The Mainichi Daily News
Japan, 3rd December 2010
Penn Setharin holds up a school textbook for Cambodian children that she compiled at her restaurant "Angkor Thom" in Machida, Tokyo. (Mainichi)
A Cambodian restaurant owner in Tokyo has started teaching at a university in her home country based on her experience of spending 36 years in Japan.
Penn Setharin (pictured), 56, has been working as a bridge between Japan and Cambodia for over 30 years while running her own Cambodian restaurant in Machida, Tokyo. She was appointed as a linguistic anthropology professor at the graduate school of the Royal University of Phnom Penh earlier this year.
Setharin will travel back and forth between the two countries and give lectures to Cambodian students in Phnom Penh. She will teach the effects of language on society based on her experience of living in Japan for many years.
Setharin first came to Japan in 1974 as the first female student sponsored by the Cambodian government. After completing studies at a Japanese-language school attached to Tokyo University of Foreign Studies, she entered Tokyo Gakugei University.
However, the rise of Pol Pot in Cambodia prevented Setharin from going back to her own country. The Cambodian Civil War took the lives of her parents and four other family members.
It was not until the war came to an end in 1991 that she could finally set foot on Cambodian soil again.
At an elementary school in her home country Setharin was shocked to see school textbooks that contained illustrations of soldiers holding guns and saying, "Kill the enemy."
The Pol Pot regime collapsed in 1979, but the civil war continued for many years, making it natural for students and teachers in the country to talk about the war at school.
"Cambodia's education system is crumbling," felt a concerned Setharin. She started sending Cambodian translations of Japanese children's books to her home country while running her own restaurant named "Angkor Thom" and teaching her native language as a lecturer at Tokyo University of Foreign Studies.
In 1995, she opened a vocational training center for women in the suburbs of Phnom Penh to promote women's participation in society.
Setharin entered Hosei University's Graduate School of Humanities in 2004 and received a doctor's degree in March this year.
Her dream of teaching Cambodian students came true when she was appointed as a professor at the Royal University of Phnom Penh following graduation in Japan. A series of lectures on Japanese literature and other topics that she gave at the university while visiting were highly acclaimed by school officials.
Some 40 students attended Setharin's first class at the university on Nov. 4. Cambodian students asked a lot of questions throughout the class and told their professor that they enjoyed her class very much.
"I received a lot of energy from my students," Setharin said after the class, which lasted about three hours.
"In Japan, I learned the Japanese mentality of 'Wa' (meaning harmony or peace in Japanese), in which people place great importance on kindness and cooperation. I want to teach the dignity of Japan (to Cambodian students)," says Setharin.
Her next goal is to build a women's college to improve the social status of Cambodian women.
Click here for the original Japanese story
(Mainichi Japan) December 3, 2010
Penn Setharin holds up a school textbook for Cambodian children that she compiled at her restaurant "Angkor Thom" in Machida, Tokyo. (Mainichi)
A Cambodian restaurant owner in Tokyo has started teaching at a university in her home country based on her experience of spending 36 years in Japan.
Penn Setharin (pictured), 56, has been working as a bridge between Japan and Cambodia for over 30 years while running her own Cambodian restaurant in Machida, Tokyo. She was appointed as a linguistic anthropology professor at the graduate school of the Royal University of Phnom Penh earlier this year.
Setharin will travel back and forth between the two countries and give lectures to Cambodian students in Phnom Penh. She will teach the effects of language on society based on her experience of living in Japan for many years.
Setharin first came to Japan in 1974 as the first female student sponsored by the Cambodian government. After completing studies at a Japanese-language school attached to Tokyo University of Foreign Studies, she entered Tokyo Gakugei University.
However, the rise of Pol Pot in Cambodia prevented Setharin from going back to her own country. The Cambodian Civil War took the lives of her parents and four other family members.
It was not until the war came to an end in 1991 that she could finally set foot on Cambodian soil again.
At an elementary school in her home country Setharin was shocked to see school textbooks that contained illustrations of soldiers holding guns and saying, "Kill the enemy."
The Pol Pot regime collapsed in 1979, but the civil war continued for many years, making it natural for students and teachers in the country to talk about the war at school.
"Cambodia's education system is crumbling," felt a concerned Setharin. She started sending Cambodian translations of Japanese children's books to her home country while running her own restaurant named "Angkor Thom" and teaching her native language as a lecturer at Tokyo University of Foreign Studies.
In 1995, she opened a vocational training center for women in the suburbs of Phnom Penh to promote women's participation in society.
Setharin entered Hosei University's Graduate School of Humanities in 2004 and received a doctor's degree in March this year.
Her dream of teaching Cambodian students came true when she was appointed as a professor at the Royal University of Phnom Penh following graduation in Japan. A series of lectures on Japanese literature and other topics that she gave at the university while visiting were highly acclaimed by school officials.
Some 40 students attended Setharin's first class at the university on Nov. 4. Cambodian students asked a lot of questions throughout the class and told their professor that they enjoyed her class very much.
"I received a lot of energy from my students," Setharin said after the class, which lasted about three hours.
"In Japan, I learned the Japanese mentality of 'Wa' (meaning harmony or peace in Japanese), in which people place great importance on kindness and cooperation. I want to teach the dignity of Japan (to Cambodian students)," says Setharin.
Her next goal is to build a women's college to improve the social status of Cambodian women.
Click here for the original Japanese story
(Mainichi Japan) December 3, 2010
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