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  • On Killing Fields anniversary, vigils and dissent

    Long Beach Press-Telegram
    April 18 2010


    On Killing Fields anniversary, vigils and dissent

    By Greg Mellen, Staff Writer
    Posted: 04/17/2010 07:22:39 PM PDT

    LONG BEACH - The solemn commemoration of something like the beginning
    of the Killing Fields genocide would seem like the kind of thing
    around which all Cambodians could rally. But in Long Beach's Cambodian
    community nothing is ever quite so simple.

    So, while two Cambodian groups staged effective and heartfelt
    commemorative events Saturday, which marked the 35th anniversary of
    the rise of the Khmer Rouge, they were underscored by dissent, or
    perhaps apathy, in the community that still grapples with divisions
    even during what would seem a unifying event.

    At the United Cambodian Community about 80 residents came to a
    commemoration that featured Reps. Adam Schiff and Laura Richardson,
    4th District Councilman Patrick O'Donnell and a number of other
    dignitaries.

    And while UCC Executive Director Sara Pol-Lim was pleased at the
    turnout and proud of the dignitaries who came out, others in
    attendance groused at the absence of many Cambodian business and civic
    leaders.

    Indeed, several days before the event Kimthai Kuoch, executive
    director of the Cambodian American Association, said his group shied
    away from commemorative events because he feared it would somehow be
    construed as political and cause dissent.

    Seven blocks away, members of the Killing Fields Memorial Center also
    staged a commmemoration event at Mark Twain Library, with a film,
    slideshow and other events. That event was attended by 35 local
    residents.

    Earlier in the day, the Killing Fields Memorial organizers had planned
    to attend a Buddhist ceremony at Wat Vipassanaram, as has been the
    custom for the past three years, but in a stunning rebuke were turned
    away.
    Leaders of the temple were unavailable for comment, but witnesses said
    they claimed to deny access because the Killing Fields Memorial
    members had not requested the monks' permission to use the property
    before member Bryant Ben showed up and was barred access.

    Ben and other members of the Killing Fields Memorial group attributed
    the dispute to an ongoing battle within the temple over its control.

    Paline Soth said his group did not protest the barring because they
    didn't want it to tinge the rest of his group's commemoration, which
    also included an evening candlelight vigil at the proposed future site
    of the Killing Fields Memorial garden next door to the library.

    Those who did attend either of the events were reminded of the tragedy
    of the Cambodian genocide between 1975 and 1979 that left upwards of 2
    million dead from execution, starvation, disease and deprivation.

    At the UCC event, survivor Phansy Peang talked of being just one of
    seven members in her immediate family to survive and of the horror of
    watching her 6-year-old son die of disease and her husband being
    executed.

    Pol-Lim, who was staging a commemoration for the second time, said it
    was important for her group to engage the community in such events and
    to try to help residents begin to heal by sharing their stories.

    "I challenge (survivors) to have a voice for those (victims) who don't
    have a voice," said Pol-Lim, adding that putting on the commemoration
    is her way of honoring the father and three brothers she lost to the
    genocide.

    Schiff, who represents the Glendale and Pasadena areas and has been a
    strong voice in urging the U.S. to recognize the Armenian genocide,
    said it is important for all cultures that have been to remember and
    not ignore the past. "The 20th century will go down as the apex of
    state-sponsored industrial killing," Schiff said.

    There were similar messages being shared at the library, where a film
    of the play "A Journey Across the Minefields to America," by local
    survivor and poet Chantara Nop, was aired. The drama, as its name
    suggests, details survival in the Killing Fields and eventual
    immigration to Long Beach.

    When talking about the reason for such events, Soth said that while
    Pol Pot and the Khmer Rouge have met their fates, "history will escape
    us if we don't remember. We have to do this every year we have to
    instill in children what happened to our gentle people."

    Or as Pol-Lim puts it, April 17 needs to be remembered because "it was
    the day we lost our innocence."

    When the day comes that those simple messages will be more widely
    accepted as unifying and apart from whatever divisions there are in
    the community is anyone's guess.

    As Cambodian newsman Narin Kem said somewhat cryptically, "Cambodian
    soup is a complicated mix of tastes, you can't know what it is until
    you eat it."

    http://www.presstelegram.com/news/ci_14 907457
    http://www.contracostatimes.com/california/ ci_14907457

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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