Wednesday, February 27, 2008

In the Air and on the Ground

Photo Gallery: Aerial Imagery and Water-gate Construction

Images taken from a recent flyby in a friend's helicopter. Shots by Bouny Te and Steve Forbes. Thanks go to Steve Forbes for making this happen. Shots also of the base slab construction on the Water-gate, for which construction is now fully underway.


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Friday, December 28, 2007

Changes in the Field

As you know we have been working for the last four years trying to bring water to thousands of people, in ten villages, who do not have enough for their crops. Their crops are their livelihood, and without this water, they cannot pull themselves from poverty.

My organization was founded to translate the needs of this impoverished community into actions - actions that will make an impact for generations. We're finally seeing huge strides towards completion of our reservoir.

construction of the reservoir


Since receiving such tremendous generosity from you over the summer, we've seen many changes:

  • We've successfully trained over a hundred community members into skilled laborers and technicians in infrastructure development.
  • Cleared land-mines from 50 acres of irrigation area.
  • Moved tons of earth to repair the mile-long retaining levee.
  • Continued to supply clean drinking water to hundreds more people through our Red Filter Project.

We can still use your help. We know we are finally feeling the momentum we need to complete our largest project ever attempted - the Trau Kod Reservoir System.

Construction has been going along full speed for the last two months, and if all goes to plan, we'll be seeing an ancient body of water restored to its full, life-sustaining capacity in the next six months.


If you'd like to read regular progress reports, please read the blog of Bryse, from Engineers Without Borders, who is in Cambodia providing us with some wonderful assistance.

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Monday, May 14, 2007

Bet Wi and the villagers of Balang


I find that the people with the most straightforward suggestions for improving life in rural Cambodia aren't in the government, and don't work for large international organizations. They are the everyday people I talk to in the villages of Balang.

For example: Bet Wi is the 47 year old matriarch for a family of five living in Kroper village, one of the eight villages in Balang Commune. She is one of the 9,000 villagers we work with on our irrigation, clean water, and scabies projects. Kroper village, like many of the villages in the Commune, is not in the best of conditions. The Khmer Rouge fought in this area until 1998, and the scene of some of the last violence between the government and the rebels was just north of Bet Wi's house. This meant that the positive development activities that were going on all over Cambodia by the mid-nineties weren't happening in Bet Wi's area. She would have to wait for the violence to end before anyone could help her and her family escape the trap of poverty.

A few months ago we got the opportunity to talk to Bet Wi. At the time we we were interviewing people in Balang to learn how we can work with villagers to improve their lives. I remember talking to her; she was in a great mood because she had just recently finished building a roadside store, and was beginning to sell small snacks and bric a brac. The store was built with a small loan provided by HRND, a local Cambodian organization that works closely with us and with the community of Balang.

It was apparent Bet Wi had caught the development bug. She was looking toward the future and told us quite clearly what she saw as the major issues affecting her and her community. We asked her what was next needed to improve life in Kroper. She replied:

"The most important way to improve life in my community would be to repair the irrigation system so there is more water for farming in Balang Commune. Doing this will increase our income, and in the process improve all aspects of life, including health, education and nutrition for the people living in my village."

Its not surprising Bet Wi said this. Most of the people in Kroper village and the other seven villages of Balang are farmers. Their livelihoods and the livelihoods of their ancestors have always been rice and agricultural crops, stretching back generations to before the time of the great Angkor Empire, one thousand years ago. Cambodia was always an ideal locale for agriculture, because of its fertile soil and plenty of annual rainfall.

Unfortunately, the farmers of Balang don't have a way to store water from the rainy season for use year-round. Without a storage system, the farmers in our villages can only use the water half the year, and they can't grow enough during this time to make a decent living. The rest of the year they are forced by necessity to turn to activities other than farming.

For Bet Wi's family, this means that her husband must go off to the forest to harvest wood for extra income. Many other villagers in Balang do the same to make up for the lack of food and money they earn from farming. In crisis situations, people turn to the first work they can find to earn money. This is also the case in Balang, and logging in recent years has become one of the most common ways for farmers to earn a living here.

But logging in excess is unsustainable, and recently the intense logging around Balang has begun to show a strain on local forests. Some villagers living near Bet Wi discussed with us the rapid deforestation they were seeing all around them.

Met Sim, 69, said "A cartload of wood used to be worth 5,000 riel ($1.25). That was 2 years ago. Now because there is so little wood the value of a cartload has increased a lot, but it is so much harder to find enough wood that its not very profitable work anymore."

Another interviewee, Mot Ten, living in Popeil village southeast of Kroper, said "Foraging wood used to be a way for people to earn money here in Balang. Now almost all the wood is gone."

A lack of water resources made farmers become, out of desperation, loggers. But as farmers turned en masse to logging in their area to sustain their families, the forests around Balang were rapidly depleted. Now forests are further and further away from the villages where people like Bet Wi and Met Sim live. The isolated areas where villagers collect wood are a risk for landmines-every day we see those unlucky enough to have lost a limb earning a living by logging. Not only that, villagers logging in distant forests often have to stay for extended periods of time in the wilderness; in the nighttime these dense, humid jungles fill with mosquitoes carrying malaria to unfortunate victims.

This is what happens when poor people don't have a stable source of income-they turn to activities that are often unsustainable and even just plain dangerous. The problems of malaria, landmines and deforestation could all be avoided in Balang if there was enough water for farming, enabling the people to earn a dependable living. Villagers would also have more income to pay for healthcare, education and food, all necessities they currently struggle to afford.

Given living conditions in Balang, its no surprise Bet Wi was so emphatic in stressing a great need for a better water supply in the villages near her. We asked her if our proposed project, the reservoir and canal system at Trau Kod, was a good solution for the problem of water storage. She said:

"If you put a dam at Trau Kod it will benefit this area a lot. With Trau Kod dammed, we can grow many things, even vegetables and fruits in the dry season. Without the dam, its not possible to make a living off of only farming in this area."

I agree with Bet Wi. Building a reservoir and canals at Trau Kod will give the villagers of Balang the solid foothold needed to climb out of the desperate conditions they now live in. It will allow them to leave the distant, dangerous forests and return to farming close to home with their families. It will change everything for the better in this impoverished part of rural Cambodia.

The discussions I had with Bet Wi, Met Sim and Mot Ten I took to heart. Now, many months later, we are finally able to work on a solution to their water storage and irrigation problems, a solution which will help them cultivate the land instead of deforesting it.

The Trau Kod reservoir and canal project has been under construction for a month and a half now. We broke ground on March 17th with the Governor of Siem Reap Province in attendance to inaugurate the occasion (that's him in the excavator "breaking ground"). By next rainy season, May 2008, we hope to finish. The irrigation system for Mot Ten, Met Sim and Bet Wi will be fully functioning and ready to help farmers grow enough to live a comfortable life, without having to turn to unsustainable forestry or worse.

But it won't help just Bet Wi and her neighbors; it will help 9,000 other villagers living in and around Balang. It will mean that Balang will have stability once again, after decades of violence and poverty.

Bet Wi said it best, and she said it simply. More water for farming is what the villagers of Balang need most of all. We've made it our job for the next year to translate her words, her dream, and the dream of many others in Balang, into action.

[all quotes provided by the villagers of Balang were translated by our field assistant Chai]

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Sunday, December 17, 2006

Pagoda Monster


Maintaining focus is a tough business in Cambodia. There are always side-paths here. There is always more need. We have finite resources through which to solve problems. Finite resources to battle the silent monsters afflicting people’s lives.

We do what we can when the opportunities are in front of us.

About two months ago, in the midst of our second engineering visit from Steve Forbes, we began a water quality assessment for the first set of filters we installed in Balang. Between photographing wells at the dusty Pagoda and asking survey questions, one of the young monks approached us and held up his hands. The boy - who was not more than 14 years old - had the wrinkled, gnarled hands of an old man.

He was from a village far away, and after coming to the Pagoda one year ago to study, found his hands began to itch tremendously. Through a slow progression of scratching occasionally, a rash erupted into bumps and eventually into small sores. It had spread from between his fingers, to his stomach, all the way down to his feet.

We asked questions, and found that he was one of many kids that had this problem. We maintained focus and moved on and we finished our study, noting the problem in our journals.

I returned two weeks later to put together a history of the problem, armed with questions from a doctor in town. I drove in one late afternoon by motorbike with Ceda, our precocious project assistant.

We started in Trach village, which is the closest point to the Pagoda and began our survey, walking from house to house back down the red dirt road asking questions. What we found was that every few houses had someone with the same problem, and that nearly everyone along the way knew someone who had it. By the time we had reached the Pagoda, we had found over twenty people with symptoms, four of which were serious.

The Pagoda children were happy to oblige our questioning, which was sober with a little bit of silly. I sat with them in a little concrete gazebo under tattered prayer flags until dusk turned to dark. They lit yellow wax candles and we continued, asking every child and monk what their experience was in the Pagoda and how the problem began.

The story was the same: it arrived a little over a year before, and began as itching between the fingers, toes, and places where there are folds in the skin. As it spread about the body it turned into welts, then open sores. If the children were especially good at itching, their legs were covered in scabs, scars and small open wounds.

I was taken aback by how widespread it was, and how serious some of the children’s problems were. They said it had been a slow gradual beginning, and that now the pain was so much that they could not sleep at night. Every child had it, and as we asked we tracked a transmission pattern between the kids. They slept three to a bamboo mat, shared clothes, and rarely washed their apprentice monk robes. Among the dirty young boys with little hygiene, it spread like wildfire.

Our questions ended with fits of laughter, silly faces, and a ridiculous lesson in nighttime flash photography. We ate a dinner of rice and boiled duck eggs in the darkness, and drank our filtered water on a raised wooden platform where the monks take their meals.

That night we unrolled our own bamboo mats on the floor of the Pagoda and chatted with the kids in my broken Khmer. I unrolled some thick brown paper I had brought also, and began sketching a few of the children sitting cross-legged in the yellow candlelight. It felt good to stretch my hands over the paper, as my opportunities to draw had been overruled by programming, paperwork and engineering.


I finished a few sketches, and the children disappeared into the complex to study before bed. As I lay down to sleep under the odd bright paintings of Buddha’s life, my mind was full of thoughts. I felt progress, momentum. The water project is our path, but there are many ways to get there, some more direct than others. This was another need, another side-path through which to help.

In Cambodia there is a language in movement. When you move forward, the path you follow is never a straight line. You must listen, and adjust, and you must bend with the path. Otherwise you are stopped. Otherwise you lose direction.

I realized this was the same spot where I napped as a tourist, three years earlier when a few ambitious monks pulled me out of the temples, into a world of broken dams and dry rice paddies. I thought about where we had come since then. Soft chanting echoed about the Pagoda as the monks recited their prayers before bed. I could see the night sky and a familiar milky-way, framed and shining through the open window as I fell into sleep.

The next day we returned to Siem Reap Town by motorbike after eating some fruit with the kids, washing in the pump well and speaking with some of the head-monks. They understood that some of the children would be scarred for life, but they had no idea what to do about it. Their only medication was boiling tamarind leaves and soaking the sores in the hot water. This did not help.

We shared the history we developed with a volunteer doctor at Angkor Hospital for Children. She said, after looking at the pictures and our research, the problem was almost certainly a severe form of Scabies, with secondary infections of Impetigo. I was glad, after hearing the diagnosis, we had been so careful during our contact with the children. I was also glad to hear it was something treatable, even if it had become an enormous problem so far out in the middle of nowhere. I found it amazing that such a small creature could manifest into such a serious monster.

I am not a medical professional. I only profess to have the ability to connect people to causes, to help find solutions for problems. In the following weeks, I pursued connections between intense engineering work and a lot of research on the water-gate project. I kept my eyes and ears open for people to help.

Last weekend, my good friend at the hospital, Jon Morgan, invited me to his farm for a small gathering. While there I met an epidemiologist named Sheena, from Australia, who was volunteering as a lecturer at the hospital. She had just arrived, although she had volunteered in Cambodia many times before. She was bright, spoke with authority, and had a skill-set that shined through.

After finding the three needed medications and developing a plan through a volunteer pediatrician at the hospital, Sheena and I went back out to the Pagoda, and stood in front of the assembled children, telling them what both Scabies and Impetigo were, and what they could do to avoid it. In the next few weeks, we will attack the problem with a potent plan.

We are now, with the monks of HRND and the hospital, developing a system for de-infestation, disinfection, and the training of an expert in the community. Sheena is heading it up, and is staying in HT’s office as our resident health professional. We expect it to be eradicated in a month, and if our plan for education works, it will never come back.

Bend in the path. Focus maintained. Progress made.

Now back to the bigger monsters.

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