October 15, 2012
The Los Angeles Times
NEW
DELHI -- As word spread Monday that former King Norodom Sihanouk had
died of a heart attack in Beijing at age 89, hundreds of thousands of
Cambodians gathered in front of the Royal Palace in Phnom Penh to mourn.
The impoverished nation, still emerging from decades of war, flew
flags at half staff and announced a national week of mourning beginning
Wednesday, according to local media. Top leaders, including King Norodom
Sihamoni and Prime Minister Hun Sen, flew to Beijing on Monday morning
to bring home Sihanouk's body for a traditional funeral at the palace.
Sihanouk reportedly laid out in a letter in January that he wanted to
be cremated, with his ashes placed in an urn, preferably made of gold,
in a stupa at the palace. His body will be on public display for three
months before the funeral, the Phnom Penh Post reported, quoting
Sihanouk’s longtime personal assistant Prince Sisowath Thomico.
Sihanouk, a quixotic and mercurial leader, held considerable power in
the 1950s and 1960s after helping secure independence from the French.
But in the 1970s, he became something of a puppet to the Khmer Rouge
during its reign of terror, a period captured in the 1984 Academy
Award-winning film “The Killing Fields.”
The controversial leader, whom Cambodians refer to as the King
Father, lived in Beijing for most of his last decade in failing health.
But his seven decades on the political scene left many Cambodians
feeling a great sense of loss, having never known life without him.
“Either love him or hate him, the King Father had been a figure from
whom we lived and learned about our collective history,” said Theary C.
Seng, founder of the Cambodian Center for Justice and Reconciliation in
Phnom Penh, the nation's capital. “His life, his reign, his politics
have so infiltrated, impacted and altered the lives of every living
Cambodian, young or old, during the 70-plus years in which he played a
national role.”
Sihanouk was often condescending, Seng said, as seen by his habit of
calling Cambodians his “children.” His policies led to great repression
and suffering as well as great laughter and freedom. “He was a man of
great ironies,” Seng said. “Cambodia will feel the void of his presence
for years to come.”
Much of the country was headed to Cambodia’s 4,000-plus temples on
Monday for the last day of a holiday honoring deceased relatives when
Cambodians got word of his death, said Youk Chhang, head of the
Cambodian Documentation Center in Phnom Penh.
“They were shocked by the news that our king had also passed away,”
he added. “Everyone was speechless. At his age, he [still] looked so
very healthy.”
Julio A. Jeldres, the king’s official biographer and a member of his
staff from 1981 to 1991, said most Cambodians in rural areas credit
Sihanouk with promoting national consciousness and preventing the
country from becoming entangled in the war that devastated neighboring
Vietnam and Laos in the 1960s and ’70s.
During his years as an honorary member of the king’s Cabinet, Jeldres
said, he never saw him lose his charm, manners or sense of humor. “He
often had to maneuver and use shock treatment to get the best possible
result for his people,” Jeldres said.
He said Sihanouk was fully aware in 1970 that the Khmer Rouge didn’t
like him, but thought the movement was directed by more moderate leaders
rather than the infamous Pol Pot. It was only on a secret visit to
Cambodia in 1973 that the exiled king realized “what he thought were
‘pure patriots’ were in fact ‘cruel Stalinists,’” Jeldres said. “But by
then it was too late and most of Sihanouk's supporters in the jungle
were murdered.”
Filmmaker Kalyanee Mam was screening her recent documentary, “A River
Changes Course,” about Cambodia’s Cham Muslim hill tribe minority
Monday in Koh Kong province when she heard that Sihanouk had died. Most
Cambodians tend to remember Sihanouk the way he portrayed himself in the
media, as a fatherly patriot and philanthropist, she said.
“For the common people, I think they see him as a one-dimensional
figure,” Mam said. “But to move forward as a nation, we need a more
three-dimensional view.”
1 comment:
To All Khmer Yeurng (all of Khmer citizens):
Please don't talk nonsense. You don't know what you are talking about. Stop being manipulated by other Anonymous mentioned. You need to be quiet and let's focus on Unity. We want CNRP and CPP to reunite as one without fight each others in order to change the leaders. We wish all Khmer/Cambodian citizens or members of major parties CNRP and CPP to merge after the merger of SRP and HRP including other small parties like Khmer Democratic, KPPM, etc.
So, stop fighting each others. We need to work together to save our Khmer nation.
It is timing. Khmer folks both at home and abroad (USA, Australia, NZ, France, Canada, S. Korea, Japan, and so on), please stop fighting each others and please take the positive outlooks and stop hating other because of the Vietnamese/Yuon manipulation and don't let our neighbors Yuon/Viet and Siam/Thai to see our weakness.
So, watch out on each others no matter what happen. Please think and be careful.
Thanks for listening.
Khmer Yeurng.
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