Friday, 08 June 2012
By Roth Meas
Phnom Penh Post
Music could be heard from houses, rich or poor, in Battambang town.
People strolled leisurely across lawns. Children flew kites and vendors
sold food along the street.
These are the sounds and images
remembered from Khmer New Year 1975 – before the Khmer Rouge arrived and
eventually turned a child into a soldier; they are also the images that
journalist Patricia McCormick uses to begin her biography of Arn Chorn
Pond, the former child soldier who went on to found Cambodia Living
Arts.
Never Fall Down starts when he was nine and describes how
music saved him from death and inspired him to work towards peace. Arn
Chorn Pond says the book is accurate and that its author did not
restrict her interviews to him.
“She also checked with former
Khmer Rouge members who knew me in the past,” he said as he retold his
story, beginning with his separation from his family and forced
imprisonment in Wat Ek Phnom labour camp, about 10 kilometres from
Battambang town.
As a prisoner of the Khmer Rouge he was forced
to learn how to play a traditional instrument, the Khem, and become a
member of a band. He recalls seeing people killed with an axe and being
forced to help carry and bury corpses. He also remembers stealing food
for himself and other children, as well as his music teacher, even
though this could have resulted in his death.
Children selected
for the band who did not learn to play an instrument quickly were
executed, he says. “They blindfolded me and forced me to play the Khem. I
learned how to play fast, so they kept me alive. The kids who learned
slowly disappeared,” he recalls.
From musician to soldier to refugee
When
Vietnamese forces pushed the Khmer Rouge towards the Thai border, Arn
Chorn Pond and other children were handed rifles to fight them. He said
he tried to forget what the Khmer Rouge had done so that he could fight
against the Vietnamese, but eventually he, along with a group of other
children, fled towards the Thai border to escape the war.
Arn
Chorn Pond recalls being accused of being a Khmer Rouge solider, but
says he understood his actions as defending his country against an
invader, but he eventually choose to escape to Thailand because he
thought there would be more food there.
It took him weeks to
find and then cross the border and he recalls fainting from exhaustion
and hunger numerous times. After crossing the border, he fainted again
and was awoken by the sound of a bus that was picking up orphans who had
escaped Cambodia.
Eventually he was fostered by a Christian
clergyman and went to live in the United States, but returned in 1987 to
search for his family. He found one sister here and later, while back
in the States, he located another.
Revival
“I
travelled back and forth [between Cambodian and the US] since 1987. I’d
stay here for a few months, and then go back to the United States to
raise money,” Arn Chorn Pond says. “Under the Khmer Rouge, we wanted to
help other very much, but it was not possible. Now we are free, so why
we don’t help each other as much as we can?”
In 1992 he set up
Cambodian Volunteers for Community Development in Battambang, an
educational NGO, and in 1998 he set up Cambodian Living Arts to preserve
traditional arts. For the latter, he gathered older people to teach
youths their musical and artistic skills.
More recently, he started a music-video-production company, Waterek, to produce his own songs.
Reconciliation
Never
Fall Down recounts how Arn Chorn Pond saw former Khmer Rouge members
change into civilian clothes in order to enter refugee camps, but he
asked the author not to use their names to avoid reviving conflict.
“The
names were changed because some people are still alive and they would
not want their names in the book. Personally, I’m not afraid, but it’s
time to reconcile. We have to avoid fighting. Still, everything
described in the book is true,” he says.
“I hope my book reaches
the hands of young people because I want to share with them the story of
what happened to young people during the Khmer Rouge. I also want to
encourage them to spend time doing something good for society rather
than spending their time drinking.”
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