Category Archives: Cambodia

Revisiting Cambodia and Vietnam

This visit to Cambodia was very different to the last. This time I was on an Intrepid Real Food tour, and I got to visit a bunch of different places around the country.

Angkor Wat
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Goodbye Cambodia, hello Thailand!

After saying all the goodbyes yesterday, our final day in PP was a much more relaxed one. We had a trip to the Russian Markets in the morning scheduled, which our students were looking forward to – a few of the girls especially had been honing their haggling skills down to a fine art!

The Bus 3 crew

The Bus 3 crew

The markets were similar to the Central Markets we had visited earlier in the week, with multiple shops with the same stuff, but the Russian Markets were smaller, a lot more crowded and had much more stuff packed into a small area. My group of girls (the TTTT – Tacky Touristy Tat Team) had a mission – go in, get small gifts for family, and have as much fun haggling in the process. The girls were buying tshirts and those baggy patterned pants they like for $3US a pop, and I bought some jewellery, hand fans and the occasional t-shirt (Tin Tin in Cambodia was a favourite).

Leaving the hotel - all the kids with their patterned harem pants!

Leaving the hotel – all the kids with their patterned harem pants!

Then it was time to return to the hotel and stuff all our prized purchases into our bags ready to hit the airport. The group waved goodbye to the wonderful hotel staff who had been so accommodating to us, and headed into the traffic.

And stopped.

It seemed there were protests happening at the Central Markets where we’d been earlier in the week, and as traffic needed to go around the area, there were snarls all over the already incredibly busy and traffic-laden city. It took an hour to get 1km down the road, and as we had looked out the window at the same tuktuk cart piled high with garlic, chili and mango (which was looking increasingly tempting as the wait continued), we were starting to worry about our flight, even though we had left the hotel 4 hours before our flight!

Just as we were really starting to let panic creep into the edges, we managed to move past the worst of it, and things were a lot easier from then. Phew!

PP airport was pretty small, but the checkin and security still took a long time because of our big group. The plane was a bigger (and hopefully smoother!) one than the little 2×2 we’d arrived in – an A300. A much smoother flight, but because we climbed and descended quite quickly, all of our ears were popping continuously!

At Bangkok airport we had more happy/sad farewells, as three of the boys were peeling off to visit one of their mates who lives here, as well as me sneaking in a cheeky 48 hour transit break! The boys’ friend did me a huge favour of writing out the hotel’s location in Thai so I didn’t need to stress so much about the taxi ride, and all went off without a hitch. Well, except for the taxi that I was in, which really needed a bit of love, and stalled every time we had to stop for tolls or lights! (Hey, I’m just happy that people stop for the lights here, unlike PP!) I’m not quite sure what he wrote down, as I don’t read Thai at all, but the taxi rank staff member read it and laughed, so he may have just been really specific about the location of the hotel, or he might have written something… “interesting” there! 🙂

Fruit platter I'd asked for on arrival... with choccies in a mini bird cage!

Fruit platter I’d asked for on arrival… with choccies in a mini bird cage!

I’m living it up a bit while I’m here, staying at the new Hilton (it’s a pretty good price since the baht is a great exchange with the AU$, plus I thought I might need a bit of luxury after working in PP – although now I’m getting the guilts about spending so much after seeing the poverty of the kids in PP!! In any case, it’s prepaid, so it’s done…) It’s a lovely new hotel, and after a lovely shower in the huge bathroom with ceiling rain-shower, I fell asleep as soon as my head hit the pillow!

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PP days 9 & 10

Wednesday was the last of our busy ‘normal work days’. We completed the usual morning class with the littlies, who were doing art (Christmas cards) and active games in the classroom. there was a change for lunch – no soup surprise, but BBQ chicken with rice and pickled vegetables.

In the afternoon, S had to go to another meeting, so the four of us took the class – which happened to only have three students, since the rest of the class had gone to rugby training. The three girls were very shy at first (and who wouldn’t be, with ‘teachers’ outnumbering students!) We spent time on revision of their ‘after school activities’ phrases, made sentences with flash cards, and read them some of the books we brought with us, both iPad and hard copy versions.

Instead of supervising the dance in the evening, some of the teachers were invited to join Scott in his evening rounds around the rubbish dump. We weren’t prepared for the emotional effects of this, even though the others had warned us!

Homework time

Homework time

We started off from CCF5, walking along the new concrete road and into the ‘new’ areas of reclaimed dump site. We met various families of the students who were learning and living at CCF, including a couple of girls completing their homework sitting on a rock in the muck, and then we bumped into one of the girls I’d met at CCF2 during my time there. She was apparently supposed to be staying at the CCF, but her father had taken her home to the dump site. This was the part that really brought home to me that these were real people, not some strange post-apocalyptic movie set.

After shower time at the satellite school

After shower time at the satellite school

Strangely, even though we saw a lot of tangible evidence of Scott’s work here, the part that really brought it home to me how much of a difference he is making, was when we walked into one of the satellite schools in the dump site. After picking our way through the mud and the stench and the smoke, we emerged into a clean, brightly lit area redolent of fresh paint. It was the paint smell that set me off – such a new, bright scent after the smoke and sewage.  It really showed me that there are incredibly valuable programmes being implemented here, and that my decision yesterday to sponsor one of the children in one of the classes I’d been working with was a good one.

Computer class

Computer class

Meeting the rest of the group for dinner at the Hotel Anise restaurant was a bit surreal afterwards, as we were all pretty shell-shocked by what we had seen.

To add to the strange things seen on the roads here, on the way back from the dump site, we passed a scooter with four people on the back, which alone wasn’t at all strange, but what did make us blink was the IV drip hanging from a pole between them!

I shook off some of my residual discomfort by retail therapy – near the restaurant was a shop called Smateria, which is a Cambodian-based, Italian-designed company which uses recycled materials to make bags, accessories, compubags cases etc, and supports women’s employment. Great Christmas pressies to bring home.

One of the gorgeous girls at CCF 2

One of the gorgeous girls at CCF 2

Thursday’s teaching load was much less, with only the one morning class before saying a tearful goodbye to our students and the CFF staff and heading off to participate (or watch!) a soccer match between our kids and some of the CCF kids. We were soundly trounced!

Our students all dressed up and ready to rock!

Our students all dressed up and ready to rock!

Then a quick lunch and on to prepare for our concert! Our kids had been working hard every night to learn two Khmer dances to perform, and needed the obligatory hair and makeup prep. They looked amazing, and danced beautifully, no matter how uncomfortable they may have felt!

After our last dinner at the Star Restaurant, we returned to the hotel and spent time debriefing the day and the week and a half we’ve spent here. There were ‘warm fuzzies’ to write and hand out, and everyone left the meeting with a real sense of fulfillment and inspiration.

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PP Day 7 & 8

Monday ended up being a very quiet day as I was very kindly told to go back to bed and get over my malaise. Thank you so much to all the staff who helped pick up the slack from this slacker! For those at home who’ve been concerned: thanks for the thoughts. Much better at this end of the day, and raring to go for tomorrow.

Tuk-tuk ride - we're very close to the action!

Tuk-tuk ride – we’re very close to the action!

The only real experience to add to the blog today was taking a tuk-tuk to the Star Restaurant to meet up with the rest of the group. It was quite an interesting experience, with the various aromas of the street (some good and some really bad – not great for the sick kids we had with us!) and being at very close quarters with the street.

Today’s (Tuesday’s) breakfast was still a little light on, not wanting to strain the newly repaired relationship with my innards too quickly! It was raining heavily this morning, too, that heavy tropical rain that doesn’t do a lot too cool, but increases the humidity exponentially. It gave us a new perspective on PP, showing just how muddy it would get in the monsoon season. No wonder CFF5 was doing drainage work! It was quite cool by the evening though.

Muddy pathways at CCF5

Muddy pathways at CCF5

We had a little more time at the hotel this morning as the staff needed to prepare for the teacher seminar at lunchtime. Luckily for the rest of us, J had put a LOT of work into it, so each other staff member prepared one section. Since I haven’t worked with younger kids before this week, I reserved myself to occasional interjections about applying the info we were discussing to older/more advanced students, and showing the staff a few of the ipad apps we’d found useful this week.

Back at CCF2, we were in charge of our afternoon class for an hour while S went to a meeting. We covered the page in the textbook we’d been requested to, and did some fun activities to consolidate these phrases and vocab with the kids: taking a photo of the students miming doing their favourite after school activity and their least favourite, and writing sentences about them.

Then it was computer time, when the kids were supposed to be working on Khan Academy. Unfortunately none of the computers were able to access the Internet, which caused some consternation, so we ended up reading stories to some of the kids and directing them to play the games on Children’s Encarta which they were able to access.

This is the "cute" post, according to the kids, who commandeered my camera

This is the “cute” post, according to the kids, who commandeered my camera

As we were waiting for our bus, the gorgeous group of littlies we sometimes work with in the morning came back from their afternoon stint at school. There were hugs and cuddles all round, and we certainly felt that this was a group that were appreciating our presence.

Some of the gorgeous girls with me at CCF2

Some of the gorgeous girls with me at CCF2

After the evening activities learning dance or helping with the food distribution at CCF5, we trundled off to Romdeng restaurant, another restaurant associated with the Friends one we went to the other day. This place was just as good, offering up Khmer fusion dishes, like red tree ants and beef stirfry, coconut milk and lime smoothie (very tasty, I can assure you!) and the delicious beef, ginger and capsicum stirfry I had. Everyone really enjoyed their meal.

Yum!

Yum!

I took the opportunity to visit the recycled/repurposed items shop upstairs, which sold the same sorts of things as the Friends shop did. This time I was feeling much better so I splurged on a couple of nice things for people back at home.

The trip seems to be rushing past now. We only have one full day of teaching at our centres, plus a half/three quarter day on Thursday before a bit of last minute sightseeing and shopping on Friday as we head out to the airport. It seemed like a long journey to have come on, with so many new experiences, but it also seems to have gone very quickly.

 

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PP Day 6 – halfway day

At the Royal Palace

At the Royal Palace

Today was our “break” day, when we were able to act like tourists and visit Wat Phnom, The Royal Palace, and the Central Markets. Unfortunately, it also seemed to be the day a lot of people started getting sick. Might have been the seafood last night, might be we’re getting a bit laissez faire with the antibacterial, or maybe it was just enough time for all the bugs to incubate nicely! So unfortunately some of us (including moi) weren’t in a really good state to appreciate the sights, even though we decided to soldier through it, determined to have our tourist day!

wrought iron gates

wrought iron gates

I think I want this door at my place...

I think I want this door at my place…

First stop was at the Royal Palace. The buildings are amazing here, really ornate carvings and dripping with gilt. The topiary and gardens were also beautiful, with the expected plants like bougainvillea and frangipani, but also huge bowls of gorgeous purple waterlillies and topiaries shaped into such forms as elephants!

Elephant topiary

Elephant topiary

Scale model of Angkor Wat at the Royal Palace

Scale model of Angkor Wat at the Royal Palace

Next was Friends Restaurant, another charity group who offers the people in need opportunities for training and vocational education. Good food, but I couldn’t really appreciate it properly since I was feeling a little under the weather still!

Sweet potato and taro chips

Sweet potato and taro chips

Pomelo and Mint Freeze

Pomelo and Mint Freeze

 

The sweet potato and taro chips helped a bit though – some stodge to help the tummy feel less unsettled! The shop next to Friends has lots of recycled materials goods to help raise money for the group, like twirled paper placemats and coasters, bracelets, recycled cutlery jewellery, tyre rubber wallets and computer cases. I was dithering between the two Friends Restaurant cookbooks, which focused on Khmer cooking, but I was dithering so much I didn’t end up with either, thinking I might go back afterwards.

Statue at Wat Phnom

Statue at Wat Phnom

After lunch we visited Wat Phnom, a temple on the biggest hill in the city. There’s been a temple on that spot for 650 years, but the current temple was rebuilt in 1926. The walls on the inside are decorated with scenes from the Buddha’s life, including pretty freaky ones like people being stabbed and bitten by animals!

Central Markets

Central Markets

Next stop, the Central Markets. These were like most large markets, with repetition of the same shops: knockoff bag shops, tshirt shops, jewellery shops, etc etc, ut laid out in a circular design with many snaking passageways filled with people and shops. The students were all pretty keen to try their hand at haggling with the merchants, and some did amazing deals! I picked up a couple of pieces of ‘turquoise’ jewellery (it may or may not be!), and a couple of little things for kids back home. Not a lot of shopping, but keeping an eye on the students meant I didn’t have my shopping eyes on!

We had a bit of time back at the hotel before dinner, so H and I took some of the students up to the massage place, where they spread the seven of us across two rooms. Communal massage!

Dinner was back at the Khmer Surin where we had tried tarantula on the first night. The group was a much more subdued one this evening, with lots of people feeling under the weather. I took a couple of kids back to the hotel early so they could go to bed, and did so myself, so hopefully I’ll be feeling better in the morning, too!

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PP Day 5

The wedding we saw the preparations for last night must have started at about 5 this morning! Luckily my room doesn’t have a window, so I wasn’t awoken with a rude shock to traditional Khmer music blaring along the length of the street like others were! It sounded pleasantly muffled from my room – one of the good things about no window!

The students don’t have proper school on Saturdays at most of the CCFs, but they do a sports/fun activities day instead, with some groups playing games in the classroom and some going downstairs to play basketball.

This morning we were with combination of kids we’d met in the morning classes, the littlies and some of the slightly older kids. They were all very cuddly today and one of the girls we’d seen every day came up and told me “I love you”. Awwwww 🙂

We started off teaching the kids a version of leader ball and tunnel ball, which they enjoyed, but the teacher said they usually play a form of dodge, using a rolled up piece of paper as the ball. Thank goodness it’s only paper, not a real ball, as they sometimes throw it really hard!!

We joined the rest of our group for lunch at the Star Restaurant today, rather than staying at the CCF, since most of the groups were situated at CCF5 and didn’t want to put too much pressure on their food services. Again, they provided a really tasty meal, this time consisting of seafood salad, steamed fish and seaweed and pork rib soup (which was really nice, even if it sounds weird).

After lunch we went back to join another class for afternoon activities, which included games of dodge, basketball and a new game we hadn’t seen before called ‘hide the paper’, where the teacher hid laminated cards around the classroom for the students to find, giving clues occasionally. We also played a game of 4 on 4 basketball in the yard, which made me appreciate how much these kids walk around barefoot, because I left my shoes upstairs and was suffering on the hot concrete! The girls were really good at basketball! I’m really not, so unfortunately my team lost this game, but I did manage to land a few baskets when we were taking turns to shoot.

Today brought home to me even more what a difference there is between our worlds of schooling. I’m not sure our kids would see the fun that could be had with a simple piece of paper or two, or take a basketball game so seriously when it’s not on a proper court with lines drawn out and wearing team bibs, or even shoes! These kids really value every single opportunity they’ve been offered – not that ours don’t appreciate what they have, but that things we think of as so small are so important.

sign on the waterfront

sign on the waterfront

The evening brought increasing humidity and even a few spatters of rain! We had a couple of hours at the hotel before heading out to the river cruise dinner we had planned, so a couple of us walked the kids to Lucky supermarket and then had some quality pool time. Unfortunately my hotel room was having some issues, so I was talking to the front office instead of swimming. It was all soon sorted out though, and off we drove to the riverfront to board our boat.

Our cruise boat

Our cruise boat

The cruise was lovely – dinner started with baby octopus and prawns on skewers, then graduated to the ubiquitous (but very tasty) curry and rice, and then there was more delicious tropical fruit for dessert, made even tastier by being out on the water.

Seafood onna stick!

Seafood onna stick! Party time!

It was pretty dark on the water, but the twinkling lights of PP on the shoreline made it seem very different from the Phnom Penh we have come to know – it seemed a city of fluorescence rather than the raw humanity we’ve seen.

Skyline

Skyline

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PP day 4

A pretty fabulous and much less stressful day today. To start with, we had an extra hour in the morning back at the hotel to prepare lessons for the day, which meant that we all felt much more confident and happy.

Kids learning

Kids learning

When we got to the centre, my little group was split up into two pairs, and we worked with different classes. J and M worked with P from yesterday morning which left L and I to work with S who we had met in the afternoon. I presented the lesson on ‘what you do after school’ that I’d prepared, using a poster on Australian sports. Then we did a reading activity from their textbook, before taking the kids downstairs to the ‘library’ to look up the Australian sports on YouTube. The kids would much rather play games, but they did look up some of the activities from the poster, and enjoyed watching ballet and karate videos in between playing games and watching music videos (Katy Perry’s ‘Roar’ and Adele’s ‘Rolling in the Deep’ were firm favourites!)

Teaching, teaching teaching...

Teaching, teaching teaching…

Lunch was another ‘soup surprise’ with some mushrooms/fungus, chicken stock and a couple of unidentifiable offal pieces. The broth was really tasty today, with a yummy mix of herbs. We weren’t 100% sure on the offal, but at least I tried some of it…

and some more teaching...

and some more teaching…

The afternoon all four of us worked with S’s class who we had met yesterday. He was caught up in a meeting, so we started with the same sports/after school activity that we had done with the other class, but since we didn’t have access to the computers we broke into groups and used the iPads to practise spelling, writing and pronouncing the words (no wifi to access the internet on the iPads.)

Apparently on Fridays this class spends the last hour watching some comic tv shows/movies and writing a sentence about the funny scenes. Today was a comparison between Charlie Chaplin in The Great Dictator and The Trouble with Mr Bean. Many giggles ensued!

I piked on the evening dance class, supervising ‘passively’ rather than ‘actively’, as my hands are still sore from last night’s efforts. One of the girls from another group wanted to swap in, so all good!

Khmer Curry (in a coconut!)

Khmer Curry (in a coconut!)

Dinner was at another restaurant close to the hotel, the Samaky. After being terribly envious of J’s curry served in a coconut the other night, I decided I needed my own, which was delicious! There were whole spices enlivening the soup, including a chunk of cinnamon bark and a few star anise. They also did really yummy fruit mocktails, so I had a mango refresher, which involved mango, lime, lemonade and all things nice.

Wedding street party

Wedding street party

As we walked back to the hotel, we noticed a strange thing on the street outside. A large pink tent was blocking the road. Apparently for weddings here, they just set up a marquee in the middle of the street, no matter if it’s busy or quiet, and party on! Sounds like a lot less trouble than all the paperwork you’d need to do the same thing in Australia!

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PP Day 3

Today was our first day actually working in the community centres. We were up at 6am so we could leave the hotel by 7, to be at the centres by 8 when the first session of classes start. I was on wakeup duty, so my body clock decided to go haywire to make sure I woke up in time to wake all the kids up and so I ended up waking up at 4am and 5am before finally deciding to give up on this sleep caper!

My little group is on their own at our centre, working with littlies: lower primary in the morning and upper primary in the afternoon. They’re very intense, but very loving. Within thirty seconds of sitting on the floor to play some alphabet games on the iPad, we all had limpets stuck to us and clambering in our laps, eager to play.

Lunchtime

Lunchtime

It seems that some of the communication channels are a bit strained (which is of course completely understandable when there’s such a large organisation, plus the language differences!) When we arrived, the teacher was under the impression that we had prepared lessons to deliver, and we were under the impression that the teacher would tell us which way they wanted us to help out in his/her classroom. The students looked at me and blinked. So a classic “doorknob lesson” ensued – uhhhh let’s break the kids into small groups and play with the iPad apps we’d downloaded. As I alluded to earlier, this broke the ice pretty thoroughly! We had just reached the “computer lab” for a computer session when the power went out. Whoops!

We ate lunch at the centre, sharing the same meal as the kids, a bowl of rice with a vegie and “surprise” soup – I couldn’t identify a lot of what was in there! The fact we were staying for lunch also caused a bit of consternation and confusion, but we were treated like very honoured guests, having our bowls of rice and soup brought out to us. As soon as we’d finished eating, the kids all came up to play with us, and some of the older girls helped me to learn Khmer pronunciation by reading from my Lonely Planet phrase book – them reading the Khmer, me reading the phonetic spelling. That worked really well, and my new word for today is “sohm”, meaning “please”.

lunchtime

lunchtime

After a very noisy and friendly lunchtime, we retired to the quiet of the upstairs classroom to spend a few minutes preparing some lessons for tomorrow – and on my part, worrying about whether we were supposed to have prepared for this afternoon, which is with a different teacher and group of kids.

The afternoon also contained an awkward bathroom story, but I’m not going to go into great detail: suffice to say that I think the entire centre including office staff and kids knew I needed to go to the loo once I’d asked one person very discreetly where the toilet was!

lunchtime

lunchtime

Our afternoon class was a lot more structured than the morning. Since the kids were a little older, they were learning grammar, vocab and spelling, so I personally felt a lot more comfortable teaching/assisting, even though they were still a lot younger than I’m used to! The teacher, S, who had been teaching for a year, ran with his usual lessons, but asked us to join in with things like helping the kids to learn their vocab. The kids then did a test, and then went to the computer room, where we gave the children some new vocab lists of words which they looked up on google images to define. Apparently tomorrow we will be presenting a “lecture”!!

Next up was a very long bus ride, as the driver got lost multiple times taking us to pick up another group and meet others at another centre for Cambodian dance lessons, mixed with three mystifying phone calls from someone at one of the CCF centres who for some reason thought the timetable for the evening had changed. After the dance class, I can now barely type, after the very unfamiliar hand/finger movements and gestures in the dance we were taught! The girls tried to teach us stretches that they do every day to keep their hand and foot joints flexible enough to bend their hands and toes back in the “more beautiful” sharply flexed poses. Needless to say, not terribly successful on my part, and even though I’ve been dancing in various forms all my life, this one made me feel incredibly ungraceful!

After a slightly less fraught bus ride, we ended up at the Star Restaurant again for dinner, where we had some delicious salads and that chicken curry again. Yum! A challenging day, but one with lots of positives.

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PP day 2

Today was a much less sombre day than yesterday, but it certainly showed us more about the way people live here. We started with a bit of an introduction from some of the CCF people, who told us more about the organisation, before taking us on a bit of a tour of the facilities.

Near the satellite school

My group visited two of the centres, CCF5 and CCF6, plus a satellite school and the Bakery. The CCF centres are made up of classrooms (some open to the air, some more conventional to our way of thinking) and other areas like computer rooms, meeting rooms, dormitories and kitchens. The satellite school was in the old dumpsite area, in order to reach a greater number of students who otherwise couldn’t travel to the further away centres. The Bakery is a vocational school where older students can learn about food production and hospitality skills once they’ve left high school. The kids were really welcoming to us, calling out hellos, waving and giving us high fives as we walked past them.

Two gorgeous girls at CCF5

Two gorgeous girls at CCF5

We stopped for lunch at Star Restaurant, a restaurant associated with CCF which provides work experience and job opportunities. The food was great, especially the stir fried Morning Glory with tofu (!) and the chicken curry.

Obligatory cat picture! Next door to Star restaurant

Obligatory cat picture! Next door to Star restaurant

The afternoon was spent back in CCF6 where the kids from the CCF put on a bit of a show to welcome us. We found out more about what the CCF does and how it works, and the students (okay, maybe some teachers too) played some dancing games to get to know you. While dancing like a loony in front of students doesn’t faze me, I was happily surprised when one of the girls grabbed my and one of the other teacher’s hands to pull us into the circle to be part of the dancing together. While our students are all mature and lovely, this girl who looked about twelve (who was actually around 18) showed the community-mindedness that seems to characterise both children and adults alike here.

The founder of CCF, Scott Neeson arrived partway through the afternoon, much to the delight of the children who were palpably happy to see him, coming up for hugs and trading jokes.

Mangoes!

Mangoes!

After a quick pitstop at the hotel, including a quick walk down to the shops (did I mention mangoes are really cheap and REALLY yummy???) we headed out for dinner at a restaurant down by the river, the Titanic. We had a much better ending to the evening than the original Titanic thankfully, with some really tasty food (water buffalo stir fried with eggplant anyone? Yum!! Other interesting meals were flambee’d eel and a chicken curry dish which arrived in a coconut!) and the usual raucous conversation amongst the staff. Highly recommended, even if they had trouble keeping up with us – bringing 33 orders out together is pretty tricky, but we all got our food and drink orders and settled down for a great evening.

coconut curry!

coconut curry!

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Phnom Penh Day 1

No smiling allowed

Wow, what a day. We started out at Toul Sleng, the S21 prison which used to be a school before the Khmer Rouge turned it into a torture and interrogation prison. The classrooms (which were breezy and large originally) were made into cells 2m x0.8m for prisoners to be incarcerated, and barbed wire laced the walls of the buildings so inmates couldn’t throw themselves off the balconies to escape their fate.

Whole buildings were filled with row after row of photographs of those who had been taken to this prison to be tortured and killed, adults and children, men and women. It was a sickening sight, especially when you considered the irony of the setting – a place which should have been filled with children’s laughter but instead heard screams.

 

Things weren’t completely gloom and doom though. Those of you who’ve been following my blog for a while will know my penchant for candid kitty photos wherever I go. Today obliged by providing me with a teeny weeny black kitty:

Then we moved on to the Killing Fields at Choeung Ek. While this memorial didn’t have the same visceral imagery that the previous museum did, it made up for it in emotion. We listened to the audio guide as we walked the paths, going past the Killing Tree where young children were murdered, and pits where hundreds of people were bludgeoned to death and left.

Memorials left on the fences protecting the mass graves

The place is at once beautiful and terrifying, much like the S-21 prison showed two sides of humanity. There were beautiful views across the lake, of fruit trees and paddy fields juxtaposed with this horror.

 

 

We were a subdued group returning from our day’s explorations, and spent time debriefing and discussing our thoughts about the day’s discoveries.

Not all was heavy and dark though. On our way to the supermarket in the morning, we had passed a place which advertised massage for $6, and one of the other teachers, H and I wandered back in the afternoon in our free time to see if we could squeeze some pampering in. They were open, even though it is a public holiday in Cambodia today to celebrate Human Rights Day (and I just found out they have a public holiday on my birthday, 7th Jan, for Victory Day to commemorate the end of the Khmer Rouge rule in 1979! Knew it was a great date…) and were very happy to slot us in for a quick half hour of back massage. And the price, I hear you ask? $4.50US! What a bargain!

IMG_2120

Then it was out to dinner at a restaurant around the corner which offered a fabulous buffet of traditional Cambodian and South East Asian delicacies… including deep fried bugs! The kids were rapt at the idea of consuming tarantulas, and the bug (heh heh) spread rapidly throughout the group, with the teachers all having a little nibble of at least one hairy leg. It wasn’t that bad, tasting a bit like deep fried soft-shell crab, but the texture was a bit weird, and I don’t think I need to repeat the experience! Other interesting items on the “for the tourists” table included unhatched duck eggs (embryos), crickets, water beetles (which looked a little too close to cockroaches for my comfort!) and silk worm cocoons. I rested on my laurels with Spidey.

 

It wasn’t all tourist curiosities though – fabulous fresh spring rolls, green papaya salad, Pad Thai, gorgeous little packets of chicken or fish wrapped in leaves, rice paper crepes, lemongrass seafood salad… I wish I could have tried it all!

 

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