2 June 2009

Alice in Cambodia


Last month, on behalf of eRenlai, Alice Lin set off to Cambodia in search of peacemakers. She brought back a rich array of video materials, interviews and photos that will plunge you into the story and the challenges of the present Cambodian society, I pasted below her letter sent from Phnom Penh:
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Dear Cerise,
It is a little more than a week since I arrived in the dusty city of Phnom Penh and I haven’t really found the time to be idle. Phnom Penh is nothing like anything I’ve ever seen in Asia. Moto-dops and tuk-tuks dominate the roads. Speeding is no longer a question but rather the licensing of underage drivers, and the flooding of streets after heavy rain does not help the situation. Just two days ago I conducted my highly-anticipated interview with Francois Ponchaud, author of ‘Cambodia: Year Zero’ and the first to have spoken up against the Khmer Rouge in 1975. We spent the afternoon in a dimly-lit classroom where a barefooted Ponchaud spoke to me of
the past and the present Cambodia. The next day I defied all weather condition and rode to CCH, an orphanage founded by Mech Sokha on the outskirts of Phnom Penh.
Sister Denise Coghlan was another figure on my list of peacemakers, and it wasn’t till our second meeting that I got down to asking her more in-depth questions on
her work in banning landmines and cluster bombs. I was driven around by Van Kamol, a local psychologist and an equally engaging humanitarian in the medical field, whose past project involved caring for HIV-infected children. I hope that the material will show you a different side to the richness and creativity of the socially conscious community in Cambodia.
Love, Alice


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While Alice was busy exploring Phnom Penh, Roy Berman paid a visit to the Brazilian community in Toyota city and contributed an illustrated report on their conditions of living and the increasing tensions between them and the locals. In Rumour and Prevention, I ponder on the consequences of overly relying on rumours, in particular in the case of the H1N1 pandemic. And if you haven’t had the time to keep track of our weekly video commentary, you will find some in our editorial section: start with Mei’s Taiwanese glance at Shanghai.
 
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