By Keith Hamm | ESPN.com
Originally Published: October 4, 2012
skateistan.orgThe opening of Skateistan's new skate facility in Phnom Penh, Cambodia.
The four-wheeled outreached of Skateistan has taken hold of young
skateboarders in Cambodia with the recent grand opening of a covered
skatepark in Phnom Penh, the nation's capital and largest city.
More
than a year in the making, the roughly 4,300-square-foot skatepark is
part of a three-story facility that offers year-round skate lessons,
creative arts and other learning resources to Khmer girls and boys, aged
5-17.
About 150 parents and kids from the surrounding neighborhood showed up for the ribbon-cutting party on Sept. 28.
As
staff and students broke in the skatepark's five quarterpipes and
assorted banks, flat bars and ledges, the Turning Tables DJ camp
provided a live soundtrack for the afternoon event.
"The
young people who live in the area are all curious about what we're
doing here and excited to start learning," communications officer Talia
Kaufman told ESPN.com via email. "I think having a free, safe,
recreational facility nearby will make a positive impact on the whole
community. Our students who are already enrolled in programming love the
challenge of skateboarding. As they learn new skills it increases their
confidence, which transfers to other areas of their lives. It's a huge
creative outlet and a healthy way to spend free time, in a supervised
setting."
Founded in 2007 in Kabul, Afghanistan, the
international NGO Skateistan program seeks to empower young girls and
boys through the challenges and fun of skateboarding, among other
educational programs. Released earlier this year, the 320-page book
"Skateistan: The Tale of Skateboarding in Afghanistan" details the
program's beginnings and its expansion into Pakistan and Cambodia.
Skateistan
Cambodia opened in March 2011 with a modest, mobile skatepark setup
that teamed up with nonprofits Friends International, Pour un Sourire
D'Enfant, and Tiny Toones to provide neighborhood skate sessions among
Phnom Penh's population of 1.5 million.
The
permanent facility in Cambodia is a much-welcomed chapter of good news
for the Skateistan program, its staff and students still grieving the
deaths of four skaters from the Afghanistan facility. On Sept. 8 in Kabul,
a suicide bomber attacked the International Security Assistance Force
headquarters, where many of the city's street-working children --
including those from the skatepark -- sell trinkets, scarves and chewing
gum to help support their families.
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