Archive for the ‘Cultures’ Category

Life after Khmer Rouge

Sunday, March 14th, 2010

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Cambodia has gradually recovered from the Khmer Rouge regime, although the psychological scars remain for survivors and their families. Cambodia now has a very young population, and (already by 2005), 75% of Cambodians were too young to remember the holocaust, which ended in 1979.

For most people of my generation, Cambodia has been a symbol of something dark and horrible. The Red Khmers, led by Pol Pot, committed probably the largest genocide in history – killing more than 20% of their fellow contrymen. The enormity of this terrible crime is simply impossible for most of us to understand.

Sofar on our journey there has been little evidence of the horrific Khmere Rouge era, except for the present undeveloped state of all infrastructure and the apparent poverty, particularly on the countryside. (Click on any photo of this post for a larger image)

no_beggar

Today, when we had a walk in the Old Market area of downtown Siem Reap, we got our first worrying encounters with people who are still suffering because of the old regime. During a couple of hours we were approach by a dozen of crippled persons, who had lost either a leg, or both legs or an arm – either during the civil war, or for stepping on land mines afterwards. We were touched by the dignity that most of these unfortunate souls showed. They try desperately not to appear as beggars and instead try to give us visitors a chance to pretend that we are paying for a service or a souvenier.

The man with Malla and me on the photo above is Phung, he is 46 years old and lost his leg on a land mine in 1989 – and he tells us that he has five children to support. I can’t help wondering why he made five children despite his condition. If you would like to see how he presents himself on the sign shown in the photo, please click HERE.

An other type of encounter, familiar from many other parts of the world, is the mother carrying a nearly newborn child and asking for money. They are here too. I tried to do the right thing by bringing the couple with me in to a store and buing her a tin of milk powder. But I hate myself for suspecting that she will sell the can and get money for something else that the child might not benefit from at all.

milk

However, this blog post is not intended to be a negative one, actually I think that the Kingdom of Cambodia (yes the King is back!) will be developing very quickly. Because: the tourists are arriving and this is probably a good thing as it is the fastest way for a better living for the common people.

I include the following photos of wedding couples, which we encountered at Angkor Wat. I think they look very happy concerning their future!

wedding1 wedding2

Anchor what?

Saturday, March 13th, 2010

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Actually it’s name is Angkor Wat, but the brain of a cruiser immediately made a connection.

Designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site, the Angkor Archeological Park encompasses an amazing number of millennium-old ruins of the Angkorian-era Khmer Empire (9th to 12th centuries AD). As a whole, this area is in a class with the Pyramids, Machu Pichu and the Taj Mahal.

For us, it became a long day, waking up at 4:00 in Kuala Lumpur for an early flight to Cambodia, and more specificially to Siem Reap, the gateway to the ruins. Long before noon, after having been first taken to the wrong hotel, we were already on our way to Angkor Wat, the most famous of the sites. We were riding a tuk-tuk, the local moped version of a motorized rickshaw – actually it is a two-wheel trailer hooked to a moped.

Angkor-Wat_sunset

The rest of the day we explored several of the temple sites, including Bayon, Ta Phrom and of course Angkor Wat. This massive temple covers more than 1 km square and the lotus-like towers rise 65 metres from the ground (almost one Helsinki Stadium tower – see earlier blog: The real measure of hights). The walls of the temples are covered inside and out with thousands of bas-reliefs and carvings.

banyon

The giant stone faces of Bayon have become one of the most recogizable images connected to classic Khmer art and architecture (photo above – click on it), but we were particularly amazed by the jungle overgrowth at Ta Phrom, where massive fig and silk-cotton trees are taking over the temple. I’ve been told that this temple was used in the film Toomb Raider. Look at the photo (below), it’s almost as if that tree was a giant octopus, sliding down from above (click on it).

ta_phrom

Learnig Malay language

Sunday, November 29th, 2009

Bahasa Melayu is a difficult language. First I couldn’t find any worlds that resembled any other language, except the word “Restoran”. However, after a few weeks I learned to look closer. Just look at the following photo, which has nothing to do with screaming:

aiskrim

And the following sign is obviously influenced by the Wild West:

kauboi

Sometimes common sense is enough, clearly Berhenti is the word for Stop.

stop

The photo below appears to be of a 5 star hotel, but the sign says Akademi Koreksional, which of course is Correctional Academy in English. I wonder if that is a kinder expression for jail? However, looking at the buildings, it’s more likely a university for jail guards than a cage for jail birds!
correctional

Particularly interesting is the Malaysians protection of their wild life. They even make the warning signs reciprocal. Here is one, giving the monkeys a heads up for cars crossing their path:

crossing