Archive for the ‘Travel’ Category

A Cambodian New Year

April 21, 2010

Sou sdey, chnam tmey! Which for those of you who don’t speak Khmer, translates into Happy New Year! Yes I know, it’s April not January or even February like Chinese New Year but there’s a reason for that. Cambodians celebrate their New Year from April 13-15th (or whatever weekend falls close for those not in Cambodia) as those dates typically land at the end of the harvesting season.

Traditionally the New Year is celebrated with blessings that involve wiping powder on peoples faces and water fights while the hard working farmers take a moment to enjoy the fruits of their harvest and relax before the rainy season begins. Now as you can imagine, the celebrations are quite a bit different here in the States and abroad than they are in Cambodia but the partying is still there nonetheless. Here in Long Beach, the celebrations started with the 6th Annual Cambodian New Year Parade which took place on April 4th followed by the annual New Year Celebration at El Dorado Park on the 10th. Now normally I would have been out there documenting the celebrations with my camera, but this year I told myself to just simply enjoy the party instead of taking photos of everyone else enjoying it. But with that said, I couldn’t stop myself from snapping a few photos so here are some shots from the New Years Parade and a few more from KAA’s performance at El Dorado Park. Enjoy!

Cambodian New Year
Cambodian New Year
Cambodian New Year
Cambodian New Year
Cambodian New Year
Cambodian New Year
Cambodian New Year
Cambodian New Year
Cambodian New Year
Cambodian New Year
Cambodian New Year
Cambodian New Year
Cambodian New Year
Cambodian New Year
Cambodian New Year
Cambodian New Year
Cambodian New Year
Cambodian New Year

And as always, you can find the rest of the photos from KAA’s performance at SOJOURN FOTO’s Online Gallery.

Expulsion

March 15, 2010

So what’s there to do on a Sunday afternoon in a vacant dirt lot on a nondescript corner of Long Beach? Plenty if you’re one of the Collage Dance Theatre or Khmer Arts Academy dancers practicing for an upcoming performance. About two months ago Heidi Duckler of the Collage Dance Theatre approached the dancers of Khmer Arts Academy with an offer to collaborate on something new and different for The Arts Council for Long Beach’s A LOT series. The product of that collaboration is Expulsion.  Which is, as quoted from the Collage Dance Theatre’s website:

“Expulsion”, a new work from Heidi Duckler and Collage Dance Theatre will activate a vacant lot in Cambodia Town. Based on the themes of immigration and displacement, this cross-disciplinary site performance will explore the temporary, often fragile nature of “home.”

So I don’t want to spoil it for you but it’s definitely going to be something new and different if you’re expecting a traditional performance from KAA. Part of the collaboration between the Collage Dance Theatre and KAA was meant to push both groups to their creative boundaries as both groups had to be able to adapt to and create a new performance to fit not only fit the theme of Expulsion, but location and setting as well. So while you’ll probably recognize a lot of what’s taken from traditional Classical Cambodian Dance, this performance features new choreography that was created exclusively for Expulsion. I should also say that the new dance combined with the acrobatic performance of the Collage Dance Theatre should definitely keep you entertained. But that’s enough for me, on to the photos!

Anyways I hope you enjoyed that little sneak peak. If you want to see the rest of the performance in full you’ll have to show up to that nondescript vacant dirt lot on either March 19th or March 20th at 6 pm. For more information about Expulsion or the Collage Dance Theatre you can visit their site here or just take a look below.

Date: March 19th and 20th, 2011.
Time: 6:00 pm.
Location: 1546 E. Anaheim Street, Long Beach, CA 90813. At the intersection of Anaheim and Walnut across from Mark Twain Library.

Back when I was a kid, summer was my favorite time of the year. Though I’m sure that had to do more with the fact that I had two months just to run around and do anything a kid wanted to do without having to worry about school than the actual season of summer itself. As I grew older, summer was still a favorite of mine until I became a drunken fan of the white powdery champagne that falls every winter in Colorado. So much of a fan that I became a season pass holder who somehow ended up with three different snowboards and would average at least one to two trips up the mountain a week in search of the powdery white stuff. And now, after having spent the last 5 years working through some very miserable winters throughout the Midwest I’ve had a recent change of heart. Fall is now my favorite season of the year as the temperatures are mild and the colors are bright. I guess that’s what happens when you get older. The little things become more important than they used to and the once overlooked pleasures such as being able to walk around with shorts and a t shirt on comfortably take precedence over the other things we had valued when we were younger. C’est la vie!

Anyways, I’ve got more photos from some events coming up including some from Khmer Arts Academy’s opening act for Dengue Fever just the other day. I’m just short on time when it comes to working on the photos since I’ve got to squeeze them in that little bit of free time that I have between my actual career and just life in general. In the mean time, enjoy this random mix of photos from a lovely fall afternoon in Southern California.

The National Mall. It’s what I, and probably the majority of those of you out there, envision when I think of our Nation’s Capital. From the Lincoln Memorial to the Vietnam Veteran’s Memorial to the Reflecting Pool to the WWII Memorial to the Washington Monument and so forth, those landmarks are my vision of what Washington, D.C. is. Of course that’s coming from a tourist’s point of view who’s first impressions of D.C. are made up of images from t.v. and history books from an elementary school library. I should also mention that the White House and Capital Hill are also tops on my list of what Washington, D.C. is all about, but for the sake of this entry I’m going to rank the National Mall before them simply because I never quite made it to Capital Hill and while I did get to see the White House, it wasn’t quite as spectacular as I thought it would be. That’s not to say the White House wasn’t amazing to see in person, it’s just that it didn’t live up to what turned out to be overly my high expectations in the end. With exception to the sniper who was walking around in plain view for all to see on the roof.

Anyways moving on, part two of my D.C. trip picks up where I left off. After spending about two and a half hours in Arlington National Cemetery I decided that I really had to get a move on if I was going to make it to the National Mall and eventually the White House before having to head back to Bethesda to cover Sophiline and Khmer Arts’ first official practice session. The next portion of my self guided tour started with what turned out to be a longer than expected walk across the Arlington Memorial Bridge. Now the one thing that I have to mention about D.C. is that everything seems like it’s within a short walking distance when you first look at things. That turns out to be an illusion; however, because once you start walking you then realize that you’re in for a lot longer walk than you ever expected.

My first stop along the National Mall was the Lincoln Memorial. It’s pretty much what you expect to see and after hearing about how big Lincoln’s statue is supposed to be, there’s no surprise in how small you really feel while standing below it. And as expected, there were plenty of tourists around but it actually wasn’t as crowded as I had thought it would be. Though I would have to guess that assumption would be true if I had been there on a weekend instead of a weekday.

My second stop along the National Mall was the Vietnam Veteran’s Memorial where I met a homeless Vietnam Vet with cancer whom I really felt for. Yes I know, while there are plenty of those who take advantage of things by pretending to be a homeless Vietnam Vet who has been forgotten by his country just to get a free handout, I honestly believe that he was the real deal. You’re probably wondering how do I know if he’s a phony or for real and honestly I can’t prove that he was a 100%, genuine, real Vietnam Vet. But I can say that he answered enough of the right questions to convince me that he’s the real thing. As a history and military buff, I’ve been an avid reader of the Vietnam War since I was in high school. It started when I picked up a book by Gary R. Smith, author of “Death in the Jungle: Diary of a Navy SEAL”. Gary R. Smith’s account of his first tour in Vietnam grabbed my attention so much that it became the beginning of one of probably 50 or more books that I’ve read about the Vietnam War authored by those who fought in it. So over the years I’ve read up on a thing or two about what units served where, what battles were fought, who did what and so on.

When I first met the gentleman (he’s in the 7th picture down), he was giving an oral history of the Wall to a group of tourists. As I walked closer towards him, I started to listen more in on his words towards the tourists since I figured he must have been a tour guide or something simply by the way he held their attention. After he gave the crowd a quick oral history of the Wall, the War and how to find names everyone quickly dispersed. That’s when I realized that he was not a tour guide at all but rather just someone who was helping the tourists out. I figured he might be a real Vet based on all the knowledge he had of the wall and because that’s what his had said so I decided to approach him and ask how he was doing. He told me he wasn’t feeling so well and had better days before having cancer but was glad that the weather was fairly nice. He then told me a bit about the Wall and asked if I was in the service. I told him no, I had been turned down because of my asthma although I do have plenty of close friends and family in the service including my best friend. We got into talking a bit and I asked him if he was a Vietnam Vet to which he confirmed he was. I then asked him what unit he was with and how many tours he did and was told that he served with the 101st Airborne in the Ashau Valley then had a second tour with the 5th Special Forces. At that point my nationality came up and when he found out I was from Cambodian and born in a refugee camp he told me that the last 18 names on the Wall were from those who were killed in Cambodia during the Mayaguez incident and that he had also spent some time at a small firebase near the Cambodian border with his Special Forces A Team.

During a lull in our conversation he saw a WWII Vet with an 82nd Airborne hat on and gave him a bit of grief for being from that “other Airborne unit”. They joked around a bit and when the WWII Vet asked him how was doing today, he told him not so great because of his cancer. The WWII Vet asked him if it was from exposure to agent orange to which he confirmed it was. He also added that he had been fighting with the government for the last 6 years over his VA benefits and it had been a long and bitter fight. What really got me then was how you could see the pain in his eyes when he talked about his cancer and the government the second time. And I mean that literally, you could see pain, as in the pain that he was hurting from and the pain from the being denied his VA benefits by the government he served for at that very moment. There was a quiet moment at that point before the WWII Vet asked him if he needed any help. He told him that yes, he could use a bit of help because he was now homeless after losing his job months ago and was living in a homeless shelter a couple miles down. The WWII Vet asked if he would take any money to which he responded yes, if the WWII Vet really wanted to donate some he would take it because food was hard for him to come by these days. After the WWII Vet handed him some cash, the Vietnam Vet then turned to help some other visitors try and scratch a name off of the wall when they tore a hole through their paper. He handed them a pencil and another spare sheet of paper that he had in his backpack before turning back to me to resume our conversation. At that point, I really felt bad for the gentleman and really wanted to do something for him. I figured I could make him the offer that if he would be willing to tell me a few of his stories I would buy him lunch in exchange. I looked around for a place that I could take him to but there was nothing to be found anywhere nearby other than one food stand selling overpriced junk food. I thought to myself that he could eat from there any other day and I didn’t want to take him to just any fast food joint, but a nice sit down restaurant. In the end there wasn’t anything near by and I didn’t want to take up anymore of his time from anyone else so I reached into my pocket and pulled out something for him when he wasn’t looking. I told him thanks for all that he’s done and that his sacrifice, as well as the rest of those on the wall, allowed me to be here standing before him today. With that said, I shook his hand with my donation for him in my hand and walked away to continue the rest of my tour to the Washington Monument and finally the White House.