By Michelle Phipps-Evans
Asian Fortune News
Washington, DC, Feb. 2, 2013
Theary C. Seng, Dec. 2009 (Photo: Roland Neveu) |
The name Theary Chan Seng generates a fervor approaching reverence
in the Cambodian community here and abroad. She is the Cambodian-born,
American-educated lawyer and civil rights activist who founded the
Cambodian Center for Justice & Reconciliation. It is a major
component of another organization she serves as founding president,
CIVICUS: Center for Cambodian Civic Education. This nonprofit group is
dedicated to promoting an enlightened and responsible citizenry
committed to democratic principles. It is actively engaged in the
practice of democracy and reconciliation in Cambodia and the larger,
globalized world.
So who really is Seng, the person? She is a survivor of the Khmer
Rouge (KR) regime, and has spent almost two decades advocating for its
victims, many of whom were orphaned, widowed, abused or molested—victims
who were like Seng herself.
She was four when her father was killed by the KR, a Communist
guerrilla movement in Cambodia (formerly Kampuchea) led by Saloth Sar,
known as Pol Pot and “brother number one.” Its reign of terror ran from
April 17, 1975 to Jan. 6, 1979.
“My father was a target, as he was a military commander,” said Seng,
42, speaking to Asian Fortune from Cambodia’s capital city of Phnom
Penh via by Skype. At 4, she made the exodus to Svay Rieng province
bordering Vietnam, where the killings were the most intense and where
she spent five months in the Boeung Rei prison, shackled most of the
time. She recalls that she became so emaciated that the cuffs fell off
her bony feet.
For Seng, the memory is intense, vivid. She was awake when soldiers
came by the cell and saw her eyes were open. They left. The last thing
her mother said to her was, “My daughter, go back to sleep.” When Seng
and her four-year-old brother awoke, they cried and cried at the sight
of the empty cell. Seng also had three older brothers who were
“preserved,” taken away from the other prisoners as the regime wanted to
indoctrinate children who weren’t influenced by the Western world.
“My spirit wanted to join my mother,” Seng said. “My physical body
wanted to join her. Everything within me knew I couldn’t see my mom
again.” (Seng recounts these experiences in her 2005 book, “Memoir:
Daughter of the Killing Fields.” )
The KR killed an estimated 2 to 3 million Cambodians via torture,
execution, over-work or starvation in the mid- to late 1970s, about a
quarter of the population. The regime sought to “cleanse” Cambodia of
capitalists and intellectuals, and impose a new social structure based
on collective agriculture. It emptied entire cities and marched
residents into rural areas where the genocide began. Targeted were
anyone with connections to Cambodian or foreign governments,
professionals and intellectuals (also those wearing glasses), ethnic
Vietnamese, ethnic Chinese, ethnic Thai and minorities in Eastern
Highland, Cambodian Christians, Muslims, Buddhist monks, and “economic
saboteurs,” former urbanites deemed guilty because they lacked agrarian
ability.
In her memoir, Seng describes her experience as a child laborer in
the killing fields. It was her task to collect buffalo dung for
fertilizer amid the stench of inadequately buried human bodies.
Seng’s experience was hardly unusual, according to Voice of America
producer Reasey Poch. “Many Cambodians lost both their parents during
the Khmer Rouge years,” said Poch, who resettled in the United States in
1984. “My wife is among them. For me, I lost a father.”
After Vietnam invaded Cambodia and ended the KR rule, Seng and
surviving family members trekked across the border to Thailand in
November 1979, and then migrated to the United States on Dec. 23, 1980.
“It was a cultural shock,” said Seng, who landed in a bitterly cold
Grand Rapids, Mich., to live with a family. “I couldn’t make a
distinction between a man or a woman.”
Speaking no English, Seng began the long process of acclimating to
U.S. culture. She spent several years in Washington, D.C., earning a
bachelor’s degree in international politics from Georgetown University
in 1995. Returning to Michigan, she earned a law degree from the
University of Michigan Law School in 2000. She is a member of the New
York Bar Association and American Bar Association. After living for
about 20 years in the United States, Seng returned to Cambodia in 2004,
where she had volunteered with various labor and human rights groups
since 1995.
“I didn’t return for some humanitarian reason,” she said. “My history
informs who I am now. My work…is to respond to my own personal needs—to
respond to the places in my past. I feel Cambodia is my home. When I’m
in the U.S., I feel anxious and need to be in Cambodia.”
Now working on her second book, Seng is also president of the
Association of Khmer Rouge Victims in Cambodia, the first association
based in there to be registered with the Ministry of Interior. It is a
network of survivors of the 1975-79 killing fields, joined in the
fellowship of suffering in the demand for justice, and in the work for a
just peace. She has served with served with other human rights
organizations, and is vocal on the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts
of Cambodia, the court established to try the most senior members of the
Khmer Rouge.
“Cambodia is at the bottom of every economic level—warfare and
poverty,” she said. Referring to living in the United States, she said,
“We went there with our own psychological baggage and trauma and had to
start at the bottom rung,” adding many Cambodian Americans ended up in
gangs.
Some Cambodians migrated to America with Post Traumatic Stress
Disorder, the result of witnessing war-time atrocities, making it
difficult to adjust to a new country, explained Pang Houa M. Toy, deputy
director of the District of Columbia-based Southeast Asia Resource
Action Center, a national organization advancing the interests of
Southeast Asians in a December Asian Fortune article on rising
Asian-American poverty. “They came to this country as refugees with
almost nothing besides what they could carry as they fled those
countries,” said Toy.
“This points directly not only with our past but with the society
now,” Seng said about Cambodia and other Cambodians in the Diaspora.
Although the country is very poor, there’s a wealthy elite class, with
much of this wealth coming from corruption, according to Seng.
Today, Cambodia is home to 13.8 million people, with about 85
percent living in rural areas. According to the World Bank, Cambodia is
likely experiencing the greatest increase in poverty of any country in
Southeast Asia, much of it caused by the global economic downturn. About
36 percent of Cambodians live in poverty. Seng said some live on less
than $1 a day. In addition to the global influences, Cambodia’s
financial sector is underdeveloped, making it more difficult to serve
the financial needs of a country with a large rural population.
Seng said she was pleased that President Barack Obama visited
Cambodia for the East Asia Summit hosted by the Association of Southeast
Asian Nations (ASEAN) in November 2012. “He rightly snubbed our prime
minister for the myriad of human rights violations,” she said about Hun
Sen. “But the president missed his opportunity to apologize to the
Cambodian people for the U.S. policy of the Cold War years, when
mainland Southeast Asia was the theatre of war, and Cambodia its pawn.”
She added President Obama should have met with the human rights
community and activists challenging the regime, and offer an apology to
the Cambodian people for the illegal U.S. bombings during the Vietnam
War, which took the lives of half a million Cambodians and created the
conditions for the ensuing KR genocide.
However, two top White House aides, White House Senior Advisor and
Assistant to the President for Intergovernmental Affairs and Public
Engagement, Valerie Jarrett, and Special Assistant to the President and
Senior Director for Multilateral Affairs and Human Rights Samantha Power
of the National Security Council, joined Cambodian Ambassador William
Todd in meeting with human rights organizations at the urging of the
president.
Jarrett wrote on a blog, “During our roundtable...we discussed with
Cambodia’s courageous human rights defenders the ways in which the U.S.
government is working to support their efforts to bring about a more
just and democratic society. The United States aims to strengthen the
demand for democracy, accountability, and human rights...while providing
support to (NonGovernmental Organizations) advocating for political
reform...U.S. officials work with local NGOs to investigate land
grabbing, illegal arrest and detention, and obstruction of freedom of
expression and assembly, while providing legal aid to victims.”
“Our message to human rights defenders reinforced that of President
Obama, who, when he met with Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen, urged
progress on these very issues, stressing that the promise of Cambodia’s
great people will only be fully realized when human rights are respected
and all voices are heard,” Jarrett said.
Looking ahead, Seng said she’s “prayerful” about individuals and the
power of ideas creating change in 2013. She has taken it as her
mission to focus on the victims of the Khmer Rouge, to focus on their
political rights as citizens of Cambodia, and to ensure that genocide
never happens again.
“Up to now, Cambodia has had only a society of ‘subjects’ and
‘survivors,’not of ‘representatives’ or ‘citizens,’” said Seng, who
added that her work through various foundations is to help Cambodians
see themselves as citizens. “In the embryonic democracy, how do we
define this? How can we help move toward exercising our rights, and
taking responsibility because freedom without responsibility will lead
to anarchy.”
10 comments:
this theary seng is a deceitful clown, no a sinister important to Khmer, always played youn game, by leading what she did, she automatically served yuon and co policy and interest, chaol mseat
This bitch is a liar!
You're critic to all whose were better than you,you labeled people that you barely know,your heart is deeply trouble deep inside it,you're a true colors of Khmer person who was traumatized by your own Eco-mannerism/sexism against those whose think different from you especially Theary Seng who has nothing to do with you nor your problems.Please take a look at yourself in the mirror and make a change where area you don't like yourself.You may don't like her for any reasons but she has the right to voice her views,ideas for those whose may need her help.Please stop being so critical/negative attitude toward khmers people.If you're better than them HELP THEM,If you're not better than them LEARN FROM THEM...Stop your spirit of negativity it is bad for your soul.
Kmenhwatt
Khmers are best known as Killing each others. Just read some who cursing TS, one knows how Khmers are.
If I am not wrong, Theary's mission is to help people first. Then they will have to help themselves to change the society and ultimately the government whom they want personally select. Most people are impatient, they just want to topple the government, which isn't Theary's mission. The road to recover the nation will be long and hard but she's taking it one step at a time. Rushing will only end in failure and disappointment, not to mention that we will fall into our own enemy hands. We cannot become something that we want to change, that is full of hatred, injustice, and lack of charity.
Brave lady!
To 3:40 AM,
I am not the Khmer you had referred to above. But for you to generalize that ALL Khmers are killing each others and that is how Khmers are, you just expose YOUR
stupidity.
You ow all Khmers an apology.
Khmer Who Loves Khmers
Sister Theary. Congrats! Be firm and be a role model for Khmer women. Stop not until your goal is reached.
Anonymous Anonymous said...
This bitch is a liar! and serve yaoun
11:28 PM
You have to respect a woman like Theary. She is strong, graceful, intelligent, well spoken, accomplished, elegant and beautiful. She's ambitious and dedicated to her vision of a better world. I wish her the best of luck. Theary was not a friend per se but I knew her and since leaving Cambodia always seek out what she is doing in the world. May the gods continue to bless her.
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