Discovering a New Path
There are remote areas in the highlands of Cambodia,
near the Thailand border, where Heifer International projects are helping to heal the psychological wounds of a people who have, until recently, known only civil war and internal strife in their country.
Hope Equity helps provide long-term support for these projects that do more than just supply livestock and agricultural training. These projects also help heal the wounds of war by establishing an outlet for working with others, learning new skills, and the sharing of knowledge.
If you are not familiar with the Khmer Rouge, or Pol Pot’s reign of terror, the briefest history is the Khmer Rouge took over Cambodia in the mid-seventies, killing 1.5 to 2.5 million people as they enforced their warped version of an agrarian society. Today, you can visit the Killing Fields memorial site where bone fragments, teeth and clothing dot the paths to the different mass graves and a temple stacked with 9,000 skulls serves as a chilling reminder.
In fact, Cambodia experienced civil strife until the mid-nineties, but has since moved forward with tenuous democratic reforms and a mostly peaceful existence as it seeks to join the global economy and the industrialized world. Heifer International has several projects in the highlands area that was known as the last Khmer Rouge stronghold. Former soldiers are now farmers trying to lead a peaceful existence with their neighbors, and look back on their past involvement with the Khmer Rouge as something they were forced to do to survive, not a life that they chose.
One of the successful projects that is helping foster reconciliation and return dignity and a sense of purpose to a people scarred by years of fighting can be found in Parmoy, Cambodia. Sek Samath (left in the photo) and Los Thy (right) are two Cambodian women that have been involved with Heifer International since 2005. Samath was a leader of a Khmer Rouge women’s group that transported ammunition to support soldiers on the front lines during the brutal struggle with internal factions and the Viet Cong. Samath described her life as extremely difficult for many years, as she traveled day and night to the front lines. Her ammunitions group was exposed to diseases in the jungle and had no medicine, leading to the death of many of her friends and comrades. There was rarely any food for her group, so they were forced to scour the jungle for food to eat.
Thy was a food transporter bringing rice from the Thailand border to soldiers and their families. One of her duties was to make bamboo booby traps to set up for self-protection as they slept in the jungle at night. They could not grow or cultivate food because of constantly moving to new areas due to the fighting. When asked, Thy showed her skill in wielding an old, rusted machete as she demonstrated how she would set the bamboo traps for enemy soldiers. Both women spent years living in the jungle, frequently going a week at a time with no sleep as they delivered their goods.

- Total Value: $5,429.11

- 0.04% of Hope Equity Portfolio

- Established: 2009

- MEs™ who share this Interest


