10. okt. 2014

The Chaotic Kingdom of Cambodia

With a population number rounding the 14 million people you honestly cannot stop thinking how on earth this number is accurate, when it is most likely that a large part of the population doesn't even have person numbers. Kids sit in the side of the red muddy streets playing with sticks or making bottle lids float on the surface of the dirty puddles. Kids come rushing to your side in the cities, the temple entrances, even late at night you see the street children who with their begging tired voices repeat; 'one dollaaar, ladyyyy'. Meanwhile they will hold up small souvenirs or bracelets for you to buy, but their gazes will flicker to whatever is more interesting to catch a kids' attention rather than your constant forced stream of 'no thank you'. 

(Little girl we saw in front of the completely insanely beautiful and wealthy looking Royal Palace in the capital Phnom Pehn)

(This is a small girl who tried selling bracelets and fridge magnets to the tourists who came to see the sunset here at Angkor Wat Temple. Afterward the mass of people had moved on she took a walk through the dirty water. I think she was about 7 years old.)

(More kids playing outside the Royal Palace where they know a bunch of tourists are sure to come and visit) 




(We had just ended a trip where we saw several different temples located in the Combodian jungle and so many street salesmen were waiting for us. There were at least ten kids trying to sell some of their stuff to us. One from our group bought a small thing and naturally our bus shortly after was surrounded with kids hanging in through the door and presenting their items for sale up against the window.) 

Education in Cambodia is free - but for the teachers to be able to survive on their extremely low salary (30$ a month) they often charge more from the students. Therefore it is a complete  luxury and sign of success if you are able to speak English in Cambodia. Since tourism is the #1 industry in Cambodia its a life changing skill to obtain. But often the parents cannot send their kids to school because of it being too expensive. 

We visited a school called New Hope which was founded with help from the travelling agency we are travelling with; G-Adventures. Here we visited an English class and talked with the students who had been lucky enough to get a free education. The place was amazing. Beautiful people, beautiful project and so much happiness. www.newhopecambodia.com 

(They were quite shy most of them 😊) 

With half the population of Cambodia being 17 years old or under the amount of children living like this might not be as surprising. 36% of the population lives on less than 63 cents per day - and it is so evident that everyone is completely on their own. There is no government to help you - there is barely any roads which are proper. We drove on the only proper highway in Cambodia and the rest of the different bus trips were basically just on roads with countless of holes made from the raining. 7 hours free massage is all Cambodia's streets have to offer besides the up close view into the lives of the Cambodian people. 

Even the beaches, streets, and cities were floating with junk since there were absolutely no bins in sight. Basically you couldn't tell the country even had a government expect for the few times we passed one of the massive, spectacular, and fancy government buildings. 

As shocking as the living conditions are - as shocking is the history of Cambodia. Around 1965-75 something the Pol Pot regime managed to completely ruin a perfectly functioning country. Pol Pot was a perfectly normal Cambodian boy who was such an excellent student he received a scholarship to go study in Paris (Cambodia was under influence of the French). Here Pol Pot spend his time reading communist books and letting the ideology consume his soul and heart. He gave himself the name Pol Pot which is short for Potential Politican (or something like that). He returned to Cambodia and worked as a history teacher - slowly influencing his students and coworkers with the idea of the communists. Somehow he managed to get power enough to prohibit the education system, export/import, force the Cambodian people to move from the cities to the rural areas to be farmers and excecuted up to 2 million of the well educated people or former profiles within the military (1975-1979). Furthermore 1 million died of starvation from the hard and merciless work in the fields, as Pol Pot tried to force the ideology of communism into the society structure of Cambodia. 

We visited both a prison where 'public enemies' where kept and tortured right till they were send to the second place we visited; The Killing Fields. Here the bodies of several thousands have been found in mass graves. When it rains more bones, teeth and clothing surface from the dirt of the graves (the government hasn't given the resources to find the remaining victims in the area ( - as our guide told us they have been telling the Cambodia. people the many past years that 'it will come soon').

Most shocking was to see the so called Killing Tree were soldiers of the Pot Pol regime would smash small babies against the trunk of the sorrowful tree. 

(Visitors have paid their respect by hanging a bracelet on the trunk or around the graves.) 

Our guide - who lost his father during the Pol Pot regime - told us that during some of his first tours as guide the trunk of the tree was still covered in blood, hair, and strands of clothing. 

Supposedly there's a movie called the Killing Fields which I'll definitely see when I get back home to better understand the history. It's is such a devastating story of a country that fights to move on and get back on track. To be honest most of us were quite surprised a genocide like this only taking place some 40 yeas ago has not been mentioned in our education etc. 

(Memorial at the Killing Fields) 

What shocked me even more was an old man we met at the prison which is now open for tourist and function more as a museum. He was one of the two remaining survivors of the prison stay. His personal hell. Where he was tortured and heard the screams and cries of his fellow inmates. A place where hundreds were killed and tortured as if no humanity existed. You could still see the blood stains on the floor - yet this survivor returns everyday to this place in order to sell his autobiography and talk with the tourists - tell his story of how his drawing skills saved his life (he drew Pot Pol's portrait). 


I asked him how he felt about returning everyday to this place and he answered it was incredibly hard - but he had to do it to share his story. If you ask me there's a financial reason too. 

Just the fact that this poor man has to return to this place - most likely because he needs the money he makes on selling his books and drawings - just to survive is beyond me. Cambodia is a country with so much poverty and an absolutely heartbreaking and horrible story that your heart prays for the Cambodian people and their strength to move on.








4. okt. 2014

Sleepwalking in Bangkok


Trip has been extremely hectic with constant adventures and painfully early starts at 6.30, 5.30 and 4.45! My two days in Bangkok were spend in a state of overwhelmed sleepwalking while looking, smelling, and experiencing which I somehow miraculously managed to do even tho I - at the end of the day - hadnt slept properly for about 30 hours! 

But with Bangkok being a city that truly never sleeps - you obviously just need to go with the flow and throw yourself out into the stream of people, taxis, tuktuks, and the endlessly many noises and smells. 
Every corner was wired up with thousands of black wires keeping the city going - no system whatsoever and it most of all looked like a spiderweb which hadn't been maintained. 


It's quite unbelievable how they manage to make things work everywhere as it seems to be in a state of total chaos. Even the security checks at the train stations were completely unnecessary since whenever the machine started bipping people just kept walking as if absolutely nothing had happened, while we, Europeans, in the beginning took it as seriously as had it been an airport! 

I think what surprised me the most was the transportation systems they had worked out. How do you make a city with 8,2 m people function and run at its best? Apparently the answer is inspired from various science fiction movies with 'skytrains' and highways running high above the city ground. It was so fascinating and surreal to see how the city worked on different levels; the streets of Bangkok, walking bridges, highways, and different trains driving far above the city undisturbed by the tuktuk and street salesmen. 

It's a strange thing that a city in a country where their life philosophy is based on peacefulness and balance in life; it's still so hectic and overwhelming not too mentioned incredibly crowded.


 A nice example is this tiny religion spot probably some sort of temple squeezed in between skyscrapers and highways in the middle of the buzzing city - they mix up the old traditions in this city with traces of the future really. You can't help but wonder how the train system and highways, even the countless of skyscrapers have been built when kids are walking in the streets trying to sell you stuff and the handicapped have absolutely zero chance of making it anywhere in life other than their spot on the corner waiting for charity to live on. 

Right now I'm sitting in Cambodia where we've seen a three large temples, early sunrise, a charity founded school named New Hope, and driven motocross through rice fields. We have to go for a 7 hour long bus drive right now to get to the next city - a local bus that is - so I don't have time to write more unfortunately! 

 







18. sep. 2014

12 DAYS TILL BANGKOK

A trip to the mysterious far East to meet new colorful cultures, make my tongue go numb from eating spicy delicious food, meet people with lifestyles completely different from my own, and be left in awe by nature sights and a new world that's what awaits in 12 days time for me - or at least that's the plan. To be perfectly honest I'm still not entirely sure about where the hell I'm actually going on this adventure; how long time I'll be staying in one country before rushing off to reach the next point in exhilarating speed. I'm not entirely sure what to expect or how to prepare, what to bring or leave behind; and I've already convinced myself just about a few hundred times that 'I can probably just buy it much cheaper over there'. After all it's not a trip to the moon or three months in the deepest darkest parts of Cambodia's jungle - it's merely 40 days away from home, 8614 kilometers away from a place where I know how to be part of a society and have a fair idea of how the toilet facilities are.

My idea is that traveling is supposed to push you a little out of balance and challenge you with new thinking and ways to live. You'll go home with a new perspective on the world and maybe learn to appreciate things more, or be conflicted with the lack of certain things here in the West. You'll be out of balance till you realize what impact the journey has made on you - and how it leaves you with an even stronger fundament to balance yourself on. Prejudices will be challenged, ideas of living, thoughts about yourself will be poked to.

So maybe I'm not entirely sure what foreign currency I need to get my hands on; maybe I'm not sure whether to bring my digital camera or just use my smartphone - and a hundred other things, but what I am sure of is that it's going to be an amazing trip (as long as we at least stay out of prison - yikes).

Even though I'm not entirely sure what is going to happen on this trip - I know for sure two of my friends and I will be backpacking to four countries being; Vietnam, Thailand, Laos, and Cambodia. I do know we're supposed to travel with local transportation and I'm absolutely sure it'll be a blast.

So far I'll have to wait 12 days before my plane leaves to Bangkok where I'll meet my two friends (who are currently in Nepal) and while on my trip I'll post photos, stories, and whatever else comes to mind from this blog.

Lastly I'll be posting photos from my instagram - so if you're interested you can follow me there.

Hugs, Louise