It has some monuments, it has a pretty cool national museum (I especially enjoyed the floor that focuses on nomadic Kyrgyz culture through the last couple of millennia), and it has Indian and Korean restaurants where a vegetarian can find sustenance. It’s very walkable once you get to the center, and it’s about 15 miles away from some serious nature. Do I want to spend a ton of time in Bishkek? No. But I will say this: it’s the first place I’ve been in Asia where I wasn’t conspicuous. I am a tall fair woman and I tower above all the Turkic peoples and the Arabic peoples and the Asiatic peoples whose bloodlines have circulated throughout this region. But Bishkek has a fair number of Russians, or Russian-extracted citizens. And—unlike the pretty universal traditional dress of woman in Turkmenistan and Tajikistan especially (and to a lesser extent in Uzbekistan too)—the women in Bishkek are wearing…whatever. Tank tops. Short shorts. Miniskirts with Chuck Ts. Green mohawks. No one looks at me at all, and that’s a relief after so many weeks of feeling like I had a giant neon arrow reading OUTSIDER pointing at my head.
Statue of national semi-legendary hero Manas, subject of a massive epic poem that runs to 20x the length of Homer's Odyssey, which not only narrates Manas's deeds but also reflects thousands of years of Kyrgyz history.
Ala-Too Square, the central public gathering place in Bishkek
that one time when Kyrgyzstan gave itself over to Russian dominance.
I need to have a map handy
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