---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Gaffar Peang-Meth <[email protected]>
Date: Tue, Mar 29, 2011 at 11:03 AM
Subject: Young Khmers key to the future
To:




*
PACIFIC DAILY NEWS*
March 30, 2011

*Young Khmers key to the future*

A. Gaffar Peang-Meth

For the last two weeks, my columns focused on the necessity for  Khmer
youths to
cultivate quality thinking, because change is inevitable  and pro-activity
does
influence the change they want to see. Their  nation's future depends on
this.

Although I am encouraged by  ensuing discussions on the subject, some
readers
raise concerns, justifiably, that today's Khmer youths are caught in a
regime
that has confiscated school books, in an economy in which four million live
in
excruciating poverty, and attend public schools that received a mere 1.6
percent of GDP, compared to 5 percent of GDP in one of the world's  poorest
countries, Mozambique.

Last week, an e-mail from a young  Khmer in Phnom Penh informed me that
schools
are open only a few hours a day, and that many young Khmers don't even know
what computers are.

A former American State Department official who served in Phnom Penh, Donald
Jameson, wrote of the need for "an urbanized, better educated and  informed
citizenry," in his article, "Cambodia's Bumpy Road." But the  current
regime's
inexcusable neglect of the education system will only  accelerate the
increasingly unbridgeable economic and social disparities.

Remember that of Cambodia's 14.7 million people, more  than 50 percent are
younger than 21 years old -- 4.7 million are 14 and  younger; 9.4 million
are
between 15 and 64. The median age is 22.9  years. The impact of a poorly
educated citizenry is incalculable, and  that impact will persist for
generations.

Yet despair is not an option.

At  this time, more than any other time, a "no can do" attitude and
unproductive activity, including gossip, back-biting, character
 assassination,
etc., that distracts from a common effort to struggle  against a repressive
autocracy should be discarded. A positive "yes, we  can" attitude and
activities
aimed at uniting Khmers to fight for change  need to be promoted.

*Long journey*

Recall the words of India's great leader, Mahatma Gandhi, "I look  only to
the
good qualities of men. Not being faultless myself, I won't  presume to probe
into the faults of others." And recall the advice of  one of the world's
great
civil rights icons, Martin Luther King Jr.: "Never succumb to the temptation
of
bitterness."

My regular readers know I am not a fan of petitions and appeals and that my
inalienable rights are non-negotiable, but I stand in no one's way who does
petition and appeal. I take off my hat in respect to the  expatriates and
others
who set aside their differences to demand their  inalienable rights during
demonstrations sparked by the March 18  anniversary of the overthrow of
Prince
Sihanouk. These members of the  "Lotus Revolution" hoped to focus attention
on
the Vietnamese occupation  of Cambodia and to demand that Hun Sen step down.

March 18 was their first step. "A vieach york mok thveu kang; A trang york
mok
thveu  kamm; A sam ro'nham york mok thveu oss dot," say the elder Khmers.
That
translates to: "Curved wood makes wheel; straight wood makes spoke;
twisted-crooked wood makes firewood." The different participants of the
Lotus
Revolution showed that everyone and everything has a place in the  struggle
for
freedom!

The journey promises to be long and full of  risks. Though not everyone is
fit
for the journey, everyone can find his or her place in the struggle. Fear is
counter-productive. Neither poverty nor economic inequality, nor the
inevitability of political repression are ordained. With courage and
persistence and a strong  conviction, nothing is impossible.

As Lord Gautama Buddha, the critical thinker, said 2,500 years ago, "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."
*
Personality paradigm*

Equivalent to the saying, "Apples don't fall far from the tree," a  Khmer
reader
spoke astutely of bamboo shoots, that grow into thick, tall, and rugged
bamboo
trees, as he lamented about the young Khmers who have been raised in a
corrupt
society. He wonders what kind of people they will become if this is the only
culture they have known? A fair concern.

The "nature vs. nurture" debate is an old one. Various studies have posited
that 45 to 50 percent -- I also read 35 to 40 percent -- of a person's
personality is shaped by innate qualities or genes (nature), and the
remainder
is shaped by personal experiences (nurture).

At school, I taught a personality development paradigm:  Man acts, or not,
based
on perception. One's values and beliefs  (taught, or not, by parents,
schools,
and society), and experiences influence one's opinion and interest, and make
up
attitudes. When this  process is at play with his innate qualities, a
person's
personality emerges.

A creature of habit, of repetitive thought and behavior that become
ingrained,
man's personality is more often predictable than  not. If thoughts and
behaviors
are learned, so they can be unlearned. So  learn from what the elders have
done,
keep what is beneficial and  discard what is not.

There are many things to learn and unlearn.

Someone advised to achieve what one has never had, one must do what one has
never done -- a corollary to Albert Einstein's definition of insanity as
 doing
the same thing over and over, and expecting a different result.

It's important to persevere. One can hypothesize that Hun Sen perpetuates a
miserable education system by design to hold back progress and discourage an
empowered citizenry.

Nevertheless, there is more than one route to learning. One must not
acquiesce
to circumstance.

It's important that young Khmers focus and engage their energy in attitude
and
value changes. These will precede regime change.

*A. Gaffar Peang-Meth, Ph.D., is retired from the University of Guam. Write
him
at [email protected].*

http://www.guampdn.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/201103300300/OPINION02/103300335

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