Entrance to the "Killing Fields" memorial in Sien Reap |
Skulls found in mass graves in the region, on display |
This was the period during the cold war era when communists were trying to foist their violent ideology on the world. We too in Jamaica were in grave danger of being overcome by communists, as local communist forces were being armed and assisted by the Castro regime in neighboring Cuba.
From 1976-1980, we fought an "undeclared" civil war to keep the communists at bay, so the atroicities we were learning about in Cambodia which were broadcast daily by the British BBC, would not overtake us. By the time Pol Pot was stopped in Cambodia, he had massacred over two million of his countrymen and totally dislocated the population by moving people from their homes and dispersing them all over the countryside.
A shrine to the victims at the "Killing Fields" memorial |
The final spur though came from a young lady I met on a visit to Ha Long in Vietnam. She was a teacher in Britain but had been undertaking the arduous task of having to work while studying for her master's degree. So she said she decided to take a break to tour Southeast Asia and had been doing so for some three months. When I picked her brains about which was the most scenic country she had visited so far, the unhesitant answer was Cambodia.
On a Tuk Tuk tour of Angkor |
That was probably the best decision of my life as from what I saw of Cambodia in that short time, certainly indicates that my British friend and Gabby were both on target.
To begin with, the Cambodian people were by far the most friendly, helpful and humble people I encountered during my short visit to South East Asia.
In questioning some who I met about the events during the Pol Pot genocidal period, while I discovered that most had not even been born then, just about everyone knew someone who had either been killed, forcefully relocated or imprisoned during the period so knew everything about it. I also learned that nothing was taught in the schools about that aspect of their history but the older generation always spoke about it, always expressing bewilderment with the question; "Why did he do that to his own people?"
No one seemed to have a real explanation and it is something that I suspect will remain unanswered during their entire history.
The impressive Angkor Wat (Wat means temple) |
While the government does not give much information about the period, I was told, to their credit, all over the country there are killing fields memorials where skulls retrieved from mass graves are put display along with written, harrowing tales as told by survivors and of course shrines for the souls of the dead.
We got the opportunity to visit the memorial at Siem Reap and it certainly brought home the real brutality of that terrible period and communism in action.
Cambodia is now open for business though and no more is this more obvious than in Siem Reap where the
A young Buddhist monk performs rites at Angkor Wat |
Here you have on display, one of the largest collections of religious monuments in the world some of which are still being used.
Hindu carvings are visible all over |
What you find here are the most intricate designs and architecture and even where huge tree roots take over buildings, they seem to do little damage as happens with modern buildings.
A massive tree trunk envelops this temple but does little damage |
As I toured a minuscule section of the vast complex in wonderment, I was also enthralled by elephants all around transporting people and the monkeys which wondered easily among their human relatives!
When one baby tried to climb up the long, colorful Cambodian skirt which I had to buy to enter the sacred temple complex, I was tempted to pick it up but was reminded that they often have diseases.
One of the most inappropriate businesses I saw in' Cambodia though was a restaurant near our hotel named "Trump cafe." Although I wondered about the choice of name, was amused to see that during
When one baby tried to climb up the long, colorful Cambodian skirt which I had to buy to enter the sacred temple complex, I was tempted to pick it up but was reminded that they often have diseases.
One of the most inappropriate businesses I saw in' Cambodia though was a restaurant near our hotel named "Trump cafe." Although I wondered about the choice of name, was amused to see that during
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