School of Vice's note: Soft-spoken, serene, incessantly smiling especially when brought
face to face with his ubiquitous adversaries and tormentors, his every word
uttered with deliberate emphasis but with easing deliberation conveys an aura
of universal truthfulness and relevance meant to instruct and induct his audience,
but never to patronise or to scold them, you could count him as your typical
Khmer monk, except that he is anything but, even less anybody's fool. Fully
aware of all the attendant risks and measures that could at anytime be meted
out against him or his person; he refuses to allow these dark undercurrents to
cloud or impair his judgement, nor to mediate his core beliefs and convictions.
Wherever, the Venerable goes one can be sure that those stern, unsmiling "Hochi-monks"
are never far off. In fact, they must be so enamoured with him that they refuse
to let him escape their glare and notice. One would not be surprised to learn
that the Cambodian authorities are devoting a whole division of agents and
enforcers, some of whom are saffron-robed whilst others are in plain clothes,
but all are deadly determined to keep their man under strict surveillance at
any cost! How many times had we seen him being unceremoniously manhandled
and bundled into a van; how many times had we seen him physically wrestled with
his opposite numbers in the regime-issued clergy who would storm at him as if
they were still re-enacting their roles in one of those Bruce Lee movies before
he could fight his way through to the Big Boss! Their muscular physiques alone
suggest they would have undergone full programmes of martial-military training
of some sort, where days would be spent honing the use of small arms weapons
from throwing knives to strangling would-be targets with razor-sharp, near
invisible strings, and mind you they had practiced this art on a number of
Khmer monks already. So what chance does our serene, non-violent Bhikku stand
against this formidable opposition? Not a great deal, you might think, and yes
ultimately [touch wood] your sentiment is as sound as mine. Yet no one could
ever fault him for making use of whatever resources at his disposal. Dubbed
"the multi-media monk" the Venerable never seems to venture anywhere
without a cam-corder, a cell-phone [a modern cell phone does just about every
job a news reporter on field assignments would expect it to, but our Bhikku
could still find use for and insists on being armed with all of these techno-gadgets]
and Buddha knows what other devices! Now that he dons those thick, dark frame
designer glasses he can at least project an extra intimidating psychological
factor back into his opponents. Of course, they will discover soon enough that
he's neither Mike Tyson in disguise on his way to Siem Reap, nor a would-be
Khmer Olympic hopeful for the up-coming Sumo-wrestling event at London 2012!
But in all seriousness if this tragi-comic side of his public personae alone
fails to secure him the Nobel Prize for Peace in the near future I would
not be baffled in the least, for what does the struggle that a lone monk such
as himself wages on behalf of the downtrodden multitudes of a country like his
mean to the great and the good of the world who would rather keep on rubbing
shoulders with their own kind? After all why should they want to embarrass the
very people they had over the years granted red-carpet treatment to?
Opinion by
True Khmer
The tide of
democracy, of freedom and the quest for justice is an unstoppable force. They
are humanity's Soul. Being free [having freedom] and being human are like yin and yang. You can't separate the one from the other. Some might say
that freedom is like the pair of our eyes without which the universe would be
meaningless.
By now Hun
Sen and his cronies should be feeling like kids who are doing the impossible
thing as they are dreaming of steering Cambodia back into the old antiquated
world of absolute monarchy or cold war era wherein human lives, public freedom
and nation are beneath their feet.
Those worlds
of dark ages are now withering away or disappearing rapidly, as can be seen
from the Spring Revolution already underway or sweeping across the Middle East.
One should know that every human being is an image of God, and God Himself is
the judge and Lord of justice.
Acts of
humans towards humans or humans towards nature can be compared to an act of
throwing a ball onto a wall. If you throw the ball hard, the ball will bounce
back hard against you. For example, the wise say if you abuse your body you
abuse your mind; if you abuse your people, you abuse yourself and your family. Like
it or not this is a law of nature.
We as a
nation certainly share our happiness, our joy, our sorrow with one another. If
someone is being raped in front of our eyes, we just can't turn a blind eye and
walk on as we are human, and that is what Ven. Loun Sovath is being confronted
with. He is a monk that just can't stand to see this despicable injustice being
inflicted by his government against its own people. He is doing his basic
humanity towards other humans in ways that most other men might not dare stand
up to injustices being committed against innocent people in broad daylight.
There is
nothing wrong in doing what he has done, although he is a monk. In reality, the
essence or concept of any religion or even within the heart and mind of God, if
we all could feel it, it is all about justice.
Ven. Loun
Sovath is harmless, he and many others as humans should have their full rights
and liberty by which to protest against injustices. They are not planning a war
or any act of terror to harm society by means of aggression. He should not have
been forced into signing an agreement to cease his activities in this respect, or
be subjected to the threat of being removed from his monkshood.
You can't
build your wealth out of people’s tears and sufferings. Their cry is our cry, their
sorrow is our sorrow. The Nation is Family; that is how Ven. Loun Sovath feels.
He is more than a monk, and we look up to him as our guiding star in a world
where darkness is temporarily reigning.
If you don't
have peace of mind, you have nothing.
True Khmer
2 comments:
The Mahatma Gandhi of Cambodia..with love and non- violent strategy that unnerves a brutal regime. we are withnessing somethings that will define a turning point in our recent history in the future.
don't compare real Gandhi to stupid monk.
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