| Written by Chhay Channyda and Mom Kunthier | |
| Friday, 13 February 2009 | |
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While some view Valentine's Day celebrations as un-Cambodian, the younger generation embraces the occasion through buying gifts and spending time with their loved ones.
Photo by: Heng Chivoan Floral Express on Sihanouk Boulevard. If we celebrate in a good way, it will not have a negative impact on our tradition. "At my school, there will be no flower-selling inside or outside. This is our rule to enforce discipline among our students," he said. Jeopardising tradition Resistance to the holiday is not simply a matter of enforcing parochial discipline but preserving national culture, Miech Ponn, an adviser to the Mores and Customs Commission within the Buddhist Institute, told the Post. Miech Ponn challenged the capital's love-crazed youth to consider whether their culture will be lost as more young people become enamoured with Western traditions. "I do not know how they celebrate Valentine's Day in Western countries, but the way we bring in their culture into Cambodia is too overwhelming," Miech Ponn said. "We seem to bring in outside culture to destroy our own. I think many Cambodians just don't understand their own traditions very well." If they did, he added, they would find little need to look towards the West. "Valentine's Day means a loving day. We already have this in Cambodia. It's P'chum Ben and Khmer New Year, during which children and young people show their respect and love, and they make amends to anyone they have wronged. This is our traditional way of showing we love each other," Miech Ponn said. "I understand globalisation, but if we bring such culture in, why do other countries not take some of our culture back with them? In the end, we expand their culture by forgetting our own," he added. Celebration of love But on a day given over to the celebration of friendship and love, questions of tradition or even geo-cultural trends are the last things on young people's minds. Sok Liya, 18, a student at Indradevi High School, has no boyfriend but plans to celebrate the day by going out to eat with her friends. "Valentine's Day is good for people who have love and can spend time with their lovers. But even though I don't have a boyfriend, I will spend time with my classmates and have fun," she said. However, she cautioned young women planning a romantic day with the men in their lives to think of their security. "[Some men] think that they can do whatever they want," she said. Sok Chamroeun, 23, a student at Sisowath High School, is preparing for his first Valentine's Day with his girlfriend. Part of those plans will include ditching his studies for the day and purchasing flowers and gifts for his true love. "I think Valentine's Day is a special occasion for me because I will be able to tell my girlfriend about my honest heart and my feelings for her," Sok Chamroeun said. He added a word of advice to those who might look down on the holiday or dismiss it as another example of young Cambodian people losing touch with their heritage. "I know some people will use this holiday to behave badly and in a way that contradicts their culture. But for me, if we celebrate in a good way, it will not have a negative impact on our tradition," Sok Chamroeun said. "I don't think Valentine's Day is a bad day, as some people say. On this day, all people - young and old - can celebrate together. We don't focus simply on youths." |






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