Oni Vitandham
By Brian Addison |
The Long Beach Post
Wednesday, 25 April 2012
Cambodian community here in Long Beach is a vibrant one, boasting the
largest Cambodian population anywhere outside of Cambodia itself. Many
of the Cambodians here are immigrants and it is not uncommon to hear
stories of struggle and pasts engulfed in violence, as many witnessed
the disastrous results of the Khmer Rouge rule over Cambodia from 1975
to 1979. When the regime was able to overthrow the then-U.S.-backed
government once the U.S. left neighboring Vietnam, it led to the murder
of some two million Cambodians in what many consider a genocide.
A U.N.-backed trial finally started in 2003 and has faced immense
trouble, with its second judge leaving the trial this past March after
feeling that the Cambodian-led side was preventing further investigation
into the crimes -- the second such accusation by an outside judge.
This history is important to the Cambodians here in Long Beach (as it
would with anyone involved in such atrocities). And unlike some, they
are not afraid to speak out about what happened to them, what their
views are, and how they function in the dichotomy of U.S. living and
Cambodian political history.
Meet one such woman: Oni Vitandham. Her story is almost fairy
tale-like, having been born a Cambodian princess in 1972 in the Kompong
Speu province of Central Cambodia. Her father, a resistor to the Khmer
Rouge regime, went to fight against them after placing his daughter in
the hands of friends. It is presumed he was killed under the hands of
the regime's deathly rule and, sadly, Oni watched caregiver after
caregiver come and go as the regime continued its brutality.
In 1983, she became a refugee in the U.S., where life was not that
easy. Often sleeping on a cement floor in a warehouse here in Long
Beach, Oni eventually rose up to become one of the world's foremost
leading advocates for children's rights, having founded the Progressive
United Action Association, Inc (PUAAI) in 1995. This non-profit
organization is dedicated to promoting social justice and enriching the
lives of Cambodian children through education, health care, HIV/AIDS
prevention, and humanitarian relief. During the past 14 years, PUAAI has
established 17 schools in Cambodia.
In addition, she has spoken before the United States Congress as well
as the International Conference of Chief Justices held in Lucknow,
India. Oni has also written human rights resolutions adopted by the
Human Rights commission of the United Nations, and U.S. State
Department.
In other words: you should share your ear with her story, which she
will share in return with Long Beach at Portfolio Coffeehouse when she
reads parts of her book, On the Wings of a White Horse. The event will
occur on Saturday, May 5, from 2:00pm to 5:00pm.
Portfolio Coffeehouse, 2300 E. 4th St. 562-434-2486
1 comment:
Hope you are not a part of CPP supporters. Otherwise, we are not supporting you for such a story of your life in Killing Fields and being fooled January 7 when Vietnamese invasion into Cambodia captured Phnom Penh.
We all have the similar stories of lives in the Killing Fields, not just you. Hope you did not express your misunderstanding of your life as a survivor of the Killing Fields.
Just watch yourself when you claimed your hard life of Killing Fields in the foolish way that misleads Khmer survivors of the Killing Fields.
Just a thought for you think of.
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