Sign Language Training

Krousar Thmey and the Deaf Development Programme jointly sponsor a sign language committee tasked with researching and promoting Cambodian Sign Language. The committee was supposed to receive training six or seven years ago but it didn’t work out.

Now Aaron Wong, a deaf man from Hong Kong, and Keat Sokly, the co-director of DDP, are offering three weeks of training. Both are trained sign language linguists.The committee members are meeting at DDP and are off to a really good start.

Aaron explains some of the really basic linguistic concepts they will examine in these three weeks.
Heang Samath explains the concept as he understands it.

Happy Sisters

This past Sunday I had a special mass for the Salesian Sisters who were just finishing up their week-long retreat and also celebrating the 146th anniversary of their community.  The retreat must have had a good effect because they were in a joyous mood at breakfast after mass!

LaValla Graduation

One of the more joyful and life-giving schools in Cambodia is the Marist Brothers’ LaValla School for children with physical disabilities.  They have done such an excellent job in welcoming these young people, giving them a positive identity, and equipping them with a basic education that allows them to go on to a government secondary school.  Last Wednesday was graduation day for this year’s top class and it was definitely a day to celebrate the accomplishments of the students and the school.

Cambodian Election 2018

There was no way the ruling party–the CPP, the Cambodian People’s Party–was going to lose the election last Sunday.  The CPP-controlled legislature and courts had the main opposition party declared illegal and forced into exile or imprisoned the opposition leaders.

One of the opposition leaders in exile in France called for a boycott of the election but that was a dismal failure because the CPP made a big issue of the “clean finger” campaign (the index finger is dipped in ink when a person votes) and basically threatened to prosecute anyone who didn’t vote, and they know the person didn’t vote if there’s no ink on his or her finger.  (There’s no law that says a person must vote but that’s irrelevant to the CPP.)  Also the CPP can see which villages or other area had a low voter turnout and then that area could say goodbye to any hope of a new school or road or other service.

The only alternative left for those who wanted to protest was to go to vote but then invalidate the ballot by marking no candidate or several candidates.  The headline above shows that is what nearly 9% of the country did.  Approximately 600,000 ballots were declared invalid.  In the last election in 2013, only 1.6% of the ballots were invalid.  Everyone knows what the huge jump in invalid ballots means but the government can claim that they had a large turnout that makes the one-party election “legitimate.”

Notable Quotes

 

“It is time for Christians to lift up the truth over falsehood, as a way of life. To defend public service over political tyranny. And to always protect the increasingly vulnerable. It is time to reclaim Jesus. Jim Wallis.”

~ Jim Wallis, Sojourners

Cambodian Election 2018

Today is the first day of a three-day holiday for the Cambodian national elections.  The actual voting takes place tomorrow and the day before and the day after were declared holidays to allow people to travel to the provinces to vote.  There is no absentee balloting. Campaigning was allowed up to yesterday.  Today–what the officials call a “clean day”—no campaigning or demonstrations are allowed. Passive signs like this ruling party sign–on public property–can be a passive voice for the parties although the ruling party is the only one that can really afford them.