The Phnom Penh Post

Cambodian farmers deploy scarecrows to ward off virus

-

ARMED with a stick, a floralshir­ted scarecrow with a plastic pot for a head stands guard in front of a rural Cambodian home – a sentry erected by superstiti­ous farmers to ward off the coronaviru­s.

Known as “Ting Mong” in Khmer, the creatively rendered scarecrows often pop up in villages that have been hard-hit by infectious diseases like dengue or water-borne diarrhoea.

This time, “I’ve set up the Ting Mong to prevent the coronaviru­s from threatenin­g my family,” says farmer Sok Chany, 45.

She has two posted in front of her wooden stilt home in Kampong Cham province, about 110km northeast of the capital Phnom Penh.

The other is dressed in camo-green and has a stick propped like a rifle across its hay-stuffed chest.

“It is our ancient superstiti­on to set up Ting Mongs when there are dangerous diseases or to avert evil,” she tells AFP.

The majority-Buddhist kingdom has a strong strain of animism incorporat­ed into the daily lives and rituals of Cambodians, with many believing that spirits are tied to places, animals and things.

The Ting Mongs are meant to ward off evil spirits wishing to bring harm on an unsuspecti­ng family by spreading disease.

In Sok Chany’s Trapeang Sla village, no chances are taken – an effigy is tied to the gate of nearly every home, though constructe­d with varying degrees of effort.

Some are elaboratel­y dressed in military uniform or floral pyjamas, while others simply have stuffed bags with sunglasses perched on them for a head.

Farmer Ton Pheang stuffs old clothing up the arm of his Ting Mong, which is dressed in a bright pink shirt and has a helmet for its head.

“This is my second one – the first one broke,” the 55year-old says, adding that his scarecrow has been standing guard under sun and rain since April when the outbreak started spreading rapidly across Southeast Asia.

“We’ve been fine since the outbreak,” Ton Pheag tells AFP. “I’ll continue to leave it up as long as Covid still exists.”

Cambodia appears to escaped the brunt of the pandemic, registerin­g just 283 infections and no deaths.

 ?? AFP ?? A woman sets up a scarecrow in front of her home in Cambodia’s Kampong Cham province.
AFP A woman sets up a scarecrow in front of her home in Cambodia’s Kampong Cham province.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia