A Few Things We Did Not Hate In Jakarta
January 14, 2013 in Asia, Indonesia, Travelogue
Seven hours and counting left in Jakarta.
I love it no more upon exit than I did upon arrival. It’s been a four day marathon, testing our travel zen, and the first place we’ve ever been that we truly could not find a way to like. Perhaps if we stayed longer… no thanks.
It’s been funny, the Jakarta horror stories have poured in, from people who’ve literally had fecal matter rain down on them, to missionaries who spent 7 years hating it here. That, I truly cannot imagine. The only person to report liking it slept on a bench at the airport because she’d heard it wasn’t worth taking a cab into the city to spend even one night. She reported a spectacular sunrise and an evening spent drinking with the airport staff.
That being said, there were a few things we didn’t hate.
We saw a cool bridge
It was built in the 17th century by the Dutch colonists. We discussed the physics of old school lift bridges. Of course the canal that it spans, part of the crumbling district of Old East Amsterdam, is clogged with refuse and fetid with things we’d rather not contemplate over our cup of tea. “I think they’re not maintaining the old quarters with quite the eye for detail that the Dutch have,” I quipped to Tony. “Indeed,” he smirked, stepping over a dead rat.
The National Museum was pretty good
Of course it was closed on Friday when we first attempted a visit. You’d think after all the time we’ve spent in the Muslim world we’d get a clue that Friday is mosque day. We’re slow learners.
- We got to see the remains of Java Man, that was pretty fantastic.
- We were overwhelmed by the art and detail in the gold work of the old kingdoms
- I studied the Indonesian shadow puppets that I spent a semester reading about and painstakingly reproducing in university with great interest
- The boys thought a double necklace of human teeth was pretty cool
- Hannah photographed a ton of beautiful instruments
- We ate crappy foam cups of noodles for lunch in the canteen
- The children got to hang with a hundred or so of their closest Indonesian school children friends and be photographed like Museum Exhibit A: Traveling Western Children Abroad
- We were interviewed by high school English students
We enjoyed the National Museum. If you come to Jakarta, you should go. Its best features: It’s clean, quiet and no one is smoking.
Have I mentioned the smoking?
You don’t really appreciate what the no smoking laws have done until you’re dropped back into the equivalent of 1965 and you find yourself coughing, choking, and gasping for breath. Of course the smoke has nothing on the other forms of pollution, but I’m not enjoying it, nonetheless.
If you know us at all, you already know that we detest malls. Our reasons for this are many, and I won’t go into it, but suffice to say that we are not “shoppers” at heart and we hate the cathedrals built to that pursuit as a religious experience. So when I tell you that our favourite thing in Jakarta, the place that we have fled to for respite, is a mall, you will have some sense of the depth of our discontent in this city.
I almost feel guilty about the fact that I dislike it here so much that escapism is a reasonable course of action. We’ve forced ourselves to “get out there” and “experience” Jakarta. I’ve, with my most optimistic force, set out each morning to find something I like here… to no avail.
I’m not saying I like the mall… I just don’t dislike it with the same intensity that I do the rest of the city. How’s that for sad commentary?
And so, we’re packed and prepared to move on.
Sulawesi, here we come; with Jakarta as a backdrop, we’re sure to love it!
I’ve got to say that if you guys have a hard time…wow. I’d like to see one of the kids try an objective analisys of what was so difficult for you guys. Ive had a experence of needing to “bug out” but never in somthing the scale of an entire city/region. Honestlety I’m interested to know more, maybe it is the watching a car wreck effect i dont know.
We will be praying for your safe travels a little more than usual. Off to work i go, have a safe trip.
Carl
Maybe you’ll look back fondly at it someday? Who am I kidding?! Scrape off your sandals and get a move on! Happy travels, my friend!
Thanks Carl… I don’t know if objective analysis is possible… so much of an experience in a place is subjective… perhaps one of them will blog about it… I’ll make the suggestion!
Wow Jen, you really should stop holding back what you say. 🙂 My favourite part would be “The double necklace of human teeth”.
Seriously, i had no idea Jakarta was that miserable. what is your second most hated place?
Oh, I’ve heard miserable things about Jakarta. Thanks for putting it like it is. I’ve never actually spent any time there but I’ve wondered if I’d do a few days just for the experience. The most miserable places are often the times we remember as the best stories. Lots of rats! Good stories. I hope your hotel was nice, at least?
May it get better going forward. Probably still smoky, but better.
Crazy!
Puffer… the hotel was terrible. We had to change rooms once, smoking is allowed everywhere so it was FILLED with smoke. Ack. Sulawesi is better so far!
Annie… I don’t know know if we have anywhere else we haven’t been able to find something to really like about. I’m not a huge fan of Guatemala City, but that’s only because I get a massive migraine from the smog. Not a giant fan of Belize City either… but neither hold a candle to how we feel about Jakarta! The double necklace of human teeth was definitely a highlight! 🙂
I found your blog by Googling ‘I hate Jakarta’…
I have spent two years of my life here (I’m from New Zealand but have been living abroad for a number of years), and have never detested a place so much. After a week of floods, overwork by my disorganised (international) company, hours stuck in traffic (in a taxi), health issues, serious apartment problems (structural) and a $200 a month electricity bill (I haven’t even been at home!), I am finding great solace in the fact that I’m not the only one to think that this place is hell on Earth! Hope the rest of your journey is amazing.
Kelly… I’m LAUGHING!!! I felt terrible for not finding SOMETHING I could like!! I’m SO GLAD that you found our blog and found some solidarity here!! I hope you’ll stay and travel with us a while!!