Showing posts with label Cambodia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cambodia. Show all posts

Feb 12, 2018

The sound of silence: sexual abuse in Cambodia’s Buddhist pagodas

unregulated pagoda environment,
Paul Millar
South East Asia Globe
February 12, 2018

An unregulated pagoda environment, the status of monks and the downplaying of male rape means that abuse of children in the monkhood is likely more widespread than anyone dares to admit.

At first he was nice to me,” Samnang says, his eyes far away. “He made me feel important; made me feel special.”

Samnang, whose name has been changed to protect his identity, was barely 15 years old when he left home for Ratanak Mony Rong Ko pagoda in Kralanh district on the outskirts of Siem Reap town. Born into a poor family in a run-down village, and desperate for a way out, he asked his parents to send him to study with the local monks.

“My family had so many problems – they were fighting a lot,” he tells Southeast Asia Globe. “I wanted to be calmer. So they had to send me to live in a pagoda, where I could have free food and education with the monks.”

Bearing the shaved head and saffron robe of a novice, Samnang says he took to his studies of scripture and the ancient Buddhist language of Pali with relish, rising every morning to sing the holy scriptures of his faith. Fifteen kilometres from the nearest village, Ratanak Mony Rong Ko was a small pagoda with just nine other boys studying alongside him under a handful of monks. Above these monks was 45-year-old Vong Chet, the abbot, or chief monk, of the pagoda. A man whose words carried great weight with the community, he soon began to take an interest in the pagoda’s newest arrival.

“A lot of the other monks didn’t like him,” Samnang says, staring at his fingers. “Back then, I didn’t know why.”

Over the course of the next year, Vong Chet repeatedly raped Samnang and the nine other novices living at the pagoda. The abbot would corner them in the stained toilets of the pagoda or lure them into his private quarters. For some of the boys, the abuse lasted years. Later, before the court, one boy would describe how he had been raped on as many as 25 separate occasions. Each time, when it was over, the abbot would hand him a crumpled fistful of 10,000-riel notes, each one worth $2.50. It was only when the last boy he attacked, new to the temple, told his parents what had happened that the police were called.

Now 18, Samnang works at a motorbike repair shop in Siem Reap town. Scrawny and sombre, his voice never rises above a murmur as he describes the betrayal he felt when he found out that every older monk at the pagoda had known about Vong Chet’s abuse of the boys in their care – and kept silent for more than two years. “They knew before everything happened,” he says. “No one dared to tell me. All the monks knew about what was going on, but no one told us kids. No one told us to be careful.”

There is little anger left in him now, he says. He sips his water and falls silent.

Leafing through a thick red ledger in his office in central Phnom Penh, Child Protection Unit (CPU) director of operations James McCabe sifts through the hundreds of cases of torture, rape and death that his team investigates every year. Bathed in the light of twin computer screens streaming live reports of children beaten and brutalised across the nation, he passes over a photo of a drowned child, black and bloated, to stop at a double spread of gaunt young boys in saffron robes. Among them is Samnang. Although Vong Chet presided over the longest period of sustained sexual abuse that McCabe had uncovered in the nation’s pagodas, he tells Southeast Asia Globe, it was far from the first.

“It’s institutional abuse,” he says. “They’ve got access to children, without any real monitoring. We’ve [been involved in the arrest of ] at least ten monks in the past three years for the abuse of boys. Quite often there were multiple victims – sometimes two, sometimes three, sometimes four. A majority of the time, it was only through the parents or a relative that the disclosure was made.”

Cambodian Buddhist monks walk in line during a Buddhist ceremony in front of the Royal Palace in Phnom Penh Photo: Tang Chhin Sothy/AFP

Set up to work with local law enforcement to bring forensic specialists and investigators to work on cases where children are abused, raped, assaulted or killed, the CPU was active in securing Vong Chet’s arrest and 15-year imprisonment. Following reports that the abbot had previously served a series of short stints – no more than a year or two at a time – at a number of other pagodas across Siem Reap, Battambang and Kampot provinces, a task force was sent to hunt out evidence of earlier victims. The communities remained silent.

“There was a follow-up in regards to the wats that he’d been at,” McCabe says, using another term for pagodas. “There were no disclosures – nothing that would allow us to further investigate. That’s not to suggest it didn’t happen, because leopards don’t change their spots. But there were no disclosures that would allow us to investigate.”

Adding that it would be almost unheard of for a man of Vong Chet’s age to suddenly begin to abuse boys, McCabe drew parallels with the unfolding crisis in the Catholic church, where paedophile priests were found to have been purposefully shifted between parishes to reduce the risk of a scandal – allowing them to continue preying on thousands of children in sometimes decades-long campaigns of sexual abuse.

“It’s the same as in the Catholic church – they move around, and they don’t stop,” McCabe says. “Is it likely that [Vong Chet] had offended [previously]? More than likely… He had abused, what, ten, 11 boys at one wat? Who’s to say there weren’t five more at another? He had to start somewhere – he didn’t just start in Siem Reap, that’s quite obvious.”

Nor was he the only one. In 2014, a monk fled his pagoda in Kampong Cham province after being accused of raping 11 boys, all between the ages of 11 and 16. He was later caught by police and charged. Two years later, in Takeo province, another monk was arrested for the rape of a 13-year-old boy. McCabe told Southeast Asia Globe that, despite his initial arrest, the abuser was still listed as ‘at large’. And just last year, two monks were arrested in Siem Reap and Phnom Penh for separately abusing two boys in their care. They were both six years old.

Jarrett Davis, an independent social researcher whose work largely focuses on those vulnerable to sexual exploitation and abuse, said that institutions invested with unchallenged authority and power over children in their care often left those same children at risk.

“In some ways, institutions provide a cone of silence,” he says. “The big thing socially is the power, the authority, the purity that is ascribed to people – that they’re sort of untouchable. You grew up in a household where the way your parents talk about the monk, or the priest or the rabbi – they ascribe this position to them. And they become untouchable. And when you see this ugly underbelly, it must be your fault; it must be something you’ve done. Because clearly it’s not their fault – they’re pure, they’re untouchable. So what have you done?”

With more than 95% of Cambodians identifying as Theravada Buddhist, the faith is an inescapable fact of life in the Kingdom. Functioning not just as places of worship but community centres, schools, event spaces, residential care and retirement homes, the local pagoda is the beating heart of traditional Cambodian society.

As living symbols of the sacred teachings of the Buddha, monks remain a source of much-needed education and guidance for their communities. More than this, they serve as an invaluable way – by means of offerings, alms and donations – of earning good karma to ensure success not just in this life, but the next.

Yaim Chamreun, executive director of First Step Cambodia, a local NGO offering counselling and support to male victims of sex abuse in the Kingdom, says that he believes the high importance placed on pagodas in Cambodia had created a culture of gated self-preservation in the nation’s largely autonomous Buddhist sanctuaries.

“Most people think that pagodas are very sacred places – a place where God is present,” he says. “So, often, issues are not really being discussed or shared – it’s all behind closed doors. And they always think about the reputation of the pagoda. So sometimes if the abuse takes place, they’ll find ways to cover that up.”

In cases such as Samnang’s, where the perpetrator was none other than the chief abbot, it was this unassailable authority – and, it was rumoured, his past connection to the Khmer Rouge regime – that kept the other monks silent for fear of being cast out of the community they had lived in for most of their lives.

These monks were already affected by the abuse, but then the community started mocking them, making jokes

More often, though, the grim reality is that for many male victims of sexual abuse, their experience is simply overlooked or brushed aside. Davis says that Cambodia’s strict gender roles, which dictate that men cannot be vulnerable to abuse and exploitation in the same way as women, seemed to be curiously reflected in broader international efforts to fight child abuse – efforts, he says, that routinely ignore the full extent of the harm perpetrated to young boys.

“A big thing that we’ve been working on… is looking at gender and some of the assumptions that apply to genders. Oftentimes we assume that victims are girls and perpetrators are boys or men – and that, often, particularly within institutions, can make an issue invisible,” he says. “[Cases are] less likely to be reported, [boys are] less likely to be seen as harmed in the case of sexual abuse, and law enforcement are often less likely to take it seriously.”

It is this imbalance that led to the founding of First Step Cambodia more than seven years ago. Although the NGO has recently expanded its Siem Reap operations to care for female abuse victims as well, it remains committed to educating the community on the struggle of male victims of sex abuse.

“Many Cambodians find it very challenging to understand and to believe that a boy can be abused – including family members,” he says. “People still laugh – even some people who call themselves social workers. [In Siem Reap], these monks were already affected by the abuse, but then the community started mocking them, making jokes – asking them things like: ‘Who was the first wife; who was the second wife?’ and they were very ashamed. Their fear became greater, and they stopped going out to collect food. They were starving. When our staff met them, some of them hadn’t had food for two days.”

In Ponga Photra, First Step Cambodia’s project manager in Siem Reap, says that the shame the boys felt after their abuse could have a devastating impact on their mental health.

“One of the hardest perceptions to overcome is that they failed to protect themselves – they’re men, and men are supposed to be strong,” he says. “And monks are forbidden from having sex. So they feel like they have lost their value – and it’s very hard for them to recover from that.”

Even for victims who recognise what they have been through as sexual abuse, fear of their family and community finding out what has been done to them leaves them reluctant to speak out about their attacker.

When the police came for his abuser, Samnang says, he was terrified.

“After the monk was arrested, I just left. I didn’t want to stay,” he says. “But I didn’t want to leave either – I liked the pagoda a lot, and I still wanted to study there, but I needed to get out.”

It is this sense of shame, in part, that makes the full scale of institutional sexual abuse in pagodas so difficult to determine. Emphasising that reliable statistics on male victims of sexual abuse were incredibly difficult to come by, the World Health Organisation (WHO) cites studies suggesting that as many as one in ten men in developed countries reported a history of childhood sexual abuse. In some developing countries, that number rose as high as one in five.

The hierarchy of the Buddhist fraternity needs to have an office of integrity and child protection

The WHO also emphasises that the vast majority of experts believe that official statistics massively under-represent the number of male rape victims, suggesting that men are even less likely than women to report sexual abuse. A study conducted by World Vision Cambodia in 2005 found that almost one in five boys aged 12-15 stated they had been sexually abused after the age of nine. And a 2013 Unicef survey into violence against children in Cambodia found that out of more than 2,000 respondents, more boys than girls reported being sexually abused. Of those who reported being sexually abused as children, about 6% claimed to have been assaulted in a pagoda – all of them girls. The survey did not reach out to children actually living within pagodas, or specify the identity of the attackers.

McCabe says that trying to estimate the number of unreported male sex abuse victims remained a challenge.

“It would be hard to quantify what’s actually occurring,” he says. “And this is where the hierarchy of the Buddhist fraternity needs to have an office of integrity and child protection, to do inspections, to go out and visit – it’s part of their responsibility of being a religious institution. They should know exactly who’s in the wat.”

Despite failing to respond to widespread calls for reform two years ago, the Buddhist religious community appears to be making grudging motions towards transparency. Unicef Cambodia chief of communications Iman Morooka told Southeast Asia Globe that the government was taking steps to address community concerns about child sex abuse within Buddhist institutions – though they had yet to finalise a system for reporting cases of exploitation and assault.

“The Ministry of Cults and Religion, with support from Unicef, is developing a Child Protection Pagoda programme with the aim of making pagodas a safer place for children, including establishing reporting and referral mechanisms if children face abuse in those settings,” she says. The ministry did not respond to repeated requests for comment.

In October last year, the ministry published a curriculum on the appropriate Buddhist response to violence against children as well as a picture book teaching young monks the importance of setting an example for the community. Both of these texts are now mandatory for Buddhist graduate school students.

In the picture book, Novice Sokha, a young monk escapes the chaos and violence of his family life to take refuge in the teachings of Chav Athika, an older monk who teaches him that a monk must above all things advocate for the rights of children. On the final page, an adult Sokha sits serenely on his throne, receiving the respect and adulation of his kneeling community.

It is an image that jars with the boy sitting before us. Far from his friends and family, Samnang’s boyhood dream of entering into the community of monks died somewhere back in Kralanh. Despite this, he seems to have attained a level of hard-won serenity that makes him seem older than his 18 years.

“I used to be so angry,” he says. “I don’t feel angry towards those monks anymore.”

For First Step’s Photra, though, the actions of predators such as Vong Chet are harder to forgive. “They use their status as a tool for getting sex – they say it is how you become a good monk,” he says. “And if you don’t understand sexual abuse, it works… I suspect it happens in many more pagodas.”

This article was published in the February edition of Southeast Asia Globe magazine. For full access, subscribe here.

Related reading:Why Indonesian activists are defending these school employees jailed for child sex abusePagoda problems: the decline of Buddhism in CambodiaThe forgotten men: sexual abuse of males in Cambodia

http://sea-globe.com/the-sound-of-silence-sexual-abuse-in-cambodias-buddhist-pagodas/

Jan 17, 2017

CultNEWS101: Articles 1/18/2017 ​

cult news
White Supremacist, ​Catholic Church, Abuse-child, Boko Haram, Shakers, FLDS, Scientology, Buddhism, ​Bikram Yoga, Polygamy, legal, Cameroon, Cambodia


White Supremacist
While everyone is familiar with the swastika's significance to white supremacists and their organization, not every sign is as obvious. Not every neo-Nazi is a skinhead (and not every skinhead is a neo-Nazi). And as evidenced by various fascist-normalizing profiles on the "alt right," the majority of white supremacists look like normal people and can blend easily into crowds.


A former priest at Holy Name of Jesus 
​​
Catholic Church on Wednesday sued the Diocese of Palm Beach, claiming it punished him for exposing a pedophile priest rather than covering it up as they wanted.

The lawsuit, filed in Palm Beach County Circuit Court, accuses the diocese and Bishop Gerald Barbarito of defaming the Rev. John Gallagher. The 49-year-old priest pointed to a statement posted last year on the diocesan website that said Gallagher was “blatantly lying” and “in need of professional assistance” for claiming church leaders urged him not to tell police a visiting priest in January 2015 had shown pornographic pictures to a 14-year-old youth at the suburban West Palm Beach church.


Boko Haram
After Biya’s call to employ witchcraft against Boko Haram in January 2016, hundreds of militia fighters rushed to sorcerers, commonly called “marabouts,” to obtain lucky charms and talismans to protect them in battle.


Shakers
At their height in the mid-19th century, Shakers numbered about 6,000, with 19 settlements, mainly in New England, New York and Kentucky. An offshoot of Quakers, the Shakers began in England in the 1740s. Seeking religious freedom, they left for the colonies on the eve of the American Revolution. Their rise coincided with a religious fervour sweeping the frontier. Decades before emancipation and 150 years before women had the vote, Shakers practised social, gender and racial equality for all members.


Warren Jeffs
Texas records indicated that Jeffs, the church president who is serving a prison sentence in that state, married 81 times to women and girls. One of the few to speak is Brielle Decker.

Decker has given interviews in recent years. The latest is with the podcast "Year of Polygamy."

When a friend told Ron Miscavige about Holiday Magic, a multi-level cosmetics marketing scheme, he didn't think much of it at first. But in 1968, the promise of $100,000 in extra income for top distributors proved too enticing for a cookware salesman with four kids at home. A good talker with an entrepreneurial bent, he put in $5,000 to became a "master distributor."


The Minister of Cults and Religion was questioned by a National Assembly commission on Tuesday over efforts to promote Buddhism in the country and an assortment of other concerns affecting the religion, according to the opposition lawmaker who summoned him.


Bikram Choudhury
Things just keep getting worse for 
​​
Bikram Choudhury. A judge has ordered the Bikram Yoga founder to turn over the proceeds from his business to go toward a $6.8 million judgment his former legal adviser won against him last year in a sexual harassment and wrongful termination lawsuit, the former employee’s lawyer said last week, according to the Associated Press.


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Please forward articles that you think we should add to CultNEWS101.com.

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Dec 17, 2016

UFO Cult Struggles to Recruit New Followers

Followers of the Raelian Movement gather at the Taiming Plaza Hotel in Phnom Penh on Tuesday. (Cambodia Raelian Movement)
Followers of the Raelian Movement gather at the Taiming
Plaza Hotel in Phnom Penh on Tuesday.
(Cambodia Raelian Movement)
The Cambodia Daily
BY GEORGE WRIGHT
DECEMBER 17, 2016

About 10 years ago, Am Vichet was staring at a clear night sky outside his home in Takhmao City when he witnessed something that would change his life.

“I was sitting together with my brother and sister at home and I looked up at the sky. I see one object,” Mr. Vichet recounted on Thursday.

At first he thought it was an airplane. But after taking a second look, he concluded that the object was from a different realm altogether.

“It was flying around and around. The first thought was, ‘That’s an airplane,’ but later on I saw that it was not moving fast, further and further,” he said.

“This was a real UFO.”

The seeds of intrigue regarding UFOs had been sown in his mind a couple of weeks before, when he had attended a seminar hosted by foreign followers of a movement in Phnom Penh as they attempted to recruit Cambodians to the world’s biggest UFO cult—the Raelian Movement.

After witnessing the UFO circling Kandal province firsthand, Mr. Vichet said, it was the moment that he decided to become Cambodia’s first officially baptized member of the movement.

Raelism was founded in 1974 by a French journalist named Claude Vorilhon.

He claims that on December 13, 1973, at the age of 27, he drove his sports car up the Puy de Lassolas volcano park in central France when a spaceship in the shape of a flattened bell descended from the sky and hovered in front of him. A small, long-haired extraterrestrial named Yahweh then descended down a staircase and asked Mr. Vorilhon to join him on board.

Over the next six days, Yahweh told the Frenchman that he and other extraterrestrials, or Elohim, had created humanity about 25,000 years before. Over time, they had sent numerous prophets, including Jesus and Buddha, to Earth in order to communicate messages of love and peace.

Yahweh said that humanity was at last capable of understanding this, and the time had come for an embassy to be built in order for them to make a safe return.

Mr. Vorilhon, or Rael as he is now known, has yet to convince a country to let him build an embassy and the Elohim are yet to return to Earth. Despite this, his devout followers are still globetrotting in an effort to attract more into his UFO movement, which it claims boasts more than 85,000 members in 104 countries.

Tuesday was the 43rd anniversary of Rael’s “first encounter” with Yahweh and the occasion was marked in Cambodia by a small gathering of nine people, including three foreign Raelians and a handful of tuk-tuk drivers drafted in to make up the numbers, inside a small room at the Taiming Plaza Hotel on Norodom Boulevard.

During the meeting, Canadian Sylvain Mayrand, who joined the movement after picking up one of Rael’s books as a 13-year-old, presented DVDs to the group including one on Rael’s theory of “paradism.”

Paradism is based on observations Rael claims he made on a trip to the Elohim planet in 1975.

It seeks a world without money or work, and states that technology will soon be advanced enough that jobs currently done by humans can be done by robots. In a paradist society, there will be no work, no money, no government, no police, no disease and, eventually, no death. Instead, there would be an emphasis on playing, meditation, the arts and “making friends.”

Details on how paradism is to be implemented are not totally clear.

Speaking after the meeting, however, Mr. Mayrand—who attributed the fact that there are only two active Cambodian Raelians to, in part, newspapers not having “a good reputation for telling the truth”—said he believed Rael’s early teachings illustrate that paradism is attainable.

“I believe [in paradism], but he told that in 1973. That’s the amazing thing: He knew all of this. It’s written in the message that we would get to this point and now we are getting there and we’re very close to this paradise,” he said.

“In 1975, the second encounter, they brought him to the planet where they live eternally in the paradise. They explain in the book how they get to the eternal. Everything is explained. It’s a very scientific explanation,” he added.

Oy Sith, who attended the meeting to find out more about Raelism, said that although he agreed with the religion’s general message of love and unity, he found the theories about extraterrestrials and living a life with no work or money rather far-fetched.

“I don’t believe in UFOs or aliens because no one has even seen these UFO or aliens before,” he said. “Who can prove where the UFOs or aliens [are] living?”

“I don’t agree with the idea that robots will work for people and that money will not be necessary,” he added. “If people are born without working, and there are just robots working for us and we don’t need money, then what were people born for?”

Mr. Vichet said about 1,000 had attended events over the years and many have shown an interest—including a deputy prime minister whom he declined to name. However, the utopian concepts of Rael­ism and paradism are yet to strike a chord with Cambodians, he conceded.

“The concept is a very high-level for the Cambodians. Some may not understand and find it very difficult to accept this one because they are working very hard for their business. Some people are still thinking about working for their living, working for money,” he said.

Cambodia’s first official Raelian cited the importance of the establishment of an embassy somewhere on the planet to call the Elohim back to earth. A 2013 request to Prime Minister Hun Sen’s cabinet to erect one in Phnom Penh went ignored.

“I actually don’t believe that these documents got to the prime minister, because while we started the process they wanted to get big money from us,” he said. “We said we didn’t have any money.”

Despite the absence of an embassy and the lack of success in attracting new followers, Mr. Vichet had faith that the power of the Elohim could still bring paradise to Cambodia.

“Maybe for Cambodia this will take time. I do believe that we will reach it one day, but for me, if there is not any power from the Elohim, I think that it will happen very slowly in a developing country like Cambodia,” he said.

“But if we get support, like the special power from the Elohim, to change the concept of the leaders in this country, people may change their concept and change will come faster.”

(Additional reporting by Buth Kimsay)

wright@cambodiadaily.com



https://www.cambodiadaily.com/news/ufo-cult-struggles-recruit-new-followers-122114/

Jan 18, 2016

Religion Ministry to hold wedding rituals seminar

Lay Samean
The Phnompenh Post
January 18, 2016


A wedding in Tuol Kork in 2008.
A wedding in Tuol Kork in 2008. 
In an effort to standardise wedding rituals, Cambodia’s achars, or laymen who carry out Buddhist rites of passage, have been invited to a 10-day training course next month in the capital, the Ministry of Cults and Religion announced last week.


Seng Somony, the ministry’s spokesman, said yesterday the course was intended to guarantee that cultural practices are carried out in a similar manner across the country as a way to preserve them for future generations.

Referring to practices in some parts of the country in which the bride washes the feet of the groom, while in other areas “the bride is supposed to place the wedding garland on the groom”, Somony said that one practice will be formally agreed upon, although there will be no punishment for achars who do not follow the prescribed ritual.

Sambo Manara, a professor of Khmer Studies and Cambodian History at Pannasastra University, however, said that traditions are important because of their differences across regions.

“Each clergyman in different villages or provinces has their own unique habit,” he said.

However, the Venerable But Buntenh, founder of the Independent Monk Network, said the government has no place controlling the clergy’s rituals and views the training courses as politically motivated.

“At the end of the training course they have a representative from the Ministry of Cults and Religion saying, ‘We have only one party, it is the CPP party, and only Samdech … Hun Sen is Prime Minister.”

http://www.phnompenhpost.com/national/religion-ministry-hold-wedding-rituals-seminar