A Change of Guard

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Tuesday, 16 November 2010

First Cambodian-born captain of a U.S warship to sail to Cambodia in December

By Khmerization
Source: DAP News

The first Cambodian-born commander of a U.S warship USS Mustin (DDG 89) will sail to Cambodia and dock at Sihanoukville Seaport in December.

Commodore Michael Vannak Khem Misiewicz (pictured) serves as commanding officer of the guided-missile destroy USS Mustin (DDG 89). He was born in rural Cambodia in 1967 with the birth name of Vannak Khem. He was adopted by an American woman working in the U.S Embassy and was evacuated to America in 1973, two years before the Khmer Rouge took over powers in Cambodia. He enrolled in the U.S Navy and became an officer upon graduation in 1992.

He is the first Cambodian-born commander of a U.S destroyer, the Mustin. The Mustin is scheduled to visit Cambodia in December. The visit will mark the first time in 37 years that Misiewicz has returned to the land of his birth. Mustin is forward-deployed to Commander Fleet Activities, Yokosuka, Japan.

Press Releases Fom U.S Embassy

Cambodian-American Destroyer CO to Return to Birth Country after 37 Years

Released in Phnom Penh, November 16, 2010

U.S. Navy Commander Michael Vannak Khem Misiewicz has visited dozens of ports over the course of his career, but none has ever evoked the emotions that will come when his ship USS Mustin visits Cambodia in December, marking the first time in 37 years that he has returned to the land of his birth.

As a young Cambodian boy born and living in the rice fields outside of the capital Phnom Penh in the late 1960’s / early 1970’s, Misiewicz – whose birth name was Vannak Khem -- wasn’t aware of the political tension building up around him. When his country plunged into turmoil, his family reluctantly gave him up for adoption to a young American woman who worked at the U.S. Embassy, allowing him to escape before the Khmer Rouge regime took over the country, eventually causing millions of deaths in what is known as the “Killing Fields.”

“I know it’s going to be very emotional,” said Misiewicz. “I was the lucky one in the family.”

Raised by his adoptive mother, Misiewicz enlisted in the Navy after graduating from high school in Lanark, Illinois. He was selected for the Navy’s Broadened Opportunity for Officer Selection and Training (BOOST) program, and attended the U.S. Naval Academy, where he received his commission in 1992. His service as a Navy Surface Warfare Officer ultimately brought him to command the guided missile destroyer USS Mustin, forward deployed to Yokosuka, Japan.

As commanding officer of the Arleigh Burke-class guided missile destroyer USS Mustin (DDG 89), Misiewicz and the more than 300 Sailors under his charge will conduct community service projects and interact with the Cambodian Navy. USS Mustin’s port call comes on the heels of U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton’s visit earlier this month, and the first-ever Cooperation Afloat Readiness and Training (CARAT) exercise with Cambodia.

“It brings a lot of happiness to see my country – the United States – establishing a positive relationship with the country of my heritage,” Misiewicz said.

“America is truly the land of opportunity,” he said. “It’s the one country on earth where you start from the rice fields of a war-torn country and rise to command a U.S. Navy destroyer. It doesn’t get any better.”

For more than 16 years after moving to the U.S. in 1973, Misiewicz did not know what happened to his family in Cambodia.

“As a child I would cry almost every night, thinking about my family and what had happened to them,” Misiewicz said. “I had no idea at that point in my life whether they had survived the Killing Fields or not.”

“Quite honestly, it was less painful as I got older to not think about it,” he said.

While Misiewicz was pursuing his naval career, he did not know that his surviving Cambodian family had immigrated to the U.S. and was looking for him.

Sponsored by an American family and church, his surviving siblings and birth mother moved to Austin, Texas, in 1984. With the help of a college student, they started researching Misiewicz’s footsteps, and in 1989 they were reunited. But he also learned the devastating news that his father had been executed by the Khmer Rouge in 1977.

Misiewicz says the most emotional part of returning to Cambodia will be reuniting with his living blood relatives, especially an aunt who played a large part in his adoption and an uncle who hoped for a better life for Misiewicz. As a child, Misiewicz was very close to his aunt and often accompanied her at work as a maid for the American woman who later became his adoptive mother.

“My aunt got sick, so some arrangements were made between my adopted mom, my dad and my aunt to find a better life for one of us children, and my adopted mom found a liking toward me,” Misiewicz said.

While his aunt carried out her cleaning duties, Misiewicz’s future mother would let him watch movies and play games at her home. So in 1973, when she was scheduled to leave Phnom Penh, the only way she could bring the little boy she had grown fond of was to adopt him.

“I went [to the U.S] and I think the initial thought was for me to get a better education, live a better life and eventually return to Cambodia,” Misiewicz said.

Misiewicz was very young when he immigrated to the U.S. After arriving in Alexandria, Va., in April of 1973, his adoptive mother, Maryna Lee Misiewicz, who raised him as a single parent, enrolled him into the 1st grade the following fall. Misiewicz received extra English tutoring for the next three years and eventually continued his education in Lanark, Ill., which was his mother’s hometown.

“Lanark was and still is a population of 1,500 and I think I was the only non-Caucasian at my school,” Misiewicz said.

Nearly four decades later, Misiewicz believes the Navy has given him an incredible amount of opportunities that he would have never experienced had he remained in Cambodia. Although his ship’s upcoming visit has tremendous emotions attached for Misiewicz, he is also focused on his mission as Mustin’s commanding officer and hopes his background will help accomplish it successfully.

“I really feel privileged and blessed to be able to return with this crew to where I was born and to do so with the ability to promote American goodwill and share with Cambodians the success stories, not only mine, but a lot of success stories within our crew,” he said.

Misiewicz is not the only commanding officer of a forward deployed ship to visit his birth country in a U.S. Seventh Fleet ship. Korean-American Cmdr. Jeffrey Kim, USS John S. McCain’s (DDG 56) commanding officer took command of his ship in a ceremony held at Busan, Republic of Korea, in May, 2009. In November of 2009, Vietnamese-American Cmdr. H.B. Le, commanding officer of USS Lassen (DDG 82) made a port call to Da Nang, Vietnam, as the first Vietnamese-born American citizen to command a U.S. warship and visit the country. He escaped with his family from Vietnam near the end of the war in 1975.

Misiewicz says he is proud of his background and even more proud that the growth of diversity in the Navy has given him and others a chance to excel in life.

“When you think about all the things that could’ve gone wrong, I think I’m truly blessed to have so many opportunities and certainly the different miracles that have occurred just for me to reunite with my family.”

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

I am very proud of Commander Vannak Khem for making us proud to be Cambodians and Cambodian-Americans. I hope there will be more positive stoies from our Cambodian people. Thank you Vannak for your leadership in the US Navy. Rithy.

Anonymous said...

Congratulations!
Captain Michael Vannak Khem Misiewicz.
I'm proud to see a Koun Khmer who serves the FREE WORLD.Thanks.

Cheers,
Ung Bun Heang

Anonymous said...

Congratulations!
Captain
Commodore Michael Vannak Khem Misiewicz .I'm proud of you who serves the Free World.Thanks.

Cheers,
Ung Bun Heang

Anonymous said...

Hey, idiot why are you posting your comments on Sam Rainsy under this article, just to remind you that article is about "A Commander of a U.S Warship" happened to be a Cambodian-born person.

Anonymous said...

America and the rest of the free countries are the gate way to your dream. I am sure captain Michael Vannak Khem Misiewicz is worth millions time than Hun Sen. He was selected to be Captain through American transparent system ; his intellectuality; his ability ; his qualification and conductivity. This is a system of selecting leaders in a free country,where as Hun Sen was appointed by Hanoi because Hun Sen and other were ignorant and stupid. At the time Hun was appointed to be foreign minister he did not know what UN was for. All they know was about fighting and killing his own people.They were and still are frogs in Haoi's breading-well.

These are Hanoi aims of controlling Cambodia.That is why you see Cambodia education is behind Loas and Vietnam. That is why you see many Khmer are slaves in Thailand.That is why you see Khmer are refugees in our own coutry.
Cambodia should be a rich country.


Cambodia should be a country that provide the world with rice,rubber;fish;gold;oil;coper and many other raw materials.This is a country that the river runs through. How come we are still one of the poorest in the twenty first century? Where information about farming and other teachnologies just a click away.Why do we have to sell thousand of hectares of farm land to Hanoi for 99 years to plant rubber trees and exploit raw materials?

Michael Vannak Khem Misiewicz is one of the real dream that all Khmer can archive some thing higher
if they want to be . He is a successful,because he is free.His commitment is admired by his country and its system of democracy and justice.In Cambodia this dream is not possible to every Khmer because Hanoi aim to block this window.Freedom;education is Hanoi number one enemy.If Khmer advanced it means that Viet is weak and if Khmer is weak that mean we could be disappear from this world soon.This is how the natural selection work.We are between the crocodile and the tiger.We must fight for freedom for our people and country.Get rid the Hanoi mechanism from Cambodia politics.

If your ancestor can built a magnificent Angkorwat,as it admired by the whole world,you too can build the same splendid dream.

True Khmer

Anonymous said...

I hope he would take this opportunity enlightening our Cambodian soldiers to believe in your own instinct and make yourself useful to the society. Also, he should share the experience that he had living abroad with the Cambodian Navy and ask everyone of them "What have they done in their entire lifetime that help empower themselves and the people of Cambodia?".

Anonymous said...

But please don't join with youn Hanoi's dictator Hun Xen and the CPP who destroy the own people and our motherland everyday!!!
Capitan Vanak,you have to think what you do?because the CPP youn dictator Hun Xen in the worst leader in the world,he kill own people evryday!!!