Overcoming Challenges and Barriers, Cambodian Refugees ‘Accomplished So Much’

For Khemarey Khoeun, the photos bring back memories of growing up as a child in the Cambodian community of Chicago: Mothers caring for toddlers in front of an apartment block on a steamy summer day. Young men dapper in caps and sneakers, smoking cigarettes on a street corner. A couple wearing traditional Khmer clothes at their wedding party in a small apartment crammed with revelers.

The images appear in a recently published photo book, Krousar: On the Corners of Argyle and Glenwood, by Stuart Isett. The images convey the hardships and cultural dislocation as well as the resilience, adaptability and joy of the community of Cambodian refugees, many of whom were trying to find their place in American society after escaping the Khmer Rouge genocide and war that had ravaged their homeland.

Khemarey Khoeun’s family first settled in the Austin neighborhood of Chicago’s Uptown area, one of the city’s poorest communities, in 1981.

It had been a long journey, from Siem Reap, a Cambodia city best known for the Angkor Wat temple complex, to the Sa Kaeo Refugee Camp in Thailand, which the family left in 1981 after a two-year stay.

The U.S. government accepted refugees from the camp, where thousands of desperate civilians had fled to escape heavy fighting between Khmer Rouge and Vietnamese army forces in northwest Cambodia from the mid-1970s to the early 1980s.

Until age 5, Khemarey Khoeun lived in the Uptown neighborhood surrounding the intersection of West Argyle Street and North Glenwood Avenue. Her family then moved to the suburbs, and she recalled how she had seen some Cambodian youth in Uptown being drawn into gang life on the streets.

 

“Around that time, [Cambodian] people used to hang out at the beaches nearby, Foster and Montrose, and it got to the point where people stopped going there because that was where the gangs were going at each other,” she said. “We did not feel safe anymore.”

 

Khemarey Khoeun, now 40, still lives in Chicago and is board president at the National Cambodian Heritage Museum and Killing Fields Memorial. In 2017, she was sworn in as a park district commissioner in Skokie, Illinois, making history as the first Cambodian American woman to be elected to public office at any level of U.S. government.

Looking back at her childhood, Khemarey Khoeun said it was understandable that many young people turned to the camaraderie and protection of a gang as they grew up in an uprooted and impoverished community.

 

“Their parents were often not available — both of them were working — and kids were left out by their own to decide for themselves,” she said.

 

“And they grew up in an environment where their parents were survivors of genocide, wars, and had PTSD, traumas,” she said. “How easy it would have been for them to be recruited into the Cambodian gangs. So that had become their lifestyle.”

Focused on a community

 

When Stuart Isett was a young graduate student in photography, he mingled with Cambodian youths in the neighborhood, documenting their lives and their families from 1991 to 1994.

 

Almost three decades later, he revisited his collection and published it as a book in collaboration with Pete Pin, a photographer based in New York City, and Silong Chhun, a multimedia artist and a community advocate against the U.S. government deportation of Cambodian Americans. Chhun also founded Red Scarf Revolution, a clothing brand that promotes Cambodian culture and history.

 

Pin put Isett’s images in order, and Chhun wrote the text of the book, published by Catfish Books. The book sold out soon after its release at the beginning of the year, and it is unclear whether another edition will be published.

Isett told VOA Khmer: “We called [the book] ‘Krousar,’ the common [Khmer] word for family. And it’s about Cambodian families. And it’s also about how these young men had to form their own family in some ways, which was separate from their Cambodian families. Because they were now living in the United States, so they formed these — I don’t like using the word ‘gang,’ but they formed gangs.”

 

Isett developed an interest in Cambodia’s humanitarian crisis and conflict when he visited the refugee camps in Thailand after finishing college in the late 1980s. Since then, his interest in Southeast Asia has remained constant.

 

The images resonated personally with Chhun and Pin as Cambodian Americans. As the book’s blurb puts it, “They would have been the young boys in the back of the room in many of Isett’s images.”

“When I first saw [the photos], I was really, really happy, because, in a sense, his photos were a reflection of how my friends and I grew up,” said Chhun, 41, whose family had settled in a housing project in Tacoma, Washington, in 1981. Like many youths, Chhun said, he relied on his friends on the streets for “acceptance and value.”

 

He said the photos also capture how elements of Cambodian culture survive in the U.S.

 

“There are celebrations and the dancing, the older folks and the younger folks doing it,” he said. “Cambodia has a very community- and village-focused culture based on, you know, just celebrating together. And despite the hardships and challenges, we have to find some light in the dark to keep us going.”

Chhun said the text accompanying the photos was meant to provide context and help “humanize” the Cambodian experience and the struggle to find an identity and fit into American society. “We were labeled as this community that came from nothing and had to try to find a way in the country,” he said.

 

A flood of refugees

 

Tens of thousands of Cambodians fled to Thailand from the mid-1970s onward to escape the genocidal Khmer Rouge regime and the subsequent protracted conflict between Pol Pot’s forces and the Vietnamese army occupying Cambodia.

 

Most stayed in the Sa Kaeo and Khao I Dang camps, with 200,000 refugees passing through the latter camp until resettlement in the U.S., Australia and France, or until repatriation to Cambodia in 1993.

 

In 2016, a learning center opened on the former Khao I Dang site. Supported by the Thai government, the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees and the International Committee of the Red Cross, the triumvirate that once ran the camp, the center features an exhibition that includes photographs, videos and text.

The 150,000 Cambodian refugees who came to the U.S. 35 to 40 years ago were dispersed by the government to cities and towns across the country. The refugees were placed in housing projects, and eventually formed sizable communities in Chicago, Illinois; Seattle, Washington; Long Beach, California; and Lowell, Massachusetts.

 

“Many of them came from peasant backgrounds,” said Eric Tang, director of the Center for Asian American Studies at the University of Texas at Austin. “As a result, many had to remain on welfare for generations” because a mismatch of job skills and language made finding jobs difficult.

 

“So, what happens is they are immediately tracked into urban poverty in the United States, and that makes for a unique situation of Cambodian refugees and [other] Southeast Asian refugees,” Tang told VOA Khmer.

 

In addition to struggling to lift themselves out of poverty, many Cambodians faced challenges associated with PTSD and other mental health ailments. By 2020, the population of Cambodians in the U.S. reached 340,000, and 13% continued to live under the poverty line, according to the Pew Research Center analysis of U.S. census data.

 

Timely revelation​

 

Isett’s photography book appears as public attention and debate grow about the Asian American immigrant experience. Writers such as Vietnamese American Viet Than Nguyen and Cambodian American Anthony Veasna So are gaining critical acclaim.

Sithea San, 54, said it was uncommon for her to see a book that intimately captures the Cambodian refugee experience in America, and Isett’s work had helped her better understand the struggle of the tens of thousands of Cambodian refugees like her across the U.S.

 

“I thought my life settling into the American ways of life was hard, but seeing these photographs showed me how much harder and challenging it has been for other people,” she said, noting that she arrived in Long Beach as a 14-year-old refugee in 1981.

 

Sithea, a Cambodian American community leader in Long Beach, is the co-founder of Cambodian Town Inc., one of the oldest Cambodian nonprofit organizations working to preserve the community’s culture and traditions.

 

Unlike the many Cambodians who had no family outside their country, Sithea and her family were sponsored by a now-deceased uncle who had come to the United States in the early 1970s.

 

“My uncle and his family provided all the support I needed,” she said. “They provided a place for me and my family to stay and made sure I was on track with school and stayed out of troubles.”

Khemarey Khoeun said the book would help younger generations of Cambodian Americans understand what their parents went through and achieved by sheer resilience as they grappled with recovering from trauma and raising their families amid hardships.

 

“There is a younger generation who are growing up who don’t know that history and are not as connected to the recent refugee experience because they were born here as the first generation,” she said.

 

“We faced many challenges and barriers, and we still do today,” Chhun said. But we are resilient. We are people that came from nothing, and now, about 40 years later, we’ve accomplished so much.”

 

Source: Voice of America

US Sending 2.5 Million COVID-19 Vaccine Doses to Taiwan

The United States says it is sending 2.5 million COVID-19 vaccine doses to Taiwan, substantially increasing its initial promise of 750,000 shots.

Taiwan President Tsai Ing-wen said the increased doses from the U.S. are a “moving gesture of friendship.”  U.S. President Joe Biden has said his administration will distribute 80 million vaccine doses to countries around the world.

The doses are a fraction of the 500 million shots the United States has committed to distributing free of charge over nearly 100 destinations over the next two years.

The Biden administration plans to distribute 200 million shots this year and another 300 million in 2022 to 92 countries as well as the African Union.

The announcement comes as roughly 45% of Americans have been fully vaccinated against the coronavirus, according to the Johns Hopkins Coronavirus Resource Center.

By contrast, India, with a population of over 1.3 billion, has vaccinated just over 3% of its population.

India’s Health Ministry said Sunday that it had recorded more than 58,000 new COVID-19 cases in the previous 24-hour period. India has recorded close to 30 million COVID-19 cases.  Only the U.S. has more, with 33.5 million.

A Ugandan athlete has tested positive for the coronavirus after arriving in Japan ahead of the Tokyo Olympics, according to an Associated Press report. The athlete was not named and has been placed in quarantine in a government facility.  The other eight members of the team tested negative in Japan.  The Ugandan team was fully vaccinated and tested before their flight to Japan, AP said.

Brazil became the second country, behind the United States, to record more than half a million COVID-19 deaths, a Health Ministry official said Saturday.

Health Minister Marcelo Queiroga tweeted “500,000 lives lost due to the pandemic that affects our Brazil and the world,” according to an Agence France-Presse report.

Ethel Maciel, an epidemiologist from Espirito Santo University, told AFP, “The third wave is arriving, there’s already in a change in the case and death curves. … Our vaccination [program], which could make a difference, is slow and there are no signs of restrictive measures, quite the contrary.”

Britain held its first full music festival since all mass events were canceled in March of last year, the start of the pandemic.

About 10,000 fans attended a three-day Download Festival held at Donington Park in central England. The event featured 40 U.K.-based bands. The event ends Sunday.

All of those who attended, which was only about a tenth of the festival’s prepandemic audience, were required to take COVID-19 tests before the event. Neither masks nor social distancing protocols were required, event organizers said.

Britain has recorded nearly 128,000 COVID-19-related deaths, the fourth most in the world and the worst in Europe. It also ranks seventh in the number of confirmed cases of the coronavirus, with 4.6 million.

Earlier last week, Prime Minister Boris Johnson delayed by four weeks a planned lifting of coronavirus-related restrictions on June 21. Britain is battling the highly contagious delta variant of the virus, which was first identified in India.

The Johns Hopkins Coronavirus Resource Center reported early Sunday more than 178 million global COVID-19 infections and almost 4 million global deaths. More than 2 billion vaccines have been administered around the world.

 

 

Source: Voice of America

Taiwan Pulls Trade Office Staff Over Hong Kong Ultimatum

Taiwan said seven employees of its trade office in Hong Kong left the financial hub on Sunday after authorities there demanded they sign a pledge recognizing China’s sovereignty over the self-ruled island.

The move comes after both Hong Kong and Macau closed their trade offices in Taipei and as Beijing seeks to pile diplomatic and economic pressure on Taiwan.

Taiwan’s Mainland Affairs Council (MAC) said Hong Kong’s government had demanded its trade office staff sign a “one China pledge,” which supports Beijing’s view that the island is part of its territory.

Taiwan’s current democratically elected government views the island as a de facto sovereign state.

“China and Hong Kong government use the ‘one China pledge’ to set up barriers and affect the rotation of staff and normal operations of our office in Hong Kong,” Taiwan’s MAC said in a statement on Sunday.

“We firmly reject the irrational political suppression of forcing our staff to sign the ‘one China pledge,’ and condemn the Chinese and Hong Kong authorities over this.”

Seven staff members flew out of Hong Kong on Sunday, MAC deputy chief Chiu Chui-cheng said.

Just one Taiwanese employee is left in the office, although their visa runs out next month. The only remaining members will be local staff.

Chiu said that the pledge Hong Kong demanded staff sign also included a promise not to “interfere with Hong Kong’s affairs, nor to do or say anything that undermines Hong Kong’s stability and prosperity or that embarrasses the Hong Kong government.”

Taiwan is a major trading partner with both China and Hong Kong but relations between their governments are cratering.

Last month, Hong Kong suspended operations of its trade office in Taiwan.

It accused Taiwan of “grossly interfering” in the city’s affairs and causing “irretrievable damage” to relations.

Macau followed in shutting its office last Wednesday, saying it was having trouble getting visas for staff.

Both Hong Kong and Macau are semi-autonomous cities, but Beijing decides foreign policy and is ramping up direct control in both former colonies.

China had encouraged trade offices when relations were warmer with Taiwan.

But after the 2016 election of Taiwan’s President Tsai Ing-wen, Beijing cut official contacts and began a concerted pressure campaign.

Tsai’s government is also a vocal supporter of democratic principles and has quietly helped open its doors to some Hong Kongers trying to escape Beijing’s crackdown on dissent after huge democracy protests rocked the financial hub in 2019.

Hong Kong says that amounts to “interference.”

 

Source: Voice of America

Philippines Logs 5,803 New COVID-19 Cases, Total Rises To 1,359,015

MANILA– The Philippines’ Department of Health (DOH) reported today, 5,803 new COVID-19 infections, bringing the total number of confirmed cases in the country to 1,359,015.

Death toll climbed to 23,621, after 84 more patients died from the disease, DOH said.

The Philippines, which has more than 110 million population, tested more than 13 million people, since the outbreak in Jan, 2020.

Carlito Galvez, chief implementer of the government’s measures to combat COVID-19, said today that, the government has administered over eight million doses as of Friday.

The Philippines has fully inoculated more than two million people, so far, since the rollout began on Mar 1. It aims to vaccinate up to 70 million people this year.

The government administered vaccines primarily to frontline healthcare workers, the elderly, and those with underlying medical conditions. Last week, the government started inoculating frontline economic workers, to bring the economy back on track.

The Philippines kicked off its vaccination drive a day after China delivered the first batch of Sinovac CoronaVac vaccines on Feb 28.

“We are happy that the public uptake for Sinovac has also increased significantly,” Galvez said, adding, the steady supply of Sinovac allows the government to fast track the inoculation of essential economic workers.

Galvez said, the Philippines “is now seeing an upward trajectory in the vaccination throughput, across all priority groups.”

“This is a very good indication that vaccine hesitancy is being addressed and more Filipinos, especially our senior citizens, are now willing to get inoculated,” Galvez said.

 

 

Source: NAM NEWS NETWORK

Cambodia Receives New Batch Of China’s Sinovac COVID-19 Vaccine

PHNOM PENH– A plane carrying a new batch of China’s Sinovac COVID-19 vaccine arrived in Phnom Penh, capital of Cambodia, yesterday, giving another boost to the kingdom’s inoculation drive.

Cambodian health ministry’s secretary of state, Yok Sambath, who received the vaccine at the Phnom Penh International Airport, said, the jab was purchased from Chinese biopharmaceutical firm Sinovac Biotech.

“With the subsequent arrivals of the vaccines, we’re confident that our vaccination plan will be achieved on schedule,” she said.

The Southeast Asian nation has planned to inoculate at least 10 million out of its 16 million population, by the end of this year or early next year, at the latest, she said.

The kingdom launched an anti-COVID-19 inoculation drive on Feb 10. To date, some 5.92 million vaccine doses have been administered, with 2.66 million people having been fully vaccinated with two doses, the health ministry said.

Cambodia logged 471 new COVID-19 cases yesterday, pushing the national caseload to 42,052, the ministry said.

The kingdom also recorded 20 new fatalities, taking the overall death toll to 414, so far, the ministry said, adding that, 928 patients had recovered, bringing the total number of recoveries to 36,868.

 

 

Source: NAM NEWS NETWORK

Singapore Reports 21 New COVID-19 Cases

SINGAPORE– Singapore’s Ministry of Health (MOH) reported 21 new COVID-19 cases yesterday, bringing the total tally to 62,403.

Fourteen cases are in the community and there are no new cases in the dormitories. Of these cases, seven are linked to previous cases and have already been placed on quarantine. Seven were detected through surveillance, among whom, three are linked to previous cases and four are currently unlinked.

There are seven imported cases, who have already been placed on Stay-Home Notice (SHN) upon arrival in Singapore.

Overall, the number of new cases in the community has increased from 32 in the week before last, to 109 in the past week. The number of unlinked cases in the community has also increased from 14 in the week before last, to 18 in the past week.

Yesterday, 36 more patients have been discharged from hospitals or community isolation facilities after full recovery. In all, 62,023 have been discharged.

There are currently 153 confirmed cases who are still in hospital. Of these, most are stable or improving and one is in critical condition in the intensive care unit.

Meanwhile, 193 people, who have mild symptoms or are clinically well, but still test positive for COVID-19, are isolated and cared for at community facilities.

A total of 34 people have died, the official data showed.

 

Source: NAM NEWS NETWORK