Sunday 11 January 2009

early morning chez Eric

We wake at 4, and breakfast half an hour later. Its a somnambulist affair. The little boy waiters, who in daylight are wreathed in smiles, walk around stiffly, dead-eyed zombies dispensing scrambled egg and coffee. Then we leave in the dark, and with us the whole town it seems. Bicycles, motorbikes, tuk-tuks (motor-bike rickshaws), limousines battered or bright, converge from all corners and stream together out of town, towards the jungle and its ruins. There's a camaraderie de la route at this ungodly hour, and people wave gaily.

Yesterday we took the tuk-tuk, and travelled far afield visiting temple after temple, each more astounding than the one before. In a few it pullulates with crowds, Japanese, prosperous Hong-Kongers, creamy-white European widows. In most its almost empty, and you can easily be on your own, scarily so at times.

There's often the sound of music on the long avenues leading to the ruins. In the dusty shade of a tree you pass a little band of men playing old melodies on traditional instruments; its lovely haunting music. They are amputees, victims of mines, and play according to their abilities. Prosthetic limbs lie around to the side.

Cambodia is one of the most heavily mined countries in the world. I'm ashamed to say I never knew. The consequences are everywhere to be seen.

We visit a Mine Museum, started up by a young man who as a boy-soldier in Pol Pot's militia planted hundreds and hundreds of mines up and down the country. A Damascene conversion later he now dedicates his life to eradicating mines in Cambodia, and teaching the world about this scourge. He is now an expert de-miner, first doing it his own way, and now more efficiently and safely, having done a special course with the military in Salisbury, England.

Behind the moving and revelatory make-shift museum is a school for child victims, and a whole community to look after them. They are the lucky ones.

We alternate our days at the temples with lazy ones wandering around this charming town. I lunch at the Blue Pumpkin. The boys and girls there, slender and white of tooth, are all so beautiful they are surely of ancient royal stock, reincarnate. I sit there transfixed, stupefied by the midday heat and mesmerised by strange music with droning vocals from the next door wedding party. Something in me melts, like a block of ice on the sun-struck pavement.

Every other shop here offers reflexology and massage, and spas abound, but I'm shy of such delights, although God knows I could do with a good rub-down; my back is sore, and bum numb, from cycling, tuk-tukking on rutted jungle tracks, and months of indifferent beds.

4 comments:

no jo ro said...

Hello mahananda,
At last I can catch up with you, i have been trying for days to work out how to reply to you.(I think it was 3/11/08 when I received your postcard) and thank you for all your kind thoughts. They really helped me. I am feeling 100% better, had a small op,(last january) and have a good prognosis-take a pill every day for 5 years and go for annual check-ups.I am going to send this now to see if goes through and then write a bit more. With metta hugs Jo (Robinson)

no jo ro said...

Hello again, I havent blogged before and I seem to have chosen the option of it being for all the world to see-is there a choice? Oh well. I feel I now have to censor my thoughts if all the world can have a look but as long as it gets to you, htats what counts and who in the world knows that I am no jo ro -a school nickname made from my own names.
Anyway i was dazed and amazed to find your fantastic travelogue -complete with big cigar-I didnt think that could be you as Ive only seen yur Buddhist persona- and I havent caught up with reading the whole thing yet, but I olook forward to that.
Yesterday i went on the Anti-War Demon about Gaza occupation, in London. It was humungus-police said 12,000. BBC say 50,000, marchers say thousands more.It was bitterly cold- its been bitterly cold for days now (good news OAPs are getting extra winter fuel costs)and we marched from Hyde Park Corner to Kensington high st where we were led into a bottle trap set up by police barricades. I immediately leftand turned back and later people were enclosed in this area and held for hours and then charged by riot police.and the mood turned ugly. However, it was a fantastic turn-out and there were hundreds of Muslims and people of all ages protesting with passion.We had SWP marchers to stay and had discussions late into the night- (just like the old days)

I can't tell you how cold it is here-it's lovely to hear about cold when youre too hot isn't it? When the sun comes out for a couple of hours at mid-day its fantastic to walk in the frost and take in long big breaths of icy cold air. I went walking in Sheffield in hoar-frost covered country and every living plant and blade of grass was deeply etched with ice and i felt so glad to be alive amd kicking.Plus we stopped for a gastrofest(Yorkshire pud+unmentionables ) at a proper Eng.pub with a roaring fire.Doesn't this just make you want to rush back home? Mind you when I was in Thailand I began to love being covered in a film of moisture.
Sorry i havent responded to your blog yet. I'll go and have another read first. And sorry if this blog is blogging on and on- I thought thats what blogs were for-captive audience-I have no idea of the rules of the game and how much space i can take.Anyway, hope this reminds you of the cold reality of winter here so that you can fully enjoy the rapture of the setting you are in.
Oh i went to Vidyahyotis 70th (the new 50's)and it was a fantastic do for her,complete with a singinalong to Abbas Dancing Queen-just seventeen (but 70 not 17 anymore)and there were many rejoicings in merit with real appreciation of her unique humour and the gift of who she is. She was a bit stumped for words at the end(Believe that?) and finally told of a story she had just read of an old woman living on her own who was eaten by her cats (because there was no cat food out for them)but added that she didnt think we would let that happen to her! Beat that for irreverant NY humour?
Well Im blogged out now. Enjoy the warmth .Love JO

no jo ro said...

My account has not been verified as i have not received their email-dont know what to do till I meet my next expert, so this might be my first and last blog (Jo's Last Blog) I was deeply moved by your account of the victims of mines, and the pol pot area.- to think that I missed that opportunity when I was there too busy being a beach tourist. Carry on up the Mekong.Over and Out Love JOemail address is robinson775@btinterent.com

Nabokov said...

We always wanted to see those ruins. I hope you took some good photographs...
As for the amputees, my God, how sad, how dreadful.
Abrazos,
Mussy and Mauricio