Swiss Storytelling Photo Grant 9th
LuganoPhotoDays
Steff Gruber
Smor San
Smor San is a community that lives in a cemetery in Phnom Penh. The inhabitants have constructed makeshift houses on top of tombs and coffins, or inhabited vacant burial chambers. Here they eat dinner, watch TV, hang clothes to dry, care for their kids, and sleep – just centimeters away from the dead. They moved into the cemetery with around 200 graves after sand dredging had led to the collapse of their houses on the riverbank. The documentation of the lives of life in Smor San is part of an ongoing long-term project on the landless poor communities in Cambodia.
Smor San is a community that lives in a cemetery in Cambodia's capital Phnom Penh. The inhabitants have constructed makeshift houses on top of tombs and coffins, or inhabited vacant burial chambers. Here they eat dinner, watch TV, hang clothes to dry, care for their kids, and sleep – just centimeters away from the dead.
Many residents erected their homes in the 1990s, since when there has been a steady increase. Some people moved into the cemetery after sand dredging had led to the collapse of their houses on the riverbank, while others were evicted from nearby land to make way for a new market. Today around 500 people live on the cemetery with around 200 graves that are still visited by relatives of the deceased.
Just across the river is Diamond Island, the jewel in Phnom Penh’s fast-rising skyline. Four decades after the genocidal Khmer Rouge regime abolished private property and destroyed all land records, Cambodia is experiencing a real estate boom. Over the years, the capital's slums have been cleared - sometimes violently - and the poor population dispersed to larger settlements on the outskirts of the city, where sanitation, electricity, jobs, schools and health care are harder to find. Today, more than 25,000 families live in 277 urban poor settlements around Phnom Penh.
The documentation of the lives of life in Smor San is part of an ongoing long-term project on the landless poor communities in Cambodia.