Showing posts with label Loss of Kampuchea Krom. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Loss of Kampuchea Krom. Show all posts

Thursday, September 06, 2012

The 63rd Annual Kampuchea Krom Loss


The 63rd Annual Kampuchea Krom Loss




The 63rd Annual Kampuchea Krom Loss Commemoration and the Buddhist Offering Ceremony to 1,949 Buddhist Monks to honor Khmer heroic Budhdist monks, heroic emperors, heroic kings, heroes, and servicemen and women, on Sunday the 13th Waning Moon of Jeṭṭha BE2556, June 17, AD2012, held at the former SRP HQs, Tonle Basak commune, Chamkar Mon district, Phnom Penh, Kingdom of Cambodia

Thank you for watching and supporting.

KKC

Tuesday, May 29, 2012

An Interview with Senator Thach Setha



An interview with Senator Thach Setha, Executive Director of the Khmer Kampuchea Krom Community, KKC, born in Kampuchea Krom, on 1. Preparation for the 63rd Annual Kampuchea Krom Commemoration and the Offering Ceremony to 1,949 Buddhist monks, 2. Role of Buddhist monks, 3. Supreme Patriarch, mid-level ranking monk officials and police violatedly detained Ven. Loun Sovath against his will with no wrongdoing and 4. The arrest and imprisonment of the Boeng Kak villagers, land owners

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7e5oLf2nr18

Sunday, May 20, 2012

Appeal - The 63rd Annual Kampuchea Krom Commemorat​ion


Appeal - The 63rd Annual Kampuchea Krom Commemoration


Sat the 14th Waning Moon of Visakha BE2556, May 19, AD2012 Year of the Dragon


Thank you for watching and making your kind contributions.


KKC

Tuesday, April 17, 2012

Appeal: The 63rd Annual Kampuchea Krom Commemoration

Appeal: The 63rd Annual Kampuchea Krom Commemoration


Left: Heroic Buddhist Patriarch Most Ven. Ganda Dhammo Kim Toc Chon; center: Khmer hero Oknha Son Kuy; right: Heroic Buddhist Patriarch Most Ven. Dhamma Viriyo Kim Sang, and many more heroes, heroines, patriots, both known and unknown not listed here.

"No Suffering is greater than the loss of Kampuchea Krom and become an ethnic minority on one's own land."



http://www.box.com/s/ee98f579d82ede605451


http://www.box.com/s/7bfd6ed3d0fc2b13e91b

Monday, May 23, 2011

Invitation to the commemoration of the loss of Kampuchea Krom at Wat Khemara Rangsey, San Jose, California


http://www.box.net/shared/afer3dqcb2

What:
Commemoration of the 62nd anniversary of the loss of Kampuchea Krom

When:
Saturday 04 June 2011
from 8AM to 2PM

Where:
Wat Khemara Rangsey
1594 Gunningham Ave.
San Jose, CA 95122

Contact Tel.:
(408) 771-7937
(408) 693-6047
(408) 314-6929
(408) 923-2166

Sunday, May 23, 2010

61st Anniversary of the Loss of Kampuchea Krom to be Commemorated in Pusignan, France on 30 May 2010

Click on the announcement in Khmer and French to zoom in
Where:
Watt Buddharaingsey
124 Route Nationale, 69330 Pusignan, France

When:
Sunday 30 May 2010
From 9:30AM to 1:30PM

Contact:
Khoun Naka: 04 75 32 39 98
Kim Sang: 04 50 52 25 28
Biv Bonn: 04 74 55 08 40

Friday, May 07, 2010

Video Appeal: The 61st Kampuchea Krom Loss Buddhist Memorial Commemoration

Source: Khmer Kampuchea Krom Community

The 61st Kampuchea Krom Loss Buddhist Memorial Commemoration to Honor Heroic Buddhist Monks, Heroic Emperors, Heroic Kings, Heroes, and Fallen Compatriots. Colonial France transferred Khmer land, Kampuchea Krom, to Vietnam to continue colonizing Kampuchea (Cambodia) on June 4, 1949 ever since.

KKC Photo taken from the 58th Kampuchea Krom Loss Buddhist Memorial Service, June 4, 2007, in front of Wat Padmavatei (Botumvatei), Phnom Penh, Kingdom of Cambodia.

Thursday, April 08, 2010

Kampuchea Krom Community New Year Wishes and Appeal

Click on the KKC New Year Message in Khmer to zoom in

Click on the KKC appeal in Khmer to zoom in

Respected Venerable Bhantes,
Dear Colleagues, Members, Press and Public,

Enclosed above are:
  1. The 2554 (2010) New Year Wishes in Khmer language from the Khmer Kampuchea Krom Community, and
  2. The Appeal for the 61st Kampuchea Krom Loss Memorial Commemoration.
For your contributions, please make check payable and send to:

In Canada:
Suvong Kim
25 Galsworthy Avenue
Scarborough, Ontario M1R 2Y3
Canada
Telephone: 416.720.0842

In the United States and other countries:
Ra Thach
P.O. Box 37502
Philadelphia, PA 19148
United States
Telephones: 267.242.3608 Sina Son, Ra Thach 267.231.5236, Vithi Kim 864.357.6655, Thuong Khun Son 206.432.6924, and Saret Kim 978.328.4435.

In the Kingdom of Cambodia:
Hon. Thach Setha
Telephones: 012 908 882
or 090 477 007

Thank you very much for your charity.

Sincerely,

KKC

Website: http://www.khmerkromngo.org

Wednesday, April 07, 2010

SRP asks the king to declare date of loss of Kampuchea Krom a day of national mourning

Map showing the territory of Kampuchea Krom

Wednesday, 7 April 2010
By Khmerization
Source: RFA


Nine members of parliament from the opposition Sam Rainsy Party (SRP) has sent a petition to King Sihamoni asking him to declare 4th June as a day of national mourning because it was a day that the French parliament voted to cede Kampuchea Krom territories (21 provinces of Cambodian territories in southern Vietnam) to the Vietnamese control in 1949, reports Radio Free Asia.

Mr. Yont Tharo, an SRP MP who is an ethnic Khmer Krom, said by telephone from Preah Vihear province that the SRP wants all Cambodians to remember this historical and painful day of the loss of Cambodia's vast territories to Vietnam. "I think that 4th June 1949 was a day that all Cambodians feel painful and sad because France have illegally ceded our territories to the Vietnamese", he said.

On 4th June 1949, the French parliament voted to cede 21 Cambodian provinces with total areas of 68,965 square kilometres to Vietnam's control. Today, according to some sources, there are 12 million ethnic Khmer Krom people living in Kampuchea Krom.

Mr. Tith Sothea, spokesman for the government's Press Quick Reaction Unit, said the 9 opposition MPs are doing this for political gains. "I wish to ask the opposition party not to use this date as a front for political gains", he said.

The Royal Palace cannot be reached for comments at the time of this report going to air.

Monday, October 05, 2009

Letter of King Ang Duong to Emperor Napoleon III of France

Please find below the Letter of King Ang Duong of 25 November 1856 to Emperor Napoleon III of France. This is an English translation from the reprinted/reproduced French text in Cambodge, published by the Ministry of Information, Phnom Penh, Cambodia, (1962), p. 48. The King's letter was read in part by Princess Yukanthor to the National Assembly of the French Union during the meeting on 19 May 1949 dealing with the status of Cochinchina/Kampuchea Krom: A.U.F, Annales, no. 1(1949), p.515. Cambodia wanted the lost territories back. see Marie A. Martin, Cambodia: a Shattered Society,(1989) p. 350

Note:
Kay son=Tai son;
Saikong = Saigon

From Bora Touch, Esq.

-------

LETTER OF KING ANG DUONG TO EMPEROR NAPOLEON III

Cambodia was formerly a vast country made up of large provinces, then followed the Annamites, men of bad faith, allied themselves with Cambodia looking to take for themselves sometimes one, sometimes two Sroks.

At the time of the revolt of Kay Son, the Emperor Gia-Long fled his kingdom and asked for help from the Kingdom of Krong-Tep [Thailand]. He met there Our August Father then King of Cambodia with whom he formed an alliance. After having fled Kingdom Krong-Tep and settled at Srok Preah Trapeang [Travihn] where he organized his army to fight against the Kay-Son, Our August Father sent him men to help until he conquered the Kay-Son and mounted the throne of Annam. Then taking into account that the Srok of Preah Trapeang was his benefactor he asked Our August Father to exempt the Srok from all tribute [for Cambodia] and not to make the inhabitants of the Srok work.

Our August Father considering that this was an act of confession on the part of an ally, acquiesced to his demand and no longer subjected them to any duty.

A long time afterward, Gia-Long made the Srok an Annamite colony until the reign of Our elder Brother [Ang Chan] who turned toward the emperor Gia-Long to ask for his help. On our part, we allied with Kingdom Krong-Tep. The son of Gia-Long named Minh Mang mounted the throne and dug the canal that crosses the Kingdom of Cambodia from Peam [Hatien] to Chaudoc to establish mandarins and Annamite subjects.

On His death, Our August father left only a daughter (of the first lit bed(?)) The Emperor Minh-Mang, as a measure of oppression, ordered to bring in captivity to Saikong the daughters of Our August Brother, Our August Mother, Our own Child, to put to death a daughter of Our August Brother to make him disappear, ordered the grand mandarins and inhabitants of Cambodia to go live on one of the islands and the others at Tonkin near China. The Cambodians, made aware of the evil intention of the Annamite Emperor, rose up and massacred a lot of Annamites.

The state of affairs that existed in Cambodia must have made His Majesty the Emperor of the French reflect on the establishment of the domination of Annamites in the Cambodian territories. The Srok Donnai became Annamite by simple peaceful occupation 200 years ago. The Sroks that the Annamites seized after were Saikong [Saigon], Longho (Vinh-Long) Phsar-Dek (Sadec), Smeythor, Meat-Chrouk (Chaudoc), Kramuon-Sar (Rach-Gia), Omom, Tuk-Khmau, Srok Peam and the islands of Tral [Phu-Quoc] and Tralach [Poulo Condor]. From now on if the Annamites ceded to the Emperor of France all of these territories and others, We pray His Majesty Emperor of France will not accept them because these are really the Cambodian territories. The part going to the west bank of the Saikong river to Peam (Hatien) comprised of 2 islands, must remain Cambodian as before. As for the region that is found on the east bank of the Saikong river that the Annamites have occupied for a long time, We do not reclaim....

Made in Our Palace at Oudong and marked with Our seal, Tuesday, month Kadoeck, the 13th day of the waning moon, in the year 1215 of the small era, year of the Dragon, 8th of the decade cycle.

Sent to Sing Ka po [Singapore]
His Majesty signed "Ang Duong"

[Reprinted in Cambodge (Phnom Penh, 1962) p. 48]

Wednesday, September 16, 2009

Thursday, June 11, 2009

Khmer Krom to Mark Loss of Land

By Men Kimseng, VOA Khmer
Original report from Washington
10 June 2009


Calls for freedom and more unity among Khmer Kampuchea Krom have become the main demand during gatherings worldwide to mark the 60th anniversary of the loss of Kampuchea Krom (lower Cambodia now part of Southern Vietnam).

Sunday’s meeting in New Jersey is another call to reiterate Khmer Kampuchea Krom’s commitment to fight for self-determination.

“Today is a historical day to commemorate bitter experience and to try to stop colony on Khmer Krom. This is our primary call,” Ven. Thach Berong, head monk in charge of Khmer Kampuchea Krom Federation’s inter-religious affairs and one of the organizers of the gathering, told VOA Khmer by phone.

Ven. Thach Berong added that more than 100 activists coming from New Jersey, Pennsylvania, California and Washington D.C. will get together to show their “unity to the national and international community that Khmer Krom are committed to stop any ambition to annex more Cambodian land by foreign forces”.

“We are devoted to protecting our national soul, safeguarding Khmer culture and civilization, and ensuring that Khmer Krom people have rights to self-determination,” said Ven. Thach Berong.

The commemoration is also attended by a visiting president of the Human Rights Party from Cambodia.

“The difficulty of the Khmer Krom people is those of mine because I am also Khmer,” Kem Sokha, president of the Human Rights Party told VOA Khmer for his decision to attend the gathering.

French colonist awarded Kampuchea Krom to Vietnam on 4 June 1949. Currently many Khmer Krom people are living in sheer poverty.

Thursday, June 04, 2009

60th anniversary of the loss of Kampuchea Krom

Cambodian Buddhist monks read local newspapers at a ceremony in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, Thursday, June 4, 2009. Hundreds of Buddhist monks and other people mark the 60th anniversary to commemorate the Kampuchea Krom territory, a large part of southern Vietnam, handed over to Vietnam by the French government on June 4, 1949. (AP Photo/Heng Sinith)
A Cambodian man holds a burned incense sticks in front of a painting poster of Son Kuy, a hero of Kampuchea Krom, a large part of southern Vietnam, at a ceremony in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, Thursday, June 4, 2009. Hundreds of Buddhist monks and other people mark the 60th anniversary to commemorate the Kampuchea Krom territory handed over to Vietnam by the French government on June 4, 1949. (AP Photo/Heng Sinith)

Son Sann Foundation Press Release on the anniversary of the loss of Kampuchea Krom

Click on the press release to zoom in

Friday, May 08, 2009

Khmer Krom to mark loss of homeland

Friday, 08 May 2009
Written by Vong Sokheng
The Phnom Penh Post


THOUSANDS of members of Cambodia's Khmer Krom community are expected to participate in a ceremony set for June 4 to mark the 60th anniversary of the loss of their territory to Vietnam.

"We celebrated the loss every year, starting in 2000, and the King has always sent his representative to preside over the ceremony," Thach Setha, former senator of the opposition Sam Rainsy Party and executive director of the Khmer Kampuchea Krom Community told the Post Thursday.

The ceremony, which will be held in front of Wat Botumvadei, is open to all Cambodians, organisers said. Thach Setha said the group had been granted permission every year for their ceremony. However, he said he had submitted a letter requesting permission to the Phnom Penh Municipality on April 30 this year and had yet to hear back.

Kep Chuktema, Phnom Penh municipal governor, could not be reached for comment on Thursday to confirm whether this year's ceremony would be allowed.

Phay Siphan, spokesman for the Council of Ministers, said he doubted the ceremony would affect Vietnamese government policy towards the Khmer Krom.

The Vietnamese government is to appear before the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva for its five-yearly rights review Friday, with local rights activists hoping it will force Hanoi to account for its treatment of the Khmer Krom remaining in Vietnam.

Tuesday, July 08, 2008

Khmer Krom Day: A Refreshing New Perspective on Loss of Kampuchea-Krom


July 8th, 2008
By Sothy Kien
Khmer Krom Network


1949 is the year many Khmer Krom people remember with great pain and sorrow. On June 4th 1949, France transferred Cochin China, the (French name ) ancestral homeland of the Khmer Krom people to the Vietnamese.

It was a heart wrenching decision made without the full participation or consent of the indigenous Khmer Krom people, who are the original owners of the land.

Imagine if your home and rich fertile rice fields were systematically taken from you. If you were forced to assimilate into the Vietnamese culture and forced to abandon your historic ties to motherland Cambodia?

How much pain, anger, sorrow and bitterness would you feel?

Worse, if you know up until this day, land grabbing still continues and people and Buddhist monks alike are being tortured and imprisoned for demanding religious freedom and basic rights?

For decades, commemorating the loss of Kampuchea-Krom remains a significant event for the Khmer Krom and Khmer people to remember the injustice by the French and the Vietnamese. This event also gives us the opportunity to remember the people who sacrificed their lives to protect our land and culture.

Such event is forbidden by the communist Vietnam government.

In countries outside of Vietnam, it appears however, that each year less and less people are participating.

To resolve this increasingly bleak trend, this year, Khmer Krom people in Australia introduced a new concept calling the event, “Khmer Krom Day.”

Often in developed countries such as Australia, Australia Day is a day in which the people celebrate the unique diversity of all of its cultures and peoples.

For the Khmer Krom people, some would argue that they have no country in which to celebrate. In fact, if Khmer Krom Day was on the basis of the ideology of loss of Kampuchea-Krom, there should be little to celebrate.

Khmer Krom Day, or Tivea Khmer Krom is a new concept that incorporates not only the commemoration of the loss of Kampuchea-Krom but it is also an event that hopes to inspire positive and proactive movement towards human rights realisation.

Khmer Krom Day is not about celebrating the loss of Kampuchea-Krom but it is about giving credit and gratitude to those who are our everyday heroes, who are putting their lives on the line to preserve our culture, dignity and identity.

The people include but are not limited to members of the Khmers Kampuchea-Krom Federation such as Mr. Thach Ngoc Thach, Mr. Sereivuth and Mr. Tran Giap who have quitted their full time job to work for the cause of Khmer Krom.

What about our people in Cambodia and Vietnam, for example, Venerable Tim Sakhorn who is currently in prison for helping Khmer Krom cross the border? What about our five defrocked monks who organised the peaceful protests demanding greater religious freedom, only be rudely defrocked and thrown in jail for four years?

What about Chau Inn, who stood up to demand the return of his ancestral homeland, only to be hunted down like animals in the middle of the night, his family members were shot and now he is missing?

When do we get an opportunity to say prays for these brave souls and give them credit and gratitude for their courage to continue to keep the Khmer Krom struggles alive?

Khmer Krom Day is not just about remembering our heroes but also to thank our current activists and hope that by reflecting on such a day, we can start to inspire greater hope for the future.

Hopes will be the fuel and energy for the future work of human rights activists.

The Khmer Krom community in Australia took one step further by asking a high ranked Australian government representative of Vietnamese descendent to attend the event. It was a big step and very risky for the Khmer Krom people and was received with mixed emotions.

Some were against the idea stating that it was inappropriate and asked what Vietnamese people would really know about how much it hurts or ways to help the Khmer Krom.

Surprisingly, the special guest was moved to tears when he heard about what the Vietnamese government was doing to the Khmer Krom people.

He encouraged and highlighted the importance of knowing one’s culture and identity. He urged the members to keep fighting to keep their identity and human rights for their people. He have made promise to help bringing up the issues to the Australian government.

This concept of Khmer Krom is actually also about sharing the pain.

For decades, the loss of Kampuchea-Krom has been an event only for Khmer and Khmer Krom. As a result very few people who are either Khmer nor Khmer Krom knew anything about our pain or what losing Kampuchea-Krom meant.

If you want people to understand how much you hurt or how you feel about their actions, why not get them involved?

There is no doubt that a powerful message is portrayed to the world if all of Khmer Krom people stood up for what we believe in but won’t it be equally astounding if a Vietnamese stood up for Khmer Krom?

Khmer Krom Day if supported, has the potential to change the face of Khmer Krom human rights movement and maybe the tool to inspire for the greater future.

Will you mark Khmer Krom Day in your calendar?