---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Gaffar Peang-Meth <[email protected]>
Date: Tue, Aug 17, 2010 at 11:03 AM
Subject: How to deal with misunderstandings
To:


*PACIFIC DAILY NEWS
*August 18, 2010

*How to deal with misunderstandings
*
By A. Gaffar Peang-Meth

Chinese Taoist philosopher Lao Tzu said, "To realize that you do not
understand
is a virtue; Not to realize that you do not understand is a defect."

To understand is to comprehend, to grasp the significance or the meaning of
something intended or expressed by another. It requires an ability to
imagine,
relate, compare, identify, interpret and analyze the thinking of another.

An amusing remark attributed to Robert McCloskey of the U.S. State
Department is
relevant: "I know that you believe you understand what you think I said, but
I'm
not sure you realize that what you heard is not what I meant."

Everyone of us has misunderstood the intended meaning expressed by another
-- 
who may not have expressed themselves well. Whatever causes it,
misunderstanding
creates friction, ends friendships, alienates people.

Lord knows, I have experienced both ends of misunderstanding. Thankfully
there's
usually less trouble when it is I who misunderstood! In my Asian culture, I
was
taught the adage "Silence is golden." I smiled to read Abraham Lincoln's
advice,
"Better to remain silent and be thought a fool than to speak out and remove
all
doubt."

But it was my parents' upbringing of me that spared me much trouble when I
misunderstood others. My mother, with an elementary school education, made
sure
I knew that humans argue and don't always accept each other's views; that I
must
learn to listen more than to speak, as maturity takes time. And my father,
with
a high school education, taught me only when different minds meet through
humbly
talking, listening and thinking does one's true vision emerge.

They both advised that I roll my tongue seven times before I speak; if I
itched
to argue, I should go eat a green sappy banana, which should spare me from
fighting.

Both my parents died in 1975, when Pol Pot took over Cambodia. My mother
passed
away in my sister's arms . She could no longer endure the lack of food and
demanding hard labor. My father was pulled away from the house and executed
on
the day Pol Pot's soldiers evacuated Phnom Penh city.

But their teachings have remained with me.

On the other hand, while I have learned enough how not to be unhappy and
hurt as
one who is sometimes misunderstood, I have found misunderstanding by others
unnerving. Sometimes a failure to understand can be a symptom of ignorance
or of
a moral certainty of one's own view that is not supported by informed
critical
thinking. Such a tunnel view is not dissimilar to Pol Pot's uncompromising
concept of what was "correct" thinking.

So, one misunderstands. Then one labels and brands. What follows is a
categorization of the "we" and "they" groups and all that that entails.

Someone "anonymous" labeled me a Khmer "republican diehard" because of my
criticism of Chief of State Norodom Sihanouk's foreign policy that resulted
in
3,500 square kilometers of Khmer soil being occupied by Vietnamese Communist

troops, who used the occupied land as a springboard for attacks against the
Americans and their allies. As a result, the Vietnam War spilled into
Cambodia,
Pol Pot gained Sihanouk's support and succeeded in overturning the Khmer
Republic, all of which was a prelude to Vietnam's invasion and occupation of

Cambodia.

As a U.S.-trained political scientist, I studied U.S. history and learned
from
the U.S. forefathers' philosophies. It was from this foundation that I have
embraced democracy, republican values and the rule of law. None of these are

what Lon Nol's Khmer Republic experienced as it was thrown into the hell and

fire of war.

I have no apologies for backing the people who opposed Vietnamese occupation
of
Khmer soil; nor any for joining the Non-Communist Resistance (1980-1989) to
act
against Vietnamese troops that installed a puppet regime in Cambodia and
that
controlled the country from 1979-1989.

My ideas of democracy, republican values and rule of law have never wavered.

Yet I served without complaint when Prince Sihanouk was president of the
coalition that fought Vietnamese occupiers, and I served with Prince
Sihanouk's
son, Prince Ranariddh, in the joint military command, fighting the
Vietnamese
occupiers. My homeland's sovereignty and territorial integrity are
non-negotiable.

When Khmer factions and their foreign backers spoke of "national
reconciliation," I left the resistance for an academic career.

I continued my friendships with people I knew in the royalist movement, and
people who worked with me in the resistance but who are now with the new
regime,
for one reason or another, and I debate only on public policies -- not on
personalities.

I like what India's great political and spiritual leader, Mahatma Gandhi,
said:
"I look only to the good qualities of men. Not being faultless myself, I
won't
presume to probe into the faults of others."

I am not a Buddhist, but Buddha's words I cherish: "You should respect each
other and refrain from disputes; you should not, like water and oil, repel
each
other, but should, like milk and water, mingle together."

And his other words: "Let us rise up and be thankful, for if we didn't learn
a
lot today, at least we learned a little, and if we didn't learn a little, at

least we didn't get sick, and if we got sick, at least we didn't die; so let
us
all be thankful."

Humility keeps our arrogance in check, and our understanding and
misunderstanding in perspective.

A. Gaffar Peang-Meth, Ph.D., is retired from the University of Guam, where
he
taught political science for 13 years. Write him at [email protected].

http://www.guampdn.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/201008180300/OPINION02/8180325






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