FOR PUBLICATION
AHRC-ETC-029-2012
October 15, 2012
An article by Dr. Gaffar Peang-Meth published by
the Asian Human Rights Commission
CAMBODIA: The
Citizens must help themselves
Two days ago, I gave an address to the Cambodian National
Conference in Arlington, Virginia, on the topic of
Cambodians Must Help Themselves, a
topic assigned by the Conference organizers. Today's article
is an adaptation of that speech.
I was born to a Cham father and a Chvea mother. The Chvea
migrated to Cambodia from the Malay peninsula in the 14th
century; the Chams, from Champa, in the 1700s. My father was
executed by the Khmer Rouge in 1975, and my mother died of
starvation in their labor camp. I was raised and cultured
the Khmer ways in Phum Russeykeo, Cambodia, a country that
registered some 96 percent of the population as Buddhist. I
grew up learning Lord Buddha's teaching that we humans are
masters of our own destiny and that it is we who are
responsible for our own hell and heaven. I thought then it
was a fantastic teaching. I still do.
Growing up, I have learned from the teachings of the
world's great philosophers, Socrates, Confucius, Buddha,
Muhammad, and the lessons of the wise men and women after
them, the importance of our own thoughts in predicting our
future path. Our thoughts predict our actions. Through our
actions, we make our world.
Every person thinks and has opinions. But opinions often
are hastily drawn based on anecdotal events, founded on
emotion rather than careful consideration. Opinions are not
thought, which is a product of careful reflection and
analysis. And even so, all thinking is not of the same
quality. Quality thinking is comprised of creativity (to
make something that did not exist before) and criticality
(to assess whether that which was created has led to a
defined goal). Quality thinking can be taught to and learned
by willing students, but as industrialist and philanthropist
Andrew Carnegie, whose life was a true "rags to
riches" story, once said: "You cannot push anyone
to climb a ladder unless [s/he] is willing to climb it
himself ."
Khmer World
For centuries the evolving Khmer culture has continued to
favor a tradition of subservience and acceptance. Community
is valued over individualism; harmony over kinetic discord.
Khmer history and tradition show the pervasive elements in
Khmer society that reflect the pressure to live without
rippling the waters. For 2000 years, tradition has taught
Khmers to korup, respect,
bamreur, serve,
karpier, defend the rulers toward
whom smoh trang, loyalty, is
required. Those principles made Khmers great fighters of the
Empire and earned them the characterization of
pouch neak chambaing, the warrior
race. They were warriors serving rulers unconditionally
until death.
Through history Khmer leaders make use of those
characteristics for their political ends, trapping people
into the fear that deviation is abnormal, and is eventually
a disloyal and treacherous act, a fear that keeps them in
line, even today.
The Khmer expressions Chaul stung tarm
bawt, or traveling the river by following its
bends, means, good Khmers follow the tradition. The thought
of docking the boat, getting out of the river, taking a new
path, is too creative, too "outside the lines" for
those committed to the tradition of Chaul stung
tarm bawt. This is a diktat to follow and
conform.
A good friend in Phnom Penh reminds me of the current
regime's awareness of the Khmers' general characteristics of
the three Ks -- Khliean, Khlao,
Khlach, or hungry, ignorant, fearful. My
friend says that the three Ks allow the regime to practice
the four L's of Luy, Leak, Lub,
Luoch, or the god money, hiding truth, erasing
evidence, and stealing. The continued adherence to the
traditional culture allows the regime to continue, says my
friend, by resorting to a system of
Tinh or buy -- to buy votes,
buy minds, buy allegiance; Samlott
or intimidating to achieve a goal; and
Luoch or theft of anything that
can be stolen.
So, how do we bring about change?
Masters of our own destiny
African-American civil rights leader Martin Luther King,
told his people during their struggle for equal rights that,
"Change does not roll in on the wheels of
inevitability, but comes through continuous struggle. And so
we must straighten our backs and work for our freedom. A man
can't ride you unless your back is bent."
2,500 years earlier, Lord Buddha taught that fate is a
human creation: "I do not believe in a fate that falls
on men however they act; but I do believe in a fate that
falls on them unless they act." "No one saves us
but ourselves. No one can and no one may. We ourselves must
walk the path."
Humans are creature of habit. We get up in the morning,
shower and dress, drink a cup of tea or coffee with our
breakfast, and follow a fairly predictable routine from day
to day. We think and act pretty much the way we have always
thought and acted. We are, in short, predictable. So,
beware! Albert Einstein warned: Insanity is doing the same
thing over and over again and expecting different
results.
A Khmer septuagenarian, former commander and instructor
at the Khmer Military Academy, sent me the poem
Khmer Oeuy, Oeuy Khmer… as
he lamented how after an unprecedented hell in Cambodia
during which millions were killed, little if anything has
changed. French critic Alphonse Karr famously said,
Plus ca change, plus c'est la meme
chose, or "The more things change, the
more they are the same."
Khmer elders, themselves, have passed along several
expressions that are descriptive of the strategies that
rulers employ to keep the people in line, or that Khmer
employ to stay alive in perilous times:
- M'neus phnaek m'noah or humans with
pineapple eyes, refers to the many eyes of a pineapple. Many
of today's Cambodians choose to interpret this as a warning
to be careful of the regime's "pineapple eyes"
that catch every move. Yet, those pineapple eyes are thickly
covered with heavy lids and cannot really see.
- M'neus tracheak peang,
describes humans with ears of a water jar. The ears of a
water jar are just attachments; they don't hear.
- M'neus kbal khsear, mocks
those who are so willing to accept abuse that they have a
head of a smoker's pipe. The face carved on the pipe bowl
smiles in all circumstances. The smoker forces tobacco into
the hole on the carved pipe bowl, lights a match, the face
still smiles. The smoker stirs the tobacco ash with a metal
tool, removes the ash by hitting the carved bowl against a
hard surface. The face still smiles.
Yet even in such a place as Cambodia has become, change
is possible.
Guiding principles
Last month, I received an advertisement for a book,
Change is good… You go
first, by Mac Anderson and Tom Feltenstein.
Let me go first and talk a bit about how Cambodians can
learn, in fact must learn, to defy their traditional culture
and help themselves.
To begin, we must take an assessment of who we are. I've
described to you my view of the impact of the culture we
share and how in this 21st century, that culture is an
impediment to our progress as a people and as a nation.
Next we must agree on the goals we set for ourselves and
the intermediate objectives we must attain to move forward
to achieve those goals.
And we must agree on those principles that guide our
behavior toward one another and in the wider world.
Some might say that Cambodians are too humble, but I
believe that humility – the opposite of vanity,
arrogance, and pride – is lacking among many
Cambodians. Humility is the quality of being courteously
respectful of others and should be a core value as we Khmer
learn to get along, to collaborate for our own betterment
and the betterment of our nation.
Many great belief systems describe the humility I'm
talking about. In Christianity it is the Golden Rule: Do
unto others as you would have them do unto you. Confucius
said, "What is loathsome to thee, do not to
another." North American Indians had some version of a
phrase that has been popularized as "Before you
criticize a man, walk a mile in his moccasins." We
Khmer would do well to hold our tongues – roll our
tongues 7 times, as my father taught me – before we
indulge in angry words or hurtful gossip. There are not so
many of us Khmer any more. We must learn to get along, even
if we disagree.
The roots of our successful future can be found in our
past, in the Buddhist values most Khmer share. In simple
terms, Lord Buddha's teaching may be categorized into: Do
all good; Do no evil; Purify the mind. He explains evil,
"Killing is evil, lying is evil, slandering is evil,
abuse is evil, gossip is evil; envy is evil, hatred is evil,
to cling to false doctrine is evil."
The principles I'm talking about are cleverly described
in an acronym, RESPECT, developed courtesy
of Steven Ventura of the Leadership and Learning Center.
Listen: RESPECT
Recognize the inherent worth of all
human beings.
Eliminate derogatory words and phrases from
your vocabulary.
Speak with people – not at
them… or about them.
Practice empathy. Walk awhile in others'
shoes.
Earn respect from others through
respect-worthy behaviors.
Consider others' feelings before speaking
and acting.
Treat everyone with dignity and
courtesy.
Goals and Objectives
A goal is long term and broad. It is an end to be
achieved. It can take years to achieve, or a lifetime. An
objective is short range and specific, a step toward
attaining a goal.
A goal that is long range and broadly described is vague.
A vague goal is hard to implement. For example, no one would
likely disagree that justice and democracy are worthy goals,
but the devil, as they say, is in the details. Once we agree
that we would like justice and freedom in Cambodia, then
what? What are the short term objectives we can agree upon
that will begin to demonstrate to our people and to the
wider world that a healthy opposition movement is a better
partner than doing business as usual with an aging
dictator?
In her book This Year I will… How to
finally change a habit, keep a resolution, or make a dream
come true…, change specialist M.J. Ryan
suggests that in defining the changes we want to make we
apply to each certain criteria she has described with
another nifty acronym, SMART:
The objectives we develop that will lead us to change
unwanted habits should be
• Specific
• Measurable
• Achievable
• Relevant, and
• Time-Bound
Ryan warns, a non-specific (broad and vague) goal sets
you up to fail; progress that can't be measured doesn't tell
you how far you have come and how much further you have to
go. If what you want to achieve is not possible, you will
fail. She suggests we make what we want relevant
(important), and that we provide ourselves a timeframe to
achieve it.
Our long range goals of justice and civil rights in
Cambodia should remain constant. But we must create short
range SMART objectives, which can be flexible, to
accommodate more effective pathways to change.
Examples of short term objectives could include:
- Merging opposition parties into one Cambodian
Democratic Movement for National Rescue, and finally, the
Cambodian National Rescue Party
- Educating cadres and the people on the essential
elements of democracy – rule of law, transparency,
separation of powers, etc.
- Implementing one or more of the nearly 200 methods
of nonviolent action
- Demanding justice for the killing of
environmentalist Chhut Vuthy or environmental reporter Heng
Serei Oudom, or the jailing of radio broadcaster Mam
Sonando
- Mobilizing Cambodians abroad to vote in the 2013
elections
The annual gathering of activists to appeal for the
"reactivation" of the 1991 Paris Peace Agreements
does not fall under the suggested SMART scheme; the rally at
the United Nations Human Rights Council headquarters in
Geneva to urge the representatives of 47 UNHRC member states
to support Dr. Subedi's Report, does.
SMART actions empower us and give us strength and hope to
move forward.
International Support
We need international support.
We live in a world of unprecedented political, economic,
social interconnectedness, in which what happens in one
place will sooner or later affect other places, directly or
indirectly. This world is not blind to the Cambodian
regime's hold to power through threats and intimidation.
World leaders are aware of the Cambodian government's
granting of economic land concessions that destroy people's
lives, take away their land, dismantle their homes; the
regime selling Cambodia's natural wealth to private and
foreign firms and governments while a third of Cambodians
live at a subsistence level. All these, among others,
constitute the regime's violation of Cambodia's Constitution
and of the 1991 Paris peace Agreements.
Conforming to Buddha's teaching of
Anicca, that everything is
impermanent, Prime Minister Hun Sen and his ruling Cambodian
People's Party's hold on power is not permanent. No
government can hold on to power without the support of those
they rule, their citizens. Many governments are sympathetic
to Cambodians' struggle for civil rights and justice. But
they do not see it in their overwhelming interest to
initiate a struggle that the Cambodian people, themselves,
have done little to undertake. We need to think smart and
act smart.
Cambodians Must Help
Themselves
A nagging fear about change in Cambodia is the fear that
the removal of the iron-fisted regime will unleash
instability and chaos. This demonstrates a lack of trust in
the ability of the democrats to keep order and security, and
provide a better Cambodia than the one that is familiar. Old
wine in a new bottle is not a new wine.
While that insecurity among the people is understandable,
the antidote must come from within. Change will not come
from those who call for change but then look around to see
who will start. You Go First! Imagine what it is that you
want to achieve, break it down into small pieces, and go to
work on implementing one piece at a time, or work on a few
pieces at once. Get a friend to help you. Have him or her
bring a friend. Imagine. Do the work. Tell others. Change
will come, bit by bit. The process of creating change can be
taught and learned.
Coincidentally, Cambodian Buddhists need to brush up on
their Lord Buddha's teaching and practice it. The idea is
not to seek Chaul Nippean or go to
Heaven where earthly attachments end, but to become good men
and women, hence, good citizens. By so doing, we diminish
the likelihood that a corrupt dictator will be replaced by a
corrupt demagogue. True Buddhists are not oppressive and
autocratic.
Meanwhile, Cambodian democrats must close ranks as they
have never before, and work hard to bring about nonviolent
action that would remove Cambodia's current autocracy. I am
not in support of some Cambodians who call for blood. It
doesn't work. It has no appeal to the people nor to an
international community riddled with violence-fatigue. The
path forward should be nonviolent. We don't destroy, we
repair. We don't kill, we co-opt.
The message I hope you will take away today is simple.
The seeds of change are within us, and can be found even in
our own culture. We must choose those teachings from our
history that encourage us to live good lives and undertake
change that will benefit the common good. These teachings
that should guide us come from Buddha, and are reiterated
throughout cultures and religions all over the world: Each
of us is responsible for our own future and together we are
responsible for the quality of the society in which we
live.
It is never too late to change!
----------------
The AHRC is not responsible for the views shared in
this article, which do not necessarily reflect its
own.
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
pean...@gmail.com.
# # #
About AHRC: The Asian Human
Rights Commission is a regional non-governmental
organisation that monitors human rights in Asia, documents
violations and advocates for justice and institutional
reform to ensure the protection and promotion of these
rights. The Hong Kong-based group was founded in
1984.
