Friday, September 07, 2012

"I do hope Cambodia progresses to emerge out of its ancient Khmer predecessor’s shadow" (SIC!!!) - There's such a dumb visitor in Cambodia?


Good things happen to good people

Fri, 07 Sep 2012
Writer: Hafiz Noor Shams
Selangor Times (Malaysia)
I do hope Cambodia progresses to emerge out of its ancient Khmer predecessor’s shadow. (sic!)
If one looks at various socioeconomic statistics, it is easy to conclude how far behind Malaysia Cambodia is.

Yet superficially, if one landed in Siem Reap in north Cambodia, one would find it hard to differentiate rural Cambodia from rural Malaysia, apart from Khmer writing on the billboards and posters as well as the spoken language.

The homes appeared Malay and the people themselves looked Malay. There were a number of times when a Cambodian spoke to me in Khmer, only to giggle finding out that I did not speak their tongue.

The substantive difference became clearer only once I was in the town of Siem Reap. Most parts of the town were dusty to present a Wild, Wild West impression.

There was clear underinvestment in infrastructure. The statement on infrastructure was true elsewhere as well.


There were not too many cars. Whatever seen on the road would be driven by westerners, or belonged to the government or some aid organisations. The locals would either ride a bicycle or a motorcycle generally instead.

The tuk-tuk and the likes formed the backbone of public transport. A Cambodian tuk-tuk is essentially a small cabin attached to a motorcycle.

In Siem Reap, Battambang and Phnom Penh, every single available tuk-tuk driver would hail me and ask if I needed a ride.

Sometimes, it appeared almost everybody on the road honked at me to ask plainly, “tuk-tuk?”

A college friend of mine whom I was traveling with me told me that her brother visited Cambodia a few years earlier. She joked that he was traumatised by the tuk-tuks. She went on to buy a tuk-tuk-themed T-shirt for him as a cruel souvenir.

The persistence was noteworthy and it did not end with the tuk-tuks.

As both of us explored the Angkor temple ruins littered throughout the land, children would approach us and beg us to buy something from them. It could be a bottle of cold water, a flute, a book, a piece of cloth, anything.

They would beg in the softest of voices that would melt the heart of an untrained traveller. There was a hint of desperation in their voices. And they were persistent.

After a while I became desensitised to the incessant pleas, as many other travellers eventually did.

My friend made the desensitisation easier. She said we could not possibly help them all by purchasing everything from everybody.

What struck me the most, and informed me the most about the state of Cambodian society beyond the cold statistics, was our guide.

We employed a Cambodian guide, who led us into various ruins. He explained to us in detail the history, the story behind amazing Angkor’s bas-reliefs and shared tidbits about temples for a moment worth of amusement. We thoroughly enjoyed his company.

By the end of the day, we wanted to go to where we wanted to go and he had to go to where he had to go. We parted ways. We paid and thanked him for a splendid day.

He thanked us for the payment, as it is customary to do so. What was unusual was that he exhibited further unnecessary gratitude. He explicitly thanked us for providing him with employment.

It was quite clear that he not only wanted a job. He also needed it.

What I am about to do is an attempt at generalisation. There are always perils at doing so but after observing the Cambodian society as a foreigner, I do think Cambodia has a bright future.

It is true that it is poor now, with children working on the streets when they are supposed to be in school.

Yet, I do not believe those rough edges are enough to negate my optimism. I am optimistic because Cambodians in general appeared to have that hunger to move forward and leave the past behind.

Life in the capital Phnom Penh is the symbol of that hunger. The city is not as modern as Kuala Lumpur and it will be many years before the two are at parity.

Nevertheless, Phnom Penh is developing even as it maintains its old colonial charm. One can immediately feel the go-go spirit in the capital as one skyscraper or two slowly inchs toward the sky, as the tuk-tuks laze across the city.

The newly-found Cambodian openness will further aid progress.

For years, Cambodia was held back by inward-looking world views. Judging by what I saw in Cambodia, from the rural north to the urban south, that self-damaging age has come to past almost fully.

A new Cambodian era introduces its own issues.

Cambodians complain of corruption and suspicious political maneuvering. But as the society matures as it is inevitable with continuous economic progress that was impossible 30 or 40 years ago, chances are these issues will be arrested along the way to a more tolerable level.

I do hope Cambodia progresses to emerge out of its ancient Khmer predecessor’s shadow.

As I was haggling with a merchant at a market in Phnom Penh for an item, an American saw me and smiled. He approached me and said: “They’ll take every penny from you. But they are good people.”

Good things are supposed to happen to good people.

Hafiz Noor Shams is an economist in the finance industry and a fellow at the Institute for Democracy and Economic Affairs

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

is there something wrong with that? why call..him a dumb visitor

Anonymous said...

I agree KI is out of line on this one.

Anonymous said...

This visitor speaks well about the reality in Cambodia. He/she should be recognized as a good and analytical viewer of a devastated location.

Khmer Son

Anonymous said...

First of all, don't compare my khmer people with yours, Malay. Secondly, Cambodia had gone through terrible wars for 5 decades, where as your Malay had never gone through war at any give time. Thirdly, Cambodia and her people have been terrorized by this monster and his group for the past 30 years or so. So my friend, you need to educate yourself about khmer history before you open your mouth. Finally, I'm not surprised that my poor children and people had mistaken you as one of our Khmer. Get it?

Anonymous said...

Take it easy my Khmer brother. This writer just wrote what he observed. Khmers did have ancestors came from Malaysia peninsula and elsewhere. Malaysian did related to us sometime in the past. They found Angkor ruin deep under a mountain in Malaysia. Khmer Empire made up of a whole Southeast Asian peoples. Our empire stretched from Malaysian peninsula to northern Burma & China. It's true Cambodia had developed more and more every year but we still years behind Thailand. Malaysia, Singapore, Philipine, Indonesia, even behind Vietnam. Only Laos. Burma less develope than us. We still got some ways to go but we are improving, it's would helped us moving along faster if we didn't such a corrupted government.