HOST(IN KHMER): Hallo, friendly viewers, and welcome to Good People, 
Good Works on Supreme Master Television. Today’s program features the 
first of a two-part series that profiles Angkor Hospital for Children, a
 full-service pediatric hospital based in Siem Reap, Cambodia that 
provides compassionate charity medical care to the youngsters of the 
local community and neighboring provinces. 
The hospital was 
established in 1999 by internationally acclaimed photographer Kenro Izu 
who travels the world taking images of sacred sites – from the pyramids 
of Egypt to the Caves of the 10,000 Buddhas in western China. 
Besides
 providing quality pediatric care, the facility also serves as a 
clinical training center for Cambodian medical professionals. Ms. 
Sinketh Arun, Angkor Hospital for Children’s Director of Public 
Relations now speaks about Mr. Izu and why he founded the facility.
Ms.
 Arun (f): First I would like to thank Supreme Master TV for giving us 
the opportunity to give the information about the hospital. Angkor 
Hospital for Children was started by a Japanese photographer; his name 
is Kenro Izu. 
He first came to Cambodia during 1993. And the 
first time he came, he spent time doing his photography at the Angkor 
Wat Temple and then he met with many children at that time. 
Ms. 
Arun (f): And some children were sick and it seemed like the children 
didn’t have very good care or any medical care from any medical facility
 in Siem Reap during that time.
HOST:  When Mr. Izu returned to 
Cambodia to take photographs a year later, he went to the provincial 
hospital in Siem Reap to learn more about the health services available 
to the local children. 
Ms. Arun (f): And then he spent time visiting
 the provincial hospital. And then he found a child with her father from
 the countryside, and the child was sick with a serious condition. 
The
 child was brought by the father to the provincial hospital, but at that
 time the medical facility was not so good. And then one day later, the 
child died during his visit. 
He heard the story about the child 
dying and he was moved by the story of that child, and he decided to do 
something for the Cambodians. 
For more details on Angkor Hospital for Children, please visit
www.AngkorHospital.org   To learn more about Friends Without Border, please visit 
www.FWAB.org