An American Abroad

Cambodia: By Motorcycle to Chau Srey Vibol, Part 2

[Read Cambodia: By Motorcycle to Chau Srey Vibol, Part 1 here.]

There were no tourists at Chau Srey Vibol. None. No ticket booth, no tour guides, site maps or plaques either. It was just an ancient pile of stones about 75 meters behind a Buddhist temple at the end of a badly rutted dirt road. I had the place all to myself, save for a couple of saffron-robe clad shaved-headed monks from the temple who briefly came over to check me out.

2014-04-30 02.41.05e

When I was a kid, I used to build cities with Jonathan Poneman in his basement. We’d use cardboard boxes, Lego, Hot Wheels tracks, pieces of wood, erector sets, alphabet blocks, and anything else that struck our fancy. Our metropolises were very elaborate. Then, in a frenzy of joyful destruction, we would kick over all we had so carefully built, scattering blocks and boxes and buildings like angry and capricious gods.

That is what Chau Srey Vibol looked like. There were pediments scattered like Lincoln Logs, window frames strewn about like Lego pieces, enormous stone blocks tossed about as if they were 1,100 year old pieces of styrofoam.

2014-04-30 02.39.39e

2014-04-30 03.09.49e

2014-04-30 03.08.03e

2014-04-30 03.06.39e

2014-04-30 02.59.23e

2014-04-30 02.56.08e

2014-04-30 02.55.55e

2014-04-30 02.54.57e

2014-04-30 02.54.29e

2014-04-30 02.53.45e

2014-04-30 02.51.11e

2014-04-30 02.50.38e

2014-04-30 02.49.25e

2014-04-30 02.47.41e

2014-04-30 02.46.17e

2014-04-30 02.44.12e

After taking about 100 photos, I got back on my moto, feeling wonderful. I rode along singing Steeley Dan inside my helmet at the top of my lungs to no one but myself: “Bodhisattva, won’t you take me by the hand?” Children coming home from school, dressed in immaculate blue pants and white shirts waved at me in delight. And I waved back.

Comments

  1. Ken Wieland says

    Truely amazing to see your photos and to think of the hands that made this temple. I think it’s the forgotteness of it that makes my mind work overtime. The jungle has grow over it, around it, through it, but mens hands made it. There must have been hundreds, thousands of hands over a life time. Learning how to build and carve. Growing old and passing skills on to the next generation. Then all forgotten to the jungle and time. Just amazing.

Speak Your Mind

*

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.