in the post-religious
societies of the Western world, a key place for people to identify a sense of
authenticity is their feelings. If there is one thing Bangladesh has, it is
authenticity - of a rawness of human emotion and experience. I remember my own
wife's evolving reaction when she visited my ancestral village in Jessore from
recognising that the stares of locals towards her tall, Caucasian features was not
in fact rude, but an expressions of their own curiosity, vulnerability and
ultimately, affection.
While
many Bangladeshis are embarrassed and tired of images of poverty and despair
that is so often associated with the nation, an element of this - if channelled
towards the urge of many Westerners to do good as part of them acquiring
greater meaning in their lives - has the potential to attract travellers.
Mikey
Leung, the author of a travel guide for Bangladesh who did aid work in Dhaka
with his Australian wife, says target markets of expatriate foreigners living
in Dhaka and latter generations of Bangladeshis living in the West are untapped
markets. They may travel to Bangladesh in the same way they might consume other
products - with a view to communicate their identity to the outside world.
Those
who see themselves as rebels shunning modern materialism or wanting to exhibit
their sense of moral stature by helping the downtrodden will naturally be
attracted to Bangladesh as part of communicating their self-image.
During
a government funded trip for international journalists in 2011, my colleagues
and I were taken to the tea gardens in Sylhet, and the Cox's Bazaar beach by
public sector officials. The foreign journalists were impressed by the natural beauty
of the country, but also frustrated by the poor infrastructure, political
turmoil-there was a day of hartal during our four day trip - and a lath of
understanding of Western needs and comforts. These barriers are likely to
improve only with greater numbers of tourists engaging and changing the operators.
Tourism has the potential to modify some of
Bangladesh's greatest challenges - an economy heavily dependent on remittances
and garments, poor international perceptions and a greater people to people
engagement with a large, wealthy diaspora. But the challenges remain profound.
The writer is a psychiatrist and author
based in Australia, and founder of the website bddiaspora.com.
Content shared from The Daily Star.
Read
the original article at:
http://epaper.thedailystar.net/index.php?opt=view&page=6&date=2016-05-08
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