The following guest article was written by Paula Wallis, a professional photographer out of Vancouver, Canada. She recently went as a volunteer photographer to work with children in Siem Reap, Cambodia with an organization called The Giving Lens. Her other photos can be viewed at www.paulawallisphotography.com
For
those of you who don't follow my Facebook page and perhaps didn't see my
regular postings as we made our way through Siem Reap and interacted with the
wonderful youth and volunteers at Anjali House along the way; I returned in
December, 2013 from a volunteer stint in Siem Reap, Cambodia, with The Giving
Lens team, to work with the children of Anjali House, along with several other
NGO organizations in the area. It was a pretty amazing experience.
As
a team of eight photographers, we were led by two team leaders, Naomi and Elia
Locardi. Both are extremely experienced full-time travel photographers and it
was an absolute pleasure to work with them. Please check out Blame The Monkey
or The Giving Lens to see more info on the fantastic work they do.
The
last time I traveled through Siem Reap was ten years ago, to the month. I was
on a lengthy hiatus and was traveling solo throughout SE Asia. Cambodia was on
my bucket list because I had done quite a bit of research, prior to my travels,
on the Khmer Rouge Regime and it's devastating aftermath on this beautiful, and
seemingly peaceful country.
It
ended up being a pretty rough go for me, as I arrived in Siem Reap shortly
after hearing the news of a close friend's unexpected passing via email. He had
died suddenly on Christmas day, which, by odd coincidence, also happened to be
the Birthday that the two of us shared together.
Although
I had purchased a three day pass to the magnificent world heritage site, Angkor
Wat, I bowed out after two days of temple exploration because my heart, and
mind, were just not in it. I spent another week and a half or so in Siem Reap,
mostly cycling around the city on a rented bike, or walking aimlessly through its
endlessly crowded streets. I can't say that I really absorbed Siem Reap for the
wonderfully vibrant city that it is, at the time.
Next,
I headed down South to Phnom Penh, where I could finally explore the Killing
Fields and Tuol Sleng (the genocide museum), which is initially what I had come
there to do. I know - good idea, right?
So
THAT kind of did my head in. After that I headed to Sihanoukville, found myself
a little bungalow on the beach, and I don't think I left my hammock much for
the next two weeks solid, which is probably what I needed at the time.
This
country has an amazing history, despite, or perhaps because of, it's
horrifically violent past, and the grace of the people here is at jarring odds
with the Khmer Rouge legacy. I felt I owed it to this country to go back and
give it another chance. All my memories of my time spent there were grim, hard,
and tinged with deep sorrow.
So
you can imagine what a dream come true it was for me to be accepted onto The
Giving Lens team to travel there on a volunteer basis! I got to work with
Anjali House; a non-profit organization providing free food, healthcare and
education to underprivileged street kids and their families. The whole country
is still reeling, and in recovery from, the bloody regime. The generation of
children today is indirect, if not direct victims of the genocide. There are
not a lot of families there who haven't lost a family member or loved one to
the Khmer Rouge, or been affected by the crippling poverty the country has
suffered since.
Our
purpose at Anjali House was to work with the kids there in a photographic
capacity, giving basic workshops on operation of DSLRs (thanks to Andy Cotton
of Cotton Carrier Camera Systems for donating DSLRs AND lenses for the kids to
use! So generous!) as well as basic instruction in editing techniques in
Lightroom, working on their tiny, donated Netbooks.
I
cannot begin to tell you what a rewarding experience this was for all of us.
These kids are bright, happy and so eager to learn. They're just like any other
kids the world over, but at the same time, they're not. The poverty and
backgrounds some of these kids come from is appalling, and hard to think of.
But they meet each day with these amazing smiles, and they are all such
gracious people. There's that word again. But it's the one word I would use to
describe the Khmer people; gracious.
I
was lucky enough to be paired up with 3 different girls for the duration of my
time there (one of them, Chhuet, is pictured on the right, above), and I
enjoyed every minute of the time spent with them. They had, up until now, been
working on digital point and shoots, and had come out with some pretty amazing
work. But for most of them, this was their first time getting their hands on a
DSLR. Since there weren't quite enough to go around, some of us handed our own
over for them to go crazy with. I pretty much couldn't get mine out of any of
the girl's hands for the entire time, not that I was trying. It was a pleasure
to see them take to it so keenly - flipping through settings like mad, shooting
a mile a minute, trying all sorts of crazy angles, and running over to demand I
take a look at their work, or to ask "Why it not focus? Why so dark? Why
won't it take picture?" when they got stuck on a certain setting. There is
nothing so satisfying as watching someone learn something that you both share a
passion for. And these kids....they were just amazing....
I
could go on about our team's pre-dawn visits to Angkor Wat for some stunning
sunrise shots, the beautifully playful, but not entirely friendly monkeys we
encountered outside of the temples and took hundreds of shots of, the vibrant
night market, with beautiful (and cheap!) Cambodian silk, the $3.00 massages
(which include an ice-cold beer), the deliciously spicy Khmer food, about
careening through the streets in tuk-tuks, and stopping for banana
chocolate pancakes from the street vendors, about all of the small, delightful
things that make this city what it is - but for me, meeting the kids, and
watching them stand up in front of their schoolmates and tell us of their hopes
and dreams for the future; "in future, I will be lawyer" or "in
future, I will be flight-attendant", and their absolute confidence in
knowing that this would be so, was what brought redemption to me for my last
trip there.
This
is not a country that has given up in despair after decades of violence and
poverty (and are still dealing with daily injuries and death from the land
mines left behind during the Vietnam war). This is a country full of hope and
promise, and a whole new generation of amazing kids that are more than capable
of bringing about the change they hope to see. That is not to say that the
country doesn't have a long way to go. They need clean drinking water,
education, accessible healthcare, the list goes on and on.
So, if you're
looking for somewhere worthwhile to spend your time or money on this year, here
are the links for some non-profit organizations we had personal experience with
during our time there, who are all doing fantastic work alongside the Khmer
people:
http://thegivinglens.com
http://www.anjali-house.com
http://www.concertcambodia.org
http://www.thetrailblazerfoundation.org
http://www.pharecambodiancircus.org/circus
http://www.razoo.com/story/Silk-Screen-Printing-Lab-A-Green-Gecko-Social-Enterprise
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