Description: After a year as exchange professor at a Tokyo university, William Bevis spent part of the next year traveling in Sarawak, a Malaysian state located on the northern part of the island of Borneo. About the size of New York, it has a population of 1.7 million people living, outside of a few towns, in a world of jungle and brown rivers. There the rainforest is being cut rapidly, local corruption and greed siphon off most of the profit, native rights and land uses are being obliterated, and much of the fine timber is shipped to Japan to become plywood forms for concrete that are thrown away after two uses. This book is a travel narrative and also a serious environmental study of exploitation of third-world resources. During his stay in Sarawak, the author lived with both native activists and timber camp managers, seeking to understand the motives and actions of Japanese companies, Chinese entrepreneurs, and the native population most affected by the timber trade. Borneo Log is not simply a book about environmental politics in a far-away place. The power of the book lies in the author's extraordinary ability to bring home the related global disasters of the destruction of the world's rainforests and its indigenous peoples. This is a personal and passionate account of how ordinary men and women are fighting to defend a way of life that is rapidly disappearing along with their country's resources, and how the problems of their lives echo in our own.
Customer Reviews
Review Summary: Third World resources feed First World consumption and waste
Date: 1996-11-10
Details: This is a story written in diary format by the author
who after a year as an exchange professor at Tokyo University
spent part of the next year living with native activists
fighting the resistance to Japanese logging, and Japanese timber
camp managers, on Borneo,the third largest island on earth which lies
just north of the Indonesian archipelago in the South China Sea.
This is a poignant travel narrative as well as a serious environmental
study of the exploitation of third world resources.
The true irony of the story of Borneo's rapdily disappearing
rainforest, and the local corruption and greed which siphon off
most of the profits, while native rights and land uses are
obliterated, (sounds like America in the early 19th century!)
is that most of the timber shipped to Japan
is used to feed Japan's wholesale adoption of American habits:
buy it, use it, throw it away, buy another! Much of the wood is
being used to make cheap furniture
and plywood forms for concrete that are thrown away after several uses.
Unlike America's own trees on vast land masses,Japan has little
to support such habits. This is really another story which is symptomatic
of first world countries exploitation of third world resources - and the
hypocrisy of the United States' condemnation of such practices.