Poy鈥檚 gaze is intense, his stance confident. He is young and handsome, photographed to his best effect in black-and-white. He wants to be a boxer.
He has one eye and one arm.
Like the other youths in V. Tony Hauser鈥檚 exhibit, Living With Land Mines, Poy lost his eye and arm in a landmine explosion. Another girl lost her leg gathering firewood; a boy played with a pineapple mine, not realizing what it was. These are the survivors 鈥 the ones still living with land mines, and their faces stare out from a life-sized photographical exhibit in the SUB.
The children Mr. Hauser photographed reside at the Cambodia Land Mine Museum and Relief Facility; some orphans, some leaving families to live and attend school there. The nonprofit facility was founded by a Cambodian named Aki Ra. Years ago, he was trained as a child soldier by the Khmer Rouge and used to disarm mines. Now Aki Ra is focused on the future 鈥 and on giving a future to the children attending school at CLMMRF.
Mr. Hauser entered the picture by accident. While doing a project in Cambodia,聽he took some extra time to explore the country; a friend recommended he visit the land mine museum.
鈥淚 saw these kids with missing limbs and I was鈥 sort of taken aback.鈥 He pauses. 鈥淚 didn鈥檛 expect this to be in a museum, these children with mangled limbs... incredible, their tenacity, their spirit. How can they function?鈥 At the museum, Mr. Hauser befriended Hak, a Cambodian child and war amputee.
Mr. Hauser returned to Cambodia a year later 鈥 this time with a 4 by 8 camera. He sought out Hak. 鈥淚 told him why I came back and he introduced me to the wife of Aki Ra鈥 Hak and her helped me organize the kids. Not everyone wanted to have their photograph taken, and that鈥檚 fine.鈥
Overall, Mr. Hauser鈥檚 second visit to Cambodia lasted a week; he spent four days taking photographs. 鈥淵ou want to stand at a rooftop and scream 鈥榣ook at these pictures! Look at the world! Look at the way we live!鈥欌 There is so much need鈥 when you come home, you are shocked by the injustice of the world. Not everybody has to have a car. Not everybody has to have two cars. But everybody has to have the basics.鈥
Two Living With Land Mines exhibits are simultaneously touring Canadian universities. They鈥檙e totally nonprofit pieces which have been 鈥渞eally well received everywhere.鈥 Living With Land Mines depicts amputees and victims of war 鈥 but the focus is not on their lives, not how close they came to death. Chet is a dancer. Boreak wants to be a doctor. Voleak loves theatre, wants to be a tour guide 鈥 she alone of the children pictured has both arms and legs. 鈥淲hatever her dilemma was 鈥︹ Mr. Hauser explains, 鈥淓verybody was affected in this country by this endless war ... She belongs to the community.鈥
The problem of land mines isn鈥檛 going to go away without our help. Hauser is adamant that university students write letters to members of parliament, get involved, become aware. Hauser鈥檚 enemy is no one group or person 鈥 it鈥檚 apathy. 鈥淲hen you see a country where a thousand a year are being killed by land mines鈥 if it happened here in the same ratio, it would mean 3,000 people a year are being killed by landmines.鈥 He pauses. 鈥淟ook into their eyes and say, 鈥極h. That鈥檚 a person like me. This is outrageous.鈥欌
Living With Land Mines is on display in the lobby of the SUB until Saturday, Nov. 27. The exhibition is presented by 新加坡六合彩开奖直播 Student Union and International Student & Exchange Services office.