For the thousands of Australian tourists who visit Cambodia
each year, there is one stop on the tourist trail that continues to be popular:
visiting an orphanage. Typically, a visit involves meeting and playing with the
kids, walking through their living quarters and taking photographs. It can also
include a short performance or dance routine by the children. Often there are
opportunities to volunteer – for anything between a few hours and a few months.
The visit usually culminates with a request for donations.
Cambodia's tourist
orphanages
Cambodian orphanages are
increasingly used to service a tourist industry that has sprung up around
Westerners visiting them.
For
Australian couple Linda and Geoff Foard, it was a chance to interact with local
children and do their bit to help.
"I
hadn't been to Phnom Penh before and I hadn't seen poverty on this scale,"
says Linda. "We were a bit overwhelmed by it all."
In
hindsight, Linda recalls a number of red flags that only later gave them pause
for thought. "We were given carte blanche to wander around the orphanage
and talk to the kids ... When we went out to buy some sacks of rice, some
of the kids wanted to come with us. We were allowed to take half a dozen kids
out of the orphanage. They had only met us an hour beforehand. We could have
been anybody. They didn't know our names or anything – it was crazy."
The
Foard's experience is typical of many Australians who visit Cambodia.
Orphanages are easily accessible to tourists, with visits often advertised by
guesthouses or tour companies. Some orphanages even bring their children to
popular tourist areas, handing out flyers and urging tourists to visit their
orphanage.
An entire
industry has grown out of thousands of these tourist visits. In the last
decade, the number of known orphanages in Cambodia has doubled, with dozens
more still being uncovered. This is despite the number of orphans in the
country actually decreasing. The uncomfortable truth is, more than 75 per cent
of children in Cambodia's orphanages have at least one living parent, while
many more have other family members who could look after them with the right
support.
Why are so
many parents giving up their children? Mostly it's because orphanages are
promoted to poor families as a better option for their children. For families
struggling to survive, this can be convincing – a chance to give their children
the education and opportunities they missed out on.
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