Monday, August 18, 2008

The KKH (Karakoram Highway)

-China to Pakistan-


I left Kashgar at 12:30pm on a bus to Sost Pakistan. Sost is the first town/customs post on the Pakistani side of the Khunjerab pass. The Khunjerab Pass peaks out at 16,002ft and is considered the highest “paved” pass in the world. Khunjerab means ‘valley of blood’, and gets its name from the reputation it had during the Silk Road period. Historically this pass was home to generations of thieves and murderers who constantly attacked, slaughtered, and looted passing caravans along this important stretch of the ancient Silk Road. The landscape, geography and harsh weather kept this pass exclusively for the use of only the most determined, hardy and brave caravans.  It was not until recent years that this pass became accessible to motor vehicles. In the late 20th century the governments of China and Pakistan decided that it would be sensible to create a road between the two countries in order to facilitate an overland trade route between the two countries. After 20 years of brutal labor the KKH (Karakoram Highway) was completed in 1986. The Highway follows the ancient Silk Road path and connects Western China’s Xinjiang province to Havelion, Pakistan 1,300km away. The highway, which must have seemed impossible to construct 50 years ago; cuts directly through the rugged Karakoram Mountains. The Highway was successfully built as a joint venture between China and Pakistan, and is known in China as the “friendship highway”. Despite the engineering feat, and all around success of the project, many lives were lost during construction; mostly due to land slides and falls (810 Pakistanis, 82 Chinese deaths).


My recent marathon travel was thoroughly wearing on me; however, I was able to fight through the exhaustion with a bit of adrenaline produced by my anticipation, fear, and excitement for the unknown. The thought of traveling on the famed KKH to Pakistan was enough to keep me alert, attentive, and happy throughout the 7 hour bus ride from Kashgar to Tash-Kurgan. The incredible scenery and remarkable landscape also helped keep me conscious.


As the road began to ascend up the KKH and through the Pamir Plateau (3,000M); I suddenly realized that my fatigue had vanished. While gazing out the window I witnessed some of the most breathtaking scenery I had ever seen. Crystal blue mountain lakes surrounded by clusters of Yurts, caravans of double humped camels climbing through glowing white sand dunes, jagged cut mountains tops, deep sharp crevasses being slowly shredded down by steep massive glaciers, endless views of bleached white salt flats that added exotic diversity to the landscape of mountain lakes, sandy dunes and grassy marshes filled with grazing yaks


My bus arrived in Tash-Kurgan (12,000ft) at around 6:30pm. Tash-Kurgan is beautifully located in a desolate valley between large horse shoe shaped ranges of snow capped mountains. We were forced to stop here for the night because the Chinese customs and the border itself had long since been closed for the day. I ended up finding a trashy hotel, and sharing a 3 bed dorm room with a couple tourists from my bus. The price was right ($2), however it was lacking the one thing I desired most; a shower. I had not bathed or changed clothes for five long, exhausting, sweaty days, so a bit of clean up was definitely in order. I tracked down a banya near my hotel and spent the next hour vigorously scrubbing my body with soap and hot sulfur smelling water. The shower facility I rented was a dark 4x8ft room of rusty pipes, and crumbling concrete. Green algae coated the lower half of the walls where all of the baby blue paint had chipped and pealed away. 


After my shower I was refreshed and ready to continue my journey into the unknown……and presumably unsafe. After meeting up with a couple of Korean girls and a Canadian guy from my bus, we grabbed a quick meal and hit the sack.


5-6-2008


I woke up at 3am freezing cold with a pounding headache and ruthless diarrhea; probably just a mixture of mild AMS (Acute Mountain Sickness) and bad food. I began my day at 8am by running a few errands around town, AKA: spending what was left of my Chinese currency on snacks for the road. The bus left at 9am but did not clear Tash-Kurgan’s customs until around 11:30am. 


The windy cut backs up the KKH to the Khunjerab pass were amazing. We drove through a steep mountain valley of green-brown fields. Yaks and goats grazed throughout the barren seemingly uninhabitable mountainside. Yurts and mud shacks were scattered sparsely along the steep rocky slopes and alongside the curvy river, providing shelter for the rugged inhabitants. The massive, sharply formed, dark, snow peaked mountains gently kissed the bright blue sky and seemed to create an impenetrable barrier between China and Pakistan. 


After a couple military check points, and a relatively gradual climb we had reached the top of the Khunjerab pass 16,002ft. The air was noticeably thin, and the view was exactly what you would expect……..absolutely phenomenal. After a short break on top of the pass, the bus continued down the Pakistani side of the KKH.


 At the very peak of the Khunjerab pass, at the point where China meets Pakistan; there is a distinct line across the road that provides a very vivid contrast and clue of what is to come. The newly paved road on the Chinese side abruptly stops where the Pakistani KKH begins; smooth sailing is over and the uncertainty begins. 


As we descended down the KKH into Pakistan the bus traveled at a very sluggish pace. This was due to the many road obstacles we encountered: giant potholes, streams, bumpy unpaved sections, landslides that covered half the narrow road and giant recently fallen boulders that obstructed our direct route down the wildly sketchy road. The road descended in a series of sharp cut backs that seemed on most occasions quite dangerous. The margin of error was slim; the slightest driving error on the narrow road would send our bus tumbling off a 200+ft cliff. The pass is closed most of the year do to dangerous and unpredictable weather conditions, but was opened the first of May; 5 days ago. 


The final stretch of the bus ride was by far my favorite. After surviving the stomach turning cut backs, we made it to the bottom of the canyon where we drove past a couple of USA army officers near the edge of the raging river; not sure what they were doing there. At this point the road simply followed the river that cut deep into the steep rocky canyon. The narrow, near vertical, geologically diverse canyon was amazing. I opened the window and peered my head out in astonishment each time the bus turned a corner and opened visibility to another bend of the canyon. 


At 1:00pm we reached Sost (we gained 3 hours), where I spent the next couple hours working my way through customs. When I finally cleared customs my heart was pumping and my mind was racing wildly. I was here, (Pakistan) a land of incredible natural beauty, deeply diverse culture, warm hospitality, and peppered with a bit of Islamic extremism. My rapidly pumping heart and increasing levels of adrenaline made it more than easy to ignore the immediate dangers of the latter. 


I have traveled extensively in several Islamic republics and have found them to be in most cases safer, more hospitable, warmer, and friendlier than the Western countries I have visited. I feel quite strongly that the Western/American media has painted an unfair portrait of Islam. The fact is that Islamic extremism is not at all representative of Islam as a whole. The Taliban, Al Qaeda, and other Islamic extremist groups are simply a small minority of uneducated, ignorant thugs, with nothing to live for. These Extremist prey on the ignorance of others and use their power to breed hate and false hope. They in no way, shape, or form, come close to representing the peaceful, kind, loving and tolerant Muslim majority. One of the fundamental principals of the Islamic religion is to be hospitable and kind to all people, whether or not they are your friends, strangers, or even enemies.


 In the Holy Koran there is a story about a couple of men who traveled many miles in order to assassinate the prophet Mohammed; when they arrived to kill the prophet he greeted them with smiles, opened his home to them, and served them food and water to cure their fatigue. He did this out of the kindness of his heart and in full knowledge of the men’s intentions. Mohammed new that he would be killed by these men, but served them as brothers despite the fact; the men later were so taken back by the prophet’s generosity and kindness, that they decided to spare his life and eventually converted to Islam. What we should all take from this story is that Islamic religion when practiced in a conventional way is as peaceful, warm, and selfless, as any other well accepted religion of our modern world.


When examining other religions such as Christianity, should we judge based on the few or the masses? Is the Catholic priest pedophilia epidemic representative of Christianity or more specifically Catholicism? Are the Christians who bomb abortion clinics a good representation? How about the ones who protest gay pride parades with signs that read “Aids is the cure to Homosexuality”, and “Jesus hates Fags”. Should the crazy, incestuous, polygamists Mormons of Idaho be the sole representation of Mormonism?


Perhaps we should all stop generalizing and stereotyping based on the actions of the distinctly despicable few, and instead begin examining the good of the majority.


Overall Sost did not bring much to the table, so I decided to work my way downstream to the town of Passu. The sun was radiating fiercely through my skull as I nervously walked down the bustling main street to the bus station. After a few quick inquiries I found out that all of the busses to Passu had left before noon. As I walked out of the small gravel parking lot known as the bus station, a scruffy middle aged man sporting a Chitrali cap, a bushy brown beard and a white shalwar kameez (Pakistani clothes: long shirt and baggy pants) approached me. His suspicious eyes cut through me as he offered me a patronizing smile while saying “Asalam ahalikum”(peace be with you), I responded with a nervous smile and “ ahalikum Salam”(and to you). After a brief but awkward moment of silence he asked me in broken English where I was from. I hesitated briefly but then responded firmly by saying that I was from America. I then smiled, and stared at him attentively in order to gage his response. He began stroking his beard and laughing hysterically before tapping me on the shoulder calmly and saying “Al Qaeda big, Al Qaeda big”. I smiled nervously, turned away, and began walking down the road away from the bus station. 


How was that supposed to make me feel? Was he merely joking around with me? I had been in Pakistan only a few hours and it appears that I had just been given some sort of vague warning of potential danger to come. My adrenaline shot through the roof, and my heart began pounding so hard that I could hear each beating pulse through the veins in my head. I eventually calmed down by putting a few things in perspective, and hopped in a van heading to Passu. 


By the time I had reached Passu, 1.5 hrs down the road by mini-bus; I was calm, happy and excited to be in a land of such natural beauty. Passu is a beautiful, desolate, and barely accessible area of scattered mountain and valley villages. I decided to stay at the Passu Inn with my new Canadian buddy Steve. Steve and I hit it off immediately and shared a lot of the same philosophical ideologies of life and travel. The view from the porch of the Passu Inn was heavenly. I was at the base of the most incredible canyon I had ever seen. A large but relatively dry river bed cut through the center of the narrow valley, while the mountain ridges on both sides dominated the skies with authority. As I stood in front of my hotel I could hardly comprehend what I was seeing in front of me. The mountains were incredibly unique and magnificent. I was gazing at a black, snowy mountain range that seamed near vertical, and was topped with jagged spikes. I found myself wishing I had a geologist beside me to explain just how these mountains were formed. 


After a wonderful dinner of vegetable curry and chapatti bread (a dish I later grew tired of), Steve and I decided to explore the area. We ended up hiking about 5 miles up the canyon’s dry river bed before realizing that we were soon to be in complete darkness. Getting back proved to be a slow, scary and dangerous experience. A couple times I found myself in absolute darkness, and hiking cautiously on the edge of a 60ft eroding cliff.


5-7-2008


I woke up at 6:30am, washed a bit of laundry in a rusty metal bucket, ate a quick bite, and was on the trail by 7:45. Steve: Canadian, Ono: Japanese, Matt: French, and I decided to hike to Borut Lake, a small lake in the shadow of Mt. Betura (7,500M). Shortly after beginning our ascent we found ourselves dwarfed by Mt Betura and at the base of the Guglan Glacier. The sun was beating down hard upon us, and the dusty landscape of red sand and rocks provided not the least hint of shade. We caught a break while passing through a small Tajik village near Borut Lake. We noticed a Tajik woman standing in front of her mud shack and staring at us with childlike curiosity; we all smiled at the woman and yelled “Asallam Ahalikum”. She smiled soon after, waved us over, and invited us into her home for tea. The woman and her husband sat us down on the floor and we all sat blissfully in a circle around the small half buried stove in the center of the shack. No words were spoken, only simple hand gestures, miming and friendly smiles were used to aid communication. I shared with them peanuts and sugar cookies, while they provided us with stale wheat bread and scolding hot milk tea. The woman wore a round decorative hat with a flat top, a beautiful purple dress, and uniquely braided hair. Her face and skin was worn and leathery, but her eyes were youthful and gentle. After soaking in the hospitality of our new Tajik friends, we left the isolated Tajik village and headed down to Borut Lake. 


The Glacier, Lake, and Tajik hospitality was an incredible part of the day but the highlight for me was the extension bridges. We headed back down the mountain and to the base of the river bed where we came across the sketchiest bridge I had ever seen. I felt like Indiana Jones as I slowly walked across the shoddily constructed bridge. The bridge consisted of narrow cables intertwined with a series of logs and sticks brittle with age. Each stick was placed between 1-3ft apar,t which meant each step had to be taken carefully. The exhilaration I felt while crossing this bridge was incredible, I felt like an explorer on an adventurous mission trekking through unknown habitation.


The next 4-5 hours I hiked through lush green fields of irrigated farm land stopping only briefly for water breaks and pleasantries with the locals. Eventually we made our way to another daredevil extension bridge that crossed back over the river to the other side of the canyon. Before crossing I watched a local woman with an enormous load of grass walk across the bridge without once bracing herself with her hands; this was incredible. Can you imagine watching a middle aged woman with a 60lb load on her back walking across the top of a 150YD set of monkey bars, but the kicker is that the monkey bars move up and down, back and forth, and have loose, unstable bars? So basically, I found this no handed feat quite impressive. I on the other hand grasped each cable side rail firmly as I slowly walked across the bridge praying that each wooden plank would not collapse beneath me and drop me through to the rocky riverbed below me.


Well, the day was awesome, but I foolishly failed to apply sun block to my pasty white skin. As the sun slowly faded, the sky maintained its glow due to my radiating red skin. I looked as if I had spent the entire day submerged in a bucket of red paint. No amount of cream, Chinese pain killers or melatonin pills would help me get to sleep. Each movement irritated my burnt skin and sent a stinging pain through my entire body. This was my first brush in with UV rays at high elevation. Lesson learned.


5-8-2008


After breakfast I hopped aboard an old Suzuki van and headed about an hour down the rock-strewn KKH to the small town of Hunza. I was dropped off on the edge of the highway at 11am and spent the next hour of blistering heat hiking up the steep narrow roads to Hunza.  Hunza is an exceptionally beautiful mountain town nestled alongside the brilliant Karakoram Mountains. The people in Hunza and in most of northern Pakistan are culturally and ethnically different than the Pakistani majority. The people in Hunza for example display a culturally unique mountain lifestyle and intentionally segregate themselves from the region’s other minority groups. Their fair skin, strikingly vivacious eyes, and unique dress set them apart from their Pakistani counterparts. Despite their Caucasian appearance, they do in fact follow the conformities of the region. The people of Hunza are religiously and culturally Muslim, and exhibit hospitality, warmth, kindness, and joy in all aspects of their day to day life. 


I spent the day of cultural absorption sporting a white Chitrali cap and a traditional long sleeved shirt in order to avoid the forceful rays of the sun, and protect my already toasted skin. I took it easy on my body today; short hikes, a quick exploration of an 800 year old fortress, and several non-verbal conversations with local villagers.


I was only given a three week visa, so unfortunately I was again rushed, and in frantic, see all you can travel mode.


5-9-2008


I started the day by taking a jeep to Alamabad, and later a 9:30am bus to Gilgit. I arrived in Gilget around noon; a small historic town which played a big role during the “Great Game” Era. The town was loud, busy, dirty, and overall quite intimidating. At each street corner there was a small fortress made of sandbags and razor wire. These military posts were guarded 24-7 by soldiers sporting machine guns and thick beards. I felt as if I were in a war zone; the scene reminded me a lot of the militarized down town Beirut (except not quite as clean). This was the first real Pakistani city I had been to, so I knew it would be a whole new ball game. I found it relatively easy to feel at ease in the very moderate northern villages of Pakistan, but entering the heart of the North incited in me new fears and emotions.


It is impossible to ignore the fact that Al Qaeda and the Taliban do in fact have strong operations in Pakistan. And despite the safety, warmth, kindness, and hospitality that surround the majority of Pakistani Muslims; there will always be a possibility that I might brush up against the wrong individual. However, this is definitely not a significant enough deterrent to keep me out of Pakistan. Although it will be prudent for me to exercise caution and good judgment at all times while traveling through this country. I believe that knowledge of the area you are in is important no matter where you might be. It is also important to understand that even though there are risks involved with traveling to certain areas, it does not mean you would be wise in skipping them completely. The world is packed full of potential danger; I believe that we should educate ourselves and take calculated risks constantly rather than live a risk free, seemingly safe life clouded by ignorance and fear.

-Just because there are more than 1,000 murders in Los Angeles(County-Population 10 million), California annually, does not mean it is unsafe to take your kids to Disneyland.


I felt intimidated and nervous as I wandered around Gilgit lost and confused trying to track down a place to stay. The few curious stares I came across were countered adequately by the smiles and greetings of friendly locals. One young man around 20 years old approached me suddenly and offered to help me find a place to crash. Tamir worked in a local bank and was part of a wealthy family in Gilgit (he even had his own car). He also was studying English at a nearby language institute and was more than eager to practice his English with a native speaker. After checking into my hotel, he offered to take me around town and show me the historical sights of Gilgit. Tamir and I began with a short hike up a rocky canyon to the site of a couple ancient Buddha’s carved in the stone. Later we shared a late lunch of vegetable curry and rice. We ended up spending the entire day together cruising around town discussing religion, politics, and women. Mohammed, a devout Muslim, was incredibly open minded, intelligent and eager to soak up all the knowledge and experience he could.


The highlight of the day was going to a local park and playing cricket and football (soccer) with the locals. I didn’t quite understand Cricket, but found hitting to be quite easy and nearly identical to baseball. All the locals greeted me warmly and were more than willing to allow me a spot on their team. There were at least 5 Cricket games going on at any given time on the large grass field, it was quite the sight. 


Pakistanis love cricket: obviously a simple but lasting product of British colonization. After the Brits left India in the early 1950s(officially ended its occupation in 1947), Pakistan was formed as a way to create independence for the large group of Indian Muslims. Despite breaking the country in two, and creating the Hindu-Muslim split; cricket and other British influences remained in both countries.


 My initial fear and nervousness associated with Pakistan’s extremist reputation had completely melted away by the end of my first day in Gilgit. The people were absolutely amazing, and greeted me with open arms not unlike the wonderful people of Albania, Kosovo, Turkey, Syria, Lebanon, and Islamic Central Asia. It is impossible to ignore the fact that, though Muslims are normally quite conservative, and firmly religious, their openness, compassion, and humanity are generally admirable.


Today gave me a second wind; I now feel that I am able continue my journey without losing motivation and burning out. I feel remarkably refreshed, happy, and enlightened. I feel proud to be in a country that the West shuns as violent and extremist, and to be able to see first hand how misleading and harmful the Western/American media can be toward Islamic Republics.  I feel personally obligated to share my first hand experiences in order to promote a more truthful reputation and understanding of the people of Pakistan. I am now sitting peacefully in my hotel room examining and contemplating in bewilderment, just how a country like Pakistan could get such a horrible international reputation. How are these reputations formed?


 Perhaps the answer is obvious:……………- a recent history of prominent Terrorist Cells, Islamic radicals grooming youth in extremist madressas, and sporadic violent terrorist attacks on Western/American military-diplomats-aid-tourists. 


Exactly how many bad apples does it take to spoil the bunch? When comparing a country like Pakistan (population 150 million) to a randomly chosen 25 US states (assuming you were able to split USA’s population in half this way), what sort of comparison would we see when correlating both country’s crime index; specifically violent crime? Without even doing the research and punching the numbers I can tell you with confidence that the USA has substantially more violent crime than Pakistan. The United States has one of the highest crime rates in the world, yet we are somehow able to avoid the harmful reputation. How is this possible? Are cracked out drug dealers for some reason less imposing and dangerous than Islamic extremists? A foreseen answer to those questions is that Islamic extremists attack indiscriminately and tend to kill in the masses, but perhaps we are forgetting about American shitheads like McVeigh and Ramirez.


Driving down the wrong street in LA or NYC is no less dangerous than driving through the tribal areas between Peshawar, Pakistan and the Afghan border. Anyone can be in the wrong place at the wrong time, no matter what country you are in. So why are we so afraid of Islamic countries?  It doesn’t quite make the headlines like it once did, but the fact is that minorities including homosexuals still occasionally get lynched in the USA. Perhaps an interesting correlation would be to find out the number of lynchings/hate crimes in the USA during 2007, divide it by 2, and then compare it to the number of foreigners or ethnic minorities murdered in Pakistan in the year 2007. I will make the assumption that the USA gets the grand prize.

-Quick Fact: in 2006 there were 17,034 murders in the USA(Population 300million) 

-Current Population of Pakistan is 164 million


-I challenge anyone reading this to test this theory.


I made it back to my hotel/Hostel at around 6pm and spent the next couple hours relaxing with a book. At around 9pm I wandered out of my hotel and down the loud smoky streets to a dark alleyway where I found a few locals making kebabs. I bought a couple kebabs (meat patties), a cucumber, a couple pieces of chapatti bread, and washed it all down with a warm/hot mountain dew. The kebabs were amazing; the flavor reminded me of Turkey’s famous Adana Kebabs. The only drawback to the situation was that I bought the food at a back alley street restaurant, and due to the dim lights was not completely sure just how thorough the meat had been cooked. 


The Nausea began at about 11pm………..followed shortly after by a bit of bloating and sweating. The rotting meat in my stomach began slowly filling my chest with gases and causing my mind to struggle with consciousness.  By 4am I had “expelled” pretty much everything I had eaten that day, and despite the ferociously hot temperature of my hotel room, I was shivering uncontrollably. At 5am I decided to take control of the situation by swallowing 1000mgs of Cipronal. I am not very happy with this decision;………… instead of “killing all the bacteria”, it simply made my throat burn and my mouth taste like aspirin each time I puked thereafter. My previous optimistically high level of happiness, excitement, and morale had gone drastically down hill. I was now laying alone in a shitty hotel, puking, shitting, and shivering in the fetal position, all while mentally slapping myself in the face for eating Gilgit’s mischievously delicious street food. I am not sure why I do it to myself;………………..Why is it that I tend to make the same mistakes over and over? Perhaps I should have learned from past experiences, that back alley restaurant establishments in underdeveloped countries do not serve the safest meat. Eating at these places is like playing Russian roulette, disaster is always a very real possibility. 


5-10-2008


After a horrendous night of pain, depression, and sleepless physical misery; I decided it would be wise to postpone my journey to Chitral. I had planned on taking the 8am bus 15+ hours to the North-Western city of Chitral, situated in the renowned Hindu Kush.  However, I was in no condition to travel and was instead forced to lye in bed all day suffering in agonizing silence. The monotony of my day was only interrupted briefly by unpleasant trips to the filthy toilet (hole in the floor) and periodic sips of chlorine flavored water. 


At 8pm a guy from the hotel staff visited my room to make sure I was still alive. Apparently I had disrupted the sleep of another guest by noisily “expelling” rotten meat throughout the previous evening. 


The worst part of having food poisoning is the recovery process;  there is nothing more irritating than having your body cramp with hunger while your stomach and mind adamantly refuse to entertain the idea of consuming food. It would be so much more convenient if my whole body was on the same page. If the thought of food makes me nauseous, why is it that hunger physically prohibits my body from relaxing. 


5-11-2008


I woke up at 6:15am feeling refreshed after a long night of melatonin (pills) induced sleep. After checking out of my hotel, I began the 4 mile walk to the bus station. The hotel owner sympathized with my condition, and kindly offered to carry my bag for me all the way to the bus station. I smiled and thanked him gratefully but refused his offer. Wow, another random act of kindness; I could not believe that this man I barely knew was willing to escort me all the way to the bus station carrying my heavy bag. It is completely refreshing to be around submersed in a culture so selfless, kind, and hospitable.


  The streets were quiet and peaceful, vendors were sleeping on the sidewalks beside their carts, old men were sweeping their door steps, and packs of dogs were feasting on piles of rubbish alongside overflowing steel dumpsters. The scene was unfamiliar and pleasant; Gilget had slowed its pace and began to exhibit faces of calmness and repose. Before reaching the bus station, I smiled and said hello (Asallam Ahalikum) to several armed soldiers near their baracades, each of whom initially observed me with suspicious stares, but later with warm smiles.


I arrived at the bus station at 7am, and immediately bought a bus ticket to Chitral ($5). While waiting in front of the bus station a small group of soldiers standing behind a wall of sand bags and razor-wire spotted me and waved me over. As I slowly approached them I was immediately put at ease by their warm smiles and gentle eyes. Their kind faces and friendly demeanor adequately countered the intimidating presence of AK-47s slung over their shoulders. One of the older soldiers with a dark leathery face and an inspiring moustache greeted me in English and asked me what I was doing in Gilgit. After explaining to them that I was a tourist and was on my way to Chitral, he nodded with understanding and yelled something in Urdu (Pakistan’s official language) to one of his men, who quickly nodded with acknowledgment and ran off up the dusty road. About five minutes later the soldier returned to the makeshift mini-fortress with a small serving plate containing a cup of milk tea and some sort of wheat-sugar-gelatin dish. The soldiers promptly set up a chair and small table for me and told me to sit down while presenting me with the small tray. I was completely shocked, here I was hanging out with a few Pakistani soldiers whom immediately befriended me and treated me as if I were an honored guest. For the next 30 minutes I sat and drank tea while answering various questions about American culture and government. I was surprised to hear them tell me over and over again that they liked the USA, and that we (Americans) have made their country better. Presumably they felt this way because we had helped them a great deal after the disastrous earthquake of 2005; or perhaps because of our dominant efforts to expunge terrorism and Islamic extremism from Pakistan. I didn’t want to pry too deeply into their reasoning, I was simply pleased and elated to be visiting with a group of armed Islamic men who actually liked my government;………………….quite rare this day and age.


After thanking all the soldiers by smiling and bowing to them with my hand over my heart; I boarded the crowded mini-bus. Within minutes we had left the KKH and Gilgit behind and were heading West toward the rugged mountain passes leading to the Hindu Kush.


{Update: I should probably add that I wrote most of this blog months ago.............. currently Pakistan is quite volatile and in many areas unstable and unsafe. It goes without saying that traveling in war zones is generally not safe, however the message of the above blog is intended to voice that Islamic countries are not unsafe, but simply misrepresented and misunderstood. The best current example would be Syria.......... represented as unsafe and extreme by Western Media, but in actuality quite calm, safe, and peaceful.


A few pics of the KKH:

Yurts in front of lake Karokol-Chinese side of the KKH

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Views on the way up the KKH(China)

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The Top with Steve:

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On the way down, The Pakistani side of the KKH

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Passu Extension bridge

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View around Passu:

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The hike around Passu:

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Hunza:

at the old fortress-

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on my way out-

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the old fortress-

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Gilgit with Tamir:

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7 Comments:

At 9:17 PM, Blogger Rev. Donald Spitz said...

Nice pictures, I would have liked to have been there, but not with anti-Christians like yourself.
Whatever you think, you will not be able to change God's Word and will one day have to pay the price for not believing what God has written.
Leviticus 18:22 Thou shalt not lie with mankind, as with womankind: it is abomination.

Leviticus 20:13 If a man also lie with mankind, as he lieth with a woman, both of them have committed an abomination: they shall surely be put to death; their blood shall be upon them.

Romans 1:22-27

V22 Professing themselves to be wise, they became fools, V23 And changed the glory of the uncorruptible God into an image made like to corruptible man, and to birds, and fourfooted beasts, and creeping things.

V24 Wherefore God also gave them up to uncleanness through the lusts of their own hearts, to dishonour their own bodies between themselves:

V25 Who changed the truth of God into a lie, and worshipped and served the creature more than the Creator, Who is blessed for ever. Amen.

V26 For this cause God gave them up unto vile affections: for even their women did change the natural use into that which is against nature:

V27 And likewise also the men, leaving the natural use of the woman, burned in their lust one toward another; men with men working that which is unseemly, and receiving in themselves that recompence of their error which was meet.

SAY THIS PRAYER: Dear Jesus, I am a sinner and am headed to eternal hell because of my sins. I believe you died on the cross to take away my sins and to take me to heaven. Jesus, I ask you now to come into my heart and take away my sins and give me eternal life. http://www.armyofgod.com

 
At 10:34 AM, Blogger William said...

You forgot to mention a formerly important faction of extreme American Christianity: The KKK, whose ilk are apparently big fans of yours.

More on the good Reverend Spitz: http://www.splcenter.org/intel/intelreport/article.jsp?aid=72

 
At 12:23 PM, Blogger Andrew! said...

Trevor!!! Man, you have THE WORST LUCK with street food! And it's so unfortunate cause street food always tastes the best! So sorry, buddy!

Dear Reverend Crazy Spitz,

You're crazy. Let me explain. First I'd like to use your own book to slap you across your filthy mouth:

Mathew 7:1
Judge not, that ye be not judged.

Your ignorant rant reminded me of some people I know who also base their lives and belief systems on another human-written book. This one is called, Dungeons and Dragons. And some of them are my friends. Stop judging people you know nothing about, or I'll have them use their +6 magic skills on your other cheek!

XOXO,

A!

 
At 11:48 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

FUCK OFF JERK U FUCKIN SPAMMER STOP SPAMMING OUR NICE BLOGS THEY ARE NOT FOR THAT!!!!

 
At 2:43 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Dear Trevor's,

I am amazed with comments made to your blog. You can see what your ppl think about Islamic World.. I am from a place you passed and stayed during your visit to Northern Pakistan. Do you think the people living around you in America will believe you for what you said??;) ...

This is what I call western media Magic!!


Cheers!!

 
At 12:25 AM, Blogger Roomi Farhat Baig Sostiq said...

Mr.Trevor

my name is Farhat Ullah Baig from Sost, Gojal Northern area of Pakistan. i am doing job in PRAL(Pakistan Revenue Automation Ltd)as Information Technology at Sost.

i read yours whole travel spending in our area. but i would like to clear that you use Khunjerab word in that side its not Khujerab actually it is Khunz'hrav and you also mention wrong meaning, the correct meaning is Land of River.

you didn't focus on Sost Valley, or may be none of local person you meet in sost, so i offer you again you come in sost, i will show you the beauty of sost.

Finally i hope you will come back, i will mention my mailing address below.

(any body intresst for travelling in Sost then kindly contact me)


best wishes,


your's friend

Farhat Ullah Baig
Village & Post Office
Sost, Distric Gilgit,
Tehsil Gojal, Hunza Northern
area of Pakistan.
Cell No 00923435339344

 
At 1:43 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Long Story but described the beauty of Gojal..

 

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