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From: Khemara Jati <[email protected]>




 


News From Cambodia/Nouvelles Du Cambodge
Khemara Jati
Montréal, Québec
 
SOLIDARITY BETWEEN CAMBODIAN IS AN IMPORTANT STEP TOWARDS THE NATIONAL 
SOLIDARITY
 
We publish below an initiative which is an important step towards the national 
solidarity’s development. Khemara Jati, readers and friends fully support this 
call and wish the realization of this appeal by the solidarity among our 
countrymen of all kinds : mutual aid in everyday life, group organization for 
poor and especially aid to the development of national language teaching in 
primary classes as well as in universities, aid to farmers in difficult times, 
reviving the system of “pravas daiy” for assistance at harvest, for example. We 
hope that this appeal is followed by the collective enthusiasm among our 
countrymen where ever they are in order to change our mentality towards our 
compatriots, of the indifference, distrust, sympathy, understanding, mutual 
assistance, to solidify the economic solidarity by “buying Cambodian” and 
preferably using the skills of our compatriots in all fields.
 
La solidarité entre Cambodgiens 
est un important pas vers la solidarité nationale

Nous diffusons ci-dessous une initiative qui est un pas important vers le 
développement de la solidarité nationale. Khemara Jati, ses lecteurs et ses 
amis soutiennent totalement cet appel et souhaitent la concrétisation de cet 
appel par la solidarité entre nos compatriotes en tout genre : entraide dans la 
vie de tous les jours, organisation des groupes d'aides aux plus démunis et 
surtout d'aides au développement de l'enseignement de la langue nationale des 
classes primaires aux universités, d'aides dans les travaux des champs dans des 
moments difficiles, faire revivre le système de "pravas daiy" d'entraide lors 
de la moisson par exemple. Nous souhaitons que cet appel soit suivi 
l'enthousiasme collective chez nos compatriotes où qu'ils se trouvent, pour 
changer notre mentalité envers nos compatriotes, de l'indifférence, de la 
méfiance, à sympathie, à la compréhension, à l'entraide, à la solidarité 
économique en achetant "cambodgiens" et en utilisant de préférence les 
compétences de nos compatriotes en tout.








 


CAMBODIA: Key role for universities in healing society



Vicheth Sen*
20 June 2010 
Issue: 129 







Universities need to move beyond their traditional roles of teaching, learning 
and research towards another core function - linking campuses to communities. 
They can play a key role in organizing programmes in which students have the 
opportunity to be engaged in civic activities. This is particularly important 
in countries like Cambodia, which have been damaged by severe societal 
breakdowns in the past.

The erosion of trust in Cambodia - both interpersonal and institutional - 
caused by the Khmer Rouge regime, has weakened people's ability to work 
together for a common goal. It has crippled Cambodia's ability to recover from 
the devastation caused by prolonged civil conflicts. The Khmer Rouge regime 
left a psychological legacy - in this case, trauma - which has yet to be 
treated or healed.

As someone born after the collapse of the Khmer Rouge regime in 1979, I believe 
that many young Cambodians have been affected by their parents' bad 
experiences. This trauma has become inter-generational.

Although young Cambodians' experiences are not as bad as those of their 
parents, parents' traumatic experiences of the genocidal regime and the chronic 
civil wars have been passed on to their children through the ways they were 
brought up. 

The bad experiences affected the ways people viewed the world around them and 
how they related to other people. The erosion of trust continues into present 
Cambodian society.

It is noticeable that the ability to work together among (young) Cambodians 
tends to be limited to within families and small intimate groups of close 
friends. People don't seem to have enough confidence to extend cooperation 
beyond close networks, which really affects their ability to work together as 
well as the productivity of their work.

Promoting civic engagement at universities allows students to interact with one 
another beyond their small groups, to communicate with one another, to work 
together to achieve a common purpose, and to learn about one another, which 
leads to a better understanding of each other.

This process is critical for confidence and trust building, which is the first 
step to encouraging people to work together productively. 

However, because of limited budget and lack of understanding of the importance 
of civic engagement, most Cambodian universities focus only on their 
traditional roles of teaching, learning and research. 

Although some students mention having been involved in community service or 
volunteerism, the primary reason they stated was egoistic rather than 
altruistic, self-centered rather than compassionate. For instance, the most 
cited reason for doing community service or volunteerism was to gain some 
experience so that it was easier to secure a job in future.

I believe being civically engaged means learning to give back to the community, 
to help one another, to share, to take responsibilities, to understand the 
working and systems of the government and the processes of choosing a leader, 
and learning to be a good leader, to be accountable and to understand the 
principles and practices of democracy, to mention a few.

In this sense, civic engagement at university makes young people build or 
connect the missing link between the academic world and the real world. Civic 
engagement makes the students understand the importance of being civically 
engaged because of the benefits they will gain by doing so.

It also helps them to learn to trust fellow Cambodians through working together 
and helping those in need of support. At the same time, they learn to be good 
citizens and good leaders. 

What's also important is that civic education programmes help students to 
understand the importance of their role in a democratic country. This is vital 
not only in the present but also in the future. I believe that a healthy 
democratic country has a huge population with high levels of civic mindedness 
and engagement.

For this reason, in this critical stage of democratizing Cambodia, it is 
important to promote civic engagement among young Cambodians. This will provide 
a good opportunity for them not only to be well prepared for future careers but 
also to contribute to a healthy democracy in this newly democratized country.

* Vicheth Sen, a lecturer at the Royal Phnom Penh University, is the author of 
Higher Education and Civic Engagement In Cambodia: A Case Study at the Royal 
University of Phnom Penh. 

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