By Ker Munith, the Associated press
KAMPONG CHAM, Cambodia - Munching on their first hamburgers in weeks, the Americans traded tales of mastering the Asian squat toilet and eating deep-fried tarantulas.
These were some of the rural realities that greeted 29 U.S. Peace Corps volunteers who left behind the comforts of home to teach English for two years in the Cambodian countryside.
It marks the 46-year-old Peace Corps' first program in the poor Southeast Asian country, which was bombed by American B-52 bombers during the Vietnam War, ravaged by the genocidal Khmer Rouge regime in the 1970s and further weakened by a civil war in the 1980s.
Political instability and security concerns kept the organization out of Cambodia until now, but both sides felt it was "the perfect time" to introduce the Peace Corps to the country as it strives to develop and expand its economy, said Van Nelson, the group's country director. The group's arrival makes Cambodia the 139th country where the service organization has worked.
The 13 men and 16 women, from New York, Wisconsin, Iowa and elsewhere, fanned out recently to villages in seven rural provinces after two months of training that introduced them to life in Cambodia - where the average civil servant earn about $25 dollars a month.
Roughly a third of Cambodia's 14 million people live below the national poverty line of 50 U.S. cents a day.
During an eight-week orientation period, each volunteer was lodged with a Cambodian family in Kampong Cham province, 50 miles east of the capital, Phnom Penh, where they eased into their new culture and downsized lifestyle.
Used to driving cars on American freeways, they became accustomed to maneuvering bicycles along bumpy country roads, where traffic rules don't apply.
They lived in shacklike wooden homes on stilts overlooking dry and empty rice fields and slept under mosquito nets to keep away the malaria-carrying mosquitoes that are a major killer in this country. They hand pumped well water into buckets and boiled it for drinking, and many said for the first time in their lives they showered three times a day - the only way to cool off from 100-degree heat in the absence of air conditioning.
They did have some luxuries, like dim lights at night powered by car batteries - a rarity in rural areas.
"We have different routines now. We go to bed earlier and get up earlier. We wake up when the dogs wake up," said Sam Snyder, 24, from Buffalo, N.Y. He came with his wife, 22-year-old Kara, who said the couple wanted "to experience life outside the box."
Dogs weren't the only early risers. Colin Doyle, 23, from Baltimore, said he was awakened regularly by insomniac roosters.
"They crow at 2 a.m., 3 a.m., 5 a.m. Very annoying," he said at his temporary home in Kampong Cham before the group got posted around the country.
Over the course of two years, the volunteers are expected to teach English to approximately 60,000 Cambodians as part of efforts to increase job opportunities, particularly in the booming tourism industry, organizers said.
Tourism is one of Cambodia's biggest moneymakers, bringing in hundreds of millions of dollars a year, mainly from the crowds of visitors who flock to the famed Angkor temples in the city of Siem Reap. The government is also developing some of the prime white-sand coastal areas in hopes of building Cambodia's image as a beach destination.
Peace Corps officials said they plan to increase the number of volunteers to Cambodia each year. The initial group ranged from young adults just out of college to a married couple in their 40s.
While the Peace Corps' image remains that of a youth service, the organization has been attracting more and more Americans like Mark Stilwell, a 46-year-old former computer network administrator from Denver. He and his 41-year-old wife Kristine, a high school teacher, joined the organization because they wanted to travel but "in a way that is more than just tourism," he said.
Nelson said the Peace Corps has been attracting older volunteers for years and has found they bring special skills like patience and "a different way of looking at the world than young volunteers."
"We find people coming to Peace Corps when they retire. They just realize that they're not getting any younger and that they should get out and see the world and expand their horizons," he said.
Many said the brief orientation made them realize all they took for granted back home - like washing machines and dryers. Doing the laundry involves squatting outside over a bucket of water and scrubbing each item with bare hands.
Going to the bathroom was another learning experience, as a group of three volunteers explained while on an outing at a riverside restaurant in Kampong Cham, which happened to be owned by an American from Philadelphia and, to the group's delight, served burgers and fries.
Mastering the Asian squat toilet, a porcelain covered hole in the ground, was the first challenge. One volunteer, who asked not to be quoted by name on the subject, said he had given up using toilet paper - which could only be bought at a distant town - and instead did as Cambodians do, which involves splashing oneself with water from a filled tub near the toilet.
Eating offered new and sometimes stomach-turning dishes, said Chris Rates, a 25-year-old from Oshkosh, Wis., who suffered diarrhea after sampling a delicacy of fried tarantulas.
He confessed to being "freaked out a bit" when he bumped into two of the creature's living, breathing cousins in the bathroom at his host family's home.
"I'm used to living with them now," he said, as he devoured his first hamburger in weeks.
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Sunday, April 29, 2007
Americans living 'outside the box' through Peace Corps in Cambodia
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