Scholarship awards keeping classical and folk arts alive
Twenty-five
young people were awarded scholarships to study traditional music and
dance on Thursday, as arts organisation Cambodian Living Arts (CLA)
launched a new school year.
The Arn-Chorn Pond Living Arts
Scholarships for the school year 2013-14, named after the organisation’s
founder, will give music and dance students the opportunity to develop
both musical and professional skills.
The scheme is part of CLA’s
mission to contribute to the arts in Cambodia by developing the skills
of artists and helping them find paid work in the field.
In a
ceremony that featured speeches and performances from past and present
scholarship students, two different kinds of scholarships were awarded:
an Artistic Skills Development Scholarship, for students and
professionals who wish to received advanced training in the arts, and a
Non-Artistic Skills for Artists Scholarship, which can fund any kind of
study, as long as the recipient can explain how it will help them
professionally.
Kong Gne, 24, is a student of the chapei dang
weng, a two-stringed, long-necked guitar. Originally from Svay Rieng
province near the Vietnam border, Gne moved to Phnom Penh in 2011 to
study tourism and hospitality at the National University and started
learning to play the chapei dang weng at CLA.
Gne said: “I never imagined in my life that I could get
a scholarship. It’s very important for me to study English – when I
came to Phnom Penh I couldn’t speak the language, but thanks to
Cambodian Living Arts I started to study step by step.”
He
continued: “If I hadn’t received the scholarship, I might not be able to
speak English. Also I can get some money – the $50 pays for gasoline
for my moto or my food.”
CLA’s founder, acclaimed musician Arn
Chorn-Pond, said he was honoured to present the awards, and stressed the
importance of carrying on the country’s traditions.
“The
scholarship gives opportunities to young people to enhance what they
have learned from Cambodian Living Arts, especially traditional music.
“I think it’s very important for young people to learn about their past and their culture through the arts.”
Chorn-Pond,
a former child soldier under the Khmer Rouge regime, also expressed his
belief that arts can play a role in healing trauma.
“There are now more and more opportunities for young people to get jobs in the arts.
“We
can use arts to heal the wounds of the war, the killing fields and
spread this art around the world and use it as a model. If it works
here, it works everywhere else. The arts have no borders.”
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