Saturday, July 27, 2013

Our last Orphanage visit - Phenom Penh

Today we visited the other orphanage in Phenom Penh, They call it PP1 and yesterdays was PP2.  It is a much larger orphanage and is 5 stories high.

When we first arrived the children's Choir which is coming to the USA later this week was practicing.  They are very very good.  I cannot wait to see them at the Church on Sunday the 4th of August.  A young boy of 15 came and sat next to me and instantly we made a connection.  It was wonderful.  His name is Moun Sauda.  And we got along great.  Of course then other boys and girls came over to see and they love the tablet so I got some nice pictures to send you. 

Also you can see the city from the top floor of the orphanage in two pictures below.

I took the older children 14+ aside and we talked about my story.  I talked to them about the choices they will need to make.  It is a rough city and the bad choices are everywhere.  We talked about God and about how they need to keep him as the center of their life.  We talked about how they need to look out for each other and nobody is perfect.  I gave the eldest one of my eagles and you can see a picture of him below.  The children really respond to my talk.  I think it is encouraging to them and they so rarely have an older male visit who focuses on them to try to connect.  I know now this is what God had in mind for me.  To focus on this specific group of children.

We sang songs and did Tie dye T-shirts.  The children were wonderful.  Many of them are in the choir and Kept asking if they would see me and Wendy, Rachael and Matthew next week as I told them all about them. 

Of course when time came to go, A boy and girl around 10 years old came to me and were stuck to me.  We hugged and many kisses on the head an more hugs.  They just don't let go and I don't want them to.  As you can see by the picture of Oudom (one of our translators) sleeping, this trip has been exhausting.  Non-stop and many many long days.

I have come to love these children.  They are a completely open book.  An open heart and so giving.  Its very hard to explain the emotional bond.  I have always been fond of children, but these precious boys and girls are so very special.

As I sit here at the airport preparing to come home, I reflect upon the week.  I reflect upon all these precious boys and girls and all I have seen.  My heart is full but I am sad.  At the same time I look forward to going home to my family and home.  It is a strange combination.

I will likely post on the blog when the Choir performs and then a final wrap up.  I have more than 500 photos so may post some miscellaneous information along the way.

Pol Pot and the Cambodian Genocide (graphic descriptions and photos)

Today we went to two memorials and museums that illustrate the terrible genocide that Cambodia suffered during the reign of Pol Pot.  During this period (1975 - 1979) over 3 million Cambodians were murdered by the ruthless Pol Pot regime.  This accounted for 1 in 4 people in the country.  One of my new friends from Cambodia, Piseth lost his mother and sister, Aunt and uncle.  When Pol Pot came to power, the country originally embraced him as he represented change.  Immediately upon assuming power they began emptying the cities and killing all of the educated people.  Anyone who was learned or a tradesman was killed.  Families were turned against each other and the children were drafted as ruthless soldiers to kill and torture their fellow Cambodians.

We began the tours at the Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum which is in Phenom Penh and was once a school.  Pol Pot turned this school into the infamous Office 21 or S-21.  It was used to imprison thousands of men women and children.  They were tortured until they confessed to plotting against Pol Pot and then murdered.  I viewed the horrible cells, torture devices, and pictures of all the prisoners that the torturers took when they entered the prison.  In the center are 14 graves of the 14 bodies that were found when the camp was liberated.  They were murdered at the last moment as the regime tried to escape.  Inside the former classrooms, they used bricks to create tiny prison cells.  they would chain up hundreds of people in stock like chains one right next to the other and take them for torture.  It was a very very sad and frightening place.

The second place we went, which is in the pictures attached is The Choeung Ek Genocidal center.   This is a place on the outskirts of the city which was a killing field along the river.  The regime would take blindfolded people there on trucks and murder up to 300 a day.  They would not use bullets as they were too expensive.  they used shovels and other tools to murder them.  This place was only to kill.  They poured DDT and other chemicals on the bodies to try to keep the terrible smells hidden from the city.  As you look through the pictures below (graphic) you will see a building in the center of the museum that houses over 800 human skulls that were recovered when they dug the area up after the war ended in order to document the murders and inter the people properly.  It is called the Memorial Stupa.  Also you can see the graves that are protected by roofs and dug up mass graves that are covered by grass.  You will see a glass box full of clothing recovered as a way to remember the dead.  You will see on top of the box bones, a jaw and other things.  You see there were so many murdered that as it rains here, those bones continue to surface even though they were dug up.  One picture shows clothing surfacing along with a leg bone and that is in the path that you walk!  You will see the killing tree.  The soldiers would seize babies from the mothers and holding them by the feet smash them against the tree until dead.

Lastly two pictures of the skulls.  A horrible sight.  I couldn't help but wonder who these people were.  It was all so terribly sad.

As we all gathered together after the viewing under a beautiful tree along the side of the museum, Jennifer George talked to us about what we all need to do to avoid such a thing. We know we cannot trust everything governments and the press say, we need to be curious and ask questions, we need to ensure that when we see wrongs we speak up and fight them, we need to love one another and we need to heed the messages of the Bible and what God tells us to do in treatment of one another. 

This was such an emotional visit.  There were very few if any dry eyes.

Friday, July 26, 2013

Phenom Penh

The city is very tense here in Phenom Penh.  The elections are in two days and the two major parties have people by the thousands streaming into the city.  They come on scooters and cars and trucks full.  adorned with flags and the colors of the party they are in the streets thick as ants.  I am looking outside the hotel and the streets are full of people chanting the party slogans and the rivals honk at each other and wave their flags.  The citizens here are very concerned for the country.  They desperately desire a better life and wish for democracy but are worried that the losing party may start a civil war.

Today we went to Phenom Penh 2 a brand new orphanage for New Hope for Orphans.  The previous group deserted the building and the orphans and was to set them out into the street.  NHO took over the orphanage and saved the children from that fate.   They are mostly older children.  Between the ages of 14 and 20.  These young folks were very receptive to the group.  As they were older, Julius had an awesome talk with them about decisions and choices and I talked about my story.  They were very receptive and i think encouraged.  We did tie dye t shirts with them and I used the t shirt I had here for when I sleep and did one with them too!  Dee had brought some bibles from Fairview at River Club and the young adults were very interested to have them.  They study English at school and as Christians it gives them more practice in their faith and studies.  Once again I felt so inspired by the team.  Each of these people brings a unique dynamic to Cambodia to help these children.

At lunch time (don't confuse it with lunch) we went to the Russian Market.  It is a set of stalls with crafts, clothes, silks watches etc.  I was able to barter for some nice gifts for my family.   Hope they like them!  I say don't confuse it with lunch cause we didn't get any.  It has been this way the whole trip.  Our priority has been the children.  To meet as man as possible and meals have been second.  We have gone long hours without but the wonderful thing is we have never ever complained.  The whole crew has been so wonderful and caring and none of this has been a problem.

After that we went to the Slums.  This is the very poorest part of the city.  The shantys are built on posts that are set over a canal full of human waste, chemicals, trash etc.  The narrow dirt streets are trash filled, have a coating of snail shells from the fresh water that they eat, Rats, and animals.  The people have to survive by renting a cart (you can see one in the pictures below), then they go around the city and collect trash that has some worth and bring it back to the rental spot.  They subtract the rental and whatever pennies are left, the people get.  Most of the children that were small were naked as they have nothing.  We walked into the area and almost every face I saw was either happy to see us or just curious.  It was not the reaction I expected.  I was a bit concerned about it as in a USA slum, you would be concerned about mugging or something worse.   But here we walked among  the shantys and gave the children candy.  They came running from all directions and it was wonderful.  Big children, tiny children, naked children and everything in between.  When we got deep into the slums, Dee gathered about a half dozen women and their children around him.  Some of the girls I think were forced to prostitute for money to survive.  He gave tehm a wonderful message from the bible and one of the women saw me coming and ran and got me a plastic chair to sit in.  I was so very humbled that this woman who lived in such poverty would get me a chair.  I felt I should get here one.. but no.. with a smile she gave it to me and then with her two children sat in the dirt to listen to Dee.

On the way back to the edge of the slums, all the children followed us.  we had a trail of them and Andy got an inspiration.  He went back to the van and grabbed a large duffle of new flip flops he had bought.  There in the dirt, amongst all that trash and very bad smells from the canal, he actually had the right number and sizes of flip flops to give every child a pair.  One child, completely naked except for his new shoes!  It was beautiful.

We then went to a church that one of the translators that travels with us and is an orphan ministers at in the slum.  We met some people from the phillipines who where there and the people streamed in for a service.  Their pastor spoke, we all sang in multiple languages, and then Julius spoke on how we are all one family in God.  It was a a wonderful message.  Dee provided a short service and then we went out of the church.  Outside the children from the slums awaited us.  I gave some of them yoyos, the Andy and Jennifer did a David and Goliath skit, Rachael and Julius did some magic tricks focused around a relationship with Christ and Dee gave them a very short but wonderful message.  The time had come to go.  The last picture below is Dee ministering to those children in the streets of the slum.  (this is on the outside edge and a nice part of it, inside the conditions were much much worse.

We wrapped up our day with a meal and I actually got a hamburger. Oh MY!  It was amazing.  No rice or noodles.  YUMMMM!!!

Thursday, July 25, 2013

Road Trip!

I am now in Phnom Phen at the green house.  A guest house very near the slum districts of the city.  Yesterday we let the orphanage at Bonteay Meanchey and headed south to the city stopping at two orphanages along the way.

The first orphanage is at Pursat and we spent about 3 hours with the children.  I have put some photos of them and the orphanage below.  The children as at every orphanage were simply wonderful.  The programs ran from story of how God has the whole world in his hands and David an Goliath, to the story of the Bible and Christ related through colored bracelets that the team gave away.  We had a volleyball game and the Georges brought synthetic snow.. so we had a snowball fight! 

During our visit, I really felt connected to the older boys at the orphanage.  A girl of about ten to twelve with a speech impediment just attached herself to me and followed me everywhere.  She was at my side and wanted hugs and kisses on the cheek and stayed with me for an hour to include walking with me to the vans to leave. 

The reaction of the children when you leave is so very very sad.  Even though you are only with them for a short time, when you leave a few of them are so terribly sad they start crying.  At Bonteay Meanchey a small boy of ten was off to the side while we got ready to leave and I watched his eyes pool up and the tears start to fall.  He stood there alone, you could feel how very sad he was.  I of course joined him in crying and walked over to hug him for a while.  A very small consolation for a child who must at times feel so terribly lonely.

One thing that I felt called to do while I was here was to focus on the eldest children.  When they reach the age of 15-18 depending on circumstance they will leave the orphanage and have very difficult  choices to make.  The country is mostly Buddhist and the poverty is very extreme.  Society here pressures them towards drugs, alcohol, crime, prostitution etc and away from God and away from school and the education that the Orphanages ensure they receive.  It is fairly rare for someone my age and male to visit the older children.  they really have no older role models for encouragement.  So what I had decided to do is to sit with the oldest ones (14 and up) and tell them about me and my life.  I brought some pictures of Wendy and Rachael and Matthew and one of me walking Rachael down the aisle at her wedding.  To tell them a story that they could relate to about how if you choose to chase only the physical things in life and leave God aside, you will have nothing when those "things" go away.  Whether its a job or money or cars or whatever.  In the end I would challenge the eldest to look out for the other orphans and in that challenge I would give the eldest boy and girl a Colonel's eagle that I brought to always remind them to take the good path.  When they leave the orphanage they are to pass it to the next eldest.  After the first night when our hosts listened in, this became very important and they wanted me to speak to as many of the orphanages as we could reach.

After Pursat we stopped briefly (about 30 minutes) at Kompong Chnung to visit an orphanage.  Julius as always talked to the children in a masterful way.  He is such a loving person with these kids and you can tell they love him so.  We talked about how much Christ cared for them and that truthfully though they had no father here on earth they have the best father in heaven.  The Leader of the New Hope for Orphans group asked me to speak and I was so honored as it is about a 10 minute presentation.  Then Dee led us in a prayer for the group and we were gone.  A very brief visit, but impactfull for certain.

Some lighter moments today.  Those of you who know me may not be surprised... The ride was very very long (all day - about 12 hours) and after laying on the matts from the night before we were all very very sore.  At about noon time we went through Battam Bang on our way.  The elections are saturday and there were trucks of political supporters by the thousand all over the road.  I put a picture of one below.  Well in the city we were stuck in terrible traffic with scooters going every direction, to include across your path, next to you on both sides and in between cars, those huge trucks of people with loudspeakers and flags and uniforms.   Jennifer and Rachael decided they wanted a flag so Oudom our translator and who has become a friend, was yelling out the windows for flags to see if they would pass one to us.  I decided to help and started shouting in Cambodian what I thought Oudom was saying... well the four locals with us just started dying laughing and I was getting some weird looks.  Apparently my mimic was not so good and I was asking the Cambodian Peoples Party to send give me a prostitute.  "sigh".

I also attached a picture of a gas station you see on the side of the road.  They sell gas by the liter in glass jars.  Crazy!

Last story for today.  When we finally got here, my back was very very sore.  So for the first time ever I decided to get a massage.  They are 7$ for a 1 hour massage.  Well I was concerned due to the very high rate of prostitution here so I asked Oudom to come with me to ensure I ended up in a reputable place.  It was late at night (like 1130PM) so there were no Took Tooks nearby.  These are 4 passenger wagons mounted to a motorcycle.  So Oudom asked if a motor taxi was ok.  I thought ok, a car is fine.  Nope I was wrong, before I know it me, Oudom and the driver are on a scooter (yes all three - I have seen up to 6 people on one) blasting through the streets of Phnom Phen.  I have to say it was nice to have the breeze, but I am just glad we ended the ride safely!

Banteay Meanchey

We made it!   It was about a 2.5 hour drive out of the city of Siem Reap.  Along the way we passed many small villages and miles and miles of rice paddies.  Along the way we were passed by lots of trucks full of people, flags and loudspeakers talking about the upcoming election.  The person running in the opposition to the communist party was allowed to come back from Exile and today he and his political supporters.  We saw lots of water buffalos in the paddies, and lots of bulls, chickens and other crazy things.  The roads are narrow and many times I thought the van would not make a squeeze but our drier Hong is a pro and knows his van.  We made it through every time.

We stopped at a larger village along the way for some fruit.  The open market was really something to see.  hundreds of people selling everything from veggies, to rice, to dead chickens, live ones they would dispatch at the time you bought it.  There were lots of live eels and snakes and fish that people would home live.  It was very very hot humid and the crowd was thick. 

Finally after 2 hours, we turned into the jungle on a narrow dirt road which you can see below.  We traveled into the jungle for at least 30 minutes until we reached the orphanage.

The children were so happy to see us, we had an amazing greeting just as in Siem Reap.  After about 30 minutes of playing with the children, we started the beds which went upstairs.  You can see the materials and All of us carrying up the wood.  All the children pitched in and it formed a chain passing things up and carrying all the materials.  You could tell that we figured it out from the last orphanage.  We got all 20 beds made her in about 5 hours.  

The Orphanage made us lunch and now dinner.  For dinner we had rice, chicken soup with cabbage and onions, some salty grilled fish (head on) and some grilled eel which was surprisingly tasty.

We have no real internet connection here, but we are trying to upload it.  Might not be able to.

The kitchen is a fire pit outside the building over wood from the jungle.  There are chickens running about, a couple pigs nearby and a river across the street.

During dinner there was a huge rain storm which actually was nice.  It is so hot that I actually took a rain shower from the water off of the roof.  it was very nice and refreshing.

After dinner we watched a movie with the children.  Veggietales - Jonah and the whale.  Then we gave them new flip flops and shirts.  While watching I had a sweet little girl snuggle up with me in my lap and fall asleep.  What a precious angel.  I must admit< like with my children I was sleeping too!

I am now sitting inside my mosquito net on the mission house on the porch.  We are laying on a straw mat on the floor. There is rain dropping on the tin roof, geckos and frogs croaking and some animal howling in the jungle.  I can hear the children giggling on their new bunk beds.  It is unbelievably hot.  The sweat is rolling off of me as I type and contemplate sleep.   Being here with these people and these children, sharing God's love and my own... I feel like the luckiest guy in the world.

Tuesday, July 23, 2013

change of plans!

Well as we were told many times, plans will change.  Today we were to drive to Banteay Meanchey (I know how to spell it now!) but the roads were impassable due to the heavy rains we got last night.  So we are back in Siem Reap and will try again tomorrow am early.

This morning we went to Ankor Wat, a large site of ancient Buddhist temples from the 12th century.  I still cant put up pictures so I got one from Wikipedia to attach.  IT was amazing and actually HUGE.   I really enjoyed walking through the structures to look at the architecture, the unique carvings and the view of the jungle once we reached the top of it. (up some really really steep stairs).  It is still an active Buddhist site so you would find a active worship site here and there inside the temple with incense and the like. 

From there we went to lunch and the highlight was fried pineapple and fried bananas.  YUM!  The whole group had a great lunch except Jennifer who ordered some spring rolls that tasted..... frankly.. .nasty.  I tried one and spit it out.  I think there was fish oil all over it maybe.

Then we went to Ta Prohm, another temple site, but where the jungle had taken over.  It was where Tomb Raider was filmed.  There was man areas where huge (100 ft) banyan trees had grown out of the jungle through the temple walls and into the sky.  amazing really.  I actually thought this site to be my favorite.  I will say though that in the jungle it was SO hot.  it was about 150% humidity and hot so i was actually dripping with sweat and all my clothing was soaked through when we finished.

Lastly we stopped on the side of the road to feed wild monkeys.  They were pretty funny and clever.  of course on occasion one would steal what you had to feed them and I saw one offer to take some food from a lady so when she bent down, it psyched her out and stole the whole bag.  I was trying to feed one in a tree and another snuck up on me and jumped up grabbing my shorts then proceeded to climb me like a tree and sit on my shoulder.  So rather than risk an angry monkey on me, I gave him some corn on the cob.  He thought that was very nice and munched away happily.

Tonight we are back at smileys, Glad they had rooms for us.  We plan to eat on the street tonight and visit the street markets.  I will likely be enjoying delicacies such as fried tarantula, fried crickets, cooked water bugs (like 3 inches long) and maybe some chicken feet soup.  mmm mmmm mmmm.

Tomorrow we depart early in the am for Bonteay Meanchey and hopefully the mud has dried to make the roads passable.

Monday, July 22, 2013

Day 2 Boats and Bracelets

This morning we took a trip via boat along an inlet to the Sap lake.  This the major lake in the country and if you look at a map, Siem Reap is north of the lake.  We rode along an inlet/river to where the open water is in the lake.  There is a large population living along the lake in floating shacks and even in their leaking boats with just tarps that cover them.  The trip was very humbling as the poverty was excruciating and severe.  It amazed me as the resilience of the people as they lived on the water.  Most everyone as you can imagine exists from the fish in the lake and we saw many things to include pig pens floating on the water with a few pigs in it, chicken coops, stores and gas distribution centers.  The Catholic church has a school set up where the children come for school and in return they are fed three days a week which is more than what they receive in their floating homes.  We went to the end of the outlet to what I what would consider a tourist type place where they had crocodile pens, fish pens and a type of store.  There were some tourist type people there, Id say a dozen or two coming and going on the boats and the people were all around begging from the water.  As you drove up the river, a small boat driven by a mom holding an infant and leaking water badly would fly up next to you ... really like a row boat type thing with a motor is the best description i could say.  On the bow would be a small child of 8 or so and they were just standing there up on the bow begging.  sometimes the child would have a snake around its neck or the begger would be blind.  as the boat moved, they drove along side through waves and everything.  I even saw boys sitting in buckets paddling along cause they had no boats.  There were two schools, one the Catholic Church set up and one for an aid center.  Our group pooled our resources and purchased 6 50 lb bags of rye grain for the children.  We drove to the schools and hand delivered it (or rode the boat).  It will feed 350 children for a month.  When we got to the schools, we took a moment to look at the schools and Andy and I saw a bit of bank on the opposite side with children playing.  so we leapt over the mudbog onto the bank and shortly I was playing marbles and Andy was climbing trees with the children.  Rachael threw me a bag of lollipops and oh boy I had 3 children 6, 10 and lets just say all the pops are gone.  It was humbling.  Last note on this trip is most of the people were Vietnamese.  The Cambodian people and the Vietnamese dont really get along.  It was really great to see our group guides and translators jump in with the children too.

In the afternoon we went back to the orphanage from the day before.  We completed the beds that the church made and they asked us to cut two in half so the adults could have beds too.  SO that made 4 beds and of course we only had a hand saw so that was a trick...

We played a lot with the children and I personally spent a lot of time with them.  We did some skits and of note, I played Joseph in one and we used a tie dye t shirt as my multi colored coat.  That was a nice segway as we did tie dye Tee shirts with all the children.  Andy played Goliath  as he is the tallest and a child had to slay him.  wonderful stories from the bible.

We made fake snow and the children got to feel it (its cold and everything) and then a crazy snowball fight ensued making a heck of a mess.

We gave the children the hand made pillow cases which they adored, teddy bears and flip flops.  It was more touching one event after the next. 

Well after dark, with lightening in the sky and the rain coming down, the children came to use with bracelets they had made.  Each child picked out someone and gave them a bracelet to take home.  I have two beautiful ones on my wrist as I type this.

Finally it was time to go.  Many Many tears, and prayers and hugs and kisses.   The children were sad to see us go and all of us were so so sad to have to move on.  But we must.

Tomorrow we got to Ankor Wat to see the temple ruins in the AM and then onto an orphanage in the jungle and I hesitate to try to spell it, Bantamashay is how it sounds....  There we will stay in one large room for the whole group sleeping under mosquito nets in the open.

Posts may be a challenge.... Keep us in your Prayers.  The group is doing amazing work in the Lord's name.

Sunday, July 21, 2013

Day 1 wrap up

Its 5 am of day two and the internet connection is very spotty.  Luckily Andy plugged in the TV and blew the power to the whole neighborhood.  then the internet started working!  :)  So I can wrap up for yesterday.  After tonight (MON) we move to where it will be more difficult to put up posts.  I am already having trouble getting pictures up so this will be without.

Yesterday afternoon we went to the New Hope Orphanage in Siem Reap.  It was in the middle of nowhere after driving miles on rutted dirt trails with lots of water buffalos and chickens running amok.  the Cambodian folks houses are all on stilts because it floods a lot.  The makes it so they have their cooking areas below the houses.  They cook over open fires and its pretty neat cause the cows etc just hang out under the houses with the people.

At the Orphanage there was a walled in compound of three buildings.  Two of them were occupied and they were working on the last one.  In the main building it was segregated into three rooms.  a dorm for girls, one for boys and a main area.  each dorm is really just a small empty room.  The children each have a basket with all they own and a matt to sleep on.

When we arrived the children treated our group like rock stars.  They were shy with me.... probably cause I was shy.  but in about 5 minutes we got along wonderfully.  We played with the children for about 30 minutes then jumped right into it.  It was organized chaos.  we moved materials, assembled beds and they barely fit.  We were at a point in the afternoon, when we were out of gas and we just didnt think that the beds would fit in the dorm.  Andy had a great idea and we all stopped and prayed to refocus ourselves.  it worked miracles.  We jumped back into it and Andy and I reorganized the dorm and all the beds fit!!  We moved to the Girls dorm and amazingly we knocked out 12 more beds in like half the time.

As soon as we finished the boys beds, the boys figured it out one at a time and started sneaking in to look.  I ended up in a sword fight with one little boy with sword balloons on top of the beds!!!  Way to go FRC these beds are very sturdy! 

While we were working in the Girls dorm, i looked back in the boys dorm and the boys already had moved their sleeping mats and belongings onto a bed.  It was almost too much to take.  They were so happy to sleep on a bed.  Amazing

My final story to tell is one of a little girl.  I had just finished in the girls area and I was so tired.  I seated profusely for hours and hours with water streaming down my face.  I leaned against the beds and looks in amazement to what we had accomplished in God's name.  suddenly i felt a tugging on my shorts.  I look down and this precious little girl with her basket in hand had a HUGE smile in her face.  She motioned that she wanted me to set her up on the top bunk.  So i did.  I smiled at her and picked her up.  she set her things down and came and hugged my neck smiling all the way.  precious.  amazing.

One thing I noticed today that you would never see in the USA.  There were about 50 children here today.  I was with them for about 9 hours.  I heard one child cry one time.  They just don't act like our children.  Can you imagine 50 american children playing and learning for 9 hours with no fights, no tantrums, no tears?  These children are amazingly resilient.

I would leave you with a final observation.   Looking out on the children playing I realize that all of us are the same.  Every human being, every adult, every child.  we are truly made of our creator and a place like this will erase any ideas that any one person is better than another.  Jesus loves us all the same.  completely.

Day 1 Siem Reap

Good Morning from Siem Reap.  We had a fairly restful night.  I got about 5 hours of sleep but poor Andy only got about 3.  We were up early and ate breakfast all as a group.  Then off to a local church for services in Cambodian.  They translated enough of the service so that we could share in the songs (most of them) and understand the sermon.  I really enjoyed it.  We shared communion and I was so touched with the emotional connection in the room.  Even though we are from opposite sides of the planet and dont understand each other fully, for sure, the communion today was as sincere and emotional for me as it would be at FRC.

We are staying at Smileys... As you can see by the picture.  It is a nice Inn and better than I expected.  Andy and I share a room and we have a bathroom with a shower.  No hot water, but a shower is nice even cold!....  interestingly they dont have a shower stall, it is just a nozzle on the side of the wall and it sprays all over the toilet and everything... then down a drain in the corner.

We are regrouping now and heading to the orphanage here in Siem Reap.  I am really looking forward to meeting the children.

Saturday, July 20, 2013

Almost there

It's been a long day so far.  Flying from DC to Chicago then on to Seoul Korea where we are now.  That flight was over 7300 miles long and took 13.5 hours.  The group is all logged into the airport WiFi :).

Next stop... Cambodia!

Friday, July 19, 2013

On our way!

Dee, Andy and I are on our way.  We met this morning at the church and we are now on the road to the airport.  This surely will be an adventure and we are ready to serve Gods will.  Keep us in your prayers. 
Stephan       Andy       Dee