CIVIL RESISTANCE


My TREASON & INCITEMENT MASS TRIAL (Initial Page on Trial Matters)     TUESDAY, 14 JUNE 2022 VERDICT ANNOUNCEMENT Court Statement: Concluding Remarks ការការពារ ផ្លូវច្បាប់ របស់ខ្ញុំ  [ ... ]


CIVIC EDUCATION


សាលា ចំណេះដឹង មូលដ្ឋាន Basic Knowledge Academy     សេចក្តីផ្តើម, ទិដ្ឋភាពទូទៅ INTRODUCTION / OVERVIEW   គ្រូបង្រៀន៖ លោកស្រី  [ ... ]



Mozart's The Magic Flute

Cambodianized, Asianized version of this much-loved opera

Chaktomuk Theatre, 10 March 2018

 

Lauk Pou Son Soubert, Theary, Nekmieng Savai, Prince Tesso Sisowath

 

 

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The Buddhist Institute

Phnom Penh, 9 March 2018

 

Commas! First published in 1933.

First published in 1934

First published in 1938

 

 

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Theary C. Seng, 11 January 2012


Chaktomuk Theatre, Phnom Penh, January 2010


January 7 is indeed a significant day for survivors of the Khmer Rouge. It arrested the macabre convulsions that would have swallowed all of us into a hellish hole if the Vietnamese military had not intervened.


It is a bittersweet day of commemoration through invasion.


And now, unfortunately, it is a day propagandised to be solely the Day of Liberation, neatly sweeping away the equally important fact of it being simultaneously the inaugurating day of an occupation that would last for the next decade.


That occupation began with the barricading of Phnom Penh to facilitate the plundering of its wealth by convoys of trucks heading to Vietnam and the mass crimes of the K5 plan.


My hairdresser remembers returning from Battambang to his home in Boeung Keng Kang I on February 3, 1979, only to find that all the wealthy neighbourhoods of villas and jewellery stores were still barricaded off.


It was an occupation cut short only by the meltdown of the Cold War – specifically, the break-up of the Soviet Union, which funded the Vietnamese occupation of Cambodia.


The rewriting of history in this manner by the current regime is fraught with danger for the longevity of Cambodian stability and peace.


Cycles of past grievances that touch on national identity and humiliation run deep in any society, and no less in Cambodia. Think of the Khmer Kampuchea Kroms and their current suffering and struggles. Think of the underpinnings for the bloodletting in the former Yugoslavia.


It’s not only on January 7 that the regime is revising history to fit its narrow political agenda. The political interference in the Khmer Rouge tribunal speaks to the same dangers.


This regime never wanted the KRT, but once it was inevitable and the regime was confident of its control over the mechanisms of the process, it did everything to achieve and protect its twin goals: to go down in history as the government that put the Khmer Rouge on trial and, concurrently, to erase its own Khmer Rouge history and crimes. With the United Nations’ stamp of approval, the CPP regime is achieving exactly that.


No counterbalancing, competing narratives are permitted or have the resources and official, institutional dissemination systems to match it.


Thus, January 7 is paradoxical for Cambodians who are simultaneously survivors of the Khmer Rouge, survivors of the K5 plan under the Vietnamese occupation, and continuing survivors of a regime that desperately needs to whitewash its history of the Khmer Rouge and has indebted political ties to Vietnam – a dangerous liaison, in light of the two countries’ historical enmity over territorial annexation.


Stated differently, January 7 is a paradoxical and conflicting date for us who are Cambodian victims of the Khmer Rouge, Cambodian victims of the Vietnamese occupation and Cambodian victims of a regime with unhealthy political and historical ties to both the Khmer Rouge and the Vietnamese military.


January 7 initially made us deliriously grateful, then wearily suspicious. That is the tension.


Theary C. Seng

Founding President

CIVICUS: Center for Cambodian Civic Education




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Theary in Phnom Penh, 31 Dec. 2017

 

Turning 47

Until the end of college, I celebrated my documentary birthday of 10 November 1973.

 

However, it is not my biological birth date as that is unknown although I have guesstimated it to be around Dec. 1970 / Jan. 1971 from my research for my memoir.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Kampot Vegetable Sellers

 

December 2017

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Theary, 8 Dec. 2017

 

ASEAN economic integration. How does that work in light of:


Phnom Penh salon in relatively expensive neighborhood, clean, air-conditioned: 2 hours of meticulous care: - in shampooing my hair - massaging my head, shoulders - applying conditioner from South Korea (medium range quality product) on my long washed hair - running the steaming machine over my conditioned head for half an hour - blow drying layer by layer by layer the richly conditioned hair


ALL FOR $10. (In certain ASEAN neighborhoods, the price of a cup of holiday Starbucks coffee. You can't even buy a local Singaporean beer for $10 at a Changi Airport pub; to my surprise, $18.)


With a complimentary freebie of quick hair trim and eyeliner application.




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New members to KramaNation

 

Institut national des hautes études de la sécurité et de la justice, France. 13 Dec. 2015

Viseth Lbk

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Not-so-new members...

 


praCh Ly and Rithy Panh, New York, 15 Dec. 2017

 

 

Theary with The Financial Times at Russei Dom former prison, Svay Rieng, April 2015

 

Under the belly of an elephant with nekbong Thida Budh (does she resemble any famous Cambodian rock star you know?!)

Museum Cafe, Feb. 2018

 

Veal Main, Feb. 2018

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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I have changed the Profile name of my second Facebook account (formerly Theary Chan Seng) to Khmer.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Theary's BLOG

Published Articles of Vietnamization

Vietnamization: Military Occupation - Present
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 Francois Ponchaud, a French Jesuit who had diligently chronicled the destructiveness of the Khmer Rouge in his book "Cambodia: Year Zero," maintained that the Vietnamese were conducting a [ ... ]


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