Author Archives: Rickey Galloway

Day of Anger

Loud music, announcements, prayers over loudspeakers are a big part of being in Cambodia.  We have experienced 2 days of a religious ceremony where prayers were played over a loudspeaker for almost 18 hours per day.

Then another 4 day session of a funeral/ceremony at a Buddhist Temple.

Weddings and funerals can run from 1 day to several days and are accompanied with music/prayers over a loudspeaker for all to hear.

It’s a normal thing in Cambodia, and it reminds me of when I lived in downtown Birmingham during college.  People would visit and comment about all the ambulances that they would hear, but after a while, I didn’t really notice it anymore.

We live relatively close to the Palm Container Night Market, a place with shopping, a soccer field, restaurants, rides for kids, and live music.

So stepping outside at night is a concert of local Khmai music, and quite a mixture of Western music – Ed Sheeran to Achy Break Heart (3 nights in a row we heard this “classic”).

None of it is really distracting and typically once inside you can’t hear anything.

Yesterday at the Cambodia’s People Party building, which is 50m from our house, the loudspeaker was playing all day.

I always try to find out why something is happening. Weddings are obvious, as is the Achy Break Heart from the Container Market. But random announcements from a political party’s office, not so much.

Turns out yesterday was Day of Remembrance, more commonly called the “Day of Anger” in Cambodia. It commemorates the killing of almost 25% of the population by the Khmer Rouge in the 70’s.  Around 2 million people died during this time.  It’s estimated that 60% of these deaths were direct executions and the rest were a result of starvation and disease.

There were reenactments of the killings yesterday in Phnom Penh.

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Reenactment In Phnom Penh

Thousands were killed in “reeducation camps”. The most famous of these was named S-21, a former high school turned into a place of torture and murder.  I went to this place a few years ago. Estimate of 14,000 – 20,000 people came here, and only 7 survived.  School rooms turned into torture rooms. Beds with shackles, very small cells for prisoners, tools of torture displayed. But the worst were the thousands of photographs of the victims. Men, women, and children.

The image below is one of the “enemies” of the Khmer Rouge. Taken from a documentary on one of the photographers at S-21.

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Documentary on the photographer, Nhem En, who was a teenager at the time.photographerDoc

 

Upgraded Transportation

Got another moto today.  A Honda Wave 110cc semi automatic.  It has a lot more punch than the little Today scooter.

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This is one is still fun though.  It’s the scooter that Annika and I take to the gym every night.

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Kulen Mountain

A few weeks ago, we went to Angkor Silk Farm and meet Socheat, who was our tour guide. He has a car, which is not super common, and takes people on tours around Siem Reap.  Speaks English very well, and is also learning Spanish.

I am making him a website for his car service. Siem Reap Car Service It’s not even close to being finished, just a bunch of placeholder text. But since I was creating his website for him, he offered to take us on a free trip – even refusing money when offered.  So today, he took us to Kulen Mountiain, which is about an hour and half from Siem Reap.

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Kulen Mountain

Easter!

Easter at church was hot.  The air conditioner wasn’t really keeping up very well. 90 degrees with little air flow.  The guest pastor was a former Mennonite from America, who has moved to a village in Cambodia, and married an Cambodian lady. They only recently got electricity!

Annika and her Easter “basket” plus her strawberries.  Strawberries are crazy expensive here.  A small carton is $12.

Random Things Seen Around Siem Reap

I see this a good bit.  I’ve seen younger holding on, but I got a pic of this little guy.  Typically traffic is moving pretty slowly, 15-20 mph.  They know to hold on!

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Not a good picture, but this is how they do weddings in Cambodia. We have seen dozens, maybe 100+ wedding setups.  They will setup on the side of main roads, alleys, side roads. Really wherever they can fit. They sometimes stay up for a few days, but this one was only 1 day. This is the road we live on, so we had to take a slight detour to get around it.

They set up large tents, and decorate all the tables inside. This wedding took place at night, so it was 20 degrees cooler than the typical 100 degrees F we have in April.

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Happy Birthday!

Annika turned 16 today!  We started with a fancy lunch, then off to Old Market for some birthday shopping, then a bit of a break, off to the best burger place in Siem Reap, and finished with a movie!

Some pics old and new.

 

I love you!

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Birthday Surprise!

We had a surprise dinner for Annika tonight with friends with strawberry cake. Annika ask for strawberries every time we go to the store, but every time but one I have said no.
A small carton of strawberries is $12 here. So getting fresh strawberries was a treat.

She likes people singing happy birthday to her just as much as I do.

Khmer New Year is coming up. April 14 – 16. It’s the biggest holiday in Cambodia. Looking forward to experiencing it.  Decorations are all over the city. Here are 2 pics from the resort next to our house.

Caesar with a banana leaf birthday hat!

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My New Lawnmower

My new “lawnmower”. I bought it at Old Market, which is near Pub Street and is a pretty touristy area.  Annika got a small ax.  When you carry something like this around the market and grocery store, you get a lot of looks.

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Caesar!

A sample of one of our lunch bills.

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Happy Birthday Caesar!

The world’s greatest dog turned 7 on March 31. As always, he got a birthday party. Instead of cake, he had a piece of fried chicken from a street food vendor, which just happens to be some of the best fried chicken I’ve ever had.

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Birthday Dinner

Caesar likes to take food to his blanket and eat it there.

 

Then he gets a birthday trim. I decided to do it myself after first attempt at grooming left him all fluffy.

I gave him a break before trimming his head.

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Unrelated, but we got a wok today. Now we have 1 pot, 1 pan, and 1 wok. High Rollers!

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