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The Good It Does
Posted On 01/23/2008 22:52:24 by Features

The Good It Does

editorial by soch


I have been at a loss lately, trying to wrap my mind around the Sok An controversy. Every time I think I've reconciled myself to the issue, something else pops up to blow me away.

First, I'm completely baffled as to how the invitation could have been issued in the first place. Going by parade entry rules, which the parade committee themselves seemed to have had the foresight to draft:


1. All entries should have a positive theme which respects diversity, is non-controversial, and does not advocate any political candidate


How is inviting a leading political figure in an election year (2008 Cambodian elections) not a political or controversial statement? How exactly does one parade a political candidate on a float without advocating them? After transgressing on their very own policies, we are then told by the parade committee to "put homeland politics aside." To be honest, I have never considered the current situation in our homeland to be a matter of politics. When a government violates its own laws, mistreats, exploits, and oppresses its people, it has gone far beyond politics; it becomes a criminal matter. In fact, it is called a crime against humanity, accountable to an international tribunal. These are the language and concepts of the world we live in, the world where we Cambodian-Americans have supposedly come to take refuge from the very ravages and atrocities of none other than our "homeland politics."

So far, the arguments for Sok An's participation in the parade have ranged from slightly absurd to downright incomprehensible. No, it is not likely that his participation will induce a change of heart in his governance. And on the slim chance it could, does it require a vantage point from atop a float for it to come about? A non-Cambodian American actually stated that "as a professional," she cannot take sides on the issue. Can you imagine if professionals the world over refrain from taking sides on issues for such stated reason? The political and social wheels of many a great nation would topple to a standstill. I respect people's opinions, but I find it insulting when they opt out of expressing one for such a nonsensical excuse. Had she said, "as a professional who is acquaintanted with the parties involved," she cannot take sides, I would by far respect her honesty. Last I check, Cambodians are at least able to look up "professional" in a dictionary.

Perhaps more distressing than the Sok An invite has been this mixed-bag response. I would have thought the presence of a prominent figure of a famously corrupt and criminal regime in an event meant to celebrate and honor would inspire unified outrage and disgust among a western community. Not so. In fact, the most unified response so far has been the usual laments upon Cambodian disunity, the go-to argument meant to stymie any opposition, when all else fails. Ladies and gentlemen, since when is unity suppose to be blind? Were you to herd a community of sheep, perhaps you can ask for united support for whatever hare-brained scheme you may come up with, but until then you might have to put up with a little pastime of the free world, called dissent. Interesting enough, Harvard University used to publish a literary magazine by this very name. Stanford has a magazine called "Chaparral," a reference to a fire-prone environment. What does it say that these premier American institutions give such weight and tribute to said dissent and differing sentiments in shaping the brightest minds of their generations? According to the unity argument, are we now to feel ashamed because we cannot unite under an act we find unconscionable?

Let's be clear: I do not hate Sok An. I haven't the honor to know this man from Adam. However, as a citizen of the free world, I deplore his administration's activities and policies. And as the man in a pivotal position of power, he is fully accountable for the atrocities under his watch. Sok An may be a wonderful father and a cozy friend and you may have him over for tea in your living room, but he is also a figurehead of brutal injustice and murder and to welcome such a figurehead in a public celebration of diversity, community and freedom is to willfully turn a blind eye to the injured, victims of an intolerably corrupt and morally depraved administration. A parade is not a symposium for change; rather it is a public event meant to celebrate and honor. In fact, if there is any other function of a parade, it could be said that it is a vehicle for propaganda. As such, it is morally reprehensible that this vehicle is to be used to honor an agent largely responsible for the suffering of thousands.

The last entreaty to the opposition is: why can't we just let things be? They suggest we stay home that day if we choose not to support Sok An's presence. What good does it do to cause a stir, make a ruckus? My dear friends and countrymen, the good it does is this: whatever happens, it is on record for the people depicted below that we do not in any way, implicit or otherwise, support their tormentors. To put it baldly: half a world away, our brothers and sisters cannot speak without getting maimed or killed. On their behalf, we can. It is the very least we can do. This is the good it does.

 

 

Police and military police stand guard over cowering villagers after setting fire to their homes. Sixty houses were burned down.

Police and military police stand guard over cowering villagers after setting fire to their homes. Sixty houses were burned down.

Thirteen villagers were arrested for allegedly resisting the unlawful
eviction, yet up until now there has been no investigation or
prosecution by the authorities into the excessive violence used by
police during the eviction.

 

A group of 48 Khmer Kampuchea Krom monks, ethnic Khmer originally from
southern Vietnam, had convened in front of the Vietnamese Embassy to
submit a petition


The anti-riot unit brutally charged the Khmer Krom monks with their shields and electric batons

 

 

 



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Viewing 1 - 20 out of 73 Comments


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From: blackcoffee
03/23/2008 20:16:43
This column has gone D-E-A-D just like democracy in Cambodia.


From: malaika
02/07/2008 12:31:51
did someone try to stop you from calling anyone hippies?


From: blackcoffee
02/06/2008 17:56:03

Malaika,


Since calling someone a monkey, for example President Bush,  is a RIGHT, calling anyone here anything shouldn't be a problem according to your line of reasoning.


I think my point is, if anyone is going to point a finger, please don't cry when someone else does it back. Another point, Cambodian society is now so competitive that even overseas Cambodians will find it tough competing, in any field. They don't point fingers at you here in Cambodia. They point their Richards here.



From: malaika
02/06/2008 10:30:48
unless you use it as an insult...


From: malaika
02/05/2008 18:51:13
i don't mind being called a hippie.


From: blackcoffee
02/03/2008 20:11:42
It's so true, Malaika! And in Cambodia Town, you're not allowed to call anyone hippies, either. AND if you post a photo of your family's Phnom Penh Christmas dinner, P1T will tell you to your face they want to vomit! Rights, what a lovely word!


From: malaika
02/01/2008 21:57:21
First of all, it is Deputy Prime Minister Sok An, not Sok An.  If you are living in the US, then you can call your leader Georgie or Bush or draw a picture of a monkey...  In Cambodia (Town), you do not have those rights.


From: blackcoffee
01/30/2008 23:00:50

Theary,


I am in agreement with you on both points.


 



From: theary
01/30/2008 07:34:28

navy -- call me literal, but i consider the columns on this site officially sanctioned blogs.  the ones i've read have been fairly personal and one can extract more about its authors than its subject matters.

soch -- my point is, i have no idea who the leaders are in this effort.  and therefore, no idea who to rally around.  without that, you will lose the momentum of the khmer community of long beach you seek... and i would find it unfortunate if "nothing" came out of all this.

 



From: blackcoffee
01/30/2008 00:40:58

Malaika,


Sorry, I'm really busy over here and always on the run. I get a minute here and there between tasks, so I write when I can. Please don't be too upset, k?



From: malaika
01/29/2008 23:48:26

Theary... i was referring to the column, not necessary the blog.

blackcoffee - you don't want to be too active, yet, you write more than most. i can't imagine how much more you would be posting if your intention was to be active.   10 replies before anyone get in edgewise instead of 5?



From: blackcoffee
01/29/2008 20:10:27

Theary,


I am in agreement with you.


 



From: blackcoffee
01/29/2008 20:06:24

Malaika,


Lovely sarcasm. No excuses. Just the truth. When you were here I was on assignment and under enormous pressure. I neglected everyone, not just you. Remember, you were just a mere stranger. You won't understand the stressful and demanding life I led at the time.  Honestly, I don't know much, but I don't like it when people look down on their own people and country. I think people should stop pretending to be foreigners in their own bloody country. For goodness sake, it's Cambodia, your own country, get in it, swim in it. We don't need you to be our psychotherapist.


Ah oui, salut Monsiegneur Kaiak/kaiac!


Voulez-vous couchez avec moi ce soire?


Non? Mais pourquoi?


Sorry, my French and Vietnamese are rusty. Do write in Khmer or English.



From: soch
01/29/2008 12:38:09

theary

thank you for your comments.  i appreciate and agree w/ your suggestions, some of which have been considered and are being followed through.  if the details of these have not been blasted as vocally in the public forums as the simple idea of an opposition, i'm sure you might understand some of the reasons why.



From: theary
01/29/2008 12:10:04

navy.  thanks for the suggestion but i'm not interested in trolling through numerous blogs and commenting.  i am happy to read, in general, various interesting tidbits on this site and KC.  but my intention is not to a) be a blogger and b) to be a spectator of blogging. 

i am slightly disappointed in the follow-up to my queries regarding your post.   it's hard to imagine that for all the passionate sentiments expressed here and on kc in regards to mr. sok an's visit to long beach and its parade, a petition is really all that has come or will come out of this "passion."

 

quote .......

aside from the lament -- albeit a very well argued lament -- one cannot
expect the "community" to rally around a petition. as much as one
cannot expect "unity" from silence, complacency and inaction. i urge
the folks in long beach who really feel passionately about this issue
to:

1) outreach to other organizations/groups in the local area
who may have the same feelings as your group and start pulling everyone
with like-minded goals together. (i.e. groups at wats, groups as the
schools, groups at churches, not-for-profit groups etc etc -- your
resources are quite extraordinary here). you will need their support,
their manpower and their ideas to move forward.

2) move beyond
the petition, don't throw it out. but individual letters are good.
phone calls to the parade organizing committee and the branch of the
local lbc gov't are even better. get a group of people (could be the
hardcore few of you or anyone you recruit in speaking with the other
orgs) and a)grab a phonebook look for khmer people and call them up.
b)isolate key areas of concentrated khmer neighborhoods and go door to
door. these are the people you want to convince to write letters. to
make phone calls. to sign your petition.

3) have a plan b
committee that starts developing NOW what you will do should this
grassroots campaign not work. i.e. are you going to protest the parade?
are you going to protest outside of wherever the parade committee meets
to plan? are you going to protest outside long beach city hall? are you
going to register for the parade as your own group against mr. sok an?
what is your message? etc etc.


i offer this, merely as
advice. it's easy to berate khmers for not doing anything. it's easy to
sit behind computer screens or notepads and write the word "dissent"
... what does it actually mean though? in action. i'm willing to help
out as much as i can, from 3,000 miles away. the legwork, i'm afraid,
will be up to you folks on the ground.



From: kaiak
01/29/2008 08:23:33

Hello fils de pute Blackcoffee,


Arretes tes conneries, vieux salaud Backcoffee! Suis un agent des Viets? Quel imbecile! T'es qu'un vaut rien, Espece d'idiot!


Kaiak


p.s. Je m'excuse pour ne pas pouvoir m'abstenir de repondre a ce con, trou duc' Blackcoffe...



From: malaika
01/29/2008 05:11:53
What! K15 is a Long Beach hippies?  Can we meet up for coffee?  If I call you up, you won't be making a billion excuse not to meet up, right?  And if you give me your # to call, you will pick up, right?  All this time, I thought K15 were in Cambodia and that is why he's the columnist for Cambodia.  How wrong I was.  Blackcoffee, you seem to know a lot.  Thanks for letting me know that K15 was so close to me after all.


From: blackcoffee
01/29/2008 01:44:26

This is my personal opinion, when you see a nice piece of land, with legitimate title, ideally located next to a beautiful stream and up for sale at a good price, and you don't have the money to purchase it yourself, the natural tendency is to alert your friends to the opportunity. It's what friends do. And yet I was squarely condemned as exploitative.


How would you feel?



From: blackcoffee
01/29/2008 01:19:59

Gnome,


Gee, Gnome you asked excellent questions!


BECAUSE they accused me of being corrupt and exploitative when I'm just a little fish in the ocean, they never even took the time to drink a cup of coffee with me and got to know the real me.


Even before I put my butt on the chair, in Siem Reap, I was accused of this and that and on and on, and damn it, we could had had a lovely hour together catching up!


This condemning spirit on their part is still on full display in their columns.


Voila!


Thank you. Merci. Or Kun.


 



From: gnome
01/29/2008 01:09:36
then you could just simply say that (your personal opinion). why the need to personally attack them and accuse them of pol pot's daughter or of being vietnamese agent?


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