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Posts Tagged ‘Cambodia’

New Year, New Luck

Monday, May 9th, 2011

Nothing captures the unending spirit of Cambodia more than Chol Chnam Thmey, usually falling in mid-April. Literally ‘Enter Year New’, this is Khmer New Year: a three day long celebration, with the kind of atmosphere that you wish you could cork in a bottle and release a little every day.

I knew that the place to celebrate New Year in Cambodia would be at Siem Reap, where the temples of Angkor Wat have stood the test of time and the encroaching jungle for centuries. Gigantic Banyan trees cast their indelible buttress roots here, finding their way between ancient palaces and standing for all Cambodia: these are the very roots of the nation – culturally, historically and economically – that have stood as a constant through the terror of the Khmer Rouge.

I spent New Year’s Eve at Amansara, joining a calm and contemplative offering of alms to the Buddhist monks that reside here – a gentle reminder of the positivity of the Buddhist psyche. A performance of a traditional Khmer Apsara dance, courtesy of local women dressed beautifully in threads sparkling with gold, extravagant headdresses, jingling bells, heavy jewellery and each with a fresh red rose tucked behind their right ear, welcomed the New Year by candlelight under a sky littered with stars.

Dawn over Angkor Wat heralded the beginning of a new year; a golden sun crept from behind the temples, bruising the sky with pink, orange and yellow, all reflected in wide lakes scattered with not-quite-flowering lily-pads. An early start for New Year’s Day – yes –  but the cool of early morning air and that unique feeling of stealing secret hours before the rest of the world awakes up made it unbeatable.

Back at Amansara, a Trot dance warded off any bad luck collected over the last year; recompense, I thought, for all those sets of three drains I’ve mistakenly stumbled over, and lone magpie’s that have tainted my vision. From the Sanskrit meaning ‘to end’, Trot tells the tale of a hunter unable to hunt any prey who is presented with a golden deer after praying to the spirits.  In line, we went on to pay our own respects to the spirits, promising ourselves (we hope) a prosperous year.

Later, we wandered to Wat Thmey, joining local people to make further offerings and burning incense in the mid-afternoon sun baking the ancient stone. Cambodian children have been preparing a folk dance that has all the charm of a primary school nativity at Christmas.

It is not often that three days of New Year celebrations leave you feeling refreshed and inspired, but I guess that is the secret to those never-ending smiles.

www.amansara.com

Buddha’s Halo

Thursday, January 28th, 2010

KnaiBangChat_main

Knai Bang Chat’ is Cambodian for ‘rainbow encircling the sun’ and a Buddhist metaphor that denotes the halo around Buddha’s head. Such a moniker befits this modernist paradise, as much for its optical imagery as the artistic ‘enlightenment’ on display. Just to look at it you understand why so many other private residences have appeared close by. Kep – beach town and once summer playground of the French elite – is back in business.

On looking at it, you wonder who was responsible for such profound yet studied strangeness. The protégé, business partner and son of legendary antiques dealer Alex Vervoordt is partly to blame, along with the ingenuity of architect Francoise Lavielle. Boris Vervoordt grew up in his father’s antique-strewn castle, developing a ‘third eye’ for objects of value and a talent for synthesising old and new artistic forms with strident architectural set-pieces – a unique ‘something’ that the travel press are quick to cite as this lifestyle resort’s greatest asset.

The three houses that make up the Vervoordt compound is an amalgamation of everything Vervoordt loves most – his own definition of luxury if you like – with influences from Andrea Palladio and Luis Barragan among others. Inside you will find a playful orchestra of 12th-century artefacts and contemporary architecture, as beautiful a juxtaposition of classical mood and new-age panache as I have come across. Large villa terraces opening onto vanilla sunsets, fresh fish dining on an azure-swept private jetty and the most charming khmer service makes this the quintessential Bond hide-out. If luxury were a mixture, Vervoordt would call it the ‘perfect combination of happiness and freedom’. Knai Bang Chatt, similarly illustrated, mingles Vervoordt’s modernist conceptions of luxury with a good bit of sun and sea.

For more information, go to www.knaibangchatt.com

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