Perhaps Cambodians soft power will advance their struggle
October 14, 2011
An article by Dr. Gaffar
Peang-Meth published by the Asian Human Rights
Commission
CAMBODIA: Perhaps Cambodians
soft power will advance their struggle for rights and
freedom
Last August, my column in this space
examined the future of Cambodia's youth and education.
Immediately after it appeared, an American friend e-mailed
to ask if I was perhaps too pessimistic.
Cambodia has the
youngest population among the 10 members of the Association
of South-East Asian Nations. Two out of 3 Cambodians are
under 25 years of age, and more than 30 percent of the
country's 14 million people are between the ages of 10 and
24 years. With such a young and vibrant population and an
enviable rate of economic growth for the past 10 years, what
about the future does not beckon brightly?
Last July, the
United Nations Development Programme released results of a
survey of Cambodian youth. Ninety-five percent of young
Khmers are proud to be Cambodian nationals. They said the
country is headed in the right
direction.
Double-edged
sword
But, statistics are a double-edged
sword.
Reports abound about many of the young and vibrant
population who fall prey to alcoholism and the "Perfect
High"; live in a culture in which bribery is prevalent and
has spread nationwide among pupils, students, teachers, and
officials from elementary school to university level, to the
Ministry of Education.
Doctorate degrees, and honorary
degrees from non-accredited institutions, are much prized
credentials that improve one's job prospects and social
status. Even military officers and government officials want
doctorate titles. There are some 2,000 Ph.D. candidates in
the country.
However, the UNDP reports that the 300,000
Cambodians who enter the domestic labor market yearly often
don't have the skills required by private-sector
employers.
Concerning Cambodia's outstanding economic
development, Cambodians and foreign donors know that has
been accomplished through violence and through governmental
actions that have created in essence a "country for sale."
Tens of thousands of villagers' homes have been burned down
or dismantled and demolished by authorities. Privately owned
land has been taken by force; tens of thousands of people
have been evicted; and many have been brutally beaten. The
country's forests are fast disappearing and national
resources are being sold to foreign investors while some 35
percent of the people live on 75 cents to one dollar a
day.
Without change, what optimism should I hold for
Cambodia's future? Indeed, change will come, to be followed
by further changes. One who wrote to me noted the fear that
the inevitable change may be accompanied by bloodshed.
As
Lord Buddha taught, "Nothing is permanent." Fitting is what
American civil rights leader Martin Luther King, Jr., said:
"The time is always right to do what is right."
"Dark
Age"
In e-mail communication with a reader I do not know,
whom I will call Samreth, I learned of his love for history,
culture, tradition, and Buddhism. He said he likes to read
and he collects materials on the Khmers and Cambodia, his
native land. A democrat, he has visited Cambodia, and
described to me how today's Khmer society has changed almost
beyond recognition from what it once was.
Ignorance and
all that it begets are on full display in contemporary
Cambodia, Samreth asserted. Civility and discussion based on
ideas seem to have disappeared; Buddhist institutions are
facades that no longer provide a meaningful cultural
foundation; the military and the police are for hire;
leadership is absent.
Samreth's conclusion: "We Khmers
are in the midst of a dark era that requires especially
individuals with quality thoughts and those willing and able
to contribute to the rebuilding of Khmer society for the
long run."
Quality
thinking
Maybe I've missed what has been
percolating for some time, but certainly this year I see
what appears to be a new trend: Increasingly, writers are
employing topical, analytical, intellectual and thoughtful
approaches to Khmer issues. The writings are educational and
informative in the understanding of Khmers and Cambodia.
They provoke thought and uplift my spirit. This new thread
is a wonderful counter to the profane "free expression" that
has polluted public discourse in Cambodia in recent years.
Strong words, noted Victor Hugo, indicate a weak cause.
Perhaps the strength of a new cause is beginning to take
hold.
Readers familiar with my writing know of my embrace
of the concept that it's not what we know but how we think
that determine the quality of all that we do. Influential
psychologist in education, peace, and conflict resolution,
Carl Rogers, posited: "The only person who is educated is
the one who has learned how to learn and change."
I
believe anything and any human is capable of change.
Reproductive-repetitive behavior needs to stop. If you are
accustomed to doing something the same way every day, then
reverse it or stop it altogether. This is "unlearning." New
productive-innovative behavior needs to start. It needs
criticality – to probe to understand, to compare to
increase options and to select the best; and it needs
creativity – to generate something from nothing, and keep
adding new ideas, ad infinitum.
We need our inquisitive
minds to continue searching for answers. We must be curious,
imaginative, and not stop asking questions.
A
new trend?
Recently, I read Sean Kosal's
article, "Majority of Cambodians do not like reading
books."Kosal asserted that actually less than 10 percent --
if even that number -- of Cambodians like to read books. I
don't know if they don't like to read books, or if they
don't like to read, period. Anyway, that anecdote alone
serves to explain to me many things about issues concerning
Khmers and Cambodia.
Kosal did his research. He talked to
educators and students, he studied the environment. He found
that generally, Cambodians don't understand what benefits
reading brings, or they don't appreciate writers; they
aren't curious, don't care to find out or to learn; never
develop a reading or an inquisitive habit; but students want
the teachers' materials to learn by heart.
Kosal cited a
university graduate in economics who said reading is
essential before taking exams, otherwise books make him lazy
and tired. Have you heard some students say that thinking
hurts their heads?
According to Kosal, another educator
believes Cambodian families and schools do not socialize
children, as others in more progressive countries do, toward
the love of learning.
Then I came across writings by
James Sok. His writings so impressed me that I contacted
him.
Formerly from Kandal Province and schooled in
Battambang, he was with the Khmer national resistance at the
Khmer-Thai border until 1980, when he left for the United
States. Now, an American citizen, he is a systems
administrator in the northeast United States.
James Sok,
who basically agrees with Kosal about the principal causes
for Cambodians' lack of interest in reading and researching,
has called in his writings for Cambodians to read, to think,
to study, to make extra efforts to improve themselves
intellectually and emotionally: "Khmers need resources in
intelligence, spirit, and knowledge … conforming to Khmer
concepts of learning harder, seeking and saving more, and
sharing what we know."
Recently, in "It's time for Khmers
to stop being ignorant," James Sok reminds Khmers that it
took a long time for Khmer heroes to build the Khmer Nation;
while a nation rises or declines in history, it's the
responsibility of the people to rebuild. Sok calls on
Cambodians not to be angry, but use their current plight as
a lesson, to study and learn from it to become "learned,
developed, strong like the time of historical
greatness."
Sok ridiculed those who "just sit, shake
legs, insult, accuse and libel" others.
The
"Neighbors"
Early this month, a one-page
op-ed posted on a Khmer blog brought me another ray of hope.
To me, this is about thinking. "Education," the writer said,
"will bring about freedom from all the bondages and
suppression, including Vietnamization of Cambodia!"
What?
The idea that education would bring "freedom from
… Vietnamization of Cambodia," is novel to me, especially
at this time when Khmers in general are overwhelmed with
worries and fear that their strong neighbors will usurp
Cambodia. The op-ed asserted emphatically, "Cambodia will
not lose her name and culture … nor all of her land."
I
agree with that writer. I do not understand how in this 21st
century a nation and its people can vanish. I don't discount
the seriousness of the Vietnamese threat. Indeed, hundreds
of thousands – Hun Sen's opponents say, millions – of
Vietnamese immigrants who have resettled on Khmer soil do
change the Khmer cultural, economic and political landscape.
But an educated, prosperous Cambodia would find ways to
profit from cultural diversity. Ignorance, the current
dismal state, knows only fear of what change might
bring.
Some in the international Cambodian community are
taking advantage of the 20th anniversary of the Paris Peace
Accords (October 23) that ended the most recent war in
Cambodia to call upon the signatories to "reactivate" the
accords to stop Hun Sen's abuses and remove the Vietnamese
from Cambodia. This tactic is a diversion that will produce
no result. Khmer democrats are on their own, and might be
encouraged to read a recent article (Newsweek September 25)
by Harvard University professor Niall Ferguson on
Palestine's recent bid at the UN to be certified as a state.
In "You Were Expecting Statehood," noting Palestine's
(inevitable) disappointment, Ferguson concluded, "The U.N.
serves the interests of great powers. Just as it was meant
to." The great powers have no interest in reactivating the
1991 Paris Accords.
"Work out your own salvation,"
preached Lord Buddha, "Do not depend on others."
The
author of the op-ed, who signed as "Pissed Off," says, "What
remains to be done … (for) the survival of the Khmer race
is … to help promote and sustain education for every child
in Cambodia." When "educating every child in the country
becomes a reality," Cambodia would become a country in which
"citizens are well informed," and no dictatorship can "bud,
much less grow," on their land. Education will free
Cambodians from their neighbors, Anonymous assured.
I
agree. Education helps strengthen a people's sense of
values, traditions, and nationalist sentiments that keep
them unique. Educated and well informed citizens are better
equipped to solve problems in imaginative and creative
ways.
James Sok enters, again. The Vietnamese are in
Cambodia because Khmers allowed them to come, Khmers relied
on the Vietnamese, and "today, increasing numbers of Khmers
ally themselves in different ways with the
Vietnamese."
Sok's solution? Khmers' resources in
intelligence, spirit, and knowledge need to be rebuilt for
Khmers to become "learned, developed, and strong." "There
are too many Cambodians who are ignorant today," Sok argues,
"that's why Cambodians joined the Vietnamese." Reverse
course, Sok urges.
Perhaps, Cambodians' "soft power" will
advance their struggle for rights and freedom.
The views shared in this article do not necessarily reflect those of the AHRC, and the AHRC takes no responsibility for them.
About the Author:
Dr. Gaffar Peang-Meth is retired from the University of Guam, where he taught political science for 13 years. He currently lives in the United States. He can be contacted at peangmeth@gmail.com.
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