A couple days ago we had a photo of a woman with a scale she carried around, weighing people for a few cents each. Not far above her on the economic scale is this woman with a stack of khramas (scarves) and other cloths that she is selling. She probably pays a deposit for the cloths in the morning (and maybe rents the bicycle along with them) and then walks all day to sell a few items. Will she make two, three, four dollars in day? How much of that can she keep?
Topics: Waiting at Work
People working in the home-shop houses or working in different parts of the informal economy spend a lot of time waiting for customers. Earlier we saw pictures of those just staring or sleeping to pass the time. Here is another way some shopkeepers wait.
A Day’s Wages
Cambodia is trying to get its economic ranking raised from low-income country to middle-income country, and by some standards, progress is being made. But then you see people like this woman. She rents a scale and then walks the streets all day hoping to weigh people who may give her 3¢ to 5¢ for the weighing. Here she is counting her money. Will she have enough to buy food at the end of the day?
Even the church…
We don’t get Christmas carols on the radio starting with Halloween (we don’t get ANY Christmas carols on the radio!) but we do get some decorations around the city. Today I was at St. Joseph Church in Phnom Penh and found workmen setting up a LARGE artificial tree and a grotto/ manger on the church grounds. I’m glad they do big, bold expressions of our Christian Christmas practice but, hey, it’s not even Advent yet. Couldn’t we wait a couple weeks to set all this up?
Racism
A Declaration against Racism by the Archdiocese of New York
Topics: Waiting at Work
Cambodia has its tourism industry and its garment factories but a majority of the people make their living by farming and with small businesses they set up at home or on the street. Those handling the small businesses spend a lot of time sitting and watching for customers. Click here to see some of the people waiting.
Time to Change
This is the last weekend of the Catholic church’s liturgical year. Next Sunday, December 3, is the first Sunday of Advent and the start of the new year. Tonight, after the Saturday evening liturgy at World Vision auditorium, we had to take the old green English Missal from the plastic covers that bind them with the music books and replace them with new, violet-colored 2018 missals. We had a magnificent response to our request for people to stay behind after mass and help us make the switch for 320+ books. Here the volunteers put the old green missals into boxes to be taken away for recycling.
Year-round Treat
All kinds of food are sold on the street in Cambodia. Some of it is seasonal, but one offering that is available almost any time is the roasted bananas. Three or four on a skewer stick, they are grilled on a cart going around the city and eaten warm, a real favorite. Here this man is also roasting some kind of round cake but I don’t know what that is. Maybe it’s some kind of mashed-banana cake?
Night of the Big Chicken
Today was American Thanksgiving Day and we celebrated here in Cambodia also. It was a regular work day but at the end of the day we met at the Maryknoll office for a festive dinner featuring, as our Cambodian cooks say, the Big Chicken. May we all be thankful for all that we have and share it generously. Click here for photos from the evening.
Notable Quotes
“We should cease to imagine nuclear weapons as tools for us to manage, but rather as a curse we must banish.” ~Fr. Drew Christiansen, at the November, 2017 Vatican conference on nuclear weapons |