I decided to listen to the advice of other travellers and go to Cambodia to see the ancient temples of Angkor.
From Siem Reap I took a boat through the Tonle Sap lake and down the Sangket River to Battambang, Cambodia's second largest city. The boat ride was advertised to take anywhere from three to eight hours.
In Battambang I had the opportunity to ride a norry, or "bamboo train." Train tracks run near the town and so the locals have rigged up their own engine-powered bamboo carts that ride along the tracks. If a real train comes down the line they pull the cart off quickly. It was a beautiful, if bumby, ride through the countryside.
One afternoon in Battambang I met Nareth, a local Cambodian who founded a free English school for kids in his nearby village. Currently the school has 340 students who voluntarily study English in the evening. I hopped on the back of Nareth's motorbike and visited the school. I was a guest speaker in the advanced conversation class, where I was asked such classics as "who is your sweetheart?" and "how many kids do you have?" The kids definitely see learning English as the way to get a good job. The teachers volunteer their time as well. Currently they are trying to raise $300 to buy a generator for the school.
Nareth also told me some of his personal stories about his family and the Khmer Rouge. His grandfather, a doctor, was killed during the initial purges of the 70s. As recent as 1991 the Khmer Rouge was still sweeping through the village, killing able bodied men. Nareth remembers hiding neck deep in the river to avoid capture. These stories of life under the Khmer Rouge, the many killing fields, and the on-going land mine problems have really affected me. I find myself becomming angry about things I never used to pay any attention.
From Battambang I took several buses to come back to Thailand. I had heard a lot of horror stories about the border crossing but it went really smoothly. Its both a relief and a let-down to be back in the comparative wealth and stability of Thailand.
2 comments:
Wow! Those ruins look sooo amazing!
Hi Karen, Bill Perkins here. I hope you don't mind me sharing in your amazing adventures.
I have too tell you that the picture of the "Ruin swallowing tree" is THE most amazing thing I've ever seen.....you are truly blessed........!
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