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CIVIC EDUCATION
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Reconciling Peace with Justice: Legacy of Martin Luther King, Jr. in Cambodia Speaker Theary C. Seng University of Michigan Museum of Art auditorium (Ann Arbor, MI) 7 - 9 P.M. 13 Jan. 2011
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My recent, most favorite interview with the Georgetown University's Berkley Center for Religion, Peace & World Affairs, conducted on 17 Sept. 2010 at my Phnom Penh home (Georgetown University; KI-Media) [ excerpt ] Could you tell us a little bit more about your path to faith? My parents were very much Buddhist. My aunts and uncles continue to be Buddhist even though they’ve been exposed to the church and live in a Christian American community. Some of my brothers would say that they’re probably agnostics, meaning that they could be Buddhists or they could be Christians; only one would stress his faith identity. The other two or three might see themselves as one or the other or both. I have espoused Christianity as my own. Part of it was the initial exposure through Christian education, living in a Christian community. But I read a lot. I’ve read probably as much as any theologian on Christianity. So when I say I’ve come to own it, come to espouse it on my own, it’s not just through exposure but by deliberately thinking it through. So I would describe myself as a Christian, a Christian who is culturally Buddhist. I have no problem going to a wat or celebrating the Buddhist ceremonies, for example. Although it’s not a belief system that I hold, it is my culture.
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If you want others to follow, learn to be alone with your thoughts
By William Deresiewicz Spring 2010 (The American Scholar.Org) The lecture below was delivered to the plebe class at the United States Military Academy at West Point in October of last year (2009). . . . . . A great, great article published this 15 Dec. 2010 by a former representative of the UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights in Cambodia. Highly recommending reading !! - Theary C. Seng
The Beleaguered Cambodians Margo Picken
More than thirty years after an estimated two million people died at the hands of Pol Pot’s regime of Democratic Kampuchea, trials of senior Khmer Rouge leaders and those most responsible for the deaths are at last taking place in Cambodia. On July 26, the first to be tried, Kaing Guek Eav, commonly known as Duch, was sentenced to thirty-five years in prison for war crimes and crimes against humanity—a sentence that he and the prosecution have since appealed. Duch directed Security Prison 21, also known as Tuol Sleng, where at least 14,000 prisoners, mostly Khmer Rouge cadres and officials, were tortured and killed.1
Continued (New York Review of Books) . . .
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Speaker series includes survivor By Greg Mellen, Staff Writer Long Beach Press Telegram 29 December 2010 Want to go? WHAT: Calvin College January Series WHEN: 9:30 a.m. weekdays from Jan. 5 to Jan. 25 WHERE: Bethany Christian Reformed Church hospitality room, 17054 Bixby Ave., Bellflower ADMISSION: Free INFO: www.calvin.edu/january/2011 ____
LONG BEACH - Theary Seng survived the Killing Fields of Cambodia and emigrated to the United States, where she was in the Long Beach area while attending Valley Christian High School.
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Theary's BLOG
Published Articles of Vietnamization Vietnamization: Military Occupation - Present |