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Dancing in shadows: Shianouk, the Khmer Rouge, and the United Nations in Cambodia
The modest, white-walled Noor Al-Ihsan mosque on the northern outskirts of Phnom Penh was one of the two oldest buildings in the Cambodian capital. When the city, supposedly founded in 1434, celebrated its 550th anniversary in 1984, few if any Phnom Penh buildings predated the nineteenth century. A sign in Arabic and Khmer above the old mosque's entrance dated its foundation to 1813. That was just a few years after Cambodia's royal court first moved south to Phnom Penh from Udong, the former capital upriver. Already living in the Phnom Penh area at the time was a community of Muslim Chams, refugees from an eighteenth-century civil war downriver in neigh- boring Vietnam.
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