Showing posts with label Illinois. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Illinois. Show all posts

Friday, September 23, 2011

NIU students contribute to exhibit at Chicago Cambodian museum

Cambodian exhibit "Remembering the Killing Fields"
Lauren Bell, NIU student, and Khmer Rouge survivor and now Chicago resident King Heng Vinh attend the opening of the Remembering the Killing Fields exhibit on September 15. (Courtesy Photo)

Thursday, September 22, 2011
Shelby Devitt
Northern Star (Chicago, Illinois, USA)

NIU students contributed to a new exhibit and memorial at the Cambodian American Heritage Museum, 2831 W. Lawrence Ave. in Chicago.

The exhibit, "Remembering the Killing Fields," documents the stories of survivors of the Khmer Rouge genocide who now live in the Chicago area, said Elizabeth Denius, communications manager for NIU's Center for Southeast Asian Studies.

"This kind of project is an important project because it gives NIU students an opportunity to participate in an oral history of one of Cambodia's most historic events," said James Collins, director for the Center of Southeast Asian Studies. "It's something that the center very much supports."

Monday, September 19, 2011

Exhibit on Cambodia’s killing fields focuses on local survivors

Dary Mien, Executive Director of the Cambodian Association of Illinois gives a tour. A small group of NIU students and faculty have spent five years recording oral histories of Killing Fields survivors in the Chicago area. The histories are now the centerpiece of an exhibit "Witnessing the Cambodian Killing Fields" at the small Cambodian American Heritage museum and Killing Fields Memorial, with an opening ceremony on Thursday, September 15, 2011 in Chicago. | Richard A. Chapman~Sun-Times

September 19, 2011
BY KARA SPAK Staff Reporter/kspak@suntimes.com
Chicago Sun-Times

IF You Go ...

“Remembering the Killing Fields” is open from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on weekdays and by appointment on weekends. Admission is free.

Advanced reservations are appreciated. To schedule a personal or group visit, call Anneth Houy at (773) 980-4654 or e-mail anneth@cambodian-association.org.

The Cambodian American Heritage Museum and Killing Fields Memorial is located at 2831 W. Lawrence.

Dary Mien was about 6 years old in 1975 when the Khmer Rouge took over her Cambodian homeland.

At least that’s what age her mother told her she was. The family was forced to burn all records like birth certificates as they were coerced into a cruel collective where people were murdered for any sign of holding onto an individual identity.

Children, including Mien, were separated from their families and forced to work picking up cow dung. Their parents dug ditches or worked in rice paddies. Torture, starvation and rampant disease were woven for nearly four years into the daily lives of those living under Pol Pot. An estimated 2 million died in what was later called the “Killing Fields.”

Thursday, September 15, 2011

Where to eat Khmer food this weekend [-Pchum Ben ceremony at Watt Khmer Metta]

Pchum Ben ceremony at Watt Khmer Metta

Wed, Sep 14, 2011
By Mike Sula
Chicago Reader (Illinois, USA)

I've pointed out before that there are precious few opportunities in Chicago for non-Cambodians (without Cambodian friends or family) to try Khmer food, which can be described as somewhat similar to Thai but noticeably subtler in terms of the four S's—spicy-sweet-sour-salty. It's no ten-ton truck, but it draws on Indian, Chinese, Portuguese, Spanish, and French influences too and it's damn good stuff. If you've never partaken, this Saturday there are a couple opportunities at the Cambodian American Heritage Museum in Albany Park.

Beginning at 9 AM, Buddhist monks will conduct a Moha Bhokal ceremony remembering those who died in the Killing Fields, during which food and cash are offered to the chanting monks before everyone sits down to eat. All are welcome, but as with the community's annual Pchum Ben observance you should bring a gift.

Later that afternoon, tour group facilitator Travel Blend is presenting Meandering the Mekong: A Culinary Journey to Cambodia, featuring a tour of the museum, a slide show, cooking demonstration, and buffet dinner. The company's Loneth Soares tells me the menu will feature beef salad (pleer saik gho), chicken lemon grass (cha khreung saik moan), stir fried vegetables (cha pbales), banana in coconut cream and tapioca for dessert, and a basil seed drink

Thursday, July 29, 2010

In Chicago, US-Cambodians Seek Political Voice

A group of Cambodians met in Chicago over the weekend to discuss ways their community might receive more attention. (Photo: by Men Kimseng)

Men Kimseng, VOA Khmer
Chicago Wednesday, 28 July 2010

“Essentially, Cambodians should register to vote and go vote, all the time, from local to presidential elections.”
Although they face a raft of problems from health to education, US-Cambodians say they remain underrepresented by policy makers. A group of Cambodians met in Chicago over the weekend to discuss ways their community might receive more attention.

Participants told VOA Khmer they want better representation, but that requires a stronger, more unified voice within their communities.

“There are two reasons why Cambodian community don't get much support and understanding,” said Van Sar, an organizer of the Chicago forum. “This is because, first, we don't have representatives within the US leadership. Secondly, we don't have a strong, joint voice from our civil society organizations to influence US policy.”

The forum, the first of its kind, was organized by the Cambodian Association in Illinois and the Khmer Alliance Foundation, in conjunction with the National Cambodian American Health Initiative.

A low percentage of Cambodians take advantage of opportunities in the US. Just more than 10 percent of Cambodian high schoolers graduate, according to statistics at the forum.

“Those who know the real need of our children's education are we the parents,” said Boeuy Te, a member of the National Education Association.

Of the Cambodians who do graduate with advanced degrees, he said, few work in government institutions where they might push to improve the lives of fellow Cambodians.

Low political participation in general was also discussed at the forum.

“Essentially, Cambodians should register to vote and go vote, all the time, from local to presidential elections,” Siv Sichan, a former US ambassador to the UN, said. “Here if we want our voice heard, we have to be active. And if we just stay home, our voice won't be heard.”

There are approximately 270,000 Cambodians living in the US. Only 60,000 have become full US citizens. That means a wide majority do not have the right to vote, an important part of gaining political attention.

That said, the Chicago forum did draw Mike Quigley, a Democrat for Illinois in the US House of Representatives.

“It's not one act,” he told VOA Khmer. “I think it's a relationship that builds from here. We've been in DC for a year now. We've learned a little bit about how to get things done. So I think working with my district office here and in Washington, DC, we'll sit down as often as we need to to work out individual cases and broader issues. It's not one thing; it's a series of things.”

Friday, June 18, 2010

Celebrating their heritage: Chicago's Cambodian Museum opens retail store

Cambodian-American Association of Illinois, 2801 W. Lawrence

06.17.10
Marcus Leshock
ChicagoNow


The Killing Fields.

Three words haunt the southeast Asian nation of Cambodia. For a period between 1975-1979, it was hell on Earth.

Estimated say that somewhere around 2 million people were killed in the Khmer Rouge genocide. Countless more fled from the country at their own peril. They ended up displaced all over the globe.

Today, there are about 3,500 Cambodian Americans that call Chicago home. In 2004, the Cambodian Association of Illinois opened a museum at 2801 W. Lawrence Ave. in Albany Park.

This weekend they're opening their first retail store, featuring artifacts, musical instruments, artwork, sculptures, clothing and more - all created by Cambodians. Proceeds benefit the artists and the non-profit museum.

I spoke with a few of the artists today, each survived the terrible Cambodian tragedy of the late 70's. While the country will always be known for the hardship, they hope that museums like this one can remind people of the country's rich heritage (the store is named Morodok, which translates to "heritage.").

My full feature is running on the WGN News at 5 p.m. I'll post it here as soon as it is finished. The museum is holding a grand opening from 10 a.m. - 2 p.m. on Saturday, June 19. They also offers free music lessons on the various Cambodian instruments. Contact them about times here...

Cambodian Association of Illinois
2801 W. Lawrence
Chicago IL
www.cambodian-association.org
(773) 878-7090

Thursday, September 11, 2008

Museum Exhibit Explores Hope For Cambodia’s Future After A Tragic Past

Sep 10, 2008
Asian Week

CHICAGO — The Cambodian American Heritage Museum has launched its latest show, "Cambodia Born Anew," a major exhibit on Cambodia's remarkable recovery following years of civil strife and genocide. The exhibit examines Cambodia's core economy, folk arts, education and Theravada Buddhism, the faith tradition of over 90 percent of Khmers, as well as performances of traditional Khmer music and dance.

The Cambodian American Heritage Museum and Killing Fields Memorial, opened in October 2004, is the first museum of its kind in the United States. The museum features Cambodian and community artists and Cambodian art; promotes genocide education and awareness; and preserves the memory of over two million Cambodian people lost during the Killing Fields through healing and arts.

Charles Daas, museum director, noted that, "'Cambodia Born Anew' is a snapshot of Cambodia today as its people wrestle with how to preserve ancient traditions in the wake of a new global economy."

The exhibit examined Cambodia's core economy, folk arts, education and Theravada Buddhism, the faith tradition of over 90 percent of Khmers, as well as performances of traditional Khmer music and dance.

The Cambodian American Heritage Museum and Killing Fields Memorial, opened in October 2004, is the first museum of its kind in the United States. The museum features Cambodian and community artists and Cambodian art; promotes genocide education and awareness; and preserves the memory of over two million Cambodian people lost during the Killing Fields through healing and arts.

Charles Daas, museum director, noted that, "'Cambodia Born Anew' is a snapshot of Cambodia today as its people wrestle with how to preserve ancient traditions in the wake of a new global economy."

Saturday, May 03, 2008

Learn about Buddhism from visiting monk this evening

Venerable Somnieng Hoeun with school kids

May 1, 2008
By Leon Lagerstam, llagerstam@qconline.com
Quad-Cities Online (Moline, Illinois, USA)


MOLINE -- Use a "living" text to study Buddhism.

The Venerable Somnieng Hoeurn, a visiting Theravadian monk from Cambodia, will give a free public lecture from 7 to 8:30 tonight in Theater Room 306 in Building 1. Black Hawk College, 6600 34th Ave., Moline.

"It's rare to have a Buddhist monk in this area, and to have the chance to learn about Buddhism and hear Buddhist chanting -- a tradition rooted in one of the oldest languages in the world," college professor Galen Leonhardy said. "He's a living text we can all study."

His lecture is part of an ongoing Humanities 101 Outreach project at Black Hawk, and studying religions offers a great way to explain and pass on a humanities' tradition and understanding, Mr. Leonhardy said.

"All religions offer people wonderful and beautiful ways of framing reality," he said.

The Venerable Somnieng will discuss "who was the Buddha, what is Buddhism, and what is Buddhist chanting all about?" according to college fliers advertising the lecture. He'll also demonstrate his chanting abilities, described by Mr. Leonhardy as "a beautiful art form."

"He has a wonderful voice," Mr. Leonhardy said. "And I love to hear his insights. Somnieng is a beautiful human being who's doing good things for a lot of people."

In Cambodia, the Venerable Somnieng spends considerable time working in orphanages. He also devotes a lot of energy to education. For example, he's establishing a college scholarship program for monks and young Cambodian women.

Highly educated Cambodians were systematically executed in the 1970s by the Khmer Rouge, a revolutionary socialist party.

"Rebuilding Cambodia's college-educated population has been difficult," Mr. Leonhardy said.

Free-will donations will support the Venerable Somnieng's mission, and his stay at a Midwest Buddhist Education Center, at 216 Locust St., Davenport, while he continues his studies at St. Ambrose University.

More people are becoming aware of the center's existence and about the developing Buddhist community in the Quad-Cities, Mr. Leonhardy said. Less is probably known about the Buddhist presence, however, compared to the Hindu and Islamic communities, "but we're truly becoming a pluralistic society," Mr. Leonhardy said.

The lecture is designed simply to inform and educate people about Buddhism, not as an attempt to convert anyone, he said. "Converting, or proselytizing, tends not to occur in Buddhism," he said.

"Buddhism is a process-orientated method of overcoming suffering we experience, and it offers inner peace," Mr. Leonhardy said.

The Theravada form of Buddhism draws scriptural inspiration from the Tipitaka, or Pali canon, which scholars generally agree contains the earliest written records of the Buddha's teachings, college materials say.

Theravada, pronounced "terra-va-dah," is the predominant religion of continental Southeast Asia including the countries of Thailand, Myanmar/Burma, Cambodia and Laos, and Sri Lanka.

It's also the form that has taken root in America, according to college materials.

Learn more about it tonight by studying a "living text."

Thursday, October 18, 2007

Khmer Here

Ty Tim - Paul l. Merideth (portrait)
King Jayavarman VII posed as Buddha - Paul l. Merideth (portrait)
Food caravan bas-relief - Paul l. Merideth (portrait)

A new collection in Chicago shows there’s more to Cambodian culture than the Killing Fields.

October 18, 2007
By Deanna Isaacs
Chicago Reader (Chicago, Illinois, USA)


Ty Tim was a high school teacher in Cambodia in 1975 when the Khmer Rouge took over. The country, which had suffered years of strife during the Vietnam war and massive U.S. bombing in its wake, now fell victim to Pol Pot’s efforts to transform it into a land of peasant farmers. The plan called for the eradication of religion, culture, and history, and it was brutally enforced. The calendar was reset to year zero, temples were destroyed, educated city dwellers were declared the enemy. Capital city Phnom Penh was emptied—“turned into a ghost town,” Tim says. He and his family were among the thousands forced to trek through the jungle to labor camps, where they were subjected to inhumane conditions and fed a starvation diet. During the three years and eight months of the Khmer Rouge regime, about 1.7 million Cambodians—more than 20 percent of the population—died. Tim and his wife lost four children, as well as his parents and two brothers.

When Vietnam invaded Cambodia in 1979, the Khmer Rouge enforcers abandoned the camps and the workers dispersed. Tim, his wife, and a daughter eventually made their way to Thailand. In 1982, with the help of a sponsor in Mokena, they came to Illinois. Tim, who’d specialized in Khmer (Cambodian) literature, culture, and philosophy, found work as a bilingual teacher, and he and his wife had three more daughters.

Retired from full-time teaching, Tim now works as the archivist at the Cambodian American Heritage Museum, which opened in 2004 as a project of the Cambodian Association of Illinois. Started by a few refugee families in the western suburbs 31 years ago, the association has been located in Chicago since 1980, providing resettlement help and basic social services to Cambodian immigrants. In 1999 it purchased and moved into an old building at 2831 W. Lawrence with an empty lot next door. It also began a capital campaign, not only to add office space but to build a dream: a museum that would tell Cambodians’ story, honor their dead, and display their culture. It would be for the public but also for the elders forced to leave everything behind and for their American children, making their way in a very different society.

The golden age of Khmer culture lasted from the 9th century through the 13th century, when the Angkor empire included all of current Cambodia and extended into what are now Thailand, Laos, and Vietnam. An agricultural and artistic society rooted in the cycles of the Mekong River, it was characterized by tall, elaborately decorated stone and brick temples (or wats) and temple cities. The most impressive of them was the fabulous 500-acre Angkor Wat, built in the 12th century and dedicated to the Hindu god Vishnu. The arts of the period included ritual music and dance and the masterful stone bas-reliefs and sculptures still visible in the temples.

After raising $1.3 million, the Cambodian Association added a handsome 4,000-square-foot museum to its building three years ago. It opened with a permanent Killing Fields memorial and a text-and-photo exhibit that explained what had happened to Khmer Rouge survivors, but it had no collection of its own—none of the ancient artifacts.

A member of the museum board, Northern Illinois University anthropologist Judy Ledgerwood, suggested that the museum and the university might partner on a grant proposal. NIU is home to a center for Southeast Asia studies, started in 1963 to train Peace Corps volunteers, and the university was looking to mount an exhibit on Cambodia’s current economic and cultural recovery. Ledgerwood’s research has been focused on that part of the world, and in the past she’d received funding from the Henry J. Luce Foundation, which she says has a history of supporting projects on Southeast Asia and an interest in helping young institutions. They submitted a proposal with three components: an exhibit for NIU, a collection of art and artifacts and staff training for the museum, and an oral history. The Luce foundation gave them $116,000, and in June 2006 Tim set off with NIU’s anthropology museum director, Ann Wright-Parsons, on a buying trip to his homeland—only his second visit since he and his family had fled.

Even with the money, however, Tim wouldn’t be acquiring any ancient treasures: Cambodian law now prohibits taking them out of the country. He’d be shopping for reproductions. Tim says that, with the $6,000 he had to spend, he was determined to find the items most deeply connected to the Cambodian spirit. “Before the infiltration of the Indian religion,” he says, “we had our own culture. We worshipped the parents—the living god as the mother and father, mother as earth and leader, father as water and protector.” If Cambodians lose their reverence for these traditional things, he says, “we lose our identity.” The core pieces of the 16-item collection he brought back—which includes finely hewn musical instruments, a pair of dazzling costumes, and a 12th-century caravan in bas-relief—are a large, flawlessly crafted wood carving representing the mother and two banners like waterfalls representing the father.

Both the NIU exhibit and the museum show opened within the last few weeks; in the spring they’ll change places for six months or so. (The project’s final component, the Killing Fields oral history, is scheduled for completion by 2009.) Ledgerwood says both exhibits are about Cambodia’s recovery under what is still a relatively authoritarian government: the rebuilding of temples, the resurgence of arts and crafts, and the emergence of an economy that, besides rice growing, includes the mass manufacture of clothing and a booming tourist business. Museum chairman Leon Lim, another Killing Fields survivor, says the gleaming new collection is a way for people who lost their homeland, families, belongings, and culture to claim their identity and celebrate the lives they’ve found in Chicago.

Meanwhile, back in Cambodia, recovery aside, the wheels of justice barely turn: Pol Pot’s second-in-command was arrested only last month; no other Khmer Rouge officials have ever been brought to trial.

Khmer Spirit: Arts & Culture of Cambodia

Through June 2008: Mon-Fri 9 AM-5 PM, weekends by appt., Cambodian American Heritage Museum, 2831 W. Lawrence, 773-878-7090, ext. 201. Free

Cambodia Born Anew

Through May 2008: Mon-Fri 9 AM-5 PM, Anthropology Museum, Northern Illinois University, Stevens Building, DeKalb, 815-753-0246. Free