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(4 review)
Author : Cole, Carleton
ISBN : 978616-2450310
Category : Books on Thailand
Pages : 188
Format : ebook
Mix classical Middle Eastern culture with Thai ways and what do you get? Something very intriguing – and utterly exotic.
Some Arabs and Middle Easterners come to Bangkok for business and shopping. Others come for unrestrained sensuality, or medical tourism. Still others open restaurants, providing a welcome culinary service in Bangkok, Phuket, Pattaya and beyond. And then there are those who need jobs while they await elusive UN approval for asylum.
Proud of their own culture, one thing they don’t come for is Thai culture. Rarely do Arabs ever step foot inside “infidel” Thai Buddhist temples.
For centuries, and especially in the last few decades, Middle-Eastern traders and travellers, restaurateurs and refugees have left their mark on Thailand, bestowing their cultural, Islamic, architectural, culinary and musical heritage.
Digging deep, Carleton Cole writes about Middle Easterners who have called Thailand a home away from home. |
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Reviews (4) |
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by
: Cole, Carleton
, Author
(read all my reviews) |
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04 Jul, 2011
Views from inside the mosaic
By Paul Dorsey
The Nation
Published on July 4, 2011
Carleton Cole surveys Thailand's diverse Muslim links in a new e-book
Siamese Arabesques: Tales of the Islamic World with Thai Twists
By Carleton Cole
Published by Bangkok Books, 2011
Available as an e-book only, Bt149
"We will be here in Thailand until things get better," says the wife of a Lebanese jeweller on Surawong Road. Earning a decent living at respectable jobs, the couple doesn't strike you as being typical refugees, but diversity is a central theme in Carleton Cole's second book, "Siamese Arabesques".
There a... ... ... [+]
By Paul Dorsey
The Nation
Published on July 4, 2011
Carleton Cole surveys Thailand's diverse Muslim links in a new e-book
Siamese Arabesques: Tales of the Islamic World with Thai Twists
By Carleton Cole
Published by Bangkok Books, 2011
Available as an e-book only, Bt149
"We will be here in Thailand until things get better," says the wife of a Lebanese jeweller on Surawong Road. Earning a decent living at respectable jobs, the couple doesn't strike you as being typical refugees, but diversity is a central theme in Carleton Cole's second book, "Siamese Arabesques".
There are indeed oppressed and struggling refugees in this collection of vignettes about people from the Middle East and North and East Africa who now live in Thailand, but to others the term "refugee" instead means expatriates here by choice, seekers after fortune and those who yearn after security.
The people in this book are thinking of home - Iraq, Kuwait, Ethiopia, the once and future Palestine. They meet up in Little Arabia on Sukhumvit Soi 3/1 and proffer opinions on the Israelis, the people-traffickers and the comparative treacheries of Saddam and Bush.
When political viewpoints are offered, they are often atypical. Cole (a former Nation sub-editor) hopes his fellow Americans might see the reality of the Middle East and Africa, where too much foreign intervention has fostered vengeful bitterness that can no longer be contained. One section of the book is titled "Re-imagining the Islamic World".
Meanwhile these people are part of their region's vast diaspora. They live across a far-flung archipelago of exiles. Here they are in snapshots taken in Bangkok bistros, reflections of the TV news from their homelands flickering across their faces.
Cole joins young Egyptians watching television as Mubarak totters in Cairo. The writer's observations can sometimes be disjointed but his sense of the moment can be trusted. The cry rings clear for the return of stolen esteem.
We meet a Somali who spent two years in the Immigration Detention Centre, dreaming ever since his release of starting a business shipping Thai rice home. Bangladeshi-Malay "Somsak" Chowdry has been in Bangkok all his life and now sells fragrant Cambodian and Lao agar to tourists from the Persian Gulf.
Afghani families have shops on New Road dealing in gold and other items from Pakistan. Other Muslims trade in carpets and batiks in Phuket, where Cole also talks to Muslims from South Africa who feel welcome on the island but not in Bangkok.
The aggravating Palestinian question looms large, in discussion with an Iraq-born Israeli restaurateur in Phuket and with officials of the Thai wing of the UK-based Palestinian Solidarity Campaign. It all ends up in the shallows, going nowhere as usual, but at least Cole is clever at capturing the human passion involved.
Also run aground on a political reef are Burma's Rohingya, portrayed here in a chapter that's good for historical and cultural background.
Thailand has 13 million Muslims, not five or six million as the government claims, says Chalerm Lohmud of the Islamic Centre of Thailand, who counts the 700,000 Muslims in Bangkok as descendants of those brought from the South as "slaves".
Cole visits the Muslims of Ban Krua, Bangkok's small but feisty silk-weaving community, and learns more about Jim Thompson. He reviews Bumrungrad International Hospital's Muslim healthcare. He sees the mosque at the Foundation of the Islamic Centre off Ramkhamhaeng Road. And he meets the Islamic people of Satun and Phang-Nga's Yao Noi Island.
He speaks to the Baha'is and Sikhs of the capital too.
Regardless of their circumstances, everyone has a unique story to share, in at least some aspects. The book amalgamates their tales with reviews of their restaurants - Cedar (Lebanese), Noor (Iranian) and others in Bangkok, A La Turca (Turkish) in Pattaya - and travelogues about the countries of origin.
Cole writes about Istanbul, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain and Ethiopia and visited the Muslims of Nepal. He also took time on a trip home to the US to interview a Palestinian, a Greek-Turkish couple of overlapping destinies, and Tarik Abdullah, raised in Idaho by an Egyptian Muslim father and Korean Christian mother. Abdullah once taught English in Bangkok.
Alas, Abdullah is like several other people in the book (and its author) who seem to have placed too much faith in Barack Obama. The president's rhetoric is quoted at length - and pointlessly in light of current events.
It is Cole's blessing and curse to see life through rose-tinted glasses. Optimism can be a noble shield at times, even a weapon in rare moments, but reality too often renders it powerless. Whereas optimism beautifully illuminated Cole's first book, the largely autobiographical "Destination: Asia", it serves the political aspect of "Arabesques" poorly.
I much prefer the first book, which was more about how an American "turned Siamese", as I put it in my 2008 review. In "Arabesques", Cole has turned the spotlight away from himself, and as compelling as his subjects' stories are, and as well told as they are, the "first person" is sorely missed.
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by
: Cole, Carleton
, Author
(read all my reviews) |
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14 May, 2011
Unveiling the world of Arabs in Thailand
Soul Searching by Imtiaz Muqbil
Bangkok Post
May 15, 2011
Unveiling the world of Arabs in Thailand
An American expat delves into the country's deep connections to the Middle East through an engaging and illuminating glimpse of the lives of Islamic expatriates in Bangkok
It's not often that American writers take to Arab/Islamic culture and write sympathetically about it. But a new book, Siamese Arabesques: Tales Of The Islamic World With Thai Twists, strives to do exactly that, painting a fascinating mosaic of the cultures and cuisines, trials and tribulations of people from all over the ... ... ... [+]
Soul Searching by Imtiaz Muqbil
Bangkok Post
May 15, 2011
Unveiling the world of Arabs in Thailand
An American expat delves into the country's deep connections to the Middle East through an engaging and illuminating glimpse of the lives of Islamic expatriates in Bangkok
It's not often that American writers take to Arab/Islamic culture and write sympathetically about it. But a new book, Siamese Arabesques: Tales Of The Islamic World With Thai Twists, strives to do exactly that, painting a fascinating mosaic of the cultures and cuisines, trials and tribulations of people from all over the Arab/Islamic world who now call Thailand home.
From Somali refugees to Iranian restaurateurs, Thai-Muslims from Pattani to farangs working for Palestinian freedom, Siamese Arabesques comprises a series of easy-to-read, human interest stories as told by Carleton Cole, who describes himself as an ''atypically quiet American who never really fit into US society''.
Such stories were waiting to be told. Bangkok abounds with numerous restaurants, carpet shops, places of worship and other such trappings of Arab/Islamic culture about which little is known and even less is understood.
Desperate to escape the monotony of America's first planned community, and confronted by the seriously limited employment options open to the holder of a liberal arts bachelor's degree, Cole says he set about transplanting himself to a country he had avidly read about.
''I came to Thailand thinking I would spend a year teaching English here in 1995, but wound up in the journalism field, found my wife Mai, bought a river-view Bangkok condo and ended up settling in the Land of Smiles for good. I have enjoyed writing about Asian culture – travel, features, restaurants, refugees, artisans, etc – in various local media for the last decade.''
His extensive travels throughout Asia included a seven-month stint working in Kathmandu for a few NGOs last year.
Says Cole: ''My love for East Asia over the years naturally expanded to South Asia and then to the Middle East. I found a lack of cultural articles on local angles on the Middle East in English-language Thai newspapers, so I felt the need to carve out a niche of my own, and over the years one story led to another. Before long I found that I had created enough for a full book of Bangkok- and Phuket-based Middle-Eastern vignettes.''
From the book's preface: ''Thai-Middle-Eastern links are varied and fascinating. Down through the centuries there has been cultural overlapping in politics, business, culture and cuisine, to name a few fields.
''The allure of the exotic Far East continues to fascinate Arabs and Middle Easterners today. What's more, while admiring Thai society, they have also contributed to it, leaving an indelible mark in selling products of all kinds, from Arabic perfume to Cambodian and Thai silk to Afghan jewellery.
''They continue to prepare delicious mezze dishes and kebabs and other dishes of their homelands, which are eagerly devoured by guests in Little Arabia on Bangkok's lower Sukhumvit Road.
''And today Thailand deserves a good reputation for providing Middle-Eastern refugees and economic migrants with a second start, helping them along in terms of granting work opportunities and a shot at UN recognition as refugee that can help them find resettlement in the West.
''Furthermore, despite the ongoing uprising in Thailand's three southernmost provinces, there are signs indicating where Buddhist Thais and Thai and Malay Muslims in the region can get along, make a living and live together peaceably.''
In coming across all the creative, lively, energetic and knowledegable people he writes about, Cole also developed an appreciation for Islam and scepticism about the stereotypes mainstream media spoon-feed their audiences about it.
His book, he said, ''is designed to help dispel the unhelpful, untrue stereotyping of Islam as a violent religion, which only exacerbates mistrust and ill feelings.
''If my native US could only see just how dangerous and destructive its grossly pro-Israel bias is, and take action to genuinely support Palestine, a lot of good could be done in terms of improving relations between the US and the Muslim world. In my book I try to suggest solutions and positivity in regard to these two key areas.''
Cole notes that ''the Middle East has been a hot issue over the last decade in general and last few months in particular. I write keeping in mind the commonalties between the Muslim world and the West, and how if we all reach out and strive to get to know and respect one another, the world will be a safer place.
''This book is written in the spirit that a clash of civilisations is hardly inevitable, and what's more that there can be greater reconciliation between all religions and races.''
The cast of characters is fascinating. Says the book's introduction: ''With its evocative music and muezzins' cries, to its curvaceous, dazzling architectural detail, hearty fare, world-leading scientific advances and proud tradition of hospitality born out of the harshness of the desert, in which if you don’t offer food to guests, they might not live, the Middle East has fascinated outsider – including the author – through the millennia.''
Read about Ali, a refugee who endured a forced tour of duty in the Iran-Iraq War, survived three years of imprisonment in his native Iraq, and ultimately escaped his country, to find himself adrift in Bangkok with nowhere to go.
There's Sharif Liban Suleiman, who was released in late 2009 from Bangkok's Immigration Detention Centre after a two-year incarceration there. Fluent in Arabic and English as well as his native Somali, he was looking for work at the time of writing, possibly helping Arab medical tourists with translation.
Master tea artisan Yim Wongwai, a Muslim native of Pattani province, was interviewed while displaying his special skills at a festival in Phuket that focuses on products from southern Thailand.
One essay tells the story of the Lebanese Cedar restaurant, whose owner, Rafic Salhany, assumed proprietorship from his father Xavier in the early 1990s.
The first, and only real, Iranian restaurant in Thailand, Noor (Arabic for light), is run by Mohammed Hossein Abdollahi, an affable Teheran native, who first came to Thailand in the early 1990s. He describes the concept behind the restaurant's name: ''Light is what somebody in the darkness needs when they don't know where to go.''
Few who are familiar with Arab/Islamic culture can disassociate themselves from the Palestinian cause.
In Thailand, Cole interviews two farangs who are trying to raise awareness of this cause.
''Nowhere in the world over the last sixty years has there been so much continual suffering,'' the book quotes Sune Larsson, a former member of the Green Party in Sweden and the secretary of the Palestinian Solidarity Campaign (PSC) Thailand. ''We want to bring about awareness of this in Thailand.''
Adds PSC Thailand chairman Stuart Ward: ''Why start a group? Because there wasn't one here. I want to help Palestine.'' There are no visuals in the entire book but Cole’s relaxed, uncluttered and jargon-free prose more than makes up for it. Even Americans may benefit from discovering some fascinating facets of Islamic/Arab culture and traditions right here in Thailand itself.
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by
: Carleton C.
from Bangkok , TH
(read all my reviews) |
21 Apr, 2011
A good read
“Carleton Cole has immersed himself in a little-known pocket of Bangkok: the Arab expatriate community of political refugees, rug and spice merchants, art gallery curators, restaurant owners and medical tourists. He delves further into the centuries-old communities of Thai Muslim citizens born in Bangkok and the peninsular South. Finally, he takes off and explores the Middle East and North Africa. His endless curiously and gimlet eye for description make this an instant classic in travel writing.” – James Eckardt, Phuket Gazette and author of several books on Thailand
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by
: Carleton C.
from Bangkok , TH
(read all my reviews) |
21 Apr, 2011
praise for Siamese Arabesques
“Cole weaves an intricate carpet of prose that illustrates how Muslims from the Middle East and North Africa integrate with far-flung nationalities. Always finding the human quotient among the statistics and the history, he begins with individuals who visit Thailand or make it their permanent home, and roams from there as far as Kashmir and Morocco to discover more.” – Paul Dorsey, The Nation (Thailand)
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