Letter from Abroad: Struggling Life <http://www.sophanseng.info/?p=357>

<http://www.sophanseng.info/wp-content/uploads/2010/03/Issue-12.jpg><http://www.sophanseng.info/wp-content/uploads/2010/03/Issue-12_.jpg>
 Wednesday, 24 March 2010 15:00 Sophan Seng

[image: LFA]It’s February in Canada and the temperature is below the
freezing point. The people are shaking in the cold, harsh winter wind and
the ground is entirely covered by a thick layer of white ice. Pheak Kdey,
who is 30-years-old, drives his BMW through the blistering cold every day to
work at his gas station. But today, he is taking time to join a meeting with
other ethnic Cambodians to discuss their action plan for 2010.

The six-strong Khmer Youth Association of Alberta has contributed
substantially to its community since it was founded in 1994 in Calgary, a
sprawling city in western Canada. Pheak Kdey, who migrated from a border
camp in 1983 during the civil war in Cambodia, was raised and educated here,
and now runs a family business.

Pheak Kdey is one of many young Cambodians who have grown up in a foreign
country, and he said that this hasn’t always been easy. “My parents had a
difficult time adapting to a new life in an unfamiliar culture, surrounded
by people speaking a foreign language,” he said. “But I enjoyed making new
friends at school, and I became a coordinator between my parents and other
people in our community.” After graduating from high school, Pheak Kdey
began working at a gas station and seven years later, he was the station’s
owner.

“You must build clear goals, have an applicable action plan and have
persistence to reach your destination,” he said. “I have started from
scratch to run my family business while competing with the local people who
have better resources than us,” he said. In the future, Pheak Kdey plans to
improve and expand his station as much as possible.

In addition to his responsibilities to himself and his family, Pheak Kdey
has participated with community enhancement groups to encourage other youths
to envision their life far beyond the comfort of their homes. Under its
action plan, the Khmer Youth Association intends to achieve goals such as
increasing environmental sustainability by collecting bottles to recycle,
helping to shovel snow, raking the leaves, trimming the grass for community
facilities, gathering youths for picnics and camping, and helping to
organise other annual community events.

Take Pheak Kdey as an example – dedication is the key to success, regardless
of what country you are in. I ask all youths to utilise their potential in
encouraging their family, community and nation to come together for the
collective well-being.

Original source of this article: the Phnom Penh
Post<http://www.phnompenhpost.com/index.php/2010032434152/LIFT/letters-from-abroad.html>

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