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Cambodia
> Phnom Penh |
PHNOM PENH
Phnom Penh is
situated at the confluence of the Tonle Sap and Bassac rivers with the Mekong. It was
founded as a small monastery in 1272 by the rich Khmer woman Penh, after she had found
four Buddha statues in a tree trunk on the banks of the Mekong. She set up the monastery
on a hill near the bank of the Mekong. The Cambodian word for hill is Phnom. Therefore the
name of the town correctly translates as Hill of Penh. Rather significantly Phnom Penh's
history is founded on an episode, in which the Buddhist religion played a part, contrary
to the Khmer capital of that time, Angkor, which was shaped, and literally so, by
Hinduism. Nevertheless, Buddhism had, since the beginning of the 12th century, become the
dominant religion. (In Southeast Asia both religions are entwined to a much higher degree
than first appears to be the case. For instance, numerous Buddhist temples in Thailand
house altars of Hindu deities, especially Brahma, and the details of the royal ploughing
ceremony in Bangkok are determined by Brahman, not Buddhist, palace priests... just like
Thai coronation modalities). In 1424, after the Siamese conquest of Angkor in 1421, the
Khmer nobility unwilling to submit to Siamese overlords fled from Angkor and established
Phnom Penh as the new Khmer capital, just 64 years after the Buddhist monastery had been
founded on Penh Hill. However, the Khmer never succeeded in setting up a new kingdom to
come close to the glamour of Angkor. In fact, for long periods of time the Khmer kingdom
centered in Phnom Penh wasn't a sovereign country but alternatively a satellite state of,
or directly ruled by, the Vietnamese or the Thais. For more than 400 years - until the
French made Cambodia their protectorate - the art of politics in Phnom Penh was just an
exercise of balancing between the two powerful neighbours. On April 17, 1864, the
Cambodian king Norodom accepted for his country the status of a French protectorate. King
Norodom expected the French to protect Cambodia from the neighbouring countries Siam
(Thailand) and Vietnam. However, the French protectors did not prevent politically strong
Siam from temporarily annexing western parts of the country, including the town of
Battambang. Nevertheless, by recognizing French rule, King Norodom preempted moves of Siam
and Vietnam to entirely divide his country between them. In past centuries the loss of
territory to Vietnam had been more significant. The Mekong delta, or rather the entire
present-day South Vietnam, had been settled by Cambodians until well into the 18th
century. During almost 90 years of colonial rule the French reshaped and extended Phnom
Penh according to their architectural taste. They built broad boulevards and the city
received a touch of Mediterranean atmosphere. During the Vietnam war the city grew to more
than 2 Million inhabitants, creating an atmosphere of an overcrowded refugee camp rather
than a French metropolis. On April 17, 1975, 20 years after the end of French colonial
rule, the Khmer Rouge marched into Phnom Penh. Within weeks the city was emptied, its
population forced into provincial labour camps; Phnom Penh became a ghost town. After an
increasing number of incidents at the Cambodian-Vietnamese border, Vietnamese troops move
into Cambodia and on January 7, 1979, take Phnom Penh. Since then, many of the city's
former inhabitants have returned, and new folks have arrived. The city now, once more,
counts over a Million inhabitants. Since the signing of the Paris Peace Treaty in 1991,
Phnom Penh experienced a great economic boom, despite the civil war still smoldering in
far-off parts of the country. Although streets and canalization - destroyed by the Khmer
Rouge - are not yet fully repaired, a large number of modern hotels have been built.

Tuol Sleng Museum
The Museum of Genocide is located in the former Tuol Svay Prey
gymnasium at the 102rd Street, close to the corner of 250th Street. After April 17, 1975,
when the Khmer Rouge took the capital, the school buildings served as Security Jail 21
where thousands of people were systematically tortured. Many died during the torture and
more than 20,000 people were brought from the jail to the Choeung Ek execution area, where
they were murdered and thrown into mass graves. Only seven of the prisoners survived:
sculptors who had to produce busts of Pol Pot. The museum was set up in 1979, soon after
the invasion of the Vietnamese. Walls were decorated with numerous photographs of murdered
prisoners as Pol Pot's torturers had, with the same small-minded pedantry met in Hitler's
KZ personnel, taken pictures of all the victims. Also displayed are instruments of
torture, often surprising in their primitivity. Obviously high-tech is not needed to
inflict inexpressible suffering and pain on other people. The museum is open daily 7 to 11
am and 2 to 4:20 pm, except on Mondays. Entrance fee is one US Dollar.

Choeung
Ek
Choeung Ek, a few kilometres south of Phnom Penh, was the execution
area, where Khmer Rouge minions killed more than 40,000 compatriots and buried them in at
least 129 mass graves. At the execution area, now idyllically located between rice paddies
and fruit orchards, a high glass tower has been erected, containing the skulls and remains
of tens of thousands of victims. The tower is frequently shown in TV news footage on
Cambodia.

Royal Palace & Silver Pagoda
The Royal Palace, located between 184th Street and 240th Street,
was built in 1866 by the French. The entry is at the Samdech Sothearos Boulevard, formerly
Lenin Boulevard, not far from the banks of the Tonle Sap river. Among various buildings
within the walls the Throne Hall ranks as most important. This Khmer-style building was
erected only in 1917. It is used only on special occasions. Attached to the Throne Hall is
a tower, 59 metres high. South of the Throne Hall are the Royal Treasury and the villa of
Napoleon III. This villa was built in 1866, not in Cambodia, but rather in Egypt. There it
served the French Empress Eugenie as accommodation on occasion of the opening of the Suez
Canal. One year later Napoleon III gave the villa to the Cambodian king as a present. At
the northern area of the palace grounds is the Silver Pagoda. The original pagoda, built
in 1866 by King Norodom, was, for the most part, made of wood. In 1962, it was expanded by
Sihanouk. The name of the pagoda derives from the fact, that its floor is made of more
than 5,000 silver blocks weighing more than 6 tons. When visiting the Silver Pagoda, one
should not wear shorts or hats. Entrance fee is two US Dollars per person; anyone bringing
a camera is charged another two Dollars; the extra fee for video cameras is five Dollars.
The most important Buddha statue of the temple is, like in Bangkok's royal temple, an
Emerald Buddha, which in this case is not made of emerald, but of Baccarat crystal. It
dates back to the 17th century. Behind the Emerald Buddha is another Buddha statue made of
90 kilograms of gold and decorated with 9,584 diamonds. It was cast in 1906. The inside of
the 600-metres surrounding walls of the Silver Pagoda are decorated with murals displaying
scenes from the Ramayana epos. East of the pagoda is an equestrian monument of King
Norodom - which is actually a monument of the French Emperor Napoleon III. The head of the
original statue was removed and replaced with one showing King Norodom.

National
Museum
The National Museum of Arts is to the North of the palace grounds,
on the opposite side of 184th street. The building was designed in Khmer-style in 1920 by
a French architect. The most important artifacts are sculptures from the Angkor era and
before. The museum is open daily 7 to 11:20 am and 2 to 5 pm, except on Mondays. Entrance
fee is two US Dollars. English and French speaking guides are available.

Wat Ounalom
Wat Ounalom is the most important Wat of Phnom Penh, and the center
of Cambodian Buddhism. It is north from the National Museum of Arts (two streets from the
Royal Palace). Wat Ounalom was built in 1442 to keep a hair of the Buddha. Before the
Khmer Rouge emptied Phnom Penh in 1975, more than 500 monks used to live at the Wat. The
Khmer Rouge killed the abbot and a large number of monks and vandalized the buildings and
their treasures. After the Vietnamese invasion on 1979 the Wat was restored, and today
again serves as the center of Cambodian Buddhism.

Wat Phom
On a hill in the northern part of Phnom Penh lies Wat Phnom, after
which the Cambodian capital is named. The Wat was built in 1272 and was restored or
reconstructed in 1424, 1890, 1894 and 1926. Wat Phnom is much favoured by the inhabitants
of the city as it is considered the most appropriate place for prayer and small offerings,
given in order to influence one's own fate.

Wat Lang Ka
Wat Lang Ka, a off Boulevard Tou Samouth, once featured a beautiful
pagoda. But much of the Wat was destroyed by the Khmer Rouge. After the Vietnamese
invasion of 1979 the Wat was restored.

Wat Toul Tum Pong
Wat Tuol Tum Pong, a off Boulevard Keo Mani, has a new pagoda,
which has met criticism from some art enthusiasts.

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