Lady dancer in Siem Reap
Peacock dress in Cambodian classical dance
Cambodian dancing performance in Siem Reap
Minh Hai or Saloth Sar widely better known as Pol…
Railway still interrupted
At the Cambodian border Poipet
Border monument to Cambodia
Border cross for gambling
Nimith near Sisophon
Find your way through the slobber
Damaged bridge to Battambang
Kids at the broken bridge
Highway condition on the way to Phnom Penh
Choeung Ek Memorial
Inside the Memorial of Choeung Ek
Sculls warn for an inhuman history
One of the mass graves of 166 victims without head…
The instrument for beheading victims
Cambodian kids
Along the Tonlé Sap
Fishing boats at the Tonlé Sap river
Tonlé Sap the lifeline for millions people
Fisher men and woman watching to tourists
Sunset over Phnom Penh
Vista down the hotel room
Poor and simple housing out of Phnom Penh
On the outskirts of Phnom Penh ...
Lunchbreak beside the Tonlé Sap river
The mouth of the Tonlé Sap river into the Mekong
Road near Blvd. Preah Monivong
Alleyway beside the Blvd. Mao Tse Toung
Oknha Nou Kan Road near the German Embassy
Prayers in Wat Phnom
Chanchhaya Pavilion
Chanchhaya Pavilion
Buddha inside Wat Phnom
Inside Wat Phnom
Independence Monument in Phnom Penh
A warning landmark near the Old Stadium
Painting which shows cruel history
Torture and extermination
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Cell in the prison
The cells in the former school buildings
Further photos from inmates displayed
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Mermaid dancers in their fishing dress


Until, 1995, Apsara Dances woke up and began their new life.Cambodia revived its Ramayana tradition after 25 years with a performance of the epic at Angkor Wat. Dancers came from six countries as part of a Southeast Asia cultural exchange. The dances are full of meaning, with each gesture symbolizing something, from great concepts such as love and peace to small. A finger to the sky means "today" arms crossed over the chest "very happy," and the left arm stretched out behind the dancer’s right hand held up before the chest with three fingers up and index finger touching the thumb depict the Naga, the great many-headed snake that symbolizes the spirit of the Cambodian people. It was not until 1995, a full sixteen years after the fall of the Khmer Rouge, that Cambodians once again witnessed a public performance of apsara dance, at Angkor Wat.During the mid-20th century, it was introduce to the public where it now remains an celebrated icon of Khmer culture often being performed during public events, holidays and for tourists in Cambodia.
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