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Brian's story... continued

 

POSTCARD FROM PRASAT CHA

 

 

So this is me waxing lyrical. My name is Brian or in Deb’s parlance, Daddy Kuhl. The observations were made on my recent visit to Siem Reap to spend some time with Deb and try to be some help in all the great work she is doing.

 

To be honest, on the evening in question I was not providing any help to speak of. Rather I was resting beneath a tree waiting for Chanti, Deb’s able assistant and my ride back to town, who was giving a bunch of children an English lesson. For me it became a time of reflection as the scene before me became increasingly animated. The peaceful, totally rural setting, with the odd farmer bringing his oxen or buffalo home after a day grazing or ploughing in fields nearby, changed quite dramatically.

 

Within the space of 30 minutes the farmers had to compete for space in crossing the narrow wall across the nearby weir with a constant stream of cyclists making their way home. It was “peak hour at Prasat Cha”!!!!!   Literally dozens of men and women, returning at days end from their jobs around the Angkor temples and in Siem Reap, some 25 kilometres away. What I was witnessing was as close as one would get to a “traffic jam” in that setting.

 

How nice it was to reflect that here was a situation that would have been almost undreamt of by the people of the village 12 months ago. The happy voices of the children in the picturesque school behind me, the school that Deb and you, her supporters, helped the villagers build. The dozens of bicycles jamming up the track, some of the 240 bicycles introduced into the village under a purchase or reward program initiated by Deb to get at least one bicycle into every home. And the very fact that those same bicycles could not have traversed that track and indeed the people would not have had those jobs had it not been for the bridge that Helping Hands built to provide rainy season access to the village.

 

Through Deborah’s initiative and your support much has been achieved over the past 18 months toward improving the village infrastructure and the living standards and health of a number of families/individuals in the village. However, while the residents indeed live in a place endowed with natural beauty, the underside of  the village reveals that so much still needs to be done to raise living standards to an “acceptable” level, albeit one that we in the west would still consider to be extreme poverty.

 

Things that we take for granted such as reticulated water and power and sewerage systems are realistically generations away. The importance of establishing wells in strategic locations to provide clean drinking water cannot be over-emphasised. Nor can the necessity of adult education on the subject of health and hygiene in the home. These are initiatives on which Deborah is currently engaged.

 

Basic lighting is another area to be addressed. In time to come solar power will be an obvious solution in the area. But that remains a long way off for these people. In the meantime access to a simple camper’s lamp, which we might keep in the shed for use once or twice a year, would provide a huge improvement on the smoky little oil lamp burned in most houses in the evening. LED technology may provide a short term solution and prospects of sourcing lamps at an acceptably low price are being investigated.

 

Despite the harsh history endured by this country over many centuries and the poverty that prevails, the spirit and positive outlook of today’s generation of Khmer people is wondrous. But given the continuing corruption which holds back development in Cambodia , the people on the ground are hard pressed to improve their lot without outside help.

 

Helping Hands and other similar small non-government aid organisations cannot change the face of Cambodia . But through the seemingly boundless energy of Deborah Groves and with your continued support, a real difference can be made in the lives of the people of Prasat Cha, one of the poorest villages in the poorest Province of the country.

 

Phone (in Cambodia):  092 442 669  (outside Cambodia)  855 92 442 669
Email:   grovesphotography@yahoo.com.au

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This website is hosted and supported by Caloundra Net - www.caloundra.net.au

Helping Hands is a registered non-government organisation in the Kingdom of Cambodia.