Otago Daily Times

Couple building future for schoolchil­dren in Cambodia

- STAFF REPORTER

A QUEENSTOWN couple have become heroes in an impoverish­ed Cambodian village after bankrollin­g and building a new school, which they hope to expand.

Architectu­ral designer Mark Hillary and his wife Julie CarlawHill­ary, a teacher, spent last year working on the project in Ou Ambel Village, near Siem Reap, which will be finished on February 28.

To date they have invested $40,000 of their own money into the project which started when Mr Hillary was asked by Sergio Antunes, a New Zealand friend based in Cambodia, to design a school for the children to replace a dilapidate­d tworoom barn with no toilets or water.

That school was used by 120 children aged 5 to 15.

The Hillarys have since upgraded the barn to cater for 256 children, and convinced the Cambodian Government to give a piece of land for the new school which will cater for another 400.

The new school features four ‘‘podstyle’’ classrooms, four toilets and two medical rooms.

Mr Hillary said at times the couple had questioned why they took on what initially appeared to be a simple project, particular­ly after his wife battled a lifethreat­ening illness last year.

‘‘The question was, ‘how can we build a school here?’,’’ he said.

‘‘Within a few weeks of witnessing the desperatio­n there for education, that question had changed to ‘how can we not build a school and leave these kids like that in poverty?’’’

The couple battled Cambodian bureaucrac­y but ‘‘miraculous­ly’’ managed to get approvals for the new school almost six months ahead of the usual timeframe.

The Hillarys, joined by Queenstown builder Richard Short and his family, travelled to Cambodia to build a playground for the children while waiting for the school consents.

Once building started, the children filled washing baskets with soil and moved bricks to help the contractor­s every night after school, Mr Hillary said.

‘‘What really moved me was watching a father drive his tractor on to the proposed school site renowned for its hidden land mines with his children’s two grandfathe­rs hobbling out in front.

‘‘Some of the locals told me those two old guys had badly damaged legs from standing on land mines previously.

‘‘That’s the extent of the desperatio­n there for children to be educated.’’

The couple were now contemplat­ing selling their caravan and boat to fund the remainder of the project — there were still 1000 children around the village needing an education and each pod costs $82,000.

They hoped to build more pods and a child care facility.

To date they had raised about $23,000.

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 ?? PHOTO: SUPPLIED ?? Bright future . . . Cambodian children and their teachers with Julie CarlawHill­ary, (centre front) of Queenstown, inside the school she and her husband, Mark Hillary, upgraded. The couple has also built a new school in Ou Ambel Village, near Siem Reap, which will be finished next month.
PHOTO: SUPPLIED Bright future . . . Cambodian children and their teachers with Julie CarlawHill­ary, (centre front) of Queenstown, inside the school she and her husband, Mark Hillary, upgraded. The couple has also built a new school in Ou Ambel Village, near Siem Reap, which will be finished next month.
 ?? PHOTO: SUPPLIED ?? Heroes . . . Queenstown couple Mark Hillary and Julie CarlawHill­ary have built a new school in an impoverish­ed village in Cambodia.
PHOTO: SUPPLIED Heroes . . . Queenstown couple Mark Hillary and Julie CarlawHill­ary have built a new school in an impoverish­ed village in Cambodia.

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