READER’S DIGEST
To Teach
is to Touch
a Life
Forever
In one of the poorest
areas of Cambodia’s
capital, a retired teacher
discovers a thirst
for knowledge
MY STORY
I
t all began in 2014 when I met
Cambodian couple Koy Chhim
and Reny Phoeurk, who were
volunteering at a charity in
Sydney. I was impressed by
Koy’s passion to help provide an
elementary school education for
children living in underprivileged
areas of Cambodia. As I am a former
primary school teacher, we shared a
BYJudith Bond
lot in common. Koy asked me to
visit him if I went to Phnom Penh
and, six months later, I did just that.
During my visit to Cambodia,
I spent a day with Koy, Reny and
their family. Koy told me that he was
working with children who lived in
Toul Pongror, the garment factory
district, and home to some of the
city’s poorest people.
Under the Khmer Rouge, the
regime that ruled Cambodia between
1975 and 1979, an entire generation
missed out on an education and,
consequently, professionals and
teachers are in short supply. Schools
charge fees, yet wages are low, so
many children remain at home
unsupervised while their parents
- often single mothers – work very
long hours in the clothing factories.
Without an education, opportunities
for the youth are slim. Koy’s goal
was to get these children off the
streets and give them an education.
Within six months of my visit, Koy
had established two schools, The
Laneway School and The Train Track
School. Two months after that, I
returned to Phnom Penh ready to
help as a volunteer teacher.
Koy and Reny and their five
children welcomed me into their
home on the outskirts of Phnom
Penh for three weeks. A typical day
began early with a wake-up call
from the geckos on the wall, and
the crows and dogs outside. After a
cold shower, I’d enjoy a breakfast of
12 august 2019