
This was my only full day in Milan and it was busy. Click here to see where I went and the people I met.
Charlie Dittmeier's Home Page
This was my only full day in Milan and it was busy. Click here to see where I went and the people I met.
Today I traveled from London to Milan, starting off in the home of Vichet and Justin in High Wycombe and finishing the day at the PIME center in Milan. Click here for details of the travel.
Today was spent in London visiting friends and looking around. Click here to see where I went.
[I’m sorry for the hiatus in updating this website. I have been on the road in London and in Milan, and didn’t have access to the internet. Now I have arrived at the Maryknoll house in Rome and will be able to do the updating every day–I hope.]
Monday, 18 June, I flew from Myanmar to the United Arab Emirates to the UK and met Justin Smith, my colleague from Cambodia who now lives in London. I went to his house where I will stay for two nights with his family. Click here to see my British arrival.
Today is the beginning of a two-week trip to a conference in Rome for Catholic deaf youth. I’m starting off with a side trip to the UK to visit some deaf friends there. Click here to catch the beginnings.
This is a somewhat new scenario in Phnom Penh. Most people have never seen a moving train in Cambodia. I have been here eighteen years and this is the third time I have seen a train. The tracks from 80 years ago were not maintained and didn’t even reach their destinations. Up until this year, there was one train a day in each direction to Sihanoukville, the port in the south. The 135 miles took 12 hours.
Now there is a push to get the tracks going all the way to Thailand and a month ago, a commuter train was set up to run from the airport every thirty minutes. That is the train above.
They haven’t quite got the hang of it yet. The gates are manually operated and note that the operator is raising the gate as soon as the engine arrives, I guess figuring they don’t need the gate down because no one can drive through the train?
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Colin Allen in 2001-2002 was an advisor for the Maryknoll Deaf Development Programme in Phnom Penh. Now he is president of the World Federation of the Deaf and president of the International Disability Association. Here he is with Ms. A. Muhammed, the Deputy Secretary General of the United Nations.
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