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| ANLONG VENG PEACE CENTER | |||
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| Ek Choeun or Chhit Choeun (known as Ta Mok or Ta 15), CPK Secretary, Southwest Zone, 1977; Chief of the Gernal Staff Revolutionary Armed Fores of Democratic Kampuchea and Commander in Chief, Southwest Zone Armed Forces. Source: Documentation Center of Cambodia Archives. | |||
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ANLONG VENG PEACE CENTER 2014 - present
It has been 25 years since the signing of the Paris Peace Agreement. Peace remains a ‘fragile one’ in Cambodia. As one of the beneficiaries from the agreement, and in my role now as director of the Documentation Center of Cambodia, I would like to highlight the work of the Anlong Veng Peace Center and its contribution to the peaceful process. Peace will remain to be a long road for all Cambodians, if we don't walk together. Youk Chhang |
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| ANLONG VENG PEACE CENTER | |||
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'A long road if we don't walk to gether' An Initiative of The Documentation Center of Cambodia in collaboration with
the Ministry of Tourism The Anlong Veng Peace Center is dedicated to memory, reconciliation, and peace building, and it achieves these objectives through peace studies and genocide education. Peace studies represent the Center’s effort to identify and analyze violent and non-violent behaviors as well as structural mechanisms that precipitate conflict. Genocide education represents the Center’s effort to establish curricula that address the fundamental questions of what happened and why during the Khmer Rouge period. Both educational approaches are utilized with a view toward encouraging peace, education, and the rule of law. The Center’s new headquarters office is situated in Anlong Veng—the last stronghold of the Khmer Rouge regime. Working closely with the local community, schools, and tourism officials, the Center looks forward to bridging the divide between the former Khmer Rouge (KR) and Cambodia’s younger generation. The intent of the Center is to provide a variety of educational and tourism-related programs that help preserve the oral and physical history of the region as well as building peace and reconciliation between generations and across social divides. The Center not only aims to provide a critical understanding of Cambodia’s violent history, but it also seeks to convey a basic understanding of different theories on conflict resolution and transformation. Using its new office space as a headquarters, the Center will meet its objectives through future programs centering on interactive discussions, guided tours of local historical sites, and a curriculum that uses individual stories to convey historical and moral lessons. The tours will be rehabilitative to victims and former KR cadres in that they will provide victims and former cadres an opportunity to reflect on and impart their understanding of their experiences during the Democratic Kampuchea period and the civil war years (1979-1998) that followed. Through face-to-face discussions with victims and former KR cadres, the program will challenge participants to contemplate the diversity of human experience (both instances of humanity and inhumanity) during times of conflict and social upheaval. The stories validate the significance of individual human beings, and they help foster the most basic components of conflict transformation and civic skills. Concepts such as the ability to reflect, think objectively, and empathize with others are cornerstones to any peaceful, democratic society. The project will focus on historical empathy as its core objective, and the students, teachers, and tourguides who attend the program will be responsible for serving as representatives in their local communities, sharing their learning and insights. The establishment of the Anlong Veng Peace Center in Anlong Veng represents a start of the Center’s work towards its mutually reinforcing aims of Peace, Education, and Sustainable Tourism. Through these core objectives, the Center aims to become a leading institution for the development of sustainable approaches to achieving reconciliation and peace in Cambodia and the region. |
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| Background | |||
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Announcement on Preservation and Maintenance of the Urn of Genocide Victims in Democratic Kampuchea (1975-1979) and Conversion of Anglong Veng Area into the Historical Tourism Site | ||
| ■ | Sub-degree of the Anlong Veng’s Designated Historical Sites | ||
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Decision on the Setting up of an Inter-Ministry Committee on the Preservation and Development of the Anlong Veng Historical Sites | ||
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Letter to Mr. Chhang Youk, Director of Documentation of Cambodia, on Request to Cooperate and Provide the Documents Related to History of Anlong Veng Area, Khmer Rouge Last Stronghold | ||
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Letter to from Ministry of Tourism, Including Two Officials and Secretary into the Inter-Ministries Committee | ||
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Decision on the Creation of Inter-Ministries Committee to Govern and Develop Anlong Veng Historical Tourism Site | ||
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Invitation Letter, Inviting Mr. Youk Chhang, Director of Documentation Center of Cambodia, to Attend the Inter-Ministries Meeting | ||
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Invitation Letter, Inviting Mr. Ly Sok-Kheang, Team Leader of Publicizing History and Khmer Rouge Tribunal, to Attend the Inter-Ministries Meeting | ||
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Response Letter to the Director of Documentation Center of Cambodia, on the Request for Feedback on the Draft “Anlong Veng History” Book | ||
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Decision on the Establishment of Work Group of the Inter-Ministry Committee on the Preservation and Development of the Anlong Veng Historical Sites | ||
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Minute for the Inter-Ministries Meeting, on Governing and Developing Anlong Veng Historical Tourism Site | ||
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Report to Samdech Akeak Mohasena Padei Decho Hun Sen, Prime Minister of the Kingdom of Cambodia | ||
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Letter to Mr. Ly Sok-Kheang, Team Leader of Publicizing History and Khmer Rouge Tribunal, Informing about the Delay of Meeting Date | ||
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Invitation Letter, Inviting Mr. Ly Sok-Kheang, Team Leader of Publicizing History and Khmer Rouge Tribunal, to Attend the Inter-Ministries Meeting | ||
| Program Development: Revitalizing the Anlong Veng History for Reconciliation | |||
| ■ | A History of Anlong Veng Community (English) | ||
| ■ | A History of Anlong Veng Community (Khmer) | ||
| Reports | |||
| ■ | Between rhetoric and reality – Peace and Development in Anlong Veng | ||
| ■ | Reflecting Ideologies and Identities through Visit to Anlong Veng | ||
| ■ | Reconciliation and Understanding through Knowledge | ||
| ■ | Anlong Veng: Moving Forward | ||
| ■ | Reclaiming the Anlong Veng History | ||
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An Educational Visit to Anlong Veng Historical Sites: Promoting Inter-Community Reconciliation | ||
| Photo and Video | |||
| ■ | The video of Anlong Veng [Peace Center] | ||
| ■ | Eighth Peace Tour in Anlong Veng, October 25-28, 2016 | ||
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Inter-Ministry Committee Meeting and Seventh Peace Tour to Anlong Veng, September 14-18, 2016 | ||
| ■ | Revitalizing the Anlong Veng History for Reconciliation | ||
| ■ | Signposts to some historical sites in Anlong Veng were installed on August 25, 2016 | ||
| ■ | Sixth Peace Tour In Anlong Veng, August 14-17, 2016 | ||
| ■ | Fifth Peace Tour In Anlong Veng, July 19-22, 2016 | ||
| ■ | Opening Library and Information Desk in Anlong Veng, July 04-06, 2016 | ||
| ■ | Fourth Peace Tour In Anlong Veng, June 21-24, 2016 | ||
| ■ | Third Peace Tour In Anlong Veng, April 19-22, 2016 | ||
| ■ | Second Peace Tour In Anlong Veng, March 08-11, 2016 | ||
| ■ | First Peace Tour In Anlong Veng, February 16-18, 2016 | ||
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Contact:
Ly Sok-Kheang, Ph.D. Director Tuon Layhul Researcher |
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