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Stereotypes, Irony, and the Nicest People in the World

by Adam Seper on April 12, 2011

It’s no secret that Colombia was our favorite country we visited while on our RTW trip.  So many aspects of this country made it our favorite, but it was the people who absolutely put it over the top.  This post is one from our old site, written while in Colombia, with a few changes here and there.

The beautiful beaches and waters of Taganga, Colombia

The beautiful beaches and waters of Taganga

The title of this post about sums up Colombia.  We have been here now for a little over a week.  First, we spent about 5 days in the capital city of Bogota, and we have since adjusted to life as beach bums in a little fishing village called Taganga on the beach in the Caribbean.  We are seriously contemplating spending our remaining 2+ weeks making our way from beach town to beach town along the coast.  And while the scenery and beautiful weather has been fantastic, it’s the Colombian people that have made our short time here so great.  It is easy to see why we have heard the same advice over and over from other travelers while in South America,

“You CAN’T miss Colombia.”

“You HAVE to go to Colombia.”

“AHHHH, COLOMBIA!”

“The people are just sooooooooooo nice.”

“Go, now, you have to.  Don’t miss it.”

Cops in Riot Gear in Bogota, Colombia

This is what most people think of when hearing about Colombia

Let me back up a little here.  While initially planning this trip and deciding to start in S. America, Colombia was never even on the initial radar.  Why?  Well, just like everyone who lives in the United States, I knew that Colombia was filled with drug dealing, machete wielding, machine-gun carrying, kidnapping, violent people.  I can’t help but laugh at the absurdity of it now.

When we first looked into Colombia, we were definitely hesitant because of our stereotypes of how dangerous a country it was.  But as we researched it more, the more we realized that maybe we should start listening to travelers who have actually been there instead of the doom and gloom media of the United States.  We were met with the typical questions and statements from family and friends when telling them we were thinking about going to Colombia,

“Aren’t you afraid you’ll get kidnapped?”

“See you on the news when they are asking for ransom.”

“Gonna smuggle some coke back to the US?”

Again, all absurd when looking back at it now.  We have not felt the least bit in danger at any point in our time so far in Colombia.  In fact, one of the most ironic things to happen here in Colombia happened shortly after arriving in Bogota last week.  We were in the kitchen of a hostel sipping on some coffee and started chatting with a man  (not sure where he was from, but it wasn´t the US).  We found out that he spent some time living in St. Louis (in Webster Groves, no less) close to a decade ago.  Small world, we thought.  We talk more and he told us a story about visiting downtown, near the Arch.  Well, he reveals that he got mugged while in downtown St. Louis.  So here we were, in Colombia, one of the most dangerous places in the world, talking to a man who got mugged and robbed in our hometown.

Colombia has had its share of violence in the last 30 years, there’s no way around that, and there’s no way to hide that.  It was a very dangerous place, even as recently as five years ago.  And there still are some dangerous areas in Colombia.  But times are changing, and the Colombian people are embracing that change, they want that change, and they are doing everything in their power to expedite that change.

It all started when we got off the plane and started asking the usual questions, “Where’s an ATM?  Where can we change money?  Where’s the best place to get a cab?”  We have asked these questions more times than I can count now.  Normally we get some icy responses and pointing, usually not very many smiles.  Now I don’t want to paint Peru, Bolivia, Argentina, and Chile as being unfriendly, because they weren’t, but just like home, asking questions like these at airports and bus stations usually isn’t met with friendly enthusiasm.

But we were in Colombia, where everything is met with a smiling face.  Every question we asked we were greeted with a huge smile and friendly directions to help us out.  After arriving at our hostel and finding out that there was a problem with the room we reserved (which we were aggravated about at first, but quickly changed our tune as she worked so hard and fast to find us a new place, all the while apologizing over and over), we moved.  The people at the new hostel could not have been more helpful and friendly.  One of the workers has a house in Taganga (where we are now) and when he found out we were coming here, invited us to his place, not just to hang out, but to stay.  Anything we needed, they helped with, and they always did it with a smile.  That’s the thing about Colombians, they are ALWAYS smiling.  It’s contagious.  How can one not be happy in a place like this?

Juice stand in Cartagena, Colombia

I loved chatting with the juice vendors each morning while getting breakfast

And it continued in that way.  Cab drivers, servers, bartenders, EVERYONE who worked at our hostel, people we met in the streets, police officers, guards, literally everyone.  It was almost surreal to see this kind of friendliness.  Everyone was patient with our Spanish.  Everyone was willing to help.

After learning more about them and their culture, I think they are just embracing the chance to be happy.  After living under so much violence, after their country was torn apart over the last several decades by drug cartels and paramilitary groups, they are rejoicing.  While sometimes as a tourist and traveler I have felt not wanted and as though I was a burden to the local people, it has been the complete opposite here.  We have been welcomed with open arms, and not just because we have money to spend.  They are genuinely happy to see us visiting their country.

One of the first nights we were in Bogota, I was in the hostel bar with the guy who worked there and three of his friends (all Colombians).  We sat and talked for several hours, and it was a fascinating conversation.  These were all fairly young people, all in their early twenties in college.  While I can expect the older generations to really care about their country’s image and care about what others think about them, it’s not terribly common for college-aged kids to make international image a priority, much less in a bar on a Friday night.

But that’s what we talked about.  We talked about politics and stereotypes and international images.  They were adamant about wanting the world to see the real Colombia, not the one that we see on the news.  They expressed their anger when they get young foreigners asking them to get them some blow when they find out they are locals (yes, this does happen, and often, strangers asking locals for drugs).

“Like we all are just born with a straw up our nose,” one of the girls huffed (one of the only times I saw them not smiling).  They hate that the world thinks that all Colombians are a bunch of cokeheads walking around with semiautomatic weapons.  She made it a point to say that no one she knows does cocaine, and while it is a problem in their country, it’s the manufacturing of it that is the problem, not use.  Ironically enough, the VAST majority of the cocaine made in Colombia goes to the United States and Europe.  Not much actually stays in Colombia.  If it wasn’t for our rampant use, it wouldn’t be the problem it is.

One thing this trip has done is open my eyes.  Just three or four years ago, I never would have thought to travel in the countries I have traveled in over the last five months.  It just wasn’t something I ever thought of.  But now, I am fascinated by the way different cultures live their lives.  I want to do away with that wall of stereotypes that have been built up over the years.  I want to make my own conclusions about a country and its people.  And while those stereotypes and barriers have been slowly crumbling and deteriorating the more places we go and the more people we meet, Colombia has taken a sledgehammer and knocked a huge hole in that wall.

Have you traveled in Colombia or a country or region with similar stereotypes?  Comment below to share your stories.

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  • Anonymous

    Great post guys! Here’s the deal: I’m leaving England this year and Malaysia is pulling me one way, Colombia the other. I’m totally 50/50 about this, raaaaah. It’s annoying because I am usually quite an assertive man, but alas I’m confused.

    Nice problem to have though :) Which city would you recommend to hang out for a few months to pick up the language?

  • http://www.liferemotely.com Jessica

    Thank you for such a great in depth post on Columbia (and actually for having an entire section on Columbia!). We’re heading there in about a year, and have found so little decent information on the country. It’s so hard to plan for anything when resources are limited and so many people are spouting stereotypes.

    I found the same hassles more than a decade ago (wow, I feel old ) I was spending a summer in a study abroad program in Croatia, only a few years after the Dayton Peace Agreement was signed. It’s amazing how blatantly ignorant people were towards the country and the current situation. *sigh* At least now there’s travel blogs to set the story straight!

  • http://inspiringtravellers.com/ Andrea and John

    Colombia was never on our itinerary either initially, not because we thought anything bad would happen to us there but just because we didn’t think we had time. After talking to so many other travellers about it, we will be making time. Might only be about two and a half weeks, which we know isn’t nearly long enough, but we feel we have to see at least part of the country while we’re in SA. Glad you’re spreading the word =)

  • Josefina A.

    There are many undiscovered reasons why foreigners should visit Colombia .

    The weather averages about 65 to 85 degrees Fahrenheit year round in Cali. There is rarely a need for air-conditioning or heat. Medellin is similar, but a little cooler. Bogotá is cool to cold at night; Not what you would expect close to the equator.
    Colombia is not as dangerous as it was a few years ago, or as bad as you view on TV.
    There are many beautiful beaches; many of the most popular on the mainland are located near Cartagena and Santa Marta, and on the offshore Island of San Andreas.
    Colombia is known for its beautiful women.
    Colombia’s cost of living is less than most countries.
    Colombia is known for its rich biodiversity. It ranks in the top 2 or 3 countries in the world for species of birds and butterflies. The national tree, the Quindío Wax Palm, grows in the Andean high altitude valley of Cocora. Over 160 feet tall, it towers over other vegetation, making a very unique landscape scene.

    There are many reasons to visit Colombia. If you visit once, you will want to come back.

    Happy travels,

    Josefina! – Colombia travel

  • http://twitter.com/fooske Karen Foesenek

    I loved this post. You perfectly put into words how I feel about this beautiful country! I hope that I will be able to go back soon!

  • Castroloza

    I would love to go to Colombia! We went last year to Peru and found the people really accomodating to everything we asked for, and so inexpensive. They told me a must see in Colombia is Cartagena.

  • Ad_hhe

    The culture that many travellers enjoy when going to Colombia has been developing for many decades.
    I”m happy that many travellers have given this wonderful country a chance and I would like to comment on what most travellers say,  the part that the people are so happy, friendly, helping and passionate and this must be due to all the years they lived in violence and that now they are rejoicing.  I myself being Colombian can tell you that the people have ALWAYS, ALWAYS  been that way, even throughout the darkest days of our history, it’s not like we were plain and miserable but woke up one day and said ” hey there’s no explosions, let’s be happy, celebrate and collectively act this way”.  The worst times in Colombia took place after 1989 and in the 90′s. We had problems before just like there are problems now all over the world, but in the 90′s is when we felt like they really hit  home, because eventhough there had been problems in the past, they always seemed to be in isolated areas like it is now and most people were carrying on with their lives as usual.  In the 90′s the problems started occurring in the most densely populated areas, they “hit home”, they were real and ugly, but even then, they affected some people only, not everyone in the country.   From a local’s point of view, we felt like this was an interruption to our peace not the norm like many people think and now we are back to what we consider normal.  Colombian culture has always been manifesting itself and flourishing. Millions of people grew up and partied  listening to Colombian music all the way from Peru,Chile,  Ecuador and all the way to Mexico from the 1950′s up to now but having the biggest  impact in other countries in the 70′s. Many composers and songs are consideresd all time classics in many Latin American countries, the output of talent was major by Latin American standards. Many christmas carols sung in many Latin American countries were composed in Colombia decades ago. Colombia has always been a leader in TV production and marketing in Latin America and it still is.  It is true that we’ve had our share of problems but it’s that happy, outgoing attitude that has kept us afloat despite what’s going on.  I could always count on a smile and a helping hand when visiting some small town in  colombia now and then, I now go to school outside of Colombia but really miss the way that colombians interact with each other and that’s what I also think travellers enjoy from what I read. It is true that we are happy to see travellers visiting Colombia because we feel that the image that the country has in other countries is  too stereotypical, exagarated and NOT experential.  When I visit now I can tell no difference in safety than when I was there in the 70′s and early 80′s, I had a very happy, active and healthy childhood and adolescence living there decades ago, never saw anyone get shot, neither did anyone in my family and we are lower-middle class (not sheltered), I saw cocaine for the first time and people using it in the US (my bosses and owners of the staffing agency I worked for, they wouldn’t stop joking about me being colombian )life there  for  me was very normal, I’m not saying there weren’t national problems but it’s not like everybody was ducking bullets like some people think, most of us saw the bad stuff in the newspapers or TV.  I recently attended a Brazilian philosopical conference in the states and the Brazilian presenter was showing some numbers that indicated that during a given  time frame (don’t remember the time frame) street-crime  murder rates in Brazil surpassed the murder rates in colombia’s political war. That goes to show they way we process info based on labels and Hollywood stereotypes. I know of many people who wouldn’t think twice about setting foot on Brazil but would be afraid to even have a friend go to Colombia eventhough some places in brazil are less safe statistically than some places in Colombia .  I think it has a lot to do with the way info is presented and the assumptions that we make. 

  • Andresd82003

    What I wanted to convey is that there is a very special and enjoyable culture tha has always been there despite the problems in the past, that the number of Good people totally and utterly overwhelms the few bad people. That the sunshine, warmth, laughter and all the green around has always overwhelmed the dark, I really mean this with honesty, I’m not being romantic. That’s why everyone manages to be so laid back and happy despite financial or other difficulties.

    P.S.  the few bad acquire more power each time someone decides to get high with coke.  This creates violence and our environment is destroyed by this due to the destruction of forests sprayed with chemicals due to western demand of cocaine.

    I got these statistics from another website:

    The country contains forests of the Northern Andes which is one of the Earth’s biologically richest forests.  Forty-nine percent of Colombia’s total land mass is covered by forests that house 10 percent of the world’s biodiversity. Colombia is the second most diverse country in terms of species per land unit (in some instances, first in plant species).  This biodiversity holds great scenic and cultural value, but more importantly, has potential medicinal value.  Furthermore, the diversity is the basis for all ecological relations that result in the balance of regional ecosystems and the world climate.

  • JMA

    I am a college student in Miami. I was born in Medellin and I am writing an essay on Colombia and I came across really good ones but I enjoyed this article a lot! It is beautiful the way you describe it so perfectly. Thank you! :D

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