ASIA | TECH | BUSINESS | ARTS | TRAVEL | PHOTOS | CURRENT ISSUE


THE TSUNAMI

The Heroes of Aceh
Zaeema Ismail
Hi Phi Phi
ACTIVISTS

Sangduen "Lek" Chailert
Suciwati Munir
Chen Guidi & Wu Chuntao
CHANGE AGENTS

International Crisis Group
Masamoto Yashiro
EDUCATORS

Charm Tong
Bernard Krisher
ROLE MODELS

Mohamed Hamid
Nobu
ATHLETES

Sania Mirza
Park Ji Sung
ENTERTAINERS

Bill Kong
Ken Watanabe
Zhang Jingchu
ICONOCLASTS

Lin Hwai-min
Li Yuchun
FEATURES

Essay: The Making of a Hero

Looking Back 2004's heroes
Covers Gallery

Bernard Krisher 
A Can-Do Yank in Cambodia


Former journalist Bernard Krisher is building 275 schools for Cambodian children
JUN TAKAGI FOR TIME

Email or Print this article print article email TIMEasia Subscribe
Posted Monday, October 3, 2005; 21:00 HKT
When 31-year-old American reporter Bernard Krisher arrived in Tokyo in 1962, many people said he was too brash, too much of a New Yorker, too darned pushy to get along in decorous Asia. They were right about one thing: Krisher is pushy. In 1963, he ambushed Indonesian President Sukarno in a Tokyo antique shop and got a rare journalist's visa to Jakarta. Once Krisher was there, Sukarno introduced him to Prince Norodom Sihanouk of Cambodia; the two men have been friends ever since. In 1975, Krisher flexed his connections in Tokyo to become the first journalist to interview Hirohito, Japan's wartime emperor.

At 74, the Tokyo-based Krisher is as pushy as ever, although he's evolved from a reporter of events into a participant in them. In 1993 he founded the Cambodia Daily to give that war-ravaged land its first taste of an independent press. After North Korea suffered devastating floods in 1994, Krisher raised more than $50,000 to ship rice, corn and medical supplies. (The U.S. Treasury Department, mindful of American sanctions on North Korea, froze one of his bank accounts.) Krisher's biggest project is the building of 275 schools in Cambodia, 100 of which are equipped with computers and have access to the Internet. "This closes the gap," says Krisher, "and for Cambodia the gap is not only food and clothing. It's information."

Virtually all the funds, equipment and technology for these projects have been wheedled or cajoled by Krisher from his network of friends and contacts. The World Bank and the Asian Development Bank provide matching donations for the Cambodia schools project. Krisher constantly seeks out new benefactors. In early 2004, he wrote British author J.K. Rowling urging her to allow a cut-rate, Khmer-language version of Harry Potter. "Children in Cambodia simply haven't read since the days of Pol Pot," he says. "They needed such a book." After lengthy negotiations, Rowling agreed. A Japanese businessman put up $15,000 for printing costs. Today, Cambodian families can buy their child Harry Potter and the Sorceror's Stone for 50¢—thanks to Bernie Krisher's wizardry.

« back: Charm Tong
next: Mohamed Hamid »


October 11, 2004

April 28, 2003

April 29, 2002




Table of Contents
Subscribe to TIME



ADVERTISEMENT
QUICK LINKS: Heroes Home | The Tsunami | Activists | Change Agents | Educators | Role Models | Athletes | Entertainers | Iconoclasts | Essay | Covers Gallery | Back to TIMEasia.com Home
FROM THE OCTOBER 10, 2005 ISSUE OF TIME MAGAZINE; POSTED MONDAY, OCTOBER 3, 2005


Copyright © 2006 Time Inc. All rights reserved.
Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited.

Subscribe to TIME | Customer Service | FAQ | About TIME Asia | Search | Write to Us | Privacy Policy | Terms & Conditions | Press Releases | Media Kit