Vutha said that it is a great honor for Cambodians to have foreign friends visiting their homes. In addition to formal education, Vutha is also willing to use weekends to invest in children's talents. For him, talent is one of the ways to expand children's lifestyles. It allows shy children to let go and experience different cultures. It is also an interesting way to learn English in daily life. The trajectory of globalization is condensed in the international schools in Phnom Penh, like a small United Nations, with various skin colors and languages, and the drama of cultural conflict and empathy is staged every day.
Seeing little hands of different colors holding each other, smiling Image Manipulation Service at each other, and sharing cookies, Vutha said that if adults could be like children, the world would be at peace. For Cambodian families, it is the distance they travel in order to nurture the next generation to become citizens of the world. Notes: A Japanese friend who was engaged in international aid in Cambodia in the late 1990s observed that the now 80-year-old generation has received a good French education.
From 1997 to 2000, when he rode a motorcycle through the rugged and muddy fields, and arrived in a remote village where foreigners rarely visited, Tanabe's 60-year-old mother-in-law actually spoke to him in French! ! It's amazing, time and space misplaced! But the next generation, because the Khmer Rouge became the lost generation of education, but this group of people is the main driving force behind the reconstruction of the state system after the war and the raising of the baby boomers. Under the re-established land registration system under the Land Law of 2001, residents who have lived on state-owned land for more than five years can obtain land ownership, but V's mother never obtained the certificate.