---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Gaffar Peang-Meth <[email protected]>
Date: Tue, Sep 21, 2010 at 10:48 AM
Subject: Effect of teachers is long lasting
To:


*PACIFIC DAILY NEWS
*September 22, 2010

*Effect of teachers is long lasting
*
By A. Gaffar Peang-Meth

I was born and raised more than half century ago in the poor Southeast Asian

kingdom of Cambodia.

When my parents' financial fortunes took a sharp dive and the family had to
split up temporarily to survive, I lived on my own in an empty house, owned
a
pair of shorts and two shirts -- the second sewn by my older sister. I
walked to
school barefoot. I cooked rice on a three-legged, baked-mud stove using
firewood, and I was scared of the dark. My circumstances had greatly changed

from the days when I was driven to a private kindergarten in a black
Citroen,
attended by some helpers.

*'Teacher affects eternity'*
**

I grew up at a time of national insecurity fomented by the Khmer Issarak,
the
Vietminh, and increasing anti-French colonialist activities. I have written
about my elementary school teacher at Russeykeo, a young "progressive" chap
whose words greatly affected me. In a leaky, thatched-roof classroom, he
untiringly pounded into kids' heads that we are humans, and each of us has
"one
kilo of brain" that is as good as any other brain, and that "we" are
responsible
for our future and the country's fate. It was us -- kids in the classroom --
who
will or will not make future change happen.

"Bah!" I remember the thought I had then, as I looked around at some of my
classmates: clowns, bullies, pants-wetters ... an assembly of the future?

Fast forward. At one time it was unthinkable that I would study abroad.
Thanks
to a high school exchange program, I graduated from Chagrin Falls High
School in
Ohio in 1962, returned to Cambodia as required by the exchange program, and
came
back to Ohio to begin my freshman year at Hiram College in 1963.

My father wanted me to be an engineer or a medical doctor. I didn't care for

calculus, I hated dissecting animals and could not stand blood, so I majored
in
political science after my academic adviser loaned me some books on the
making
of the United States.

I was a political activist, even in college. In 1970, as a graduate student,
I
supported the group of Cambodians who opposed the Vietnamese occupation of
Khmer
soil as base of operations against the Americans and their allies.

In 1980, I received my Ph.D. degree from the University of Michigan, the
same
year I was naturalized a U.S. citizen. The Cambodian republic experiment
failed
miserably, and with the U.S. pullout from the region, the Khmer Republic
crumbled. Pol Pot took over and more than 2 million died as a result. That
regime was ousted by a Soviet-backed Vietnamese military invasion that
decapitated the Chinese-backed Khmer Rouge in 1979.

In 1980, I joined the nationalist resistance Khmer People's National
Liberation
Front at the Cambodian-Thai border. The Front opposed Vietnam's invasion and

occupation of Cambodia.

I read somewhere that "a teacher affects eternity; he can never tell where
his
influence stops."

*'Living antiquity'*
When I stood before a very attentive introduction to political science class
of
Asians, Pacific islanders and students from the U.S. mainland in 1991 at the

University of Guam to introduce myself with a short background as their
teacher
for the term, an islander rubbed his face and blurted, "Oh, a living
antiquity!"

For the next 13 years, I taught political science at UOG, using my
comparative
analysis training acquired in Ann Arbor, an approach I was fortunate to have

tested when I taught a graduate-undergraduate comparative politics course at

Johns Hopkins in 1990. I used Western and Eastern political philosophies and

theories; I backed them up with my practical experience and real stories
from my
service at the United Nations as a delegate, in diplomacy, in the
resistance, as
I sought to bring philosophies and theories alive. We described, analyzed
and
attempted to forecast what may lie ahead.

As some UOG students wrote in their evaluation of me, one said, "He did not
teach to pass tests, but to think in order to live a life worth living."

*Continue the traditions*

Once one has established oneself as an educator, the act of educating has
become
ingrained in the person, and I don't know if there's a stopping point.

Though I have retired from formal classroom teaching -- the Guam sunsets,
the
three-times-a-day swim at Ypao's salt waters that washed away stresses,
anxieties and built physical strength; the plumerias that brought
unforgettable
fragrance, among others, are a thing of the past. The Pacific Daily News
continues to provide me with an opportunity to write and share.

And so I write to share. I do have my own political and ideological
preferences,
which I propound from time to time. Otherwise I keep them to myself.
Humility is
my value: I respect others' views and ways and I seek to learn from them.

I have disagreed with others, privately or openly, but I do my best to
refrain
from being disagreeable -- some relationships have been hurt, some others
have
continued. Some cannot accept disagreement.

I judge from the number of e-mails I receive, and especially a few with
strong
reactions to my writings from people of both sides of the bench, that my
purpose
in writing to challenge thoughts has borne fruit.

I am grateful there are faithful readers, and those who anticipate my weekly

column. It is freedom that ensures my opportunity to write, and I thank all
media outlets that facilitate my exercise of free expression.

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=/201009220300/OPINION02/9220301

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