Interview With The Author Of: Bamboo Promise: Prison Without Walls, Vicheara Houn
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 2013
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1. Vicheara, what inspired you to write your book? One day, more than ten years after settling in America and struggling every day to begin a new life, I sat alone by a window watching a beautiful little bird pick up a tiny twig in his beak and fly away. I wondered how far that bird had to fly with those twigs, one by one, to make a nest. How remarkable that this bird would be so devoted to his family. The miracle of family, family devotion and sacrifice was symbolized to me by that little bird and his labors.
Although I had lived many years with painful memories, I was suddenly overwhelmed with grief for the loss of my father in the Cambodian genocide.. Though he had died years before, I felt his spirit still around me. I longed to tell him once more that I loved him and honored him. I wanted him to know how much I missed him. I cried aloud for him and asked God why I was left alone without him.
This book began as a letter to my father asking for the answers to the many problems in my life. I wanted to tell him I had tried many ways to keep myself as strong as he wanted me to be, but now I had become physically and emotionally exhausted. I needed new hope.
My letter began as just a few little scratches. Then, as I wrote, many memories – so long suppressed – returned. My scratches became forty pages, then one hundred, then more and more. My letter to Papa had become “Bamboo Promise”, the story of my life and my journey through the Cambodian genocide and its aftermath. Writing it has helped me to restore my soul.
2. What exactly happened to you? A: I was raised as the sheltered and privileged only child of a prominent Cambodian family. I had little knowledge of hardships endured by my country’s poor or the dangerous political movements afoot in the Cambodia of my youth.
When I was a young bride, the political tensions in Cambodia were reaching a breaking point. My father, who had risen through the government ranks to the position of a senior diplomat, was in the forefront of negotiations with the communist insurgents. All our family trusted his political knowledge but this trust was a naïve and terrible mistake. When the KR took over the city and we joined the mass of humanity being expelled to the countryside, it became very apparent that my father never really understood the Khmer Rouge or what Pol Pot had planned for Cambodia as the monstrous KR leader tried to turn back time and return Cambodia to the Year Zero.
In April 17, 1975 at 7 AM, a day after Cambodian New Year, Phnom Penh fell to the Communists and within 24 hours the entire population of the capitol was forced to leave the city with no destination, no future, no hope. Those who survived the forced expulsion were murdered or spent the next years as slave laborers, slowly starving to death or dying of disease. Nearly two million perished, including everyone in my immediate family. I alone survived.
Pol Pot transformed Cambodia, the country of his birth, into a Prison Without Walls. This extreme form of radical communism eliminated religion, culture, currency, personal property, hospitals, schools, the banking system, and every other vestige of modern urban life. Pol Pot’s followers were radical anti-intellectuals who believed that only agricultural labor deserved respect. They committed class genocide against Cambodian’s educated urban citizens through starvation, execution, and forced labor.
I lost my parents, grandparents, my grandaunt, uncle, servant and her child. My young husband was murdered without ever having a chance to say good bye. Many, many other extended family members also lost their lives.
I emerged from the genocide as an orphan with no belongings, no support and only my determination to honor my promises to my father. I rebuilt myself in a war ravaged country. Struggling with the ideals of a traditional Cambodian woman’s role in a broken society, I began to develop my own identity. I informed myself through education and experience. I eventually made the heartbreaking decision to leave my homeland and seek a new life. I escaped over the rugged, dangerous mountains to a refugee camp in Thailand.
3. What did you witness? I watched my young husband led to his death. I watched every member of my immediate family starve to death. I watched my neighbors turn on their parents and children for a can of rice. I saw my fellow workers beaten and abused. I saw those around me suffer and die from malaria even as I was helpless with malarial fever and delirium. They died usually in the morning.
I saw bodies floating by in the river and abandoned along the roadside. They had been eviscerated and their stomachs filled with grass.
I was abused by child soldiers, as young as ten. They had been taught that city people were allied with Americans who had killed their families and friends through bombing raids. They told us that we had been poisoned by western society and were so worthless that they would kill us with an axe on the back of our neck without wasting any bullets. I remember their most common insult: “Keeping you won’t benefit us; destroying you won’t cost us anything”. The KR brainwashed these young kids to reject their family and believe that they were children of the KR organization called Angkar. They trained the kids to spy on their own parents and report to Angkar if they believed their parents violated Angkar’s rules. Sound familiar? Just like the Hitler Youth in Nazi Germany.
The Khmer Rouge regime separated us, the urbanites, from the peasants and farmers. There was no equality in work assignments or in food rations. We were called “New people” or “Refugees” or “People of April 17th” and the rural people were the “Old People”. Old people had power over us, the new people. They monitored our work and spied on us. They ate full meals with meat and dessert. They used bamboo sticks to force us to work harder and beat us if they felt we were unproductive.
I watched as the Khmer Rouge first murdered us - the city dwellers. Later, as their organization began to crumble from within, they slaughtered their own. At first only the refugees were starved but soon the villagers who had supported the KR also starved as all the rice went to China to repay war debts.
The KR had a code of for murder – “re-education”. People became aware of this meaning when their family and friends were sent to be re-educated and were never heard from again. My husband disappeared from my sight for this reason. He was accused of having a military background, when he did not. This was just an excuse to murder people. Sociopaths and psychopaths had free reign over helpless victims and tortured them mercilessly.
In 1979, when we were all liberated from the killing fields, we were subjugated to a new phase of communism under the Vietnamese. I was obligated to attend three months of re-education before I could work in the new society. Their method was not terror but coercion and deceit. We were told to tell the uneducated Khmer peasant survivors that the Vietnamese were our saviors and we had to pay respect to them. Learning the Vietnamese language was mandatory in my University pharmacy program. Western people have very little knowledge of the abuses of the Vietnamese Communists in Cambodia. Hun Sen is their puppet.
4. What are you hoping the reader will take away from your story? A: My hope is that young Cambodians and Cambodians in the diaspora will read this, and more erudite texts, to learn more about what happened to their country and its people. I hope all who read will understand how a radical, violent political movement bent on death and destruction, was able to consume nearly two million innocent souls, while the world stood by. It is only when you know why something has happened that you can prevent its re-occurrence.
It is important that the world learns how Cambodians, my family and I included, lived and died through four years of Hell on earth. Nearly two million Cambodians were executed, starved, and tortured to death. All who survived, both victims and victimizers, have been traumatized and permanently scarred.
I also hope that, in some small way, my book will help Cambodians remember the history of their country and not let history repeat itself. I hope it will make young Cambodians more sensitive to the trauma that their parents and grandparents endured.
Also, my book shows how naïve many of the most privileged were to believe that nothing so horrible could happen to our country. My father, who had promised me that nothing would happen to us or to Cambodia, is my best example of this blindness. In our case, genocide was the price we paid for ignoring the signs, and assuming that something cannot happen simply because you can’t imagine it.
The weaknesses in Cambodian society, in particular our sometimes blind and unquestioning obedience to our leaders; our failure to educate all our citizens; and our acceptance of a society based upon class distinctions rather than the value of all people, paved the road for Pol Pot and his angry and vengeful followers. Our neighboring countries and the rest of the world allowed it to happen for a variety of reasons – primarily, of course, self-interest.
5. How can we prevent or stop genocide from happening elsewhere? Genocide can target any group that a leader can identify as different and dangerous. Hitler singled out the Jews as scapegoats. Pol Pot made educated and “westernized” people the enemy. Genocide is a tool practiced by a leader to satisfy his need for power and his own self-interest. It appeals to fear and self interest in the followers.
I can understand that the human mind is very sensitive and easy to manipulate.
The strategy for the Cambodian genocide was to convince the poor and ignorant that the well-off people in the cities had adopted corrupt western values and had supported a government (Lon Nol’s) that had caused great harm to the poor. This created feelings of hate, a desire for revenge and a sense that the corrupt city people were a danger to them. It is very important to know that the KR leaders had the support of King Sihanook who had been deposed by the Lon Nol government and the King wanted to regain his power at any cost. The “Old People” revered the King and many KR followers believed they were fighting for him – not for communism.
It was not only the poor and ignorant who joined the KR. To the educated, the Khmer Rouge promised power in the new society and protection for themselves and their families when the KR took power. The “join me now or never” threat was effective.
Then there is another huge question: why did the rest of the world turn a blind eye to genocide in Cambodia? When the United States abandoned the war in Vietnam, an unintended consequence was that Cambodia was left to the mercy of the radical communists. The American people, weary of war and having suffered the loss of tens of thousands of soldiers, may not have realized what would happen to Cambodia, but the politicians in Washington and the leaders in the United Nations surely did. As a consequence, Cambodians lived in the darkness of Hell for almost four years. Where was the world? Where was the outrage? Why didn’t the United Nations do something?
Genocide is still occurring in the world today and will continue as long as it is allowed by the family of nations. The United Nations was created to prevent such horror but has never been strong enough. The UN needs to have a policy of immediate action when genocide is reported. Leaders must understand that swift action will be taken to protect victims. The western powers must assume leadership in this basic protection of human rights. In the modern era of instant worldwide communication, there is no excuse for not knowing genocide is happening.
Prevention will require a different tactic. It requires that we instill a value for human life in all societies around the globe. There is an old Cambodian proverb that says to bend the bamboo when it is young. That means that the way to create the kind of human behavior that you want is to instill the proper values in the young. Compassion, morality, love and respect for all life are the values that can change the world. All the efforts of the United Nations should promote these values.
Schools and colleges around the globe should be encouraged to support genocide studies – including hearing from survivors whose personal experiences create reality from theory. Genocide books should be collected from all countries and be translated and available in libraries.
The genocide in Cambodia was auto-genocide in which the leader killed his own people and devastated his own country, just like what is happening in Syria today. World leaders must come together to stop this. Individual citizens must call upon their leaders to stop this.
6. Too often rape is used as a tool to instill fear and repression . Why do men see sex as a weapon?
Rape is a devastating act of domination and power. Its consequences are emotional, physical, psychological and long lasting. It disrupts society at its most basic level – the family. That makes it a very powerful weapon.
The individual rapist needs to assert his power over a female because of his own inadequacies – however they came about.
The use of rape as a tool of war leaves behind not just a defeated population but a shattered one. It is immensely powerful to savage, debase, humiliate and impregnate women and girls. It is immensely powerful to demonstrate to men that they cannot protect their families. Destroying the enemy’s family structure and stability - the very source of their strength – works. That’s why rape is an effective tool.
The evil genius of terrorists is to strike the innocents. Manuals on terrorism encourage attacks on schools, for example. Terror is a powerful weapon. Terrorist leaders understand this well and use it to increase their power.
We should treat rape the same as genocide for it is genocide of the spirit. Rape violates not just the woman but all who love her. The physical damage may heal but the emotional damage remains for life. It is one of the vilest abuses of power.
For more information, please consult: http://boramtz.wix.com/bamboo-promise
by Warren Adler
5 comments:
Here is an excerpt from the book of Enoch that may shed some light to the evilness of men's actions.
"And now, the giants, who are produced from the spirits and flesh,shall be called evil spirits on earth, And shall live on the earth. Evil spirits have come out from holy Watchers, their beginning is of primal origin; They shall be evil spirits on earth, and evil spirits shall they be called spirits of the evil ones. [As for the spirits of heaven, in heaven shall their dwelling, but as for the spirits of the earth which were born on the earth, on the earth shall be their dwelling.] And the spirits of the giants afllict, oppress, destroy, attack, war,destroy, and cause trouble on the earth."
Commentary:
holy Watchers is a reference to good angels who became bad angels who came from heaven to earth to take unto themselves wives of the daugthers of men and in this forbid conduct they produced giants as their children (hybrid).
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"They take no food, but do not hunger or thrist. They cause offences but are not observed.
And these spirits shall rise up against the children of men and against the women, because they have proceeded from them in the days of the slaugther and destruction."
Commentary:
"the days of slaughter and destruction" here is referencing to the world wide flood which destroyed everyone including the giants. When the giants died their spirits are wondering about here on earth. This is how they oppress men and women on earth as the text reads. When people who offer food offerings supposedly to the spirits of their ancestors they are actually offering it to the spirits of these giants. They are no friends to you, but foes.
We read in the Gospels how Jesus cast out demons from some people, well, they are the holy Watcthers children spirits that he was dealing with. And those spirits knew who Jesus was when he came to cast them out.
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"And at the death of the giants, spirits will go out and shall destroy without incurring judgment, coming from their bodies their flesh shall be destroy until the day of the consummation, the great judgment in which the age shall be comsummated, over the Watchers and the godless, and shall be wholly consummated."
Commentary:
For the time being the spirits of these giants have free roam and do damage without being judged by the Great Creator. As the text reads "until the day of consummation." Meaning, they will be judge but not until that great day comes.
Enoch speaking to the Watchers on their behalf because they had asked him to interceed for them before the Grand Creator whom they had sinned against. And the Grand Creator told Enoch to say this to them:
"You were in heaven, but all the mysteries of heaven had not been revealed to you, and you knew worthless ones, and these in the hardness of your hearts you have made known to the women, and through these mysteries women and men work much evil on earth."
Commentary
The knowledge of the ancient times came from the fallen angels and the spirits of giants of their offsprings. I believe in this text here is referring to the occult, witch-craft, channeling of the dead and so on... "make known unto men and women the mysteries".
Angkar probably is a spirit entity of the giants that walked on this earth long ago. The chaos on earth are influences by these evil spirits on earth which cannot be seen with a naked eye.
Here is a passage from the Bible:
"For we wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against principalities, against powers, against the rulers of the darkness of this world, against spiritual wickedness in high places."
What this verse is saying is, we are not fighting mainly against men
but against spiritual forces that are working through flesh and blood (men).
The only hope for deliverance is through Jesus Christ. Because the consummation day is coming when he will judge the godless and the evil spirits.
Khmers were wickeded people (commited too much bad Karma) just like Viets who have committed too much Karma since 1400's until today against Montagnards, Cham and Khmers.
But the severe punishments upon Khmers is lighter than the punishments upon Jews who not only were killed ~ 6 million Jews in Germany, Jews had no country to call home. Their land was taken by Jordan, Saudi Arabia, and Palestine.
Khmers've always denied and always claimed that they're sweet and innocence kids/people, because they're Buddhists, thus they did/do not deserve this suffering.
Khmers always want others to feel sorry for them and they are good in feeling sorry for themselves. They care for no body no other nations who are sufferings worse than them.
HOLA! No. The ancient Khmers re-incarnated to this present Khmers from their past life, and their Karma following them.
All creatures including animals, insects all the living things must be born and must pay their deeds according to their past actions. If they are good, they will reincarnate into a better realm which less or no suffering at all; if they are bad, they will re-incarnate to a lower realm such as we have seen countless sufferings and less sufferings around the world.
Each everyone of us have our own story, bad or good but we have our own story. It is called "LIFE". Life is not permanent just like the Universe, all the countless stars will eventually be exploded called Super NOVA.
No one will escape death not even the universe except the Almighty Light/Electromagnetic field which is the source of life. However our death does not destroy our souls. Our physically body gone but our soul lives on.
To this author of this book (Vicheara Houn), instead of wondering about your life and your family members who already reside at another dimension, you ought to live your life and try to do good deeds and pray for their souls, because they need your prayers. Either you are Buddhist or Christians or Islams,.. or Hindu, the living family members must pray for the souls, so they can be freed from their past life's sins. Pray to the Almighty to save and to bless and have mercy on your parents' souls. Sending them cash through donating to the Hungry people. Don't donate to the monks/nuns this day, because they are the very wicked-ed (bad) people.
Your story is sad and nice to know but everyone of us have our own, just that they don't sit down feeling sorry for themselves.
Khmers are good for feeling sorry for themselves, and they want others to feel sorry for them.
Birth, Sufferings and Deaths are normal for humans, but Khmers think they are sweet and special people, this heavy sufferings are not their faults in their past many life.
Lok Srei Vicheara should accept that her father' sad life may be the results of his many past life he did.
If I were Lok Srei Vicheara, I would move on and live a normal life. Pray pray for my father's soul that God will have mercy and bless his soul and save his soul from going to hell-fire but heaven.
A genuine expression and words by Ms. Vicheara, because nearly 2 millions people did not just simply disappear from the face of the earth.
10:09 AM
I say the same thing, 6 million Jews did not just simply disappear from the face of the earth.
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