May the soul of Prof Keng Vannsak rest in Peace with Father God.

PEACE ON EARTH 
Thursday, December 25, 2008

King Hoc Dy's eulogy for the late Prof. Keng Vannsak 



Late Prof. Keng Vannsak (Photo: RFA)Eulogy by King Hoc DyFormer student of 
Prof. Keng Vannsak
My deepest respect to you, ladies and gentlemen, brothers, sisters, relatives 
and friends who have come to attend [this funeral] today.All of us would like 
to express our sympathy to the deceased's family. Professor Keng Vannsak passed 
away on Thursday, December 18, leaving behind grieving family members, 
relatives, friends.On behalf of the deceased's old students, friends and 
myself, I would like to present the biography and some activities of Professor 
Keng Vannsak, who contributed to the Cambodian community and the Cambodian 
nation in the arts, culture and research on Khmer civilization in Cambodia and 
in France.He was born on Sept 19,1925, in Kompong Boeng village, Kompong Leng 
district, Kompong Chhnang province. His father was Keng Siphan and his mother 
Cheas Hon. After obtaining a second-level baccalaureate in philosophy in 1946, 
he went to continue his studies in France. While studying, he worked as a 
Khmer-language teaching assistant at the Ecole Nationale des Langues orientates 
vivantes [or national school of modern Eastern languages] in Paris during the 
school year 1947 to 1948 and 1951 to 1952. And during that same period, he 
taught Khmer language at the School of Oriental and African Studies, London 
University, during the school year 1948 to l950. He graduated with [a degree 
equivalent to a masters] in philosophy at the Faculty of Literature and Human 
Sciences in Paris in 1951. His wife, Suzanne Colleville, passed away in 2003 
and he married Mrs Sivorn on Saturday, 26 May 2008.After inventing the 
Khmer-script keyboard for typewriter in 1952, he returned to Cambodia and held 
the position of professor at Sisowath High School in Phnom Penh from 1952 to 
1958.He was a leader of the "Democratic Party" during the 1955 general election 
following the 1954 treaty of Geneva. He was openly against the throne [as the 
country's political system], and especially and directly opposed Samdech 
Norodom Sihanouk, founder of the Sangkum Reastr Niyum party.After the failure 
of the Democratic Party, the government arrested and imprisoned Mr Keng Vannsak 
from September 13 to October 10 1955. After his release from prison, he 
published poems he had written while he was in jail.Those poems had a very 
strong influence on Khmer writers at the time. In 1958, he was appointed 
director of the commission charged with editing a Khmer literature manual for 
high schools.From 1958 to 1962, he served as the dean of the Faculty of 
Literature and Human Sciences and the director of the National Institute of 
Pedagogy [1958 to I960]. He also taught Khmer literature, culture and 
civilization at the Faculty of literature and Human Sciences and at the 
Buddhist Institute in Phnom Penh until 1968. In mid-1968, the government 
stopped him from teaching and ordered [government] agents to watch his house, 
accusing him of inciting students to take action against the government at the 
time.Moreover, the authorities searched his house and found books of Karl Marx 
and Mao Tse-Tung and magazines from China…in his personal library, which 
prompted the Ministry of [National] Security to arrest and detain him at the 
Royal Police Academy with Sou Nem and Phuong Ton, accusing them of being 
communists and of inciting students and people to oppose the Royal Government 
of the Sangkum Reastr Niyum party.After the 1970 political event waged by 
General Lon Nol, Cambodia became the Khmer Republic, and the new government 
rehabilitated him [Keng Vannsak], established the Khmer-Mon Institute, and 
appointed him as its head with the goal of promoting Khmer-Mon culture in order 
to make Khmer citizens proud of being Khmer and reunite all Khmer around this 
cultural inheritance serving as a weapon capable of opposing Vietnamese 
communist imperialism.Keng Vannsak wrote a thesis submitted to the Sorbonne 
university [in Paris] in 1971 entitled "Recherche d'un fond culturel Khmer 
[research on Khmer cultural inventory].”Professor Keng Vannsak is a rare 
intellectual who had a long-term, universal vision and concept of our Khmer 
culture and civilization. He influenced Khmer literature teachers for 
generations in Cambodia. He later was appointed deputy representative of 
Cambodia's permanent delegation to Unesco [UN Educational, Scientific and 
Educational Organization] in Paris in 1971, and held the position of charge 
d'affaires of the Khmer Republic in France from October 1974 to April 1975.He 
lived in Montmorency on the outskirts of Paris until he died. He wrote two 
plays, poems and studies....This great teacher had a far-reaching influence on 
Khmer-language students and teachers across the country.Mrs Sivorn, family 
members and relatives: We, his old-time students, friends and I would like to 
offer you our condolence and wish the soul of Professor Keng Vannsak to remain 
at peace. We all would like to pay our respect to Keng Vannsak for the very 
last time.












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