Passion and patience make
strange bedfellows but are essential when best-laid plans temporarily go awry.
Youk
Chhang, founder of the Sleuk Rith Institute and the Executive Director of the
Documentation Centre of Cambodia (DC-Cam) continues to work tirelessly on his
ambitious proposal to reconcile his country’s brutal past with its rich ancient
cultural heritage. He is trying to build a multi-purpose centre commemorating
Cambodia’s genocide and is doing this in what can best be described as an
uneasy present.
Facing
numerous setbacks, Chhang, who is also a survivor of the infamous Khmer Rouge
era of 1975-79 in which more than two million people perished, remains
undeterred.
“We were
planning to start building in February this year,” says Chhang. But efforts
have ground to a halt.
“The
delay is very complicated involving government bureaucracy, and we are working
to resolve it now.”
Designed
by the late multi award-winning London-based Iraqi architect, Zaha Hadid, back
in 2014, the Sleuk Rith Institute’s design immediately conjures images of a
distant future as well as Cambodia’s glorious past. Five towers reminiscent of
Angkor Wat rise from the monsoonal mists of the famed and beautiful jungle to
inspire yet another allegory — trees of knowledge and life.
“The
repression of cultural knowledge during the French colonial era, followed by
the Khmer Rouge regime’s ideology as a form of education meant that links to
the rest of the world were severed,” says Chhang.
“It was
an ideology that almost destroyed us. Today we are still chained to the past,
which is why for me, only education can set us free. We should not be enslaved
by the past. We cannot escape it; we have to face it.”
The name
Sleuk Rith is highly symbolic and refers to the power of leaves, explains
Chhang, as he recounts a story of Cambodian intellectuals and activists
secretly writing messages on dried leaves during the colonial era to preserve
their knowledge and culture.
The
symbolism runs even deeper.
There are
distinctive parallels between the ancient regional tradition of meticulously
writing Hindu then later Buddhist texts on palm leaves, sastra, to the
hundreds and thousands of leaves of paper filled with forced confessions
delivered under unabated torture, to reams of survivor testimonies painstakingly
recorded and collected by the DC-Cam team since it began its work in
1995.
Chhang is
quick to mention that within the concept of the power of leaves exists another
meaning — plain paper, or that critical moment before the page fills with ideas
and feelings, and which allows for the possibility of new versions of the
history of genocide.
“When I
was growing up, there was no education, and very few had travelled outside of
the country,” says Chhang.
“As a
result of genocide, Cambodians are now all over the world, and I think, because
of that, people have formed a new version of the history of genocide. Each
person comes with a different idea, different ways of thinking and different
views, so there’s no singular interpretation.”
The new
building is meant to inspire reflection, reconciliation and the restoration of
relationships broken by the Khmer Rouge’s near four-year reign of terror.
However, unlike other memorials and in situ sites scattered throughout
the country offering explicit and undeniably invaluable evidence of the
atrocities orchestrated by the regime, the Sleuk Rith Institute aims to tell
the same horror story a little differently.
“Many
young people look at a skull, a shackle or a blood stain on a wall and feel
that it is the older generation who are responsible for the mistakes made,”
says Chhang.
“They see
the past as remote and have problems seeing it as part of their identity. But
if you come in with photography, with beauty, with dialogue, you bring them in,
and they start to question.”
Reinterpreting
the atrocities in any way as ‘beautiful’ immediately calls for a reevaluation
of aesthetics, as does the message that is hoped to be shared and retold by
others.
Sites
like Tuol Sleng, the notorious prison and interrogation center codenamed S-21,
and Choeung Ek ‘Killing Fields’ where the majority of prisoners were executed,
all serve as important witnesses to the past.
However,
it can be argued that they elicit intense feelings of pity, shame and disbelief,
which can be counterproductive when trying to understand what happened and to
possibly achieve reconciliation through empathy. And not everyone can visit
such places.
“The best
memorials evoke reflection and commemoration, but are also living, dynamic
places that engage with all generations in the community,” says Chhang.
“A
memorial should be enlightening, a place where both the younger and older
generation can feel comfortable learning about the tragedies of the past to
find new ways to heal, and to move forward.”
The
centre will not only commemorate the lives lost but also serve as a tribute to
the survivors via a museum of memory. It will also be an archive of all
documents about the period, a library and an international research center for
genocide studies, placing the Cambodian experience in context with other
atrocities still being perpetuated today despite global outcries.
While
such outcries have sadly done little to lessen the frequency and the impact of
genocide across the globe, the fact remains that there are survivors and with
them comes the arduous and initially insurmountable task of rebuilding a stable
cultural identity that helps to heal. These efforts require hope and relentless
optimism.
Architecturally,
Zahara Hadid’s futuristic designs embody this kind of optimism, as well as the
belief that the past defines the future. The future depends on it, and, so by
challenging the more traditional pessimistic practices of memorialising
traumatic histories, her designs reach into the future as if to show that this
can be, if not already, achieved. In the case of the Sleuk Rith Institute, this
can be seen in the shimmering waterways and the warmth of exposed wooden beams
that evoke the image of verdant and fertile trees or the themes of the rebirth
of knowledge.
By
widening the conceptual space for healing, the Sleuk Rith Institute has a
profoundly important role to play. It shows that heritage so unequivocally
rooted in pain and shame can be transformative through an oddly unsettling yet
familiar kind of beauty that has the potential to evoke much-needed empathy and
compassion.
“Genocide
is part our identity– it is our identity. It just takes a matter of time to
accept it,” says Chhang.
Time is a
great healer, and after a succession of delays we can only hope that Cambodia
will see a building it so desperately deserves — one that will aid a more
informed idea of the past well into the future.
Julia Mayer is a Masters of Museum and
Heritage Studies student at the Australian National University. She has lived
in Malaysia, Indonesia, Vietnam and South Korea, and has written extensively on
traditional arts, performances and cinema in the region. She is also the Asia
Correspondent for Metro Magazine Australia.
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