Chheng Phon

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The genocidal Pol PotIeng SaryKhieu Samphan regime destroyed our national culture almost completely.

Chheng Phon [13]

Serving the renaissance of Cambodia as Minister of Culture

In 1981, Chheng Pon was appointed Deputy Minister of the People's Republic of Kampuchea, thus becoming "the first person without any revolutionary or definite communist background to be appointed to a party leadership position". [14] In 1982, Chheng Phon was appointed Minister of Culture of Kampuchea, staying in office until 1991, a position in which he had to reconcile his love for Khmer traditions and the political agenda of communist ideology, producing “revised” and politicized cultural works as artists were encouraged “ to adapt the tradition to modern times". [15] Chheng Phon as Minister would however restore what was left of Khmer traditions among his people, saying: "the influence of Buddhism is quite significant, and the traditions of monarchy are still felt." [16] He worked as an expert consultant on the set of Nine Levels of Hell , a Czech-Cambodian romantic drama from 1987. [17] [18]

Professor Chheng Phon reopened the University of Fine Arts, Phnom Penh, the former Royal University of Fine Arts, in 1989 to promote the preservation of both tangible and intangible cultural assets of Cambodia.

In 1990, as Minister of Culture, he told the Khmer classical ballet to revive all 18 forms of the ballet. [19]

Later life of the cultural conscience of Cambodia

From retirement to spiritual retreat

On August 5, 1990, Chheng Phon submitted his resignation as Minister for Culture for health reasons, though some journalists have noted that the real cause may have been his proximity with Ung Phan of the FUNCINPEC royalist party which had just been ousted. [20] He retired from most of his political affairs in 1992 and used his own money to establish the Center for Culture and Vipassana at his home in the suburbs of Phnom Penh, in a place that was originally, in the late 1980s, a place for artists to study meditation in relation to performance. [21]

He travelled to California in 1993 to meet former students who had sought asylum in the United States. Together, they recreated the Khmer Royal Ballet in an auditorium at California State University at Long Beach. [22]

In 1993 he became a member of the National Council of Culture of Cambodia.

Heading the National Election Committee

After seven years far from political life, he returned to the public scene to hold a position as chairman of the National Election Committee of Cambodia in 1997, a choice that was criticized by those close to the FUNCINPEC who now considered him a supporter of Hun Sen [23] too close to the Cambodian People's Party, which he had left briefly before the Paris Peace Agreements. [24] On March 7, 1998, he signed a $25.8 million contract with a private company called Ciccone to stage the elections, and when criticized for his actions, he assumed his responsibility, saying there were no other options. [25] Nevertheless, his neutrality was appreciated in the election process, even by international observers such as Human Rights Watch [26] as well as the Asian Network for Free Elections, which acknowledged that Chheng Phon actively helped deploy a network of independent observers during the election cycle. [27]

Death

Chheng Phon died on December 22, 2016, in Ta Khmau in Kandal province at the age of 86. Sending his condolences to the family, Prime Minister Hun Sen acknowledged him as a national hero saying:

The death of this elderly man is the loss of a father, a grandfather of Brahmavihara and the loss of human resources, [who] took an important role in serving and developing the nation.

Prime Minister Hun Sen [28]

Views

The "warrior mentality" and spiritual battle of Khmer civilization

Chheng Phon defended his efforts to rebuild the classical dance tradition by appealing to a sense of pride in a Cambodian "national aesthetic." [29] Chheng Phon often insisted, as he did during his intervention at Japan Foundation's "Symposium on Angkor," [30] that the cultural restoration in Cambodia should also be a spiritual restoration. To that end, the renaissance of Khmer civilization did not only require a stronger economy but a new generation of politicians with a "warrior mentality", "visionary men and women who can reignite pride in the culture that the previous generation brought close to annihilation". [31]

Conserving Angkor

As Minister of Culture, Chheng Phon struggled to preserve the authentic site of the Angkor monuments; for him, "build a five-star hotel near the monuments would be to destroy the monuments". He wanted horse-drawn carts as taxis and no airport close to the archeological site. [32] He had an ambitious vision for the restoration of national monuments of Cambodia:

We still remember the high civilization of Angkor. What we had 1,000 years ago we must make alive again.

Chheng Phon [33]

Cultural communication between West and East

While he was very conservative on cultural issues, Chheng Phon was open to new creations, such as the 1999 version of Shakespeare's Othello wich was blended into Khmer ballet by his niece Sophiline Shapiro whom he praised for her "communication between the west and the east". [34]

Legacy

He was a representative playwright of Cambodia and also a professor of the study of ancient Khmer art. He was also a screenwriter, director, an actor. He contributed to the restoration of traditional culture in villages that were destroyed during the Khmer Civil War.

He dedicated his life after the Civil War to the training of specialists who would devote themselves to the restoration of cultural property and was especially well known for assembling the artists and performers who survived the Khmer Rouge. As such, Chheng Phon is remembered as one of the "heroic saviours of the performing arts" in Cambodia". [35]

He is survived by two sons, who are filmmakers. Culture Minister Phoeurng Sackona is Chheng Phon's daughter-in-law. [36]

Chheng Phon was the mentor to a whole generation of Khmer artists, such as Pech Tum Kravil who considered Phon as his "mentor". [37]

Honors

Bibliography

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References

  1. "Presentation of Chheng Phon". Fukuoka Prize. Retrieved 2022-02-21.
  2. "Flowers in the Forest: A Talk with Chheng Phon, Minister of Information and Culture". www.culturalsurvival.org. Retrieved 2022-02-21.
  3. Southeast Asian Affairs. Institute of Southeast Asian Studies. 1994. p. 105.
  4. Khemaravidyā caṃṇeḥṭẏṅ qaṃbī qatītakāl niṅ kārruam vibhāgdān knuṅ kārsṭār niṅ sthāpanā prades Kambujā ḷoeṅviñ (in French). Royal Ministry of Education, Youth, and Sports of Cambodia. 1998. p. 313.
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  6. Chheng, Phon (1997). "Biography". Fukuoka Prize. Retrieved February 21, 2022.
  7. Joubert, Lindy (2008-06-19). Educating in the Arts: The Asian Experience: Twenty-Four Essays. Springer Science & Business Media. p. 96. ISBN   978-1-4020-6387-9.
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  14. Khing, Hoc Dy (1990). Contribution à l'histoire de la littérature khmère: Ecrivains et expressions litteraires du Cambodge au XXeme siecle (in French). Editions l'Harmattan. p. 229. ISBN   978-2-7384-0844-0.
  15. Thiroux, Emily (1993). Cultures: Diversity in Reading and Writing. Prentice Hall. p. 259. ISBN   978-0-13-194614-9.
  16. Oriental Studies in the USSR. Nauka Publishers, Central Department of Oriental Literature. 1989. p. 115.
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  27. Kang, Iong Nian (2002). Report: International Observation Missions Cambodia Commune Council Elections, 24 December 2001-15 February 2002. Asian Network for Free Elections. p. 6. ISBN   978-974-7216-41-7.
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Chheng Phon
ឆេង ផុន
Minister of Culture and Fine Arts
In office
1982–1991