07-08/05/2017
The first city we went to in Cambodia was the capital, Phnom Penh, home to some huge markets, a pretty big national museum with loads of interesting artifacts and statues from Angkor in it, some nice french colonial architecture, and a couple of horrific museums that detail the events and victims of the state sponsored genocide that claimed the lives of one quarter of the total population.
I didn't take pictures when I went to the killing fields. It was a horrible experience but I think its important to learn as much as possible about these events in history, especially since it only happened in the 70's. There is a monument in Choeung Ek, a stupa containing more than 5000 skulls of the victims found in the surrounding mass graves, many marked with the evidence of how they were killed, many also are plainly children and babies. Its a haunting sight on its own, but knowing that a lot of these people should still be alive today but instead are now just jawless skulls forever locked in an eternal silent scream of pain is a lot to take in. To this day more bones still emerge after the rain, and as you walk around you see rags and clothing coming up near the tree roots. I honestly don't remember learning about this at school. You tend to grow up thinking that people only did that kind of thing back in medieval times but knowing that a political party or ideology is capable of turning half a nation of people into mindless child killers really brings home how important it is to pay attention to politics and just what exactly is going on in the world, and not necessarily just trusting everything you are told.
Because that's not enough tragedy for one day we also went to Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum to learn more about the lengths people go to for power, the capabilities of human beings for carrying out the horrific torture of their fellow man, and the cowardice of the western nations who knew what was happening but refused to do anything about it.
We did visit the National Museum the next day - it was pretty cool but there wasn't enough information to put all the displays into context really so some of the importance was lost on me.
The next stop in Cambodia was Siem Reap and Angkor Wat which was bloody brilliant.
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Monday, 5 June 2017
Thursday, 1 June 2017
Don Det
We went to the 4000 Islands! like only two of them though. On the first day Babs decided to stay in the bungalow - watch this video to find out why (it's not gross I promise)
So I went on a tour by myself, did a nice long walk, met a lovely human to spend the day with (hi Hev!) and visited some excellent waterfalls, went swimming... it turns out the fish bite if you stay still for too long, and proper biting it actually hurts. This part of the Mekong I thought was really nice - less trash floating around, possibly because it all get washed up on all the islands and lumps of vegetation, and also we met some nice people and everything was chilled out. There were a couple of unexpected thunderstorms during our time there and it was actually a nice relief as the temperature dropped a bit.
| No outing! |
| In memory of who now |
| Ahhhh waterfall! |
We also bumped into a guy who we met in Pai weeks ago, and have seen a couple of times since, and now we have totally forgotten his name and its far too late to ask and its so painfully awkward because I just know we will see him again and I just hope its not obvious. This happens with distressing frequency with many people. I am one big cringe.
The bus to Cambodia was next. It was long, the border was annoying but we got through and everything was fine. On to Phnom Penh!!
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