Film boss leaves Hollywood to help Cambodia’s poor

LOS ANGELES,  (Reuters Life!) – Seven years ago a  chance encounter with a poor, young girl during a backpacking  trip through Cambodia changed the life of Hollywood film  executive Scott Neeson.

He was on a holiday from his pampered life in California  and eating at an outdoor restaurant when a 9-year-old girl came  begging for money. The next night she came back, and he knew  she would be there the next day and the day after that.

The studio boss asked where she came from and he was  directed to the Steung Meanchey trash dump, outside the  country’s capital, Phnom Penh, where young kids scavenge for  food or items to sell to help them survive.

In no way would the kids ever thrive, he thought, and so  Neeson did something to help. He met with the girl’s parents,  as well another girl and her parents. He got the kids enrolled  in school and provided better housing for their families.

“The whole thing for both families was about $80 per  month,” Neeson, 51, told Reuters in a recent interview.
Why help? He said it was mostly because he could, but also  because he wanted to change.
“It was the directness of being able to help, being an  A-type personality and having control to make those decisions.  It was direct, and I never expected it to be so easy,” Neeson  said of his first experience with helping children in  Cambodia.

Now, the former president of 20th Century Fox’s  international film division lives in Cambodia, where he moved  six years ago. He runs the Cambodian Children’s Fund, which  aims to give children an education and/or job opportunities  that will help break out of poverty.

From two girls seven years ago, Neeson’s program now helps  some 700 children. It has also extended services for their  families and the communities in which they live. The fund  provides education, healthcare and job training.

For the first year Neeson continued to hold down his job in  Hollywood, traveling roughly once a month to Cambodia to get  his organization going.
Many of the children were on their own with no parents to  care for them, Neeson said, and within four months, his group  was caring for nearly 90 children.
In Dec. 2004, he abandoned his home in Los Angeles, left  his boat behind and headed to Phnom Penh to work for the kids.  The numbers grew quickly from nearly 90 to 150 as his programs  proved successful and he raised money to build facilities.

He cited one example in which it took just six days and the  equivalent of $650 to build one housing unit with a concrete  floor and swinging hammocks in which to sleep.
“The whole philosophy is to build a community that heads  toward self-sufficiency,” he said.
Neeson is quick to talk about success stories. There are  two former gang members who are now pastry chefs, a boy now in  college studying hotel management and numerous people in jobs  ranging from information technology to hair styling.

He is just as fast to note that for kids who spend their  youngest years without parents, there are different levels of  success. For some, achievements are marked simply by living a  structured life and learning skills to make good decisions.

He still walks the trash dumps outside Phnom Penh at night,  looking to help those who need it.
But is he happy he traded in a Hollywood life for long days  of community service in Cambodia?
“It’s not that simple. There are definitely things I miss.  I miss my boat. I miss my dog. But in terms of regrets, there  are none at all. If I hadn’t found what I found, I wouldn’t be  as content,” he said.

“I think I was looking for it without realizing it …  honestly, I knew I’d do something to help others, I never  realized it was such an extreme thing.”