Tourism Recreation Research Pilgrimage and Prostitution
Transcription
Tourism Recreation Research Pilgrimage and Prostitution
This article was downloaded by: [Thammasat University Libraries] On: 04 August 2015, At: 01:32 Publisher: Routledge Informa Ltd Registered in England and Wales Registered Number: 1072954 Registered office: 5 Howick Place, London, SW1P 1WG Tourism Recreation Research Publication details, including instructions for authors and subscription information: http://www.tandfonline.com/loi/rtrr20 Pilgrimage and Prostitution: Contrasting Modes of Border Tourism in Lower South Thailand a Marc Askew Associate Professor and Chair & Erik Cohen George Wise Professor of Sociology Emeritus b a International Studies Program, School of Social Sciences, Victoria University, P.O. Box 14428 Melbourne City, MC 8001, Victoria, Australia; e-mail: b Department of Sociology, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Mount Scopus, Israel 91905; e-mail: Published online: 12 Jan 2015. To cite this article: Marc Askew Associate Professor and Chair & Erik Cohen George Wise Professor of Sociology Emeritus (2004) Pilgrimage and Prostitution: Contrasting Modes of Border Tourism in Lower South Thailand, Tourism Recreation Research, 29:2, 89-104, DOI: 10.1080/02508281.2004.11081447 To link to this article: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02508281.2004.11081447 PLEASE SCROLL DOWN FOR ARTICLE Taylor & Francis makes every effort to ensure the accuracy of all the information (the “Content”) contained in the publications on our platform. However, Taylor & Francis, our agents, and our licensors make no representations or warranties whatsoever as to the accuracy, completeness, or suitability for any purpose of the Content. Any opinions and views expressed in this publication are the opinions and views of the authors, and are not the views of or endorsed by Taylor & Francis. 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Terms & Conditions of access and use can be found at http://www.tandfonline.com/page/termsand-conditions TOURISM RECREATION RESEARCH VOL. 29(2), 2004: 89-104 Pilgrimage and Prostitution: Contrasting Modes of Border Tourism in Lower South Thailand Downloaded by [Thammasat University Libraries] at 01:32 04 August 2015 MARC ASKEW and ERIK COHEN In this article we argue that 'Border Tourism' -intensive patterns of tourist visitation between adjoining countriesrequires more systematic attention by scholars as an important sociological, anthropological and spatial phenomenon. Border Tourism and the often marginal spaces where it emerges exhibit some distinctive features: notably the juxtaposition of illicit and liminal activities sustained by multiple motivations among visitors. This paper discusses Lower Southern Thailand and the tourist-oriented border landscape which has emerged largely as a product of intensive short-term visitation among Malaysians and Singaporeans since the 1970s. We discuss two contrasting forms of tourism occurring simultaneously across this frontier; sex-tourism and pilgrimage (or religious tourism). We investigate a number of key religious and entertainment sites and discuss how tourists engage with these sites and their workforces, in particular the Thai sex workers in the border towns and the main tourist hub city of Hat Yai. The Lower South Thailand border zone comprises dynamic spaces and sites shaped by the interactions between a range of groups, including local inhabitants, a Thai tourist-orientated workforce (largely with origins outside the south) as well as tourists/sojourners. The relationship of Malaysian and Singaporean tourist/sojourners with the border zone is informed by a familiarity borne of proximity and cultural affinity as well as a difference marked by the contrasts between the moral/legal regimes of their own countries and that of Thailand. The multi-dimensional character and role of the Lower South Thailand border zone therefore ensures its continued importance as an interstitial space for visitation and identification. Keywords: border, sex, pilgrimage, prostitution, Thailand, Singapore. Introduction The literature on tourism distinguishes commonly between international tourism- which attracts the principal research attention- and domestic tourism (Chadwick 1994: 66; Hall and Page 1999: 58-65). However, this disregards an important sub-category of international tourism which, owing to its volume and distinctive characteristics, is worthy of separate consideration- this is tourist visits across borders of adjoining countries. We argue that this 'Border Tourism' should be given systematic attention by scholars as an important sociological, anthropological and spatial phenomenon, one which displays complex and distinctive characteristics. As tourists move overland from one modern western country to another, they cross international borders. In the vast majority of cases such crossings involve mere formalities (passport control, security checks and customs inspections) which are activities of little sociological interest for the student of tourism, except as more-or-less malleable impediments to the free flow of tourists (Matznetter 1979; B5r5cz 1996). But borders are more than just a formalized line separating one country from another. The areas adjoining borders, the 'boundary zones' tend to be marked by some distinctive characteristics that distinguish them from the more central zones of their respective countries - they tend to be geographically as well as socially peripheral (Prescott 1965:17). While this is less apparent in the contemporary West, it is still often the case in developing countries. In the social science disciplines - particularly among geographers and, to some extent, anthropologiststhe study of borders between states and of their respective border' zones' has become increasingly prominent; the issues range from drugs, human trafficking and labour migration to the redefinition of economic spaces through global capitalism. A growing attention is also given to the importance of cross-border interactions among contiguous ethnic and religious communities (Donnan and Wilson 1994; MARC ASKEW is Associate Professor and Chair, International Studies Program, School of Social Sciences, Victoria University, P.O. Box 14428 Melbourne City, MC 8001, Victoria, Australia; e-mail: [email protected] ERIK COHEN is George Wise Professor of Sociology Emeritus, Department of Sociology, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Mount Scopus, Israel 91905; e-mail: [email protected] ©2004 Tourism Recreation Research Pilgrimage and Prostitution: M. Askew & E. Cohen Downloaded by [Thammasat University Libraries] at 01:32 04 August 2015 Feingold 2000; Grundy-Warr et al., 1999). Further, among scholars in cultural and postcolonial studies, a so-called 'Border Theory' has developed around the key notion that political borders are not simply physical boundaries but metaphors for identity and state power. 'Border-crossing' has been defined as a 'transgressive' practice of minorities and diasporas who affirm identity by contesting nation-state boundaries that are at once both physical and ideological (Dube 1999; Kalra and Prewal1999). The cultural 'hybridity' of borderlands has also been a prominent theme, notably in studies of the U.S.-Mexico border (e.g. Canclini 1995: 207263). Students of tourism have also acknowledged the significance of cross-border movements, particularly between Canada and the USA, and the USA and Mexico, and increasingly, in Asia. Some attention has been given to the role of international frontiers as tourist attractions and landscapes (e.g. Timothy 1995; Paasi and Raevo 1998). But, though aware of the considerable number of short-term crossborder excursionists, both in the West and in Asia, researchers have paid relatively little attention to the distinguishing sociological characteristics of this phenomenon of border tourism. Rather, such studies focus primarily on researching shopping or barter activities across borders (e.g. Timothy 1999; Zhao 1994). Despite the proliferation of studies of borderlands, the economic and cross-cultural patterns associated with tourism across borders have not been fully conceptualized or researched as a distinctive mode of travel, interaction and experience. These patterns are even more rarely studied in relation to the evolution and character of emerging border sub-regional tourist systems in Asia, where cross-border tourism is becoming increasingly prominent, most conspicuously seen in the recent surge in cross-border tourism between China and Russia, China and Myanmar, and China and Vietnam (Zhao 1994). Within the Southeast Asian region one can identify numerous sites of border-crossing for tourism. It often involves typical kinds of activities such as shopping, entertainment, dining, but also gambling and the use of sexual services. For example, on the Thai border zone of the Thai-Cambodian frontier are places where market goods such as cheap clothing are sold to visiting Cambodians, while cheap commercial sex and gambling are available to Thai nationals in the Cambodian border zone. These border zones are often characterized by an infrastructure based on illicit activities; but their ambiguous, marginal character makes them, paradoxically, convenient spaces for the location of sanctuaries, Turnerian 'centres out there' (Turner 1973), attracting pilgrimages from within and outside the countries' borders. 90 This article discusses Lower Southern Thailand and the border landscape which has emerged largely as a product of border tourism. Border-crossing by Malaysian and Singaporean tourists into Thailand might be described as a practice which is simultaneously: transgressive (crossing into a permissive space from a home environment where certain practices, particularly sexual, are very expensive, less easily accessible, forbidden or not socially sanctioned), affirming (that is, symbolizing a unity of belief among certain groups through pilgrimage practice) and materialistic (based on the consumption of cheap consumer goods). This heterogeneity of motivations and activities and the tourist system and space which has been shaped around them forms the key phenomenon for exploration in this article. Border Zones of Thailand From a macro-sociological perspective, border zones are often, particularly in developing countries, areas of lessened (and sometimes contested) control by the central authorities; they are characteristically inhabited by ethnic or religious groups who do not belong to the national majority. This is particularly the case in mainland Southeast Asian countries, such as Thailand, due to their historical transformation from loosely-bounded empires with indeterminate frontiers based on vassal-overlord relationships, to modern nation states with demarcated boundaries. In Thailand it is noticeable that almost all its boundary zones are inhabited by ethnic groups which do not belong to the Thai majority: Shan along the north-western borders; numerous hill tribes in the north; Khmer along the southern edge of the northeast (itself composed of people of predominantly Lao origin), Muslim Malays and Chinese in the south. In the last instance, a reciprocal situation is found in neighbouring Malaysia, where its northern border area is inhabited by a Thai minority (Golomb 1978). The southern border zone of Thailand is marked by a considerable interstitiality: thus, while the formal boundary with Malaysia is on the whole clearly defined and recognized, the border zone is in many places a fuzzy inbetween area, in some cases virtually resembling a Malaysian cultural salient in Thailand. This is particularly the case in the area on which our study focused- the border zone around the road crossing the boundary between Thailand and Malaysia, located in the district of Sadao in Songkhla province. It is topnymically expressed in the name of the village adjoining the border: it is popularly known as Ban Darn Nork, meaning the' outer village' (itself an indication of its marginality); but it is officially called 'Thai Chang Lon', which echoes the name of the nearest township on the Malaysian side of the border (Chang Lon). Although the latter name suggests that it is identified as an extension of Tourism Recreation Research Vol. 29, No. 2, 2004 Pilgrimage and Prostitution: M. Askew & E. Cohen Downloaded by [Thammasat University Libraries] at 01:32 04 August 2015 the Malaysian town, that name is in fact Thai in origin (Chang derived from Chiang, meaning township). This itself is a legacy of the mixed ethnic settlement patterns on the ThaiMalay peninsula which pre-dated the drawing of modern national boundaries (based on the Anglo-Thai Treaty of 1909, for which see Tej 1977: 162). Border zones are often areas of intensive cross-border trading; indeed much of cross-border tourism in the west consists of shopping excursions. However, owing to their fuzzy character and often limited control by the centre, border zones are also frequently marked by a variety of illicit activities, such as smuggling, contraband trade, gambling and prostitution, some of which, especially the last-named, may become significant attractions for cross-border tourism. Indeed, gambling is the principal attraction for the intensive cross-border business between Thailand and its neighbours, Burma and Cambodia (Gilley 2001). Less common and less noticed is that border zones, owing to their peripherat interstitial character constitute virtually ideal liminal locations for 'centres out there' (Turner 1973), namely for cross-border religious pilgrimages. This is indeed the case on the Thai side of the Thai-Malaysian border. Though other kinds of activities, such as shopping, are also prominent on this border, we have selected the contrasting themes of prostitution and pilgrimage to examine the variegated nature of tourism in the border zone. While essentially an extended case-study, we hope to extract from our discussion some ideas regarding the more general features of this neglected form of tourism. The Lower South Thailand Border Tourism Zone Lower South Thailand is distinctive as a region by virtue of the ethnic and religious characteristics of its population, its settlement patterns and its history as a region peripheral to the state centre. In different ways, these features have helped to shape the border tourist space that has evolved here over the past thirty years. Most conspicuously, the majority populations of four of the five provinces adjoining the border are Muslim Malay agriculturalists and small-scale rubber producers. Thai-Buddhists and Sino-Thais predominate in Songkhla province, historically the core of the Thai presence in the extreme south. Thai agricultural settlement also extends across Yala province and south into the Kedah area of today' s Malaysia, but these Thai-Buddhists remain a minority in an overwhelmingly Muslim agricultural landscape. The conspicuous presence of the Chinese in the Lower South has a long history, both on the western and the eastern coasts of the peninsula. The Chinese have historically been associated with tin production, rubber production and trade (Donner 1978: 471). Tourism Recreation Research Vol. 29, No. 2, 2004 Two prevalent spatia-cultural features have shaped the nature of the border tourist space in lower southern Thailand. First, the Chinese and Muslim communities in the Lower South have historically maintained a cultural orientation beyond the inscribed borders of the Thai nation state. This is most obvious among the Muslim communities, whose cultural and religious territory historically extended across the peninsula as well as southwards from Pattani to Kelantan. But also among the Chinese- and most obvious among the Hokkien speech group - there has long been an orientation towards centres of population and trade in Malaysia, such as Penang. These affinities and networks of trade, kinship and religion were never ruptured by the official national frontiers which emerged in the early twentieth century. Thus, for the two most significant ethnic groups of Lower South Thailand, the space of 'Thailand' is only a portion of a cultural region which straddles modern state boundaries. The second feature is the overwhelmingly Chinese character of the Lower South's urban settlements. These urban settlements can be fairly described as ethnic Chinese and Sino-Thai 'enclaves' within a predominantly Muslim cultural area (Cornish 1997). And it is these enclaves, especially the city of Hat Yai, that developed as the principal destinations and communications hubs in an evolving border tourist system. Paradoxically, it was during the 1960s, a period associated with communist insurgency and separatist violence on the Thai-Malaysian border, that tourism began to expand in the Lower South. Visits of Malaysians across the Thai border were notable from the early 1960s onwards, when they formed the second-largest national group among all tourists to Thailand -their numbers were second only to American visitors, who dominated the country's tourist profile at that time. From a total of 40,349 in 1964, the number of Malaysians entering Thailand rose by 1973 to 190,000, making them in that year the largest single tourist group (representing 18 per cent of all tourists). With the exception of only a few years, Malaysians have maintained this dominance until the late 1990s, when the Japanese overtook them (Economist Intelligence Unit 1974, 1988; TAT 1990, 2000). The distinctive characteristics of Malaysian (as well as Singaporean) tourism into the Lower South were already clear from statistics from the early 1970s: this tourism was marked by short stays and only limited movement beyond the border provinces. Another distinctive feature of this crossborder tourism was that most visitors used overland routes, whether by rail, bus, or private car, unlike the other international tourists pouring into Thailand at this time who arrived by air (Economist Intelligence Unit 1974, 1988). Border tourism from Malaysia, and increasingly from Singapore, was able to flourish because it was centred on 91 Downloaded by [Thammasat University Libraries] at 01:32 04 August 2015 Pilgrimage and Prostitution: M. Askew & E. Cohen the Sino-Thai urban enclaves, not the insecure countryside where communist and separatist camps were located. Above all, it was Hat Yai which attracted tourists. Hat Yai's importance in the Lower South had been based on its function as a marketing centre for rubber (Songkhla province is the largest rubber producing province in Thailand) and as a railway and communications junction linking cross-border trade (at both Sungai Kolok and Pedang-Besar) (Donner 1978: 484-485). Although the city of Songkhla is the governing seat of the province, Hat Yai is the regional centre of commerce and trade, and all the national development plans (implemented since 1960) have favoured this centre in the domains of higher education and communications (e.g., Sternstein 1976: 122). In 1972 the Thai government transferred the site of the south's major domestic airport from Songkhla to Hat Yai and upgraded it to the status of an international airport shortly thereafter. Largely due to the expansion of tourism from the early 1970s, Hat Yai's services sector increasingly diversified, making parts of its economy largely independent of its agricultural hinterland and intimately linking its fortunes to Malaysian tourist flows and the Malaysian economy itself (Wells 1973). Tourism was conspicuously focused on the towns. In the first major study of tourism in the border region, it was reported that Malaysian and Singaporean tourists showed little interest in travelling beyond the Hat Yai city limits: they focused instead on 'night life', shopping and eating at the city's restaurants (TOT 1977: 19). The tourist sector which has developed over the past thirty years in the Lower South is critical to its economy, bringing an estimated income of 19 billion baht from 2.2 million visitors, particularly to the region's main city of Hat Yai (Bangkok Bank 1990). In the 1990s and into the 21st century, tourism in the Lower South has maintained its focus on Hat Yai and the border towns of Sungai Kolok and Betong (TAT 2000: 21) The final removal of the communist threat in 1987 and the palpable decline of separatist terrorism opened the hinterland to development; however, this did not substantially re-orientate the largely urban focus of tourist activities and infrastructure. For example, Hat Yai holds approximately 90 per cent of the lower south's 8,000 hotel rooms (Mings and Sommart 1994: 27). The bulk of the remaining tourist accommodation is distributed between Betong, Sungai Kolok, and the new burgeoning tourist-based settlement called Ban Darn Nork, at the Kedah-Songkhla border-crossing. To an extent, one can say that the countryside has also been opened to tourism. A variety of sites have been promoted by the Tourist Authority of Thailand (TAT) and private tour agencies: these include temples, waterfalls and other attractions, such as the communist tunnels near Betong, and an ethnographic 92 museum and handicraft centre on Koh Yo island in Songkhla province (Tammasak 1982: 120-121). Visits to temples and shrines have become a key part of many Malaysian and Singaporean tourist destinations in the Lower South. However, the touristic development of the countryside in the Lower South contrasts with that in other parts of Thailand, such as the North and the Middle-South. In the Middle-South, coastal areas and islands such as Phuket and Koh Samui have become the sites of resort vacationing and allied recreational activities, such as scuba diving, sailing and trekking. In the Lower South, by contrast, the key foci of tourist consumption are the urban places, with rural destinations serving merely for day-trips. In the Lower South the TAT as well as local groups representing the tourist industry (including the Hat Yai Municipality and the Tourism Federation of Hat Yai) have actively sought to expand the tourist base by promoting the Lower South as a tourist destination in Taiwan and elsewhere; but Malaysians and Singaporeans still dominate overwhelmingly the tourist profile of the region, among arrivals by land as well as by air (Immigration Bureau, Police Department 2000; Patsara 2002; TAT 1990: 18, 32). Despite government programmes aiming to integrate Thailand's tourist regions (including airport expansion and major highway upgrading), the Lower South seems still to constitute a regional sub-system of its own, driven by distinctive patterns of movement and motivation among Malaysian and Singaporean visitors to the area. It should be noted that no reciprocal tourist sub-system developed in the Malaysian border zone, on the other side of the border. The dominant activities characterizing international tourism in Thailand - and foreign tourist motivations generally- do not fully apply to the Lower South. Malaysian and Singaporean tourism is focused not on visiting natural attractions or vacationing, but on three central activities: shopping and dining; visiting temple and shrine sites; and the use of sexual services. These orientations may be summarized as: 'consumption', 'blessing' and 'catharsis' respectively. Certainly such touristic activities are also found in other parts of Thailand; however, in the Lower South this particularly intensive cluster of activities has shaped a distinctive border space, distribution of activities and division of labour.1 The particular motivations and practices of Malaysians and Singaporeans require exploration, since in some fundamental ways they contrast with motivations and practices attributed to western tourism to Asia. Western theorizing on tourist motivations and media representations stress the orientalizing process by which the exotic' other' the people, landscape, and women's sexuality- is apparently constructed. Due to the privileging of Western tourism in scholarship (including sex tourism), Western models of the Tourism Recreation Research Vol. 29, No. 2, 2004 Pilgrimage and Prostitution: M. Askew & E. Cohen Downloaded by [Thammasat University Libraries] at 01:32 04 August 2015 tourist practice continue to dominate the literature. However, studies of Japanese tourist practices suggest that Asian tourist behaviour has some distinctive characteristics, in particular a concern with sites and sacred places of their own cultural background (e.g., Graburn 1983; Reader 1987; Cohen 2001). The common Western-centred themes of cultural/ ideological difference and the attraction of the exotic 'other' might be questioned, or at least refined considerably in the case of Malaysian-Singaporean tourist motivation and practice in the Thai borderlands. For example, for the many tourists of Chinese origin among the Malaysians and Singaporeans there is in fact much that is familiar in the places they visit. The urban-market enclaves which they patronize are overwhelmingly Chinese in their character and populations. So too, many of the shrines and religious monuments frequented by these tourists are identified in terms of recognizable Chinese symbols and meanings. There exists, of course, a set of' differences' which help to generate such a large scale of tourist visits across Thailand's southern border line. But these are not cultural, as in the case of Western tourism - they are fundamentally economic, legalpolitical and social. The economic differences are obvious: goods and services are relatively cheap to buy in Thailand because of the differentials in prices which favour Malaysians and Singaporeans and enhance their purchasing power in Thailand. This is enhanced further by the advantage of Thailand's proximity and the ease of travel, particularly when tourists have limited time. Differences in legal-political and social conditions prevailing in Thailand, compared to those in Malaysia and Singapore, are critical factors underlying the continued flow of tourism into Thailand and help to explain the predominant forms it takes, namely sex-oriented tourism and pilgrimage. In Malaysia the rigorous enforcement of legal sanctions against the sex industry and the application of the strict shariah law in some states contrasts strikingly with the openness and ease of access to sex workers in Thailand across the border. In Singapore access to sex workers is easier, but restrictive both because of high prices and the limited size of the trade. Thus, many Singaporean men travel outside their country's borders to access services of prostitutes. The closest border-crossing for Singaporeans is northwards across the causeway to the Malaysian state of Johor Bahru, where Malaysian, Thai, Filipino and Indonesian prostitutes work in brothels thinly disguised as karaoke lounges or massage parlours. The sex trade in Johor is subject to continual police surveillance, and while many Thai women travel there clandestinely (with the aid of Malaysian underground syndicates) to engage in sex work, they are frequently arrested and bars are often closed by the authorities (Nagaraj and Yahya 1998). Large numbers of Singaporean men in search Tourism Recreation Research Vol. 29, No. 2, 2004 of pleasure prefer to travel instead to the nearby Indonesian islands of Batam and Bintan (Brazil1997: 77-78; GrundyWarr and Perry 2001). Despite the growth of the nearby Indonesian island resorts, however, Hat Yai and the Thai border towns remain popular with Singaporeans. The mix of' familiarity' and' difference' encountered in these sites by border tourists is explored further below. Pilgrimage Along the Thai-Malaysian Border Zone Turner's (1973) seminal article on the 'Centre Out There' as the 'Pilgrim's Goal', proposed an important theoretical notion regarding the linkage between pilgrimage and the constitution of religious space. For, according to Turner, the 'ex-centric' location of the sacred pilgrimage centre outside quotidian, profane social space, removes it from the normal divisions and differentiations of society; being located in a liminal unstructured space, it is conducive to the emergence of communitas, an undifferentiated brotherhood between the pilgrims. While Turner's model of the pilgrimage may not hold for all pilgrimage centres, it appears to be most appropriate for small, popular centres, secondary to the major, more formalized centres of world religions (Cohen 1992). Boundary zones offer attractive locations for such centres, owing to their peripheral and interstitial characteristics mentioned above - the very same ones which facilitate the proliferation of vice in those zones. In Thailand, the most eminent and well-known of such 'centres out there' is the sanctuary of That Phanom (Pruess 1976) in Nakhon Phanom province. Like some less important Buddhist sanctuaries along the Mekong river, which marks the Thai-Laotian border, the That Phanom sanctuary is located on Thai soil, but oriented to the Laotian side of the border, from where most pilgrims appear to have emanated in the past. The Thai-Malaysian boundary zone differs in one important respect from the Thai-Laotian one: in the latter case, the boundary separates two countries with the same dominant religion: Theravada Buddhism; whereas in the former case, the boundary divides Buddhist Thailand from Moslem Malaysia. The difference is significant, in that Thailand offers to non-Muslim Malaysians (and Singaporeans) opportunities for worship and other religious activities, which are hard to realize to the same extent in Malaysia and, for other, non-religious reasons, even in Singapore (Cohen 2001). Indeed, Malaysians and Singaporeans of Chinese origin often perceive Thailand as a substitute Chinese homeland. 93 Pilgrimage and Prostitution: M. Askew & E. Cohen Downloaded by [Thammasat University Libraries] at 01:32 04 August 2015 On the Thai side of the Thai-Malaysian border are located several temples and sanctuaries popular with visitors of Chinese background from neighbouring states, as well as with Sino-Thai and Thai inhabitants of Thailand. The historical background and religious orientation of these sites is heterogeneous - some are relatively old, whereas others have been established only in the last decade of the twentieth century, with an eye to provide additional attractions to border tourists; most tend to Mahayanist Buddhism combined to varying degrees with elements of Chinese folk religion. We have chosen four of the major boundary zone sanctuaries for more detailed description. Lim Kor Niew Shrine in Pattani This is the oldest and most important of the four sites. According to a legend (which iconically expresses the tensions between the Muslim Malays and the immigrant Chinese in the Lower South), about 400 years ago a Chinese woman from the province of Fujien, Lim Kor Niew, came to the city of Pattani, at the time the capital of a Muslim sultanate by the same name, in search of her brother who had settled there. Unknown to her, the brother had converted to Islam, married a woman related to the royal family of Pattani, and been given the task of building the mosque of Kerisit (unfinished up to the present) a few kilometres outside Pattani city. The shocked sister committed suicide by hanging herself near the mosque. Her brother subsequently built a Chinese shrine for her at a site adjoining the mosque. Her spirit, inhabiting the shrine, was said to show miracles to seafarers and other travellers. As her fame grew, her shrine became a pilgrimage site. However, since at the time her shrine was- despite the short distance from the city- still difficult to approach, the leader of the Pattani Chinese community decided to enshrine her spirit in a sanctuary in the city itself; over time this became a major Chinese temple, with Lim Kor Niew, who has by now become a goddess, the presiding deity. A festival in her honor is celebrated yearly a few weeks after the Chinese New Year (Vipasai 2002); but throughout the year, the temple, as well as the shrine at the Kerisit mosque, are popular with Chinese cross-border visitors. An aberrant indication of its importance is the fact that in October 2002, the temple became the target of a fundamentalist Muslim attack, together with the principal Thai Buddhist temple in Pattani, Wat Chang Hai. Wat Khao Ruup Chang in Padang Besar Sub-district of Songkhla Province Though of recent origin, this temple best exemplifies Turner's concept of the' centre out there' in the border zone. Located in a mountain cave in a remote forest, far from human settlements, it is just a few kilometres away from the Thai94 Malaysian border. Its foundation story confirms its liminal, interstitial nature. It was established in 1969 by an ascetic monk, Meng San, who was born in China and lived in Singapore. He was first ordained in the Mahayanist Buddhist monkhood, and later, during a visit to Thailand in 1968, in the Thai Theravada order. Meng San retreated, in the company of a Thai monk, to a big cave, in what at the time was a jungle inhabited by wild animals. There he experienced a vision of the goddess Kuan Yin and of Amitabha Buddha, and decided to build their images in the cave. Wat Khao Ruup Chang emerged around the image of Kuan Yin, and expanded into the many other halls of the cave and, more recently, into the flat land in front of it (Pravat 1995). Like many other recently established sanctuaries, Wat Khao Ruup Chang is basically syncretistic. Though officially recognized as a Thai Buddhist temple, Mahayanistic influences predominate. Around the two principal images, images of other Bodhisatva and of various Mahayanistic deities were installed. In the area in front of the cave a huge Indian-style temple, syncretistically adorned by Chinesestyle columns, with dragons on top, is under construction. In 1986 a grand opening ceremony was held at the temple, in the presence of Thai, as well as Mahayanist monks from Malaysia and Singapore. In the same year, the Kuan Yin Bodhisatva Charity Society was founded, headed by Meng San himself, and managed by a Singaporean board. The Society makes annual donations to the needy in the region (Pravat 1995). The remoteness of the cave makes it a fascinating place to visit; hence it became a popular destination for Malaysians and Singaporeans of Chinese origin, as well as for SinoThais and Thais from as far away as Bangkok. The Kuan Yin image is the principal object of worship; but while eager to receive the goddess' blessing, some visitors appear to be as eager to get a winning lottery number (from among those scribbled on a Rusi image, as well as elsewhere) in the cave. In contrast to the two sanctuaries described above, which were - at least at the outset - remotely located, the next two are found within the city limits of Hat Yai, the hub of tourist traffic in the border zone. However, these sanctuaries also symbolically preserve the character of a 'centre out there' because they are not located in the city itself, but on the hills above the Hat Yai public park, in an uninhabited forested area overlooking the city. Thao Maha Prom (Brahma) Shrine This is a relatively recently established shrine, dedicated to the four-faced Hindu god of creation Brahma, whose image is established in the middle of a pavilion in a Tourism Recreation Research Vol. 29, No. 2, 2004 Downloaded by [Thammasat University Libraries] at 01:32 04 August 2015 Pilgrimage and Prostitution: M. Askew & E. Cohen square, fenced-of£ terrace, on which several trees were planted. The image is surrounded by large votive figures of elephants, contributed by cross-border Chinese devotees, whose names are inscribed on the elephants' backs. Along the fence of the terrace are lined-up rows of hundreds of smaller votive objects, also primarily elephant carvings. Though nominally a Hindu deity, the shrine is primarily visited by Malaysian and Singaporean Chinese, who refer to the image as the 'Four-faced Buddha', thus sinicizing it and incorporating it into Chinese folk religion. The image is worshipped in Chinese fashion, including the burning of joss-sticks and the lighting of strings of fire-crackers; the red pieces of cloth at the end of the strings are fastened or thrown upon the trees on the terrace and the numbers marked on them are taken as cues for playing the Chinese lottery. Some of the visitors pray devoutly before the image, while others were observed paying their respects perfunctorily or even playfully- reflectively making fun of their own devotional act. The Kuan Yin Shrine This is the most recent, and as yet unfinished, major sanctuary in the boundary zone, established by the Chinese business community of Hat Yai and the municipal authorities of the city, as a tribute to the Fifty Years Reign of the present King of Thailand, Rama IX. At the centre of the shrine complex is a tall image of Kuan Yin, surrounded by her assistant goddesses. The images are located on a big lotus flower, on top of a circular ball. Inside the hall are found images of various Chinese gods; in its middle, around the mighty column supporting the tall Kuan Yin image, are lined up rows of hundreds of small, gilded images of the deity. Nearby is a large souvenir shop, selling primarily porcelain images of Chinese deities and similar religious paraphernalia. On the top of the hill, far above the existing complex, a very tall standing Buddha image is under construction. This Kuan Yin shrine is probably the most popular and also the most commercialized- sanctuary in the border zone. A constant flow of Thai and cross-border visitors of Chinese ancestry passes through the place. The popularity of the shrine can also be gauged from the fact that a bus line, connecting it to the Thai port of Pakbora in Sadao provinceand from there to a boat to Penang in Malaysia- starts from here. Though many cross-border visitors worship at the four popular sanctuaries here described, not all of them should be seen as 'pilgrims' in a strict sense. Rather, as in the case of the visitors to the Chinese Vegetarian Festival in Phuket Tourism Recreation Research Vol. 29, No. 2, 2004 (Cohen 2001), here too considerable variation exists in the salience of their visits to the sanctuaries as against those to other attractions, and in the degree of their devotion. Many of the visitors arrive on brief, usually two-day weekend tours, often in multi-generational family groups. Their itineraries include, in addition to the sanctuaries, a variety of other attractions, such as visits to an ex-communist insurgents' tunnel complex and a Chinese dinner in Hat Yai. In particular, the two shrines conveniently located on the hills above Hat Yat are on the itinerary of many brief cross-border excursions to South Thailand. Many of the visitors to these shrines can be seen as 'religious tourists' (Cohen 1998) rather than pilgrims: they avail themselves of the occasion of their visit to the shrines to worship the gods -but they would not travel to South Thailand especially for a pilgrimage to these or any other sanctuaries. Though there are some tours devoted exclusively to such pilgrimages even staying overnight in temples rather than hotels - the great majority of cross-border visitors combine their visits to the shrines with various other activities- including, in some instances, the use of sexual services. Visitors to the sanctuaries commonly purchase ritual necessities or souvenirs at the site; some donate religious statuary or conveniences (such as benches) for visitors. Some devotees make more substantial donations for the construction, enlargement or embellishment of the sanctuaries. Pilgrimage and religious tourism thus play an important role in the sustenance and prosperity of the sanctuaries and indirectly in the local economy as a whole. Religious tourism appears to be an increasingly important constituent of boundary zone tourism in southern Thailand. While the earlier sanctuaries of Mae Lim Kor Niew and Wat Khao Ruup Chang were not founded expressly to attract tourists, the establishment of the newer ones above Hat Yai's public park were expressly intended to provide new attractions to tourists, within a general policy spearheaded by the TAT- to diversify tourism to the border zone and thus reduce the salience of sex tourism as its principal attraction. Paradoxically, however, there is a symbiotic relationship between sex tourism and the growth and prosperity of pilgrimage centres in the region. Urban centres such as Hat Yai and Betong have mainly prospered on sex tourism, whatever other attractions they might have had to offer to cross-border visitors. This form of tourism has enriched a class of local businessmen, who owned tourist-oriented establishments - not only sexspots, but also hotels, restaurants and entertainment centres. This business community contributed generously to religious establishments, either as an expression of gratitude and 95 Pilgrimage and Prostitution: M. Askew & E. Cohen appeal for further good luck, or as an attempt to improve the image of the locality and diversity of its attractions. The two shrines in Hat Yai as well as the Chinese temple with its conspicuous pagoda and the Buddhist temple with its big Buddha image in Betong, exemplify this link. 2 In turn, these religious establishments attract more tourist visits, whose contributions further their prosperity. Though prostitution and pilgrimage are contrasting forms of border tourism, they are nevertheless interdependent, and in fact reinforce each other. Downloaded by [Thammasat University Libraries] at 01:32 04 August 2015 Sex and the Tourist Border Zone A Permissive Space The sites of the Lower South's sex-entertainment sector constitute a permissive zone for thousands of Malaysian and Singaporean men to engage in forms of sexual and recreational behaviour with a freedom and abandon impossible in their own countries. Behavioral sanctions imposed by legal-religious regimes as well as social and economic constraints in Malaysia and Singapore were the subject of frequent complaints among the male tourists including those of Chinese and Indian ethnic background whom we encountered in the sex trade sites along the border. Thailand represented a brief escape from the daily round of life for these men. The cathartic nature of the experience essentially involving drinking, involvement with sex workers and often gambling- was succinctly expressed by one Indian Malaysian from Ipoh, who proclaimed: 'When we come to Thailand, we forget everything'. The centrality of the sex trade in the Lower South's tourist economy was noted in the early 1970s, particularly in connection with the region's main city of Hat Yai. In that decade Hat Yai' s tourism-based nightlife industry had already boomed, despite the fact that the countryside around Hat Yai was considered unsafe due to bandits and terrorists (Wells 1973). In 1977 a study conducted by the Tourism Organization of Thailand reported on the reliance of Hat Yai's tourism industry on male Malaysian tourists, who at that time represented 90 per cent of Malaysian visitors. In a breakdown of expenditures it was noted (simply as a matter of fact, without any disapproval) that an average of 40 per cent of each visitor's expenditure was devoted to nightlife activities, including payments to prostitutes (TOT 1977: 19). Over the past three decades, Hat Yai' s key role as a tourist 'nightlife' attraction to Malaysian and Singaporean men has often been remarked upon, with 'nightlife' (or the Thai equivalent term banthueng) used as a euphemism for sexrelated activities (Economist Intelligence Unit 1984: 14; Mings and Sommart 1994: 28-29). However, neither Hat Yai nor the southern border crossing points which host the sex trade have been subjected to a level of lurid journalistic exposure 96 equivalent to the exposure of the Western-oriented tourist sex zones of Patpong and Pattaya (for a brief mention see Hewison 1985). Nonetheless, the size and economic significance of the tourist-related sex trade in the Lower South are comparable to the centres of the Western-oriented sex industry in central Thailand. The gender ratio of tourists to the region provides one general background indicator of the continuing importance of sex-oriented tourism. Notably, two-thirds of Malaysian and Singaporean tourists entering the Lower South are male. Since the mid- 1970s the very high proportion of men (around 90 per cent) among these tourists to Thailand has declined, but it is notable that they still conspicuously outnumber women in tourist flows from these countries. In 1990, for example, men comprised respective} y 70 and 68 per cent of Malaysian and Singaporean visitors to Thailand. Although this percentage was lower than for males among Indian and Japanese tourists, it was higher than the percentages of men among the tourists from any western country (TAT 1990: 22-23). The southern border provinces share with Bangkok, the eastern seaboard (including Rayong and Pattaya) and the Phuket region of the central south the highest concentration of commercial sex workers in Thailand (Wathinee and Guest 1994: 34-35). But public references to the tourist-oriented sex trade on the border have, until recently, been largely muted. There are some obvious reasons for this. First, the type of night life in the key sex trade sites of the Lower South does not feature the conspicuous eroticism and public displays between sex-workers and clients that mark the Western-oriented sex districts of Bangkok, nor does the Lower South region attract Western tourists in search of sex; thus the Western media are not attracted to it. Second, public comments by Malaysian and Singaporean governments on sex-oriented tourism in Thailand's Lower South have been generally muted because of a reluctance to openly expose the popularity of the practice among tens of thousands of their menfolk. The most explicit public acknowledgement of Malaysian sex tourism occurred in May 2000 when Prime Minister Mahathir openly warned Malaysian men of the dangers of contracting AIDS by patronizing Thai prostitutes in Hat Yai and Songkhla (Deutche Presse-Agentur 2000). The Thai government treated the statement as an affront to the country, and Thai news reports responded in tum by reporting the fact that many sex trade venues in the south were owned by Malaysian men, and that Malaysians were active in trafficking Thai women into their country and beyond (Business Day 2000). As for Mahathir' s advice to men to curb their sexual desires when in Thailand, his statements had little or no impact these men's behavior continues to contest and contradict the moral precepts of the Malaysian state. Tourism Recreation Research Vol. 29, No. 2, 2004 Pilgrimage and Prostitution: M. Askew & E. Cohen Downloaded by [Thammasat University Libraries] at 01:32 04 August 2015 Sites and Infrastructure The sex trade infrastructure of the Lower South incorporates a range of interconnected services including transport, accommodation, eating establishments and entertainment venues centred in Sino-Thai dominated settlements. Paradoxically, this permissive commercialized sex industry flourishes in the midst of a predominantly Muslim Malay region where sexual licence is strongly disapproved according to Muslim law and custom. The labor force which directly participates in and manages this system is largely unconnected with the local Muslim population. The sex workers themselves are predominantly lowland Thai Buddhist women (mainly from the northern, northeastern or central regions, with only a small proportion from southern Thai provinces) while the rest are women from tribal minorities from areas bordering Burma, or 'Haw' Chinese from northern Thailand and Yunnan (Chayanoot 1991: 54). Owners, managers and other personnel in sex trade establishments are Sino-Thai, Thai and Malaysian Chinese males. Muslim women are conspicuously absent from sex work. Thai Muslims, however, do participate indirectly in this system by operating guest houses, restaurants and small businesses which cater to the many Malaysian Muslim tourists who frequent the border sex establishments. The geographical hub of the system is the regional urban centre of Hat Yai which hosts the greatest density and variety of these services and venues in the region. Until very recently, Hat Yai enjoyed a virtual monopoly of hotel accommodation in Songkhla province. Today, with some 96 hotels, it maintains an overwhelming dominance in tourist accommodation when compared to the other Lower South centres of the sex trade - Betong (19), Sungai Kolok (20) and Ban Dam Nork (13) (field survey, Askew and Cohen December 2001; TAT accommodation data, Hat Yai and Betong). Hat Yai also offers the advantage of proximity to related services in demand by tourists, particularly good restaurants and shops. Sex trade-related venues span the gamut of types, ranging from cheap brothels and motels to karaoke bars of various sizes, massage parlours and discotheques. Most of the larger hotels maintain a range of these venues within their premises. The size and glamour of Hat Yai' s larger discos and massage parlours, in addition to the quality of the hotel accommodation, are not matched in any of the other sex-related tourist destinations in the region. In Hat Yai there are also numerous gay and transvestite clubs catering to the more specialized desires of tourists. In the year 2000 it was estimated that the city's commercial sex worker population numbered at least 10,000 (Charoon 2000). The other key sites of the sex trade in the Lower South are located directly on border crossings and maintain a more limited range of entertainment and sex-related venues. In Tourism Recreation Research Vol. 29, No. 2, 2004 the well-established border trading towns of Betong (in Yala Province opposite Kedah) and Sungai Kolok (in Narathiwat Province, opposite Kelantan), the sex trade is integrated with the accommodation facilities and service infrastructure. Prostitution-related venues in these settlements cluster inside hotels (pubs, singing cafes and discotheques) or tend to concentrate along particular streets close to the hotels. Venues associated with the supply of tourist-related commercial sex services number approximate!y 71 in Betong and around 50 in Sungai Kolok. A rough calculation of sex workers in these two towns based on an average of 20 women per establishment yields an estimate of 1,420 and 1,000 respectively. Pedang Besar is another border town linked to the railway route into Thailand through Perlis state. It is much smaller than the former two settlements and its sex sector is correspondingly smaller, comprising around 15 'karaoke' bars with an estimated 300 female sex workers (field surveys, Askew and Cohen December 2001 and June 2002). In contrast to these market towns, the settlement of Ban Dam Nork in Sadao district, bordering Malaysia's Kedah state, has developed an almost exclusively sex-trade centred economy. DamNorkisliterally a frontier boom town with an economy based on the tourist-oriented sex trade and its ancillary services. In the period of little over five years, from the mid-1980s to 1990, this settlement was transmuted from a border crossing point with a small marketplace catering to shoppers from Malaysia to a settlement of over 30 brothels and karaoke bars, with a female sex worker population numbering over a thousand women (Chayanoot 1991: 41). In the 1990s Dam Nork continued to grow, despite the lack of any standard urban-related amenities such as water supply, or facilities such as banks or post offices. By the end of the year 2001 there were over 140 sex-related establishments, some 13 hotels and nearly 40 guest houses, with a sex-worker population of at least 2,000. This infrastructure, together with food establishments, shops and cheap local rental accommodation is clustered along 12 short lanes which extend from the main highway leading from the immigration and customs post at the Thai- Malaysian border (field survey, Askew and Cohen December 2001). The emergence of Dam Nork (still officially classified as a 'village' despite its population boom) as a centre of sex tourism was directly related to a number of changes. Perhaps pre-eminent was the improvement of the road and highway system in Malaysia, particularly the super-highway leading from Johor-Bahru, through Alor Setar in Kedah to the border crossing at Dam Nork. This brought increasing numbers of Malaysian men through the border crossing as well as enabled others to travel convenient!y from more distant states of Malaysia, particularly Penang. Another factor which stimulated Darn Nork' s development from a stopping point 97 Downloaded by [Thammasat University Libraries] at 01:32 04 August 2015 Pilgrimage and Prostitution: M. Askew & E. Cohen to a destination in its own right was the increasing costs of accommodation in Hat Yai and the greater convenience of Darn Nork for Malaysian men seeking weekend relaxation. And a further, more recent, stimulus was the severe flooding of Hat Yai late in 2000 which led to the temporary, and eventually permanent, relocation of sex workers and small establishments to the border, away from flood-prone land (Charoon 2000). To some extent the development of Darn Nork reflects a trend towards the dispersal of sex services to the border, away from Hat Yai, with a division of labour emerging whereby Hat Yai maintains pre-eminence in upmarket entertainment and Darn Nork hosts smaller establishments (Horn 2000). Due to its convenient location on main highway routes from Malaysia, Darn Nork has grown at the expense of other border towns, such as Betong, Pedang Besar and Sungai Kolok. Supply and Access to Commercial Sex Services and selecting women for them. The customers' payment for the woman's services (determined according to the length of time) is made in advance to the management, with this income split (usually 50-50) between sex workers and employers. An important source of additional income for women is gained from Malaysian and Singaporean men in the form of tips paid over-and-above the booking fee. The booking system applies to a range of establishments, even to those which seem, by their appearance, to be'closed' - that is, businesses set up for the sole purpose of providing sexual services, with minimal allowance for any social interaction between clients and sex workers. These most typical of commercial sex venues, as noted already, are euphemistically named 'karaoke bars' (a term employed by owners simply to reduce direct police harassment). We may distinguish these latter venues from the singing-karaoke lounges by designating them as 'sexkaraoke' bars. Chinese-Malaysian tourists who prefer karaoke lounges and pay women singers for sitting with them (generally 100 baht per hour) often denigrate the latter establishments as 'sex shops'. But although they might be simply described as 'brothels', the sex-karaoke bars are in fact far more flexible than ordinary brothels, because they function mainly as the bases for escort services. Most sex workers in sex-karoake bars conduct their work outside these venues. The booking system is generally utilized by many Malaysian and Singaporean tourists in such a way as to ensure that they spend time with women outside the Malaysian and Singaporean men access prostitution services in a variety of settings, including those that directly provide sexual services like massage parlours and brothels, or in entertainment contexts such as karaoke lounges, discotheques or pubs and music cafes. Women's sex work correspondingly spans a range of modes. They include: fulltime employment in establishments devoted to direct supply of paid sexual services such as brothels (thinly disguised as 'karaoke bars') and 'modern' massage parlours; employment as therapeutic masseurs or singers in karaoke lounges and 'cafes' or barbers' shops where sex is negotiable and separate from the establishment's charges; or freelance prostitution (phuying chap khaek) in discotheques (this latter mode is almost exclusively concentrated in Hat Yai). However, it is the system of 'booking' that is the predominant means by which women's services are engaged. This booking system is one of the key features differentiating Malaysian/ Singaporean customerprostitute transactions from those in the Western-oriented sex trade zones of Thailand; it is common in other sex trade districts in the regions of Southeast Asia dominated by the Chinese (including Malaysia and Singapore, for which see Brazil1997: 93). According to this system, a customer 'books' a woman for a specified amount of time, generally but not exclusively with the' captain', Figure 1. Pamtings on the front window of a singing karaoke bar in Ban Dam Nork. an employee of a sex venue, who is (Photo: Erik Cohen) responsible for attracting customers 98 Tourism Recreation Research Vol. 29, No. 2, 2004 Pilgrimage and Prostitution: M. Askew & E. Cohen establishment. This booking system contrasts strikingly with Western-oriented venues such as beer bars and go-go bars, where much of the entertainment and interaction takes place in the establishment. Downloaded by [Thammasat University Libraries] at 01:32 04 August 2015 Women and Work Regimes As already noted, the majority of women engaged in sex work in the Lower South originate from north and northeast Thailand, which are known as the poorest regions of the country. One of the few researchers who has conducted a survey of these sex worker's regional origins (based on a case study in Dam Nark) arrived at the following profile: Northeastern Thailand 47.2%; Northern Thailand 35.2%; Central Thailand 10.4%; South Thailand 5.2%; Burma and Southern China 1.6 % (Chayanoot 1991: 54). These findings correspond in general to our own investigation of four establislunents operating in Dam Nark and discussions with owners, operators and other sex workers interviewed individually. The largest proportion of these women are aged between 21 and 30 years, with a significant minority between 18-20 years. In the border sex trade sites of Betong, Dam Nark, Pedang Besar and Sungai Kolok, and particularly in the small sex-karaoke bars, the larger proportion of the women have commenced work with no prior experience of prostitution. However, in these cross-border settlements there are also found women with prior experience: some masseusses have worked in Bangkok massage parlours and some singers in the karaoke lounges have worked previously in Hat Yai or Phuket. A number of women have previously worked in brothels in Malaysia and are recouping income lost following their arrest and deportation from there. Our research in the Lower South confirms Chayanoot' s findings at DamNark that women's entry into sex work in the lower south is largely voluntary (Chayanoot 1991: 74). A minority of the women have been trafficked, in the sense of being deceived and forced into prostitution by agents, with no knowledge of the nature of their work or even of their destination. Women usually move to the south from their homes in the north and north-east after receiving information on work opportunities from friends, community social networks, or neighbours, who may also be agents for owners of sex trade venues. Women who enter work through these agents (nai na) are obliged to pay a fee to the agent and often take an advance from the employer. Sums of money owed by women on entering employment range from 8,000 to 15,000 baht, depending on whether they have also borrowed money for other expenses. Some women do not use agents but travel to the establishments by themselves or with friends who are already employed there. In these cases they do not incur financial obligations to owners. In both instances women are usually aware in advance of the nature of the work they Tourism Recreation Research Vol. 29, No. 2, 2004 are about to enter. It should be stressed here that although most of the women entering sex work are of a rural background, they are not 'village women' in the quintessential sense that they are ignorant of life outside the rural environment. As with women entering the sex trade in Bangkok, most have already engaged in a variety of urbanbased work during their lives (predominantly in Bangkok) and draw on their knowledge and skills to make connections and judgements about work options (see Askew 1998). Cases of trafficking women to Betong, Hat Yai and Sungai Kolok have been reported by a number of researchers, but in these cases the women have usually been smuggled into Thailand and belong mostly to ethnic minorities, such as the 'Haw' Chinese from northern Thailand or southern Yunnan or to the 'Thai-Yai' (Shan) from Burma (Bond et al. 1997: 202-203; Vorasakdi 1998: 37-38). In the tourist-related sex and entertainment venues in settlements such as Darn Nark, Haw women are found working in the large 'cocktail lounges' frequented by Chinese Malaysians and Singaporeans because they are able to sing fluently popular Chinese language songs. They are also favoured because of their fair skin, which Chinese men find attractive. The women's conditions of work and their level of freedom in the work place vary depending on the establishment to which they are attached. With the exception of Hat Yai, which offers greater freedom to the women to live outside their workplaces, most women in the typical commercial sex establishments are accommodated in rooms above or next to the workplace. That 'workplace' is essentially a rectangular room lined with cushioned seats where customers are received and where women are pointed out by the captain and selected by customers. Most employers maintain a set of basic rules governing the women's behaviour and work practices, often backed up by penalties. The women are required to return promptly after a booking, to receive permission to leave the establishment during the day for routine activities (such as shopping or making telephone calls). They are penalized if they refuse to accompany a customer. In some establishments rules and fines for infractions are recorded on a notice board. The captain has a number of functions in the workplace - he plays the role of host for customers, states payment amounts, collects booking money and escorts women to customers in their hotel rooms. In practice, business relations between management and employees are carried on in a very personal style. Thus, for example, in some venues that we observed, the captains did not compel women to be booked by customers whom they did not like. Captains are often bypassed by women who independently select their customers. Women working the brothels of DamN ark are also allowed to return to their home villages to visit children 99 Pilgrimage and Prostitution: M. Askew & E. Cohen and parents in times of need or during official holiday periods. Informality and flexibility is a function of the small size of most of the border town sex establishments, where owners also live on the same premises and often share meals with their workers. Downloaded by [Thammasat University Libraries] at 01:32 04 August 2015 Relationships with Customers Thousands of Malaysian and Singaporean men travel to the sex venues of the Lower South for the practical end of brief relaxation and sexual release, often in the company of friends. Nonetheless, the transactions that take place between many of these men and the female sex workers often develop in various ways beyond the basic exchange of sex for money. It is, in fact, the renowned sociability of Thai sex workers that attracts men to cross the border. The ability of the Thai sex workers to act as companions and become 'girlfriends' and mistresses is emphasized strongly in one of the major Singaporean web sites devoted to sex-based tourism for men. Paradoxically, this dimension is also a source of considerable confusion for many Singaporean men who find it difficult to disentangle the emotional from the material bonds in their relationships (see for example Sammyboy.com). This enduring confusion mirrors the general dilemmas of Western men facing open-ended prostitution in Thailand (Cohen 1982). Women develop relationships of familiarity with their regular customers from over the border. Relationships are also easy to maintain owing to the good cross-border telephone connections. Women who are in the sex trade for lengthy periods speak the Malay language and also acquire elements of Chinese dialects, particularly Hokkien; this enhances their appeal for men of these speech groups. A stage beyond the sexworker's role as a regular companion is that of the 'mistress'. This form of relationship, which is fairly common, combines a mix of emotional and pragmatic bonds between foreign men and the women. The maintenance of a mistress by these men gives them the benefit of a permanent companion; it is also an option which is recommended by many as an apparent safeguard against the danger of contracting AIDS. Among Chinese men in particular the mistress also serves as an important marker of masculine status and potency (Bao 1999). In short, Thailand represents a haven, a place for relaxation and an arena for expressing potency and masculinity. This highlights the important function of the tourist border space of the Lower South as a critical sexual and recreational hinterland for Malaysia and Singapore. The tourism-related infrastructure in the Lower South supports a space which functions as a tolerance zone for Malaysian and Singaporean men. This zone comprises dimensions which are both familiar and different to these visitors. The familiarity is generated by certain cultural and 100 linguistic similarities shared between the visitors' societies and the host societies of the Sino-Thai enclaves, and it is enhanced by the geographical proximity of this zone to the visitors' countries of origin and the frequency with which they visit its key sites. Particularly on the border crossings, as especially in Dam Nork, the settlements have developed as virtual colonies of Malaysian men who visit weekly or even stay in Dam Nork every evening and simply commute to their work in Malaysia (by virtue of their border passes if they are residents of the four adjacent Malaysian States). The critical differences that mark the sites of this border zone are represented by the legal and social regime of Thailand which contrasts markedly with those of Malaysia and Singapore, permitting behaviours which are illicit and illegal in the visitors' countries of origin. Thai women, through their work with their bodies, have sexualized the Thai-Malaysian border, serving to act collectively as a major source of attraction, using the border in their own way towards strategies of economic recovery and improvement, often through relationships of varying intensity and duration with the cross-border visitors. Here we have concentrated on describing the sex trade system and infrastructure within this space; although this is an essential component of that space, it helps to engender a broader environment of tolerance that furthers foreign men's engagement in collective recreation and sociability. In short, the border zone functions as a space of catharsis. This is expressed succinctly in the words of one Malaysian business man who travels regularly into Thailand to visit his Thai mistress (a former karaoke hostess) and to gamble and drink with his Malaysian and Thai male friends: 'this [Thailand] is the place where I release tension'. Conclusion Our specific findings regarding each of the contrasting forms of border tourism have been discussed in the body of this article. In this concluding section, we shall attempt to tease out from our materials what appear to be some of the generalizable features of border tourism in southern Thailand, which we suggest might also be found, under different circumstances, in border zones elsewhere. These features are intrinsically related to the typically interstitial, liminal character of border zones. Border tourism in Thailand occupies an intermediate position between domestic and international tourism, bearing features of both of these kinds of tourism. This intermediate position is reflected in the formal arrangements of border tourism: unlike domestic tourism, it involves the formality of border crossing; but unlike international tourism, it does not in most cases involve the need for a visa, but only of a border pass - whose validity, as in the case of Tourism Recreation Research Vol. 29, No. 2, 2004 Pilgrimage and Prostitution: M. Askew & E. Cohen Downloaded by [Thammasat University Libraries] at 01:32 04 August 2015 the Thai-Malaysian border, may be limited to the border zone. But, more significantly, this intermediate position also reflects the mixed character of the boundary zone, incorporating as it does social and cultural features of both adjoining societies. Tourism to the border zone combines elements of the familiar with the different, but does not have the extraordinary character which is usually associated with tourism (Graburn 1977). Neither does it generally involve a quest for the strange or the exotic. Most border tourists in the Thai-Malaysian border zone seek familiar experiences in a different context than at home: more easily available, of a better quality, of a greater variety, at a lower price or with a greater freedom of choice. This is certainly true for crossborder shopping which is probably the most common but sociologically the least interesting border-zone tourist activity. More significantly, it is equally true for dining on luxurious Chinese food in Hat Yai, as it is for worshipping at the various Chinese sanctuaries in the zone, or even for engagement in various forms of vice, and especially prostitution in Hat Yai, Betong, Sungai Kolok or Dam Nork. The last point is especially enlightening in a comparative context: for Western tourists travelling to Thailand, the encounter with 'Oriental' sexuality, even in its commercialized form, is generally an 'extra-ordinary' experience, occasionally verging on revelation; for the Chinese or even Malay border tourists it is not. It could be objected that pilgrimage to border zone sanctuaries could not be seen as an ordinary, familiar activity -owing to the claim, put forward by Turner (1973) and others, that pilgrimage involves a reversal of everyday activities, a journey to a' centre-out-there', which represents the opposite of the pilgrims' home environment. But most visits of crossborder tourists to sanctuaries in the border zone represent an attenuated form of pilgrimage: in contrast to pilgrimage to important far-off shrines, visits to sanctuaries across the border are a more casual affair, often included within tours to several other attractions. The visitors are predominantly 'religious tourists' rather than pilgrims in the narrow sense of the word. Moreover, in our case, in the spirit of Chinese religious practice, visits to Chinese sanctuaries often involve the perfunctory performance of ablutions, rather than some exalting and profound religious act. We are aware, however, that there exists a minority of fully-fledged pilgrims to the border sanctuaries, who come to South Thailand in tours for the sole purpose of visiting religious sites. The quest for familiarity with a difference in crossborder tourism is closely related to its temporal characteristics: the trips tend to be short, but repetitive. Crossborder visitors are usually on trips extending from a few Tourism Recreation Research Vol. 29, No. 2, 2004 hours to two or three days, mostly over the weekends. Many cross the border quite frequently, especially those living close to it on the Malaysian side. Some Malaysians come to Darn Nork on an almost daily basis, while others visit the town of Betong regularly on weekends. The more repetitive the trips, the more ordinary they become and the more familiar the experience. Indeed, there are some cases of what could be called 'reverse expatriates', Malaysian citizens working in Malaysia, but living in Thai border settlements such as Darn Nark. Some others sojourn semi-permanently in Thailand, conducting their businesses- often related to border tourism itself- in the border zone. A few people even have dual, Thai and Malaysian citizenship. But even for those Malaysians who do not reside in Thailand, the repetitiveness of their visits enables then to establish more than just fleeting relations with the locals. These are Malaysian habitues of restaurants and entertainment venues on the Thai side of the border who have befriended local employees and customers. Some Malaysian men formed more or less permanent liaisons with Thai women on the other side of the border, taking them out of establishments offering sex services and setting them up as mistresses or' second wives'. This pattern of tourist activities and the industry that has emerged to service them has played a significant role in shaping the landscape of the Thai-Malaysian border zone, notably in its urban centres and religious sites. Despite official attempts to broaden the tourist base, the majority of tourists to the Lower South remain Malaysians and Singaporeans, largely of Chinese origin. It is essentially their preferences and demands which will continue to shape the border tourist space. What evidence is available as to the extent to which these general features of border tourism, proposed here on the basis of the particular circumstances prevailing on the Thai-Malaysian border zone, are found in other situations of border tourism? The comparative evidence on border tourism is spotty. Regarding the concrete cross-border tourist activities found in our study, particularly shopping and vice -specifically prostitution- many instances can be cited from other border zones, in Thailand and around the world. Cross border shopping, as well as prostitution and gambling, are offered along the Thai-Burmese and the Thai-Cambodian border. Brief shopping excursions to neighbouring countries are a widespread phenomenon, involving in some instances millions of cross-border visitors; well-known examples are the Canadians and Americans shopping across their respective borders (Timothy and Butler 1991; DiMateo and DiMateo 1996), or the British on shopping trips in the seaside towns of France across the Channel. Vice and especially prostitution are also fairly commonly found in border zones: for example in Mexican 101 Pilgrimage and Prostitution: M. Askew & E. Cohen Downloaded by [Thammasat University Libraries] at 01:32 04 August 2015 border towns, such as Nogalas or Juarez, serving an American clientele; in Botswana, serving mostly white South Africans; and on the Czech side of the border between Germany and the Czech Republic, serving German customers. We do not know whether the cross-border visitors in those instances form extended liaisons with their partners, as they do in the Lower South of Thailand. While pilgrimage is certainly a major international phenomenon, with important pilgrimage centres attracting the faithful from different and other remote countries, we are not aware of good examples of pilgrimage centres in border zones, expressly oriented to cross-border visitors, in other parts of the world, besides the above mentioned case of That Phanom in Thailand, oriented to Laotian visitors across the Mekong river. This is a problem worth further study, since, from an anthropological perspective, the possible existence of such centres would constitute a particularly apt confirmation of Turner's thesis of the ex-centric nature of popular pilgrimage centres. also present in other instances of border tourism. Rather, it is whether border tourism in those cases is marked by the distinctive general features described in this article - thus lending empirical support to our claim that border-tourism constitutes a distinct intermediary type of tourism, neither domestic nor international. It is this question which should be more systematically examined in the comparative study of border tourism. 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