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begs the question

Thursday, January 15th, 2009

by Rachael
Phnom Penh, Cambodia

It’s mid-afternoon and we’re mooching about the guesthouse. I look across at ER2, who is sitting in her Dadda’s lap. Hands outstretched, she’s pretending to beg. I decide the time has come to ask the children something that’s been mulling round in my head for weeks now. 

As we sit there on the street corner waiting for dinner, my question pops out, “What do you think of the beggars?”
Mboy6 is often first with an answer. “They’re bad. They always ask for money.” He’s not always so direct! And where did that idea come from? It’s not like we’ve suggested anything of the sort. I was particularly intrigued at his answer, because the other day he found 100riel (next to nothing!) on the footpath and carried it around all day, his treasure. In the afternoon when some kids came begging, he gave it away. I had to find out why.
“Why did you give those children your money the other day?”
“So they’d go away. I thought if I gave them some, they would leave us alone. I don’t like them asking for money all the time.”
Not as philanthropic as I’d thought! And not successful at losing the crowd either – you give one note and more kids appear!
I hadn’t realised the begging makes even our smaller children uncomfortable. It’s something we’ve been faced with every day, but not yet discussed. The conversation continued as we considered why people beg, how they go about it, what alternatives there are, how well-to-do the small-stall owners might be, how to decide who to give money to, making judgments, what else we can offer, treating everyone with dignity and respect, the swearing-at-the-beggars-ex-pat some of the family noticed the other day, what the Bible means by “give to everyone who asks”, the proliferation of limbless people here, “what do YOU think Mum?”…..

Dear reader, what do YOU think of begging?

salt n pepper

Thursday, January 15th, 2009

by the chief cook
Phnom Penh, Cambodia

We have really been enjoying black pepper on our tomato rolls……not being gourmands, we had never come across the fact that there are different sorts of pepper in the world, but we have now been enlightened. Cambodian pepper, and in particular Kampot pepper, is the best. Unfortunately, when we were in Kampot we missed the pepper plantations….but we did get to the salt fields…..we think. We might have been ripped off.
We had been told it was a twenty minute trip each way and so we were willing to pay $5 for “go and come back”. But the trip took less than quarter of an hour – both ways. We also went the opposite way to what the map said – totally opposite away from the salt-water estuary. This raised a few questions in our minds…and even more niggled us when there was no salt. Not a skerrick anywhere. The drivers insisted it was due to the rain we had had, and indeed there had been an overnight downpour, but it all did seem a bit strange. Curiously, the fields looked just like the brochure – just there wasn’t any salt. So we are not convinced we saw the fields from which 800,000-900,000 tonnes of salt is harvested between December and March each year. For supposedly being the busy harvesting time, there was a surprising absence of workers (one to be exact, and according to the drivers “no workers, because no salt”). Neither were there any sacks or piles or anything in the storehouses. Nothing.
Just acres of what we would have thought were flooded rice paddies waiting to be planted out. So who knows if we saw the real salt fields? As we bounced along in our tuktuk, we decided that if we were enterprising tuktuk drivers ourselves we would offer a “Salt-n-Pepper Shaker” tour, taking in both the real salt fields and the pepper plantations together with  ride that would shake every bone in your body. But maybe they make more money taking unsuspecting tourists to rice paddies and calling them salt fields??

Regardless, we are delighted to have become acquainted with Kampot pepper, a taste that will stretch my resolve to eat exclusively-locally when we return to NZ!

coping

Tuesday, January 13th, 2009
by the Mama Phnom Penh, Cambodia What I would like to know is who of the kids is coping the best and/or the least? How does age and personality come in to that? ~ asked by a friend Interesting questions. In a nutshell, ... [Continue reading this entry]

fit for a king

Saturday, January 10th, 2009
from Jgirl14's journal Phnom Penh, Cambodia Years ago I had a durian lolly. It was bad enough to be spit straight out and put me off durian and all things related forever. Today, with Mr Lim's expert guidance, this changed. We met ... [Continue reading this entry]

Cambodian Birthday

Friday, January 9th, 2009

by Rachael Phnom Penh, Cambodia

A long time ago Pa told me that April is a very good luck month. In the Cambodian culture, New Year's always falls in April, which means that all the children born before New Year's ... [Continue reading this entry]

would you like to come for breakfast?

Wednesday, January 7th, 2009
by Rach Phnom Penh, Cambodia  We're just popping down to the market. We leave our guesthouse.....

and walk down the road. Nothing spectacular, just a fairly typical street.

[Continue reading this entry]

Cambodia Quiz

Tuesday, January 6th, 2009
by one who can't help but teach Phnom Penh, Cambodia You want to buy bread rolls. You look for:

two weeks together

Monday, January 5th, 2009

by a friend Phnom Penh, Cambodia 

we have experienced so much....

from bustling Bangkok to the unnerving border crossing, from the eerie grandeur of Angkor to the fire and the almost-stampede, from the even-busier-than-Bangkok Phnom Penh to Kampot, from dogs ... [Continue reading this entry]

food in our tummies and a roof over our heads

Thursday, January 1st, 2009
by a surprised traveller Phnom Penh to Kampot, Cambodia  Expecting to be picked up just before nine, we were cutting into our breakfast watermelon at a quarter to eight when the guesthouse staff apologetically announced at our open doorway that the ... [Continue reading this entry]

as busy as bangkok

Sunday, December 28th, 2008
by Rob-n-Rach Phnom Penh, Cambodia Even as we drove into Phnom Penh on the bus and then across this capital city in a tuktuk convoy, J14 observed, "It's as busy as Bangkok." There seemed to be just as many motorbikes, just ... [Continue reading this entry]