The lines of culture distinguishing one country from another are
blurring. The globalization of technology, information and finance has
allowed wealthy countries to export not only their political and
economic ideologies to developing countries but their traditions and
values as well.
The Cambodian government has made aggressive rhetorical efforts to
preserve the integrity of traditional Khmer culture, but younger
generations are hungry for a change.
In a seemingly uphill battle to maintain cultural identity in an
increasingly homogeneous global community, one man has made it his
mission to preserve the past for future generations.
From household items and clothes to jewelry and sculpture, Liv Saa
Em's private collection is one of the largest in Cambodia. "It is my
favorite thing to do since I was young. I like to keep antiques in my
house because my parents bought a lot of antiques from villagers to keep
at their house.
Upon first glance, Liv Saa Em could be mistaken for an ancient Khmer
man in his traditional dress. Ancient relics adorn his house as well,
stretching from the front door into the darkest corners. The building is
his sanctuary; a place Liv Saa Em says keeps him smiling. Visitors to
the house, which doubles as a museum, often have offered the collector
money for his goods. But Liv Saa Em's mission is to maintain Khmer
culture for Cambodia. His message: History is not for sale.
The robbery of Khmer artifacts, for sale to foreign countries, is a
rising concern. In efforts to preserve the integrity of Cambodia's
tangible history, the Ministry of Culture and Fine Arts recently
prohibited the exportation of artifacts from Cambodia to Vietnam and
Thailand. Liv Saa Em agrees with the act's passage, as he too works to
preserve artifacts so that all of Cambodia may enjoy them in years to
come.
Since the tender age of 13, Liv Saa Em has taken the cue of his
parents, who were avid collectors. Now preserving artifacts is not only a
hobby--it's a mission. "I'm very upset when I see our artifacts
exported to neighboring countries," he said. "We know that they are
really Khmer artifacts, but I have no ability to take them back to the
country."
Even when it is not in transit, safeguarding art is not always easy.
Liv Saa Em said artifacts kept in the National Museum cannot be promised
security, and his house in Tang Yab, Prey Kabas district of Takeo
province is no better. Pieces of history were shattered in 1976 when
young Khmer Rouge soldiers destroyed his parents' house and the
artifacts in it.
Unable to forget the loss, Liv Saa Em has made a conscious effort to
buy pieces for his private collection at home. Trading medicine or rice
for art, the collector has purchased relics from Takeo, Kampong Speu and
Phnom Penh. Now Liv Saa Em's reputation for collecting precedes him,
and tourists that visit his home hoping to make a purchase are always
denied.
"I love Khmer artifacts and I love to keep them forever," Liv Saa Em said.
Liv Saa Em's love affair with the past started when he was just a
boy. "I wore simple cloth like other people when I was young," he said.
But after completing his studies, Liv Saa Em developed a style of his
own. Entering adulthood, he wore the ancient Khmer cloth donned by
people of the Funan period and shaved his head so that only a tuft of
hair sat atop the middle of his crown.
Businessmen raised Liv Saa Em, the youngest son of a nine-member
family that often dressed in traditional Khmer clothing. He was the most
beloved of the lot then. Today he is alone. Liv Saa Em's brothers,
sisters and parents perished during the war.
Struggling to overcome the loss of his family, Liv Saa Em filled his
time honing his skills as a silk maker. He mixes together a rainbow of
colors to produce the vibrant fabric that is exported to Japan today and
earned him the Ministry of Culture and Fine Arts' Award for Best
Quality Producing in 1993. His Excellency Nut Narang, the former
Minister of Culture and Fine Arts, personally recognized Liv Saa Em as
the first successful producer of best quality silk following Pol Pot's
regime. His creativity is unceasing. Liv Saa Em rearranges the relics in
his house to assume a new look every week. In the afternoon visitors
can find the collector sitting amidst his artifacts, which he says are a
comfort to him. The house, an increasingly popular tourist destination,
has drawn curious visitors from around the country and the world. Movie
production companies have made the trip as well, using his traditional
house for the backdrop to particular scenes.
Liv Saa Em preserves the past to protect the future. Concerned that
irresponsible development could damage ancient artifacts, the collector
suggested that Cambodia develop a tourism industry based on the riches
of Khmer artifacts and temples.
Texts and pictures from Leisure Cambodia.
Religion and Beliefs
Theravada Buddhism is the religion of virtually all of the ethnic
Khmers, who constitute about 90% or more of the Cambodian population.
Buddhism originated in what are now north India and Nepal during the
sixth century B.C. Theravada Buddhism is a tolerant, non-prescriptive
religion that does not require belief in a supreme being.
Its precepts require that each individual take each individual take full responsibility for his own actions and omissions.Buddhism is based on three concepts: dharma (the doctrine of the
Buddha, his guide to right actions and belief); karma (the belief that
one's life now and in future lives depends upon one's own deeds and
misdeeds and that as an individual one is responsible for, and rewarded
on the basis of, the sum total of one's acts and act's incarnations past
and present); and sangha, the ascetic community within which man can
improve his karma. The Buddhist salvation is nirvana, a final extinction
of one's self. Nirvana may be attained by achieving good karma through
earning much merit and avoiding misdeeds.
A Buddhist's pilgrimage through existence is a constant attempt to
distance himself or herself from the world and finally to achieve
complete detachment, or nirvana. The fundamentals of Buddhist doctrine
are the Four Noble Truths: suffering exits; craving (or desire) is the
cause of suffering; release from suffering can be achieved by stopping
all desire; and enlightenment
Buddha hood – can be attained by following the Noble Eightfold Path
(right views, right intention, right speech, right action, right
livelihood, right effort, right mindfulness, and right concentration),
which constitutes a middle way between sensuality and ascetism.
Enlightenment consists of knowing these truths. The average layperson
cannot hope for nirvana after the end of this life, but can by
complying, as best he or she is able to, with the doctrine's rules of
moral conduct-hope to improve his or her karma and thereby better his
condition in the next incarnation.