Archive | July, 2012

A day in Phnom Penh

9 Jul

The White Building on Samdach Boulevard 1

From the shelter of my guesthouse’s covered rooftop I look out over the street below. It is in chaos – pelting rain has sent all the street sellers into hiding.

I think back to the hostel I was at this morning. Two kids were rifling through the open garbage dump just opposite the hostel. I think they were looking for cans, like the woman who hovered over me last night. She was waiting for the remains of the 50c beer I was enjoying by the riverside.

I was in the company of young Frenchman who’d just ridden a single gear bicycle from the province of Kampot to Phnom Penh. I remember blowing her off in my desire to continue our heated conversation on the status of France.

That garbage dump would be floating down the street now, in the torrential rain.

I wonder about the families living in the kilometer long building the Frenchman took me to this morning. “My building” he called it. His building was so dilapidated it looked like the whole front had been ripped off.

He’d been spending his days photographing the families inside –  families packed in like sardines – playing cards, minding children, cooking food, going about life.

I mentioned his building to another man I met this afternoon. I was told that legally the families should have title to the land2. Legally they should be able to make repairs, patching the leaks that I’m sure are letting in the rain right at this very minute.

But they don’t have the titles. So they don’t make repairs.

Before the rain had settled in I’d headed out to the Olympic Stadium for a run. The place was packed. Around the outside boys playing football on every square inch of space, girls filling in the rest with games of badminton.

On the inside of the stadium there was row after row of dancers, busting out synchronized moves to Rihanna. This is where I usually run, weaving in amongst the dancers, looking over the the Phnom Penh skyline, watching yet another spectacular sunset.

I learnt today that there are rumors the stadium will be demolished. The land is apparently too valuable to leave to public space.

On the way home I see another near miss on the road. I have seen just about as many motorbike accidents as number of days I have been here. My record refuses to break – I return to the hostel  to yet another Frenchman, this time with injuries and stories of yet another collision.

Perhaps it is only the fragility of a hangover, but it would seem as if today is a day for open eyes, a day for being affected by the world.

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Image: License: Some rights reserved by Jonas Hansel

1 ”Cambodian architect Vann Molyvan designed this building, intended as a housing project for the booming middle class that emerged after Cambodia’s independence in 1953. The project was halted after the Khmer Rouge take-over in 1975, and never finished. Nowadays the decaying building is inhabited by hundreds of families, plagued by poverty, crime and prostitution.”

After the fall of the Khmer Rouge, “the Vietnamese made a bold, perhaps brilliant move: they rendered all prior property claims in the city null and void….Phnom Penh was opened up for settlement on a “first-come, first-serve” basis

Lovings of the week: Two countries which have done amazing things at scale

5 Jul
  • The national utility, Vietnam Electricity, estimates that in 1975, electrification among poor households in the country was no more than 2.5%. Yet in a little over 3 decades, Viet Nam was able to connect millions to the national grid. By 2009 the country had electrified 96% of its households, bringing modern power to the Vietnamese people in both urban and rural areas.
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Image credit: Some rights reserved by henrikj

 

 

 

The West Wing – pushing on the ocean

2 Jul
I have just about finished watching all 7 seasons of The West Wing, which is a fair investment of time for someone who almost never watches television.
One thing I love about good art is when it stops you in your step, when it makes you think differently. The show is one of the few that has reached deep – one of the few that made me really stop. Months after watching an episode I would often still be thinking – even dreaming – about the themes it explored.
One thing the show really opened my eyes to was just how hard it is to be, or work for, the leader of a country. How hard it is to campaign, to negotiate legislation, to get just about anything done. If you think your day gets interupted…! If you think you have a lot on your plate…!  The show gave me a lot more respect for the profession than I had had previously. My brother once said to me that he had great respect for Bob Brown - for the years of service he had given to Australia.  One of the shows main themes echoes that very sentiment.
I love how the show has so much going on in it – but still manages to squeeze in character development. Like life really – we might have too many balls in the air, but somehow we still manage to fit in friends, families, personal growth. As part of this, the show considers why people in these high stress positions continue to be there – what it is that drives them to be on call at all hours, to sacrifice their families, their health and highly lucrative jobs outside of civil service. Ryan Adam’s song “Desire” plays poignantly in one of my favourite sequences of the series – showing staff members at the end of a long day – reflecting on what they have to come home to.
The show also made me laugh about some of the ridiculous causes out there – like the special interest group focused on getting the world map turned upside down and the alternative energy lobby group who couldn’t decide on a single positive group message that would represent all their interests. And then the negotiations about debate negotiations during an election campaign.
The show reminded me that existential crises I might have are “neither great, nor unique” – as a friend once put it. One of my favourite lines from the show is “Sometimes I think, what if I were at UNICEF or United Way pulling together the AIDS fight, or back in New York turning the public school system around, would that be a more effective use of my 24 hours? Not this. Not pushing on the ocean.”
Pushing at the ocean – a sentiment I’m sure we’ve all felt at some time or another. It’s of some comfort to me that others, even those with great power and ability, have felt the same, and have found it within themselves to keep going.
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