MR CHLOOIN'S
STORY Mr Chlooin lives in Prasat Char village with his
wife and three boys who are all under 10. He also has some grown
up children. He makes a living as a farmer and both he and his
wife work extremely hard.
During the time of Khmer Rouge regime
(1974 - 79) Mr Chlooin was sent to live and work in a village about 50
km's from Prasat Char. He married his wife just after Cambodia was
liberated from the Khmer Rouge by the
Vietnamese. His wife, who was completely unskilled and can barely read and
write, was assigned to be a nurse during the Khmer Rouge times.
With virtually no training she was assigned to look after the
sick.
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If you're interested in finding out more about what happened to the
people of Cambodia during the Khmer Rouge times the movie "The
Killing Fields" is very good.
A lot of people don't realise that the fighting didn't stop in 1979
when the Vietnamese came. In fact, in 1990 in Prasat Char village
the government forces were still fighting the Khmer Rouge
soldiers. At one point Mr Chlooin was tied up and beaten with a
large stick by government soldiers who believed he was with the Khmer
Rouge (which he wasn't and never had been). They "interogated"
him for 24 hours trying to get him to confess to being Khmer
Rouge. He told us that had he given in and said he was he would
have been shot.
It was also during this time (1990) when the fighting was going on
that landmines were laid down in the Prasat Char area. Mr Chlooin
was one of the first people to start farming the land and so
unfortunately lost his leg when he stepped on one of the land mines.
(Thankfully they've all be cleared now.)
Mr Chlooin often asked us for
a generator and water pumping machine. He said because of his
false leg he found it difficult to water large areas of his farm and was
therefore limited in how much he could grow (and subsequently
earn). Farmers usually carry two watering cans which are supported
by a thick stick balanced across the shoulders. Mr Chlooin found
this too painful because of the weight it applied to his leg.
Being such an obviously hard working man we wanted to give him the
equipment that he needed but were reluctant to "give" such an
expensive thing to one family because of our policy of not giving
charity and also so as to avoid issues of jealousy. We finally
struck on the idea of getting him to work for Helping Hands in return
for the equipment he needed. He was given the job of repairing and
maintaining all the water pumps we had built in the past. He went
to the original installer and learnt how to repair them and then
enthusiastically got stuck into the job. As mentioned above, he
has also now been trained in how to install the new type of pump we are
using.
Mr Chlooin has had his current false leg for about 7 years.
When he went to Siem Reap 7 years ago to get it fitted he had to leave
his wife and young family behind in the village to look after the farm
(it takes about two weeks to get a new leg made and fitted). While
he was away a pack of about 8 wolves came to his house and tried to get his 2
month old baby. His terrified wife was home alone with the baby
and scared them off by banging a big metal pot with a large stick and
making as much noise as she could. She then lit a huge fire to
keep them away. It wasn't all that many years ago when tigers were
still seen in the Prasat Char area too, though none have been seen for
quite a while now.
Mr Chlooin needs to get a new leg. His current leg no longer
fits well and falls off easily. He told us one story about the day
his leg got stuck in the mud in the rice field. He was looking
after his cows, they bolted and he tried to go after them and his leg got
left behind! The everyday hardships people go through here are
hard for us to imagine. Mr Chlooin has to deal with mud everywhere
during the wet season. Due to his leg being old and worn out it
also causes him pain.
Handicap International
operates in Siem Reap. Brian went to visit them to discuss Mr
Chlooin and his old leg. He discovered that they supply prosthetic
limbs for free, but the problem is that the patient has to stay at their
premises in Siem Reap for about two weeks as the leg is made, fitted and
the patient learns how to use it. Mr Chlooin needs and wants a new
leg but the prospect of spending two weeks away from the farm at this
time of year (the beginning of the rice season) is simply not an
option. Instead, he visited Handicap International and they made
some minor repairs and adjustments to his leg and then he will come back
into Siem Reap after the rice season is finished and go through the
process of getting a new leg.
Mr Chlooin and his family (like most Cambodian's) have got some
amazing stories and live very hard lives. What amazes me is the
way he retells these stories, sometimes even with humour. To him
its just the way things are.