Tuesday, October 16, 2012

Young and Old Mark Passing of ‘The Last King’

Laymen and women from Takeo province’s Wat Phnom Chisor kneel in front of the Royal Palace in Phnom Penh yesterday afternoon to pay their respects to the late King Father Norodom Sihanouk, who died in Beijing early yesterday at the age of 89. (Lauren Crothers/The Cambodia Daily)
October 16, 2012
By Kaing Menghun and Lauren Crothers
The Cambodia Daily

Around Phnom Penh yesterday, the news of King Father Norodom Sihanouk’s death just shy of his 90th birthday appeared to resonate with both the young and older generations.

By mid-morning, many people had heard of his passing from friends, the news or the Internet, though activity was relatively quiet around the Royal Palace. But by the late afternoon, ranks of onlookers and those wishing to pay their respects had swelled at the palace gates and traffic came to a near standstill on Sisowath Quay.

Heang Yat, 57, sheltered from the morning rain under a tree in front of the Royal Palace, cried as she clutched pails of food intended as offerings for the Pchum Ben festival.


“I came to Wat Botum and heard the news of the death of the King from a motorcycle-taxi driver,” she said. “I feel very sad and pitiful for him; he had fought so hard for Cambodia.”

Ms. Yat said she clearly remembered the feeling of pride in 1962 upon hearing the news that the International Court of Justice had awarded the disputed Preah Vihear temple site to Cambodia. Norodom Sihanouk, then a prince, ascended the hill to the mountaintop temple the next year and presided over a flag-raising ceremony, much to the delight of a large crowd of Cambodians that gathered at the temple.

“Cambodians still love him, even if he had been staying in China for a long time,” she said. “He was like a father of the country. I wish he could have lived longer to watch over his children.”

Ms. Yat said she witnessed a man kneel in front of the palace and shave his head—a traditional mark of respect made by sons or grandsons when a parent dies.

At about 10:45 a.m., a man in a white suit walked down a set of steps leading to the Tonle Sap river in front of the palace, and slowly offered up clumps of his freshly shorn hair to the current. He stood up, rubbed his head with water and solemnly walked up the steps, refusing to speak with reporters.

Along Phnom Penh’s mostly empty boulevards, both Cambodian and international flags flew at half-mast. At Independence Monument, where the flag was also at half-mast, some drivers and passersby stopped to take photographs.

The King Father’s portrait, which typically hangs alongside that of his wife Queen Monineath and his son, King Norodom Sihamoni, was removed from the outside of several government ministries.

Thirty-three-year-old Ben Navy from Stung Meanchey district said her family was devastated to hear the news, which they read online, and that her mother took it particularly hard.

“He was like the last King for us,” she said, “and I feel very sorry that he did not die in his home country.”

At Wat Pur Yaram in Russei Keo district’s Chroy Changva commune, the sound of devotional chants filled the air as families packed into the pagoda where worshipers were instructed to pay their respects to the King Father.

Kim Long, the 72-year-old chief of Village 2, said he was informed of the news at 2 a.m., shortly after Norodom Sihanouk passed away of a reported heart attack in Beijing.

“The people in the entire village were very sad,” he said. “A lot of the older ones shed tears for him and the villagers kept asking when his body will be brought back to Cambodia,” Mr. Long said.

But these feelings of grief were not reserved for those in whose lifetimes Norodom Sihanouk would have been a larger presence—Hi Sreypich, 24, said she too was sad to hear of his passing.

“When I first heard it, my body seemed to stop working,” she said. “He was the great King of all. He was like a father in our Cambodian family.”

By the afternoon, interest outside the Royal Palace had piqued. Scores of people parked their motorcycles alongside the barriers that block off the stretch of Sothearos Boulevard in front of the palace. Curious onlookers gathered at the palace gates, kneeling to pray or pressing their faces up to the bars to see inside, where there was no activity save for the occasional security guard standing around.

Two palace sentries stood duty outside the gates, where a 60-strong group of nuns, monks and laypeople from Takeo province’s Wat Phnom Chisor gathered and prayed en masse for about 45 minutes.

“We’re here to pray for the King,” one of the women said. “May he rest in peace and may his spirit come back to bless all Cambodians.”

In Kandal province’s Khsach Kandal district, where about 500 people gathered to watch water buffalo and horse races yesterday morning, Sok Keng, a 58-year-old Cham Muslim woman, said the death had made her sad.

“I feel very sorry and sad now. It’s so sad we lost him because he was a good King, and very kind,” she said.

Speaking by telephone from Kompong Speu province’s Samraong Tong district, Long Sin, 65, said she was shocked by the King Father’s death and recalled meeting him as a youngster.

“I remember he built houses for widows in Kompong Speu province, which had been destroyed by the Khmer Rouge,” she said. “I met him and touched his hand when I was a schoolgirl.”

(Additional reporting by Mech Dara and Denise Hruby)

9 comments:

Anonymous said...

What are the differences between King Norodom Sihanouk and PM Hun Sen?

Can anyone out there explain the diffrences between King Norodom Sihanouk and PM Hun Sen in detail? as we khmer young generation are so mess up very badly.

Anonymous said...

Did King father put his country and nation before himself like other kings and queens of England?

Anonymous said...

To All Khmer Yeurng (all of Khmer citizens):

Please don't talk nonsense. You don't know what you are talking about. Stop being manipulated by other Anonymous mentioned. You need to be quiet and let's focus on Unity. We want CNRP and CPP to reunite as one without fight each others in order to change the leaders. We wish all Khmer/Cambodian citizens or members of major parties CNRP and CPP to merge after the merger of SRP and HRP including other small parties like Khmer Democratic, KPPM, etc.

So, stop fighting each others. We need to work together to save our Khmer nation.

It is timing. Khmer folks both at home and abroad (USA, Australia, NZ, France, Canada, S. Korea, Japan, and so on), please stop fighting each others and please take the positive outlooks and stop hating other because of the Vietnamese/Yuon manipulation and don't let our neighbors Yuon/Viet and Siam/Thai to see our weakness.
So, watch out on each others no matter what happen. Please think and be careful.

Thanks for listening.

Khmer Yeurng.

Anonymous said...

ស៊ីន ស៊ីសាមុត + នរោត្តម សីហនុ = (ខ្មែរស្នេហាជាតិ)
_____________________________


ព្រាប សុវត្ត + អាឆ្កែយួន ហ៊ុន សែន = (ចោរប្លន់)
.............................

អាឆ្កែយួន ហ៊ុន សែន = អាយួនយៀកកុង (កញ្ជះអាយួនយៀកកុងគឺ.....ក្បត់ជាតិ!)
****************************

សូមបងប្អូនខ្មែរ...វិនិច្ឆ័យ?

កុលបុត្រមហានគរខ្មែរ said...

Burn his body over there (China). Don't bring back to Cambodia. He was a Traitor to Khmer people. The Khmer people have suffered enough by him. He did not respect even his own mother. He was an evil king . He should be alive until he can serve his punishment in the Khmer Rouge trail. Please don't forget he was the person who killed Lok Protean Sam Rainsy's father.

Pang Sokheoun, Secretary-General of SRP in Sweden.

Anonymous said...

10:21 PM

Even foreigners respect the great king and millions khmer will do the same.

What make you think people listen to you? so STFU, khmer rouge!

Anonymous said...

And Ah Choy Marai @10:33PM,

Why the fuck can't you respect other people opinions...Aren't you Khmer Rouge yourself you fucker?

Anonymous said...

10:43 PM
Yuon invaders' opinions like yours cannot be respected. Go back to your Yuon hanoi rotten hole. Bye

Anonymous said...

Do not get me wrong during the year 60 many youths in schools through out Cambodia including myself, we love Sihanouk cause he remained neutral not too left not too right for Cambodia National interest, although later year gone by since we learned litle by litle that Sihanounk pro-vietcong and ultra communist Mao Tse Tong revolution, and he allowed 60,000 Vitecong occupied Cambodia in the East side of Cambodia your name it like Srok Krek, Mamot of Heng samrin's village or Camteav Men Sam An, parent village was also stationed by Vietcong and some Khmer Viteminh armed forces...
Sihanouk then joined Khmer Vietminh Pot Pot in the March 70( Pot Pot repalced Tou Samuth, Secretary KCP, Khmer Vietminh when he died in Peking),and their associates as Ieng Sary, So Phim, Heng samrin, Chea Sim, Hun Sen ect...
If not Sihanouk demogogy political skill of join PREY MARKIS armed forces in 1970, there was no way KR and Vietcong, Vietminh can defeat Lon Nol to kill 3 Millions.
As Buddhism. Karma is go around went around.
Praying for the soul of the Victims of Parents and Family and the innocent Khmers in the killing Fields, for them to be rest in peace in Heaven.

Survivor of the Killing Fileds.