Showing posts with label Cambodian New Year Parade. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cambodian New Year Parade. Show all posts

Sunday, April 03, 2011

Long Beach New Year Parade 02 April 2011

All photos courtesy of P. from Long Beach. Additional photos on Facebook at:
http://www.facebook.com/#!/album.php?fbid=122251104516806&id=100001957502363&aid=24191
or on Flickr at:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/61342119@N07/sets/72157626292483241/

Sara Pol-Lim, Parade Grand Marshall

United Methodist Church of Long Beach

Peter Chhun (standing next to the parade car) of Hearts Without Boundaries

Bunlak Song looks apprehensive next to his sister. He was the latest boy brought to the US for heart surgery by Peter Chhun's Hearts Without Boundaries

Khmer Girls in Action
Cambodian beauties (sorry, I don't remember their names)
Sichan Siv and Martha Siv, former Bush appointees
Khmer Kampuchea Krom Federation (KKF)
Khmer Labokator demonstration
Khmer Labokator
Khmer Kampuchea Krom Federation (KKF)
Khmer Student Coalition
Too handsome to be real cyclo drivers
Khmer Art Academy

Saturday, April 02, 2011

Long Beach Cambodian New Year Parade returns Saturday

04-04-10-Cambodian dancers perform before the start of last year's annual Cambodian New Year parade that took place on Anaheim Street between Junipero Avenue and MacArthur Park in Long Beach. (Stephen Carr / Press-Telegram)

MacArthur Park celebration follows march down Anaheim.

03/31/2011
By Greg Mellen, Staff Writer
Long Beach Press Telegram (California, USA)


LONG BEACH — The seventh annual Cambodian New Year Parade, celebrating the Year of the Rabbit, hops off the curb Saturday at the corner of Junipero Avenue and Anaheim Street.

The event will begin at 9:30 a.m. with the traditional blessing of the event by Buddhist monks. The actual parade is slated to take off at 10 a.m. in front of the UCC Plaza.

There had been talk of shortening the parade route, but UCC building owner Gary Fultheim agreed to pay the extra money required to maintain the parade route launch point in front of his property.

This year's grand marshals are Sara Pol-Lim, Kimthai Kuoch, Jeanetta McAlpin and Steve Meng.

Monday, April 05, 2010

Long Beach turns out for Cambodian New Year parade

Members of the Cambodian Culture & Art Preservation Association step out behind a flag bearer during the sixth annual Cambodian New Year parade on Anaheim Street in Long Beach on Sunday. (Stephen Carr, Staff Photographer)
Paradegoers enjoy sights and sounds of the annual Cambodian New Year event as cultural, social and arts groups pass down the route. (Stephen Carr, Staff Photographer)
Rickshaws were part of the sixth annual Cambodian New Year parade, that took place on Anaheim Street between Junipero Ave and MacArthur Park. in Long Beach. (Stephen Carr, Staff Photographer)

The multicultural melange set off on its sixth annual trip down Anaheim Street to a large and appreciative crowd.

04/04/2010

By Greg Mellen, Staff Writer
Long Beach Press Telegram (California, USA)



LONG BEACH — The multicultural melange that is the Cambodian New Year parade set off on its sixth annual trip down Anaheim Street Sunday morning to a large and appreciative crowd.

The number of parade participants was down for a second straight year, possibly due in part to the economy or this year's date coinciding with Easter. Some of the Christian, Latino and interfaith organizations were not on hand this time around.

However, the crowd was at least as large and enthusiastic as in prior years and the spirit of the event was equally buoyant.

And, as seems to be tradition with the event, the grim-looking morning clouds seemed to disperse on cue with the 10:14 a.m. parade start from Junipero Avenue.

Among the honored guests at the parade was Cambodian Ambassador to the United States Hem Heng, who was making his first trip to the Long Beach event.

"As a Cambodian, it makes me very proud," Heng said. "It is an indication of the prestige of the Cambodian-American people in Long Beach.

"Also this parade can make others know better the Cambodian people."

Heng said having Cambodians stage an all-American event such as a parade, which is unknown in Cambodia, was a fitting way for cultures to mix and interact.

As always, a wide range of ethnic, cultural and social organizations, clubs and groups were on hand. They ranged from a variety of Khmer youth and arts groups, to a large contingent of Hmong, to police, a fire engine, politicians, civil leaders and two guys in kilts.

One of those kilted guys was Peter Joseph, the co-owner of the Big Red Bus, which was ferrying members of the United Cambodian Community down Anaheim.

Asked about his attire, Joseph said, "We wear these everywhere we go.

"It's just how we roll."

All through the parade route and throughout the day snapshots of the mixing of cultures were evident:

There was Mkott Pich jewelry store, festooned in United States and Cambodian flags.

Pre-parade blessings given by monks and Cambodian and black Christian ministers.

Former ambassador Sichan Siv reading a letter from Cambodian King Norodom Sihamoni, praising the parade.

The entertainment troupe of Serey Raph doing a representation of the Cambodian folk opera Lakhon Bassac, or The Giant Never Wins, from the bed of a truck.

A Jeep accompanying the Cambodian Veterans Association with a Cambodian flag in the front and a Chicago Cubs wheel cover on the spare tire in back.

Postparade entertainment that ranged from traditional Cambodian ballads, to rap by Long Beach's Prach Ly, to an 11-year-old boy doing Michael Jackson dance moves.

A Cambodian man buying his daughter a paleta, a fruit ice pop, in the park.

As the afternoon waned, diagonally across the street from the park celebration, another fitting symbol of Americana was getting under way — a carnival.

greg.mellen@presstelegram.com, 562-499-1291

A new year for Cambodian Americans

Wearing the traditional costume of a Cambodian apsara dancer, Natalie Buor, 21, who lives in Long Beach, waits for the start of the city's sixth Cambodian New Year parade. (Jay L. Clendenin / Los Angeles Times / April 4, 2010)

Long Beach parade is a celebration of ethnicity for the city's growing Cambodian population.

April 5, 2010
By Corina Knoll
Los Angeles Time (California, USA)


Dressed in a bright red uniform with a green scarf around his head, David Thong beamed Sunday as he kicked and punched an imaginary attacker while thousands watched.

The 43-year-old was leading a group of students in a demonstration of labokator, an age-old martial art, at the sixth annual Cambodian New Year parade in Long Beach.

Being able to publicly show off the Cambodian fighting technique on such a grand scale was a sign of how far the community had come, Thong said.

"We have the ability to show to the world that we live here now," said Thong, who arrived in Long Beach two decades ago.

For years, the Cambodian community in Long Beach, believed to be the largest outside Southeast Asia, has gathered to celebrate the Cambodian New Year, a three-day event that takes place in April. Census figures show 25,000 ethnic Cambodians in Long Beach, though community leaders place the figure at twice that.

In 2005, organizers added a parade featuring traditional dancers, drummers, pedicabs and colorful floats.

Beginning at Junipero Avenue, participants marched west on Anaheim Street to Warren Avenue, a one-mile stretch of restaurants, jewelry stores and markets considered to be the heart of what was designated the nation's first Cambodia Town in 2007. Afterward, Douglas MacArthur Park was swarming with families playing carnival games and listening to a woman singing in Khmer on a stage.

Phylypo Tum of the Cambodian Coordinating Council, which organizes the event, said the parade is a chance to showcase the history and customs of a burgeoning population that was established in the 1970s by refugees escaping the Khmer Rouge.

Tum said it was difficult to find sponsors for this year's parade. He hopes to cover its cost at another celebration on Saturday at El Dorado Park, at which admission will be charged.

Joe Som, 25, said he returns to his hometown at least once a week.

Having moved from Long Beach to Anaheim Hills earlier this year, he has found it difficult to be far from a neighborhood that represents his ethnic roots.

"We couldn't stay away," he said. "Each weekend we have to come down here. Long Beach just feels like home."

Som and his girlfriend, Makayla Seng, 26, attended the parade to cheer on participating friends and family.

"It's so new to the community that we want to support them," Seng said. "It's a big step, and it means a lot for us all to cooperate and put this on."

Chenda Yong, who immigrated to the United States in 1980 and grew up in Long Beach, has made a point of attending the parade since it began in 2005.

"It's about keeping an identity," Yong, 39, said. "It represents belonging and that we do have a place here."

corina.knoll@latimes.com

Sunday, April 04, 2010

Cambodians to mark new year with parade

LONG BEACH: Tiger celebration moved up to avoid conflict with Toyota Grand Prix.

04/02/2010
By Greg Mellen
Staff Writer
Long Beach Press Telegram


LONG BEACH - Cambodians will celebrate the Year of the Tiger on Sunday when the 6th annual Cambodian New Year Parade sets off down Anaheim Street.

This year, it would have been more fitting had it been the Year of the Hare, which is 2011, as the parade coincides with Easter Sunday.

This year the parade is being staged several weeks before the actual Cambodian New Year date and the annual New Year celebration is being held on Saturday, April 10, so as not to conflict with the 36th annual Toyota Grand Prix of Long Beach on the weekend of April 17.

The actual three-day New Year celebration in Cambodia is April 14-16.

Such fine points should have little effect on the upbeat atmosphere of the popular event that has become a staple in the center of Cambodiatown.

Adding to the atmosphere for the first time will be a weekend carnival at the empty lot at the corner of Walnut Avenue and Anaheim Street, diagonally across from the parade terminus at MacArthur Park.

Last year, the post-parade celebration was held in the dusty lot, but this year it moves back to its traditional spot at the park.

Some of the proceeds from the carnival rides and activities will benefit the Cambodian Coordinating Council, which stages the parade and celebration.

John Edmond, chief of staff for Councilman Dee Andrews, in whose district the event is held, said the council office has worked closely with parade organizers to help them overcome the obstacles of previous years.

He said Andrews spoke with residents to allay concerns about the park celebration and the office brokered the deal with the carnival operator, who had a similar deal at the Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Peace and Unity Parade and Celebration.

"It's a new thing. We're trying to help them keep their costs under control," Edmond said.

Organizers ran into financial difficulties two years ago when they ran into unexpected costs for city services.

This year, however, all is well and Cam-CC spokesman Dan Durke said the parade has "a clean slate."

Otherwise the parade will be much like past years. Durke says there will be about 60 parade entries and VIPs.

There will also be three grand marshals: Sam Meas, from Massachusetts, who is running as a Republican for Congress against incumbent Niki Tsongas; Thary Ung, a local activist in a variety of social organizations and a member of the Citizen Police Complaint Commission; and Mary Blatz, the pastoral director at the Mt. Carmel Cambodian Catholic Church, who is active in a number of issues including deportation and health care as well as working in the community on the 2010 census count.

The post-parade celebration at the park will include entertainment until 4 p.m. The parade begins at 9:30 a.m. at Anaheim Street and Junipero Avenue.

The Cambodian New Year Celebration on April 10 at El Dorado Park Area III, 7550 E. Spring St., runs from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. It features religious ceremonies, ethnic food, games and live entertainment including traditional Khmer performances and a band with popular Khmer singers.

Advance admission to the event is $23 per vehicle and $7 entrance fee to be paid to the city. The price is $10 more on the day of the event. Tickets will be available after March 8 at many Cambodian restaurants and businesses throughout Long Beach. See www.cam-cc.org for a complete list of locations.

greg.mellen@presstelegram.com 562-499-1291

Monday, April 06, 2009

Drumming in the Cambodia New Year [in Long Beach]

Flag-bearer Vincent Haim, 11 months, is set for the Cambodian New Year parade. (Carlos Delgado / For the Press-Telegram)

Celebrating on a budget

04/05/2009
By Greg Mellen, Staff Writer
Long Beach Press Telegram


LONG BEACH - A leaner, cleaner Cambodian New Year parade hit Anaheim Street on Sunday.

It took 47 minutes for the Cambodian Coordinating Council's banner at the head of the parade to make the approximately half-mile trek from Junipero Avenue to MacArthur Park, but it marked a successful conclusion to a tough yearlong journey for the parade.

With a worsening economy dampening donations and restricting entrants in the popular event and a bill of $40,000 for city services, the parade had significant obstacles to overcome.

But at 10:13 a.m. under a cloudless sky, the parade successfully embarked on its fifth annual trip through the center of Cambodia Town, after an celebration and blessing by local monks.

Parade chairman Sweety Chap said he was proud, particularly of his volunteers, for sticking together and pulling off the event that, despite the smaller numbers, retained the color, vibrancy and spirit of previous years.

"We told everyone we were on top of it and don't worry," Chap said. "I think it's good."

This year's roster of parade entrants was 53, down from 80 the year before, and four City Council members were no-shows. And while the crowd of onlookers may have been a bit thinner, particularly in the midsection of the parade, there was a large enthusiastic gathering at the parade terminus at MacArthur Park.

The route was also pristine this year, thanks to the efforts of about 60 volunteers, organized by the United Cambodian Community and Sixth District Councilman Dee Andrews' office, who staged a neighborhood cleanup on Saturday.

As Allan Lim and Chenda Che stood in front of Lim's Mkott Pich jewelry store, they talked about the importance of the parade.

"We should have this every year to show our culture, especially for the younger generation," Lim said.

"This is the best way to promote Cambodian culture to Long Beach," Che added.

From civic to arts to sports groups, many of the parade participants celebrated the Year of the Ox in colorful garb from their homeland and played traditional and newer Cambodian music.

And while the overall number of participants was down, there were a couple of notable first-timers, including a group that practices labokator - ancient Khmer martial arts - at MacArthur Park, and members from the Long Beach chapter of

100 Black Men, a national group working to provide positive leadership in black communities.

By noon, the last group in the parade arrived at MacArthur Park, ending the event on schedule.

If there was a downer to the event, at least in the eyes of some, it was the decision to move the celebration after the parade from MacArthur Park to a dusty, rock-strewn lot on the corner of Walnut Avenue and Anaheim Street. A number of parents were upset that there were no grassy areas for their children to sit or play and noted the lack of shade. The move was done to save money on park fees.

Ninth District Councilman Val Lerch agreed the lot was barren, but said it was a symptom of the times.

"I'm going to have the same problem at the Veterans Parade," said Lerch of the event he helps sponsor in North Long Beach.

With the city's budget deficit, the amount of aid given to events has been severely curtailed.

"I don't know how you get around the fees these days," Lerch said.

Ever the optimist, Chap tried to put a positive spin on the celebration location, saying it reminded residents of Cambodia, where many villages are in flat open spaces.

"I like it here. You can see everything that's going on," he said.

The city's Cambodian New Year events are not over. On April 25, the annual New Year Celebration will be staged at El Dorado Park.

Organizers were short of funds, but have been working with the city to cut costs and guarantee the event will be held as planned.

greg.mellen@presstelegram.com, 562-499-1291

Thursday, April 03, 2008

Together, We Can!

TOGETHER, WE CAN!

April 02, 2008
Op-Ed by Justin Sok

I just wanted to capture a precious moment of everyone’s attention. Since I was among the individuals living in the community and had also raised issue relating to the upcoming annual Cambodian New Year Cultural parade, I wanted to express my thoughts with every one on the issue in the hopes of bringing this matter to a close. It is by no means my intention to reiterate and/or harangue about the issues as a personal memoir. However, I feel that it is important to share the issue out in the open so that the public would have an opportunity to witness how the issue was raised and how it would eventually affect the outcome of our annual Cambodian New Year Cultural parade.

They say, “Every barrel always has a few rotten apples.” It would not be a controversial issue if this were about a few rotten apples. But the issue raised was clearly about a few community organization leaders who, without having consult with their associates and without giving the public an opportunity to share their opinions on the issue, were quick to execute their plans in which they had hoped that their status would shine. Among the goals and objectives they have proposed to add on to the original ones were to “invite a dignitary from Cambodia” to participate in the annual Cambodian New Year Cultural parade, which will be held on Sunday, April 6, 2008. However, since the issue of the “invitation” appeared to be somewhat sleight-of-hand and surreptitiously undertaken by the few so-called community organization leaders, it would defeat the whole purpose of our solidarity and damn our democratic principles. The issue of “inviting” a high-ranking Phnom Penh government official was clearly the focal point of our argument, and if the proposed issue were allowed to stand, it would surely prove foreseeable future detrimental.

Despite the relentless pursuit for dialogue made by concerned individuals and groups of Cambodian and Cambodian-American people from our community, to clarify the invitation issue, it is encouraging to hear from Mr. Peter Long, Cam-CC. Mr. Long issued a public statement, which he had claimed to have “misunderstanding” among the few so-called community organization leaders. The Cam-CC had been informed that “Deputy Prime Minister Sok An will not attend the annual Cambodian New Year Cultural parade,” he added. Although the public statement was not scrupulously stated, nor was intended as “public apology” for having caused such an upheaval in the community, it has significantly calmed our Cambodian and Cambodian-American people in the community. I had hoped that the recent controversial issue could always be rectified. I would personally like to commend Mr. Long for his fervently taking the actions to reassure the public with the limited information he had to offer. I am quite confident that Mr. Long’s gestures were meant to reach out and try to cement the relationship among the Cambodian and Cambodian-American people in our community and as well as the Cambodian people overseas.

The law required that business corporations and organizations should always have stipulated their internal policies and procedures on how to appropriately conduct their business with the public. For instance, one of the rules would be a disciplinary action, which it adhered to would specifically state the procedures and rules on how to handle the member/employee(s) who has violated that rules. Frankly, I would like to make a fair generalize statement that the public would like to leave this action in the hands of the community organization leaders and their members to decide what would be appropriate action to take for the few individuals who were identified within the organizations that had made this monumental and inexcusable mistake.

On the other hand, I would hope that the community leaders and the organizations would process this and take the issue raised by our Cambodian and Cambodian-American people in the community as an educational learning opportunity. I wish that the community organizations, the Cambodian and Cambodian-American people in the community, and as well as, the Cambodian people overseas would come to the conclusion that “it is always best to make room for improvements.”

While we are trying to put this matter in the rear mirror, let’s hope that in the future the organizations and community leaders would pay more heed to the community, focus more on responsibility, accountability, and be more transparency about the hair-splitting public matters, which would help prevent from causing friction and misunderstanding among the people in our community. The public has given a voice and that voice has indeed needed to be honored.

The importance of civility, reminding us of the difficulty of the tasks, and saying that we ought not to be surprised that we were struggling and that these struggles reflected our seriousness, and that nothing less than an open and honest discussion of issues was suitable to the tasks we faced. It has been historically proven that when people pull together and roll up their sleeves to work together on a particular issue, they can achieve anything. Together, I believe we can!

I wanted to take this window of opportunity to thank all the Cambodian community organizations, leaders, and their members for their commitment, diligent, and meticulous work for the New Year Celebration. Through their work, I am confident that the New Year Celebration will be a success. I would also like to offer my sincerely acknowledgement and thank the individual concerned citizens (you know who you are), the associations, and the concerned citizens as a whole for being the eyes and ears of the community. Lastly, I would also like to extend my deep appreciation and gratitude to the Cambodian and Cambodian-American people living in our community, and as well as, the Cambodian people overseas for their courage in standing up for what they believe is just, and for added their voices of encouragement and support.

For this New Year Celebration, wherever you are, I wish each and every one of you a shower of good health, happiness, prosperity, and a Happy New Year! May this New Year and the years a head of you be much brighter than you could possibly guess! Happy New Year!

Thank you.

Justin C. Sok
April 02, 2008

Wednesday, April 02, 2008

Public Notice for Protest Against Sok An in Long Beach, California

Click on the text in Khmer to zoom in

Translated from Khmer by Socheata


Notice for
Protest Against Sok An


In the event that Sok An shows up his face at the ribbon cutting to inaugurate Cambodia Town and participates in the Cambodian New Year Parade which will take place on 06 April 2008, I have the honor to inform our beloved compatriots that, on Monday 31 March 2008, the Long Beach Department of Parks, Recreation and Marine had already issued us an authorization to hold our protest.

There will be two locations where the protestors can gather:
  1. Along the sidewalk in front of the Monorom Restaurant, and
  2. At the corner of Walnut Street and Anaheim Street where there is an empty lot.
Paper banners not attached to any pole which could be used as a weapon are allowed, however, loud speakers, weapons (including eggs, tomatoes, rocks), alcoholic beverages, etc… are not allowed. Similarly the use of racist and sexist language is prohibited. The protest will be non-violent.

To the contrary, if Sok An is not present during this occasion, our compatriots will have the opportunity to enjoy themselves during the ribbon cutting ceremony inaugurating Cambodia Town or during the Cambodian New Year Parade.

Thank you,

Ly Diep
31 March 2008