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Southeast Asia | |
Cambodians open the "Khmer Rouge Experience" Cafe | |
2005-10-04 | |
But the set "theme menu" of salted rice-water, followed by corn mixed with water and leaves, and dove eggs and tea at $6 a time is proving too much to swallow for many visitors. "Our grandfather and other relatives lost their lives under Pol Pot's regime," said 17-year-old manager Hakpry Agnchealy, whose brother owns the business. "This is more than just a restaurant. It is to remind us of those who died. We opened two weeks ago, but have only had two Europeans coming here to eat. We don't know how much longer we can go," she said. Faithful to the Khmer Rouge era, when many victims starved to death after a disastrous attempt to transform the country into a peasant utopia, the waitresses are barefoot and clad in the black pajamas and red-white scarves of the guerrillas. Speakers blare out tunes celebrating the 1975 toppling of U.S.-backed president General Lon Nol and the walls are adorned with the baskets, hoes and spades Pol Pot hoped would power his jungle-clad south-east Asian homeland to communist prosperity. Recognizing that many tourists might not be able to stomach such a close brush with the Killing Fields, the "Khmer Rouge Experience Cafe" is also promoting itself to those wishing to shed a few pounds. "It's good for me to slim down," said Tan, a 40-year-old Malaysian visitor. For some who survived Pol Pot's rule, the cafe served up too many chilling reminders of one of 20th century history's darkest chapters. "My mother visited me here once, saw the Khmer Rouge style and has never come back again," Hakpry Agnchealy said. | |
Posted by:Seafarious |
#1 Now I can take that holiday in Cambodia. |
Posted by: Secret Master 2005-10-04 19:33 |