KY,
Good analyze!
 
During the KR time, I lived next to a Pagoda in Phoum Chah, songkatt Teuk Cho, 
Preah Neth Preah, former Khet BB now Bonteay Mean Chei, there was a young monk 
named Nam ( in early 76'S there was still some buddah temples ), he was a very 
kind monk, he used to come to talked with my father, helping build our hut and 
sometime he brough left over food from the temple to my family. Later, the KR 
ordered to close all temples, Nam became a Chhloab ( Like Kinh or 2B ), and the 
same time the killing started, and something happened to him beyond my 
understand, he became a cruel killer, every night we lived in fear, especially 
when we heard Nam's horse bell ( unlike others whose rode a bike , he rode a 
horse ), we always asked ourselves " Who is the one gonna be tonight? "
I saw him , one day, beat up a 7 year old boy who was accused of stealing water 
melon from the " Suon Komar ", and slam him against the temple wall...
   After all, I think we don't have to be " Khmer Pouch Neak Chombaing " or 
follow 100% the teaching of Buddah, however, remember one of the Buddah 
teaching " Teung Pek Vear Dach...Thoo Pek Vear Phleav(?) (sorry, I'm not sure 
exactly what the word was ) ", meanly " Be flexible ", not too arrogant nor 
humle, also we should understand that SOME Khmers have this attitude, if they 
see someone succeed/rising they jealous with them, dodn't want them to 
grow, but if they see someone so humble, they think those people are stupid and 
look down them as trash. 
      
Just my 2 Cambodian Cents
KC

Khoar Chev ( Made in Cambodia )

--- On Wed, 5/20/09, Khmer Young <khmeryo...@gmail.com> wrote:


From: Khmer Young <khmeryo...@gmail.com>
Subject: Internalize beliefs, don't just talk
To: khmeryo...@gmail.com
Date: Wednesday, May 20, 2009, 11:01 PM



Wednesday, May 20, 2009
Internalize beliefs, don't just talk  
Comment: Extremists have never paid attention to the principles of religions. 
Pol Pot, Hitler, Stalin and contemporary terrorists etc have always 
overwhelmingly affected by their own fanatic and paranoid thought. Finally, 
they have translated those thoughts into brutality or sometime committed 
bomb-suicide. We can say that those actions don't base on religion, morality or 
compassion, but it totally based on self-conceited thought, self-indulgent 
pursuance, idiosyncrasy, frantic emotion, and paranoia. Self-realization or 
self-enlightenment has been profoundly taught by Buddha. But Pol Pot, or Hitler 
including others might have no self-realization. Personal behavior of 
self-realization might be perfectly guided since people were very young. Other 
factors of Cambodian people have possibly affected by the political 
environment. We concur that Cambodian people are cynical and living under fear 
of oppressions since the fall of Angkor era. The political
 cynicism and fear were deeply embedded in Cambodian society by the intractable 
neighbor invasions and internal conflicts for power. In Cambodia, needless to 
blame on Buddhism on civil war and brutality like Bhikku Dr. Hok Savann, a 
contemporary Cambodian Buddhist scholar said civil war and brutality in 
Cambodia have been endorsed by the desired people who have never interested to 
learn and practise Buddhist teachings. 

PACIFIC DAILY NEWS
May 20, 2009

A. Gaffar Peang-Meth, Ph.D


Senior researcher Lao Mong Hay, of the Hong Kong-based Asian Human Rights 
Commission, wrote "Khmer Rouge Trial: Time for soul searching," published 
several months ago in UPI Online. It's a thought-provoking piece, valuable for 
people of all faiths.

As the Khmer Rouge trials proceed, Mong Hay suggested "the need for the 
Cambodian people themselves ... to do some soul searching."

Theravada Buddhism, a state religion under the kingdom, the republic, the Khmer 
Rouge and today's autocracy, is based on three founding concepts: the "dharma" 
-- Buddha's teachings on right actions and beliefs; the "karma" -- a person's 
present and future life as determined by his or her own deeds and misdeeds, the 
sum total of his acts and omissions in all his incarnations past and present; 
and the "sangha" -- the ascetic community within which a person can improve 
karma (and become a superior being).

Buddhists who seek enlightenment practice compassion, which is the root of 
Buddha's dharma teachings. Compassion, kindness, tolerance and forgiveness are 
the essence of Buddhism.

Cambodia has more than 4,000 monasteries and more than 50,000 monks. Up to 95 
percent of the population are Therevada Buddhist.

Mong Hay asked, if "the overwhelming majority of Cambodian people were 
Buddhist" before the Khmer Rouge's rise to power, "how could these Buddhists 
among the Khmer Rouge help kill some 1.7 million of their fellow countrymen" 
from 1975-1979?

"Cambodians need to do some deep soul searching as to how Buddhist they were 
prior to the Khmer Rouge times, and even in current times, where crimes are no 
less ruthless," he writes. "Was Buddhism just skin deep, and were Buddhist 
ethical values -- such as respect for life, loving-kindness and compassion -- 
not the Cambodian people's strong deep-seated core values as these people might 
have thought?" he asked.

People in general like to talk. Talking the talk makes some people feel 
knowledgeable and even pious, and many do this. But walking the talk is less 
common, for it's harder to do. We "talk the talk" on autopilot; we don't 
internalize the belief system the words espouse.

More than a decade ago, in 1996, Harvard political science professor Daniel 
Goldhagen's book, "Hitler's Willing Executioners," stirred controversies about 
a German mentality containing "eliminationist anti-semitism" that originated in 
medieval attitudes and developed for centuries. Growing from Goldhagen's 
doctoral dissertation, which won the 1994 Gabriel Almond Award in comparative 
politics from the American Political Science Association, the book argues that 
the ordinary Germans knew about the Holocaust, did not oppose but supported it.

Someone has compared the Khmer Rouge's three years, eight months and 20 days of 
brutality "as awful and unfathomable as events in Nazi Germany, Stalin's 
Russia, Rwanda, Yugoslavia and Darfur." Goldhagen's book should provide food 
for thought for Cambodian historians.

After all, were the monsters Khmer Rouge not among the Cambodian Theravada 
Buddhists who followed Buddha's dharma teachings? So what snapped? Did Pol Pot 
have his "willing executioners," in and out of Cambodia, who knew about 
atrocities, did not oppose them and even welcomed them? Are some such 
executioners in the government today?

Someone asked, why has Cambodia's Buddhist clergy not spoken out against 
atrocities, bloodshed and violence, past and present?

Remember there have been Buddhists and non-Buddhists who put their lives on the 
line fighting Pol Pot since his victory in April 1975.

A few decades ago, I read a Cambodian statesman's political analysis of Khmer 
history. A nationalist and Buddhist, he wrote of Khmer valor, the Khmer Empire 
and the builders of Angkor. The Khmer race was "pouch neak chambang" -- a 
warrior race -- at a time the Hindu influences were paramount. Then came 
Buddha's doctrine of peace, kindness and compassion to replace the old ways of 
combativeness and valor, and Cambodia began her decline, he wrote.

I have asked myself since about a "dichotomy" within a person with an inner 
tug-of-war between the combative warrior personality and the peaceful 
Buddha-like personality. I was reminded of statues of Hindu gods such as Brahma 
(Preah Prum), Vishnu (Preah Noreay), Siva (Preah Eysor), among others, in 
Cambodia's public places -- and not many statues of Buddha.

When I read in another article by Mong Hay, "The history of extremism runs 
deep," in The Phnom Penh Post of Dec. 7, 2001, that "many of our actions have 
an extreme aspect" -- he drew examples from social in the family contexts to 
politics in society -- the thought of "pouch neak
chambang" in conflict with the little Buddha seeking enlightenment recurred. 
Can the conflict be bridged through learning, relearning and unlearning?

The deep wounds inflicted on Cambodians, their culture and society by the 
brutal Khmer Rouge require no less than justice -- the rendering of what is due 
to the accused and the victims -- before national reconciliation and healing 
can be reached.

But the way the Khmer Rouge trials have been conducted put justice beyond 
reach. Many who manifest the warrior spirit of Cambodia's history may not rest 
until the accused are thrown in the tigers' den.

Michael B. Ross, an American inmate on death row, writes men can stop the pain 
and heal only by willing to work for it: "Forgiveness ... doesn't erase what 
happened, but it does allow us to lessen and perhaps even eliminate the pain of 
the past. ... It is letting go of the past so that we can move on."

A. Gaffar Peang-Meth, Ph.D., is retired from the Universityof Guam, where he 
taught political science for 13 years. Write him at peangm...@yahoo.com.

http://www.guampdn.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/200905200300/OPINION02/905200321

-- 
Cambodian Brighter Future depends on enduring conscience and tireless strivings 
of Cambodian Younger Generation!
http://cambodianbrightfuture.blogspot.com





      
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