No mailman

After I wrote an article for the Catholic newspaper of the Archdiocese of Louisville family, former students, and others donated to help pay for our work with refugees here. I wanted to write a personal thank-you to them but we have had no outgoing mail since it stopped in May, 2020 because of Covid. I decided to write the thank-yous and send them by courier to Louisville where my sister would drop them in a mailbox. Yesterday I contacted UPS here and they wanted $92 to send the letters; DHL wanted $82. I then went to Express Mail Service of the post office and sent them for $37. But after I paid, the clerk told me it would take five to ten days to get to the US!

Oh, well….at least my investment years ago in Forever stamps paid off. I bought them for 32¢, I believe, and now they cost 60¢+.

Just like the old days….

Today ended up with a delightful visit from Dave and Sharon Rohe who met with Roath Leakhena and me in Phnom Penh. Dave and Sharon and Leakhena used to work with American Friends Service Commitee (AFSC) in Sihanoukville and I collaborated with them in a small deaf program they had. Then Sharon and Dave moved to New Zealand. Now they are in Cambodia for a visit and we had a wonderful time talking over a pleasant dinner. Welcome back!

It’s the way we do it here….

This photo shows why Phnom Penh’s traffic is so horrendous–and deadly. Notice 1) there are no lanes painted on the road; 2) there is no attempt by drivers to stay in anything resembling a lane of traffic; 3) physical barriers are widely used in Phnom Penh because lane markings are ignored, but here an opening is provided to nullify the effect of the barrier; and 4) allow a truck to make a U-turn right in front of the sign saying no U-turns. Cambodia averages about five traffic deaths a day.

Ooops…

I was trying something new with today’s post about the dance performance when the CACD went on retreat in Takeo Province. I added a 40-second video of the dancing, the first time I’ve used video here, and it’s giving me mixed results. The video keeps pausing, unable to buffer the content quickly enough. Maybe it’s my own slow Internet connection playing back the video or maybe it’s a problem with video on Mailchimp. I’ll have to experiment more but apologies for now if you’re getting results like mine.

CACD Retreat #4

The CACD (Catholic Alliance for Charity and Development) retreatants toured and heard explanations about the different programs offered at the cluster of schools set up by Bishop Olivier in Takeo Province. We also had a chance to see some of the students performing.

Here are some of the student apsara dancers backstage, waiting for their turn to perform.
There are many versions of the classical dance form these young women are performing.

Other students concentrated more on music, albeit with classical dance elements added.
And these young men add a rather non-classical musical element to the performance.

Caritas Visitors

Today a team of management from Caritas Australia and Caritas Cambodia came to visit the Maryknoll Deaf Development Programme. Nou Chanthea (2L) is Caritas Australia’s Asia Manager based in Sydney.