Eh! I graduated from the university of Khmer Rouge.
I spent my four years in hell with hard work. I was rewarded at the
end.
Thank you UKR (University of Khmer Rouge)

On Jan 23, 2:07 am, rattanakiri <[email protected]> wrote:
> International housing provide more privacy and isolation than freshmen
> dorms.   Students may live under the same roof but they have their
> private room.  You should not accuse people of wrong doing because your
> prejudice against this person.  If you are truly a Buddhist, you never
> let your prejudice, hatred of this person cloud your judgment
>
>
>
> Heng Sombat wrote:
> > Rattanaki must went to the same school as this so called "phony monk"
> > or the same person? His statement seem to be off track from buddhism
> > just like SS.  Dorm is dorm, off campus apartment is different.
>
> > Rattanki name is nick name, right??  I wonder who is this mask man?    
>
> > So off the wall of thinking processs!
>
> > On Jan 22, 2010, at 12:57 PM, thisbugone <[email protected]
> > <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
>
> >> Off campus housing is not the same as the dorm.  What kind of pills
> >> are you taking while writing the email below?  If one chose to be a
> >> monk one must follows by its religion.
>
> >> On Thu, Jan 21, 2010 at 8:55 PM, rattanakiri <[email protected]
> >> <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
>
> >>      I went to college once. I know these co-ed international student
> >>     dorms are like an apartment building. Everyone has his or her own
> >>     room. This is far from what you have implied. Even if he decided
> >>     to live off campus, it is the same setting. Each apartment
> >>     complex is going to females and males residence. Where do you
> >>     think he should stay? Freshmen dorm?
>
> >>     Heng Sombat wrote:
>
> >>         Hey Rattankiri,
>
> >>         You miss the whole picture here.   Monks are subjected to be
> >>         a pure person
> >>         that we all respect and trust during his period of serving
> >>         his monkship
> >>         regardless young or old.  If you claim that it is fine for a
> >>         monk to live in
> >>         the same dorm with female(s), I must say that you have lost
> >>         track and you do
> >>         not have any believes in Buddhism.  Or you are pretending to
> >>         be Buddhism. Or
> >>         you are an idiot just like what "thisbugone" said.  Please
> >>         check with your
> >>         parents about Buddhism before you response.
>
> >>         Sombat
>
> >>         -----Original Message-----
> >>         From: [email protected]
> >>         <mailto:[email protected]>
> >>         [mailto:[email protected]
> >>         <mailto:[email protected]>] On Behalf
> >>         Of thisbugone
> >>         Sent: Saturday, January 16, 2010 11:23 AM
> >>         To: [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>
> >>         Subject: Re: My Letter to the Phnom Penh Post
>
> >>         Monk and women can stay together lol. You must be an idiot!
>
> >>         On Saturday, January 16, 2010, rattanakiri
> >>         <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
>
> >>             Some people may not realize it but speak ill of someone
> >>             including making a
>
> >>         harsh and quick judgement unfairly on someone is unbecoming a
> >>         buddisht.  Remember, Buddha teaching speak rightly only.
>
> >>             In a poor country like Cambodia, monastery life is a way
> >>             out of poverty
>
> >>         and a chance for a proper education.  In fact, many
> >>         celebrated Khmer leaders
> >>         and scholars owed their career to their days in as a monk.  I
> >>         think not any
> >>         Cambodians would  be shocked if a monk rejoins his civilian
> >>         life. Cambodian
> >>         buddhists offer money, food to monks in order to receive good
> >>         karma,
> >>         blessing.  Should the monks refund the money, foods back if
> >>         he returns to
> >>         civilian life.  Would you expect the monk perform a return of
> >>         good karma,
> >>         blessing back to heaven from those people?  Give me a break.
>
> >>             Savouth Chea wrote:
>
> >>             Aloha,
>
> >>             As a resident of Hawaii, which Sophan Seng claims he
> >>             represents, I wanted
>
> >>         to share my observations, thoughts, and also questions about
> >>         his motives.
> >>          Unfortunately, I didn't like what I saw of him, and I only
> >>         foresee further
> >>         disruption.
>
> >>             Sophan Seng came to Hawaii to further his education back
> >>             in 2006.  The
>
> >>         first time he set foot in Hawaii, I introduced him to some
> >>         Cambodian
> >>         community members since he was a Khmer new  to the island.
> >>          Some knew his
> >>         background from the past and had their opinions (good but
> >>         mostly bad), but I
> >>         tried not to take people's word for it.  As months
> >>         progressed, however, I
> >>         came to see that the warnings I had heard were true.  First,
> >>         he used the
> >>         Buddhist religion to advance himself rather than becoming a
> >>         monk selflessly
> >>         in dedication to Buddha.  How do I know this?  While
> >>         attending the
> >>         University of Hawaii, he lived in a co-educational dormitory.
> >>          One may think
> >>         this is not a big deal nowadays, but should a monk put
> >>         himself in the
> >>         company and living quarters of females?  Is this appropriate?
> >>           He often
> >>         flirted with young female members of our community and made
> >>         inappropriate
> >>         comments - causing some of our youth and their parents to
> >>         become very upset!
> >>          He was affiliated with a so-called temple in Hawaii, and
> >>         performed
> >>         Buddhist ceremonies.  That was reasonable because he was a
> >>         monk, right?  But
> >>         in 2009, he visited Cambodia from Hawaii, ostensibly still a
> >>         monk, but came
> >>         back to the United States only a couple of months later with
> >>         a wife!  Prior
> >>         to his trip back to Cambodia, he told members of the
> >>         community in Hawaii
> >>         that he was going there to represent and gain support for the
> >>         temple and the
> >>         Buddhist religion.  The temple committee gave him $400, and
> >>         some
> >>         individual people also gave him money, since he was a monk
> >>         and/or student.
> >>          Poor him, right?  When  he came back with a wife, people
> >>         were shocked.  Did
> >>         he care?  Apparently not.  He did not attempt to explain
> >>         himself nor
> >>         apologize for using the monies to go back to Cambodia to get
> >>         married.  No,
> >>         he used religion for personal gain.  Sad but true.
>
> >>             To people that do not know him, Sophan Seng represents
> >>             himself as a
>
> >>         community facilitator.  To be a facilitator, ideally one
> >>         has to be
> >>         neutral, or at least try to maintain neutrality.  Instead,
> >>          he openly
> >>         expresses his opinion about Cambodian politics.  In fact,
> >>         even as a monk,
> >>         whose studies are supposed to focus on learning and
> >>         internalizing Buddhist
> >>         principles and the path to peace, he chose to pursue a degree
> >>         in /political
> >>         science/.   Most if not all of the articles he has written to
> >>         the Phnom Penh
> >>         Post (PPP) discuss politics.  At the close of each of his
> >>         articles, he
> >>         signed "Sophan Seng, University Hawaii at Manoa, United
> >>         States," or
> >>         "Cambodian Students of Aloha" (the University's student
> >>         organization).   This might indicate that his opinions echo
> >>         those of other Khmer at the
> >>         University of Hawaii.  They do not.   Again, he is not
> >>         representing the
> >>         university, Khmer in Hawaii, or the United States of America.
> >>          He used these
> >>         closures to make himself look good with outside parties.  Not
> >>         all Khmer in
> >>         Hawaii (or elsewhere in the United States) agree with him.
>
> >>             In his previous correspondence, Sophan stated, If you
> >>             want to know me
>
> >>         more, go to these links.  The links he provided,
> >>        http://www2.hawaii.edu/~csaloha/officers.html
> >>         <http://www2.hawaii.edu/%7Ecsaloha/officers.html>
> >>         <http://www2.hawaii.edu/%7Ecsaloha/officers.html> and
> >>        http://www2.hawaii.edu/~sophan/
> >>         <http://www2.hawaii.edu/%7Esophan/>
> >>         <http://www2.hawaii.edu/%7Esophan/>, are
> >>         links that were self-created  -- using the university-
> >>         related resources
> >>         (originally created for the use of the student group as a
> >>         whole) for
> >>         personal gain, again.  Was the information he put on the site
> >>          approved by
> >>         the majority of the students in the organization?  Has anyone
> >>         else
> >>         affiliated with the CSAloha used this site for personal
> >>         boasting?  No.  Not
> >>         even the founders, myself or Mr. Chanthoeun To, ever
> >>         considered using this
> >>         site to toot our own horns.  The purpose of CSAloha, does
> >>         not represent
> >>         any political or religious ideologies both on/off campus.
> >>          Yet he used the
> >>         university-based name/group to send articles about politics
> >>         to PPP and other
> >>         media.  Like Mr. Heng Sombat mentioned in his email, He just
> >>         wanted his
> >>         name to be read in Phnom Penh Post.
>
> >>             Most of the articles he wrote to the PPP from Hawaii
> >>             attacked the current
>
> >>         Cambodian government and sided with opposition political
> >>         parties.  Hmmm . .
>
> ...
>
> read more »- Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -

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