Hi Everyone,
I've come to the conclusion that using my website is the
most efficient way to keep in touch and allow everyone to view my photos.
I've been in Cambodia for over two months now and feel
quite at home here. My friend, Angela from Australia, has also
just spent six weeks here with me, but has just left for China to take up
an English teaching position. (Hence the reason for my
"tardiness" in keeping my emailing up to date - well that's my
excuse anyway.)
As quite a lot has happened since I've
been here I'll briefly recap what I've been up to. (Sorry this first
newsletter is so long, I promise the next ones will be more frequent and
therefore shorter.) So that this page doesn't take too long to download I
have split it into two.
After six wonderful weeks living at the orphanage
it was
time to move on. I thoroughly enjoyed my time there and became very
close to the children. I still go back regularly to visit them.
I'm
still in Phnom Penh (the capital of Cambodia) and call Narin II Guest
House my home. Its very inexpensive and is a friendly, family run
establishment so I always come home to a welcoming and friendly
face. Admittedly, its very basic - my room contains only a bed, a
small table, a plastic chair and a hat stand (what the!), but its a heck
of a lot more than many, many Cambodians have to call home. There
are also some other "long termers", other foreigners who call
Narin home, so as well as having the opportunity to meet lots of
travellers. Narin also has a restaurant that serves very good and
very inexpensive food, as well as fast internet access - so all in all its
perfect for me.
After
leaving the orphanage, as well as spending time in Phnom Penh,
Angela and I did a bit of travelling to Siem Reap (where the famed Angkor
Wat and other ancient temples are) and to Sihanoukville, a coastal town,
for a bit of much needed "R and R".
I've
also been doing some volunteer photography work both for the orphanage
(making slide show presentations for promotional purposes) as well as for
a new magazine that is being developed for the garment factory
girls. The magazine is being developed by Charlie, a lovely English
lady, and its main aim is to help the girls develop self esteem and a
sense of their own value. So far we have done three shoots - one of
some of the factory girls for an article on friends, another on different
eye make up styles and the third on cooking and nutrition. The
makeup shoot was really interesting as it was done with girls that have
been rescued from vulnerable situations where they were being commercially
exploited. the girls were lovely and were tickled pink to be
involved. The cooking shoot was lots of fun too. We had to
photograph every step of the process of the recipes being prepared as many
of the girls who read the magazine won't be able to read. Then, of
course, we sat down to enjoy the three dishes that had been prepared!
SIEM
REAP
Angela and I took a
trip west to Siem Reap with Charlie and a couple of other ladies.
Siem Reap is where all the amazing temples of Angkor Wat are, but as
Angela and I had seen them last year we decided to pass up on them this
time. Instead we visited the children's hospital again to give
blood. Denghi fever is a huge problem here and the children who get
it need blood transfusions or they will die.
We
also met up with our guide from last year, YouSa, who has a real burden on
his heart for his people. He took us on a trip out to a remote
village where the people live in quite mind boggling poverty. YouSa
is hoping to set up some foundation to try and improve their lives.
There was one man we saw there who was so incredibly sick that he looked
like someone form a concentration camp. I am intending to go back to
Siem Reap in a couple of days time and hope to try and help this
particular man - if its not too late.
I
also spent some time at a place called the "Land Mine
Museum". It is run by a man called AkiRa, an ex soldier, who
now dedicates his life to ridding Cambodia of the millions of land mines
that still cripple the land. Everyday, someone is killed or disabled
by land mines. In the course of his work demining AkiRa meets many
boys who have been disabled by land mines. Because of their
disabilities and poverty the parents of these boys often don't send them
to school and the boys are destined to a life of begging. AkiRa has
"adopted" 20 of these boys who all live with him and his wife at
the Museum (which is really just a collection of shacks). The Museum
and upkeep of the boys is funded purely by donations from
tourists.
Continued
on the next page - please click here Cambodia Newsletter Page 2