MKLM Retreat Days

Addendum

Our MKLM retreat went well and was a good experience. There were also a few other interesting things that were part of that trip to Kirirom National Park.

The center where we stayed had three beautiful dogs, something like a sheepdog, and then there was this horse that I believe thinks he’s a dog. He just wanders around poking into everything like the dogs.
Day and night he just appears and wants to interact like a dog or cat.
The problem part of that is that not all our group appreciated all the animals, especially the BIG ones, and especially when the horse would come up on the porch and stand in front of the door and keep one of the women from getting in or out of her room. Hang Tran here in the photo made friends with the horse.

MKLM Retreat Days

The first part of this past week was spent at Kirirom National Park where the four of us members of Maryknoll Lay Missioners gathered for an annual retreat.

Each morning of the retreat was filled with discussion of ideas about community based on Pope Francis’s encyclical Fratelli Tutti. There were not many people present at the center so we used a convenient table located near the restaurant.
After our morning discussion, we had an activity to help us express and integrate what we had been talking about.
Kylene and Julie returning to the residence building where we had our rooms.
The meals were quite good and we had many settings to choose from as places to eat.
The final evening we had a simple celebration of the eucharist on the porch outside our rooms.

Deaf Week

Friday

The activity for Friday of Deaf Week was making shirts with handprints, signatures, greetings, etc. Here Julie Lawler and I sign the shirts of two students

After making the shirts, the students saw some sign language videos, had some chocolate to drink, and then played some games.

Deaf Week

Tuesday
This Tuesday of Deaf Week had a coffee theme, and members of a delegation from the Embassy of the Czech Republic and the Agile NGO were invited to share coffee with the deaf students.
Wednesday
The theme for Wednesday of Deaf Week was khramas, the cotton scarf used by everyone in any fashion or way that suits your needs.
I had to get help to tie a khrama around my head somewhat artfully!

Kirirom Retreat / Sunday

Every year each MKLM group plans a retreat for its members. This year MKLM Cambodia arranged a retreat at a center at Kirirom National Park, a beautiful setting with hills (unusual in Cambodia) and trees.

Because I had the Sunday morning mass with the English Catholic Community, we left Phnom Penh at 2:00 PM for the 2 1/2 hour drive to Kirirom. Here Kylene and Julie, who made most of the arrangements, check in at the center which was quite nice.
Because of our late afternoon arrival, we planned no activities but just walked around to explore the center which had a real variety of activities and settings to investigate. First we located the restaurant, next to a pool, where we would eat all our meals.
Our rooms were in this building which is set in formal garden which would not be out of place in a European palace setting.
The center has a variety of accommodations, from tents and tree houses to hotel rooms and cabins like this one with its own kiosk on the lake’s edge.

Deaf Week

Sunday

Every year deaf people around the world celebrate Deaf Week to inform people about their deaf culture and to encourage the inclusion of deaf people into the societies and communities where they live.

This year a major change for our Deaf Day was moving to a new venue, a Salesian Sisters school in Phnom Penh. We were afraid it might seem far away for members of the deaf community but it turned out to be an ideal location.
Another change this year was having the big Deaf Day celebration on the Sunday at the beginning of Deaf Week instead of at the end of the week. The morning saw an opening talk and the a story-telling activity. Then it was time for lunch which was prepared by the hearing students in the hotel hospitality training program at the school.
After lunch there were some games pitting teams against each other. The games are always a most enjoyable time for these gatherings.
Then it was time for the major activity of the day, a food-tasting event. Volunteers from the English Catholic Community prepared foods from their home countries to give the deaf people a taste and a glimpse of different cultures from around the world.
Deaf people experience tremendous isolation. Hearing people tend to avoid them because they don’t know to communicate with deaf people, and so when we have a large gathering like this a major attraction is just catching up with old friends and chatting in sign language.
We also have a Deaf Day celebration in Kampong Cham Province but this year we also invited a group from Kampong Cham to participate with us in Phnom Penh.