Waving children on the road
New Hope students learning English
Our group sits down to dinner at the New Hope restaurant, a brand new facility that will help fund the organisations many efforts
Angkor Wat slowly revealing itself with the sunrise
At 4am in the pitch dark the following morning, armed with a headlamp and a flashlight, we were crossing the threshold of the largest religious monument ever constructed, the capital of the Khmer kingdom from 802 to 1295. I had grand notions of what to expect at Angkor Wat, literally "city temple," quite fitting considering the entire complex is a spansive 37 square mile city in itself, tough to navigate purely in a day. Once the sun started to spread light on a temple fronted by massive ponds, (water storage vital to the inhabitants in it's days of glory) every minute added excitement. We traversed through the highlights, each more impressive than the last. Every wall of every temple was something to marvel; stone reliefs told mysterious stories of the past, the detail mind boggling when considering the vast quantity contained in the entire complex. And speaking of pictures, they can't begin to give the experience justice but please see below. From wikipedia:
One of the first Western visitors to the temple was Antonio da Magdalena, a Portuguese monk who visited in 1586 and said that it "is of such extraordinary construction that it is not possible to describe it with a pen, particularly since it is like no other building in the world. It has towers and decoration and all the refinements which the human genius can conceive of".[5]
However, the temple was popularised in the West only in the mid-19th century on the publication of Henri Mouhot's travel notes. The French explorer wrote of it:
"One of these temples—a rival to that of Solomon, and erected by some ancient Michelangelo—might take an honourable place beside our most beautiful buildings. It is grander than anything left to us by Greece or Rome, and presents a sad contrast to the state of barbarism in which the nation is now plunged."[6]
All images by PepperKeyStacie
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