http://newamericamedia.org/2011/10/cambodian-refugees-reunite-in-oakland-26-years-later.php#
RE: Colonel Ne Lam from New America Media on Vimeo.
OAKLAND, Calif. -- Despite what he’s been through, Vietnamese Colonel Ne
Lam, now 83 and residing in a senior housing unit in Oakland, looks
young for his age. These days he’s recognized as a devoted Cambodian
Buddhist monk, a community leader who travels back to Cambodia and
Vietnam every year to do charity work. But to the survivors of the
Vietnamese Dong Rek Refugee Camp, he was more than a leader. He was a
life-saver.
“To me, he is the king,” described Sean Do, a
47-year-old Cambodian-Vietnamese-Chinese survivor of the Dong Rek
camp—an International Red Cross-supported camp located on the
Thai-Cambodian border that was home to Cambodian and Vietnamese
refugees.
Do, who now works and lives in San Francisco,
recently learned from other refugees that Lam had not passed away as
rumored. And not only was Lam alive, Do learned, but they were living in
the very same city. After 26-years, Do would finally be reunited with
the man he calls his “hero”.
At the age of 17, Do arrived alone
at the refugee camp after losing contact with his family amid the chaos
of fleeing the war. When the Red Cross delegates were off duty,
thieves would regularly raid the camp, and one night Do was hospitalized
after being mugged and severely beaten. Due to his injuries, Do was
immediately relocated to Nong Samet Platform, a new refugee camp where
Do later landed a job as a physician’s assistant with the International
Red Cross. He was attractive as an employee because of his ability to
speak Cantonese, Vietnamese, Cambodian and French. Lam, who ran the
refugee camp at that time, visited Do frequently and gave him the
attention and support he so desperately needed during his recovery.
“I am not only grateful that he saved my life, but that he was there for the [other] refugees,” said Do.
Theft, random attacks and the raping of girls and women were common at
the camps, but the presence of Lam made all the difference, recalled Do.
Each night, Lam patrolled the camp perimeter to ensure the safety of
the refugees. Lam said the Cambodian soldiers were all scared of him
and respected him as a Buddhist monk, so they didn’t dare invade the
camp when he was present. “He was a true leader,” said Do. From time
to time, he allowed girls and women to find shelter in his cottage on
the nights when they were worried for their safety.
From 1982
to 1985, the number of refugees at the camp grew from 500 to over 8,000
people, mainly because of the social instabilities in Cambodia and
Vietnam, but also because of Lam’s reputation for maintaining peace in
the refugee camp.
Born in 1927, Lam was brought up as a
Cambodian Buddhist monk at a Cambodian temple in Vietnam, where he was
born and raised. Lam’s parents migrated from China to work on the rice
fields in Vietnam. Lam later furthered his education in France and
joined the Vietnamese military after he returned, and was later
appointed as Colonel.
However, during the Vietnam War, Lam,
like many intellectuals, was put in a reeducation camp for six years.
After he was released, he immediately took his son and fled to the Dong
Rek Refugee Camp in Thailand. Recognizing Lam’s background as a Colonel
and his leadership skills, people at the camp eventually turned to him
to create some order within the disorganized and unsafe camp.
Lam said life in the camp was harsh. Food and clean water were in short
supply, hygiene was poor and interpersonal conflicts were many—caused
by differences between families, languages, ethnicities and religions.
The refugees were mainly Laos, Vietnamese, and Cambodian.
Lam
sought to maintain peace by preaching respect. Even though he was a
Buddhist practitioner himself, he kindly welcomed worship in temples,
churches and mosques throughout the camp. Religious practice in the camp
allowed for the refugees to believe in a better future, said Lam.
In 1985, after spending three and a half years at the camp, Lam and his
son were ordered to leave the camp after his life was threatened. Do,
who knew the camp wouldn’t be as safe after the Lam’s departure, decided
to also leave, and was fortunate to have the Red Cross arrange for his
relocation to Denmark. Do and Lam thus parted, and lost contact with
each other over the ensuing years. Do finished his college education in
Denmark and immigrated to the U.S. after a stop in England and Japan.
What he did not know was, Lam also immigrated to the United States after
stopping briefly in the Philippines shortly after he left the camp.
Do said he was grateful to see Lam again, and not surprised to find
that he hadn’t changed a bit when it comes to helping others.
Now living alone in Oakland, Lam leads a very modest life, receiving SSI
and saving up every penny for children and monks in Cambodia. Since
1994, Lam has managed to visit Cambodia and Vietnam once a year to
donate money and food to temples out of his own pocket, to support the
education of children there.
“Life is now different; whenever I
travel back to Cambodia and Vietnam to do the charity, the government
is happy to see me. They respect and welcome me. They know I am a good
person,” said Lam.
Lam also used the opportunity to visit his
five daughters who stayed in Vietnam. Lam said he petitioned for his
daughters to immigrant to the United States but all were rejected except
his youngest daughter because the U.S. government suspected that they
were not his real children.
“I have to wait eight years (for my
youngest daughter to come home), ” said Lam, who is hoping to have his
daughter come to take care of him.
BATAAN REVISITED -Venerable Abhinyana
-
Because I Care
THE SKY WAS OVERCAST as we left Manila— my two companions and I— on the
morning of December 19th 1999 for what used to be the Bataan Refug...
5 years ago
0 comments:
Post a Comment