Cambodian ethics
Posted: Sat Nov 23, 2019 12:28 am
One thing I note when I browse this forum is that many posts like to compare Khmer ethics / morals / culture to the way things are done in the west, and there's sometimes (not often) an undertone, usually not spoken outright or blatantly, but an insinuation that Khmer culture is somehow inferior to how things are done in the west.
I thought it might be a good idea to share a personal experience of mine that would put western values to shame.
When I was a teacher (of young students, between 8 and 14), if my students did well throughout the week, ie, did all their homework and generally performed well, I would allow them to relax on a Friday with a movie.
It was the only time that I would allow them to eat snacks and drink soft drinks in the classroom. I wanted to make it a relaxed atmosphere, as if they were in the cinema. Before the movie started, they were free to go to the school canteen and buy whatever snacks and drinks they wanted to eat and drink while watching the movie.
Children with a western mindset would go to the canteen, buy whatever they wanted with whatever money they had, return to the classroom and eat their own snacks that they bought themselves with their own money.
My students never, ever, did this. Instead, they would get together as a group and pool all of their money together. Some of my students never had any money whatsoever to contribute. Their parents sent them to school every day without any money at all. Others came to school with a dollar, some with two or sometimes five dollars that their parents had given them.
It didn't seem to matter to them. They would pool whatever they could into one collection. Then two students would go to the canteen with the pool of money, and return with a big box of assorted treats. Crisps, candy, nuts, chocolate, bottles of Coke, Fanta etc... you name it.
Before anyone was given anything, they'd open every single thing that was in a packet, crisps, chocolate, nuts, candy etc and empty everything into the box, so that the box was filled with all sorts of treats that people could just simply dip their hand into and help themselves.
They'd then all sit around the box and help themselves to the snacks as they watched the movie. Not once did I ever hear anyone say "You can't have any because you didn't put any money in". Not once did I ever hear anyone say "That's not fair, you're eating more than everyone else". Not once did I ever see anyone put their hand into the box and greedily try to pull out as much as their hand could manage. They would simply casually put their hand into the box from time to time and pull out whatever they managed to get, almost in a lucky dip fashion.
I would often sit and observe them as they watched the movie, fascinated that not one of them even attempted to take more than was their fair share.
The notion that everything was there to be shared, regardless of who contributed what, was as natural to them as night follows day.
I think there are some Khmer values that us westerners could learn a lot from.
I thought it might be a good idea to share a personal experience of mine that would put western values to shame.
When I was a teacher (of young students, between 8 and 14), if my students did well throughout the week, ie, did all their homework and generally performed well, I would allow them to relax on a Friday with a movie.
It was the only time that I would allow them to eat snacks and drink soft drinks in the classroom. I wanted to make it a relaxed atmosphere, as if they were in the cinema. Before the movie started, they were free to go to the school canteen and buy whatever snacks and drinks they wanted to eat and drink while watching the movie.
Children with a western mindset would go to the canteen, buy whatever they wanted with whatever money they had, return to the classroom and eat their own snacks that they bought themselves with their own money.
My students never, ever, did this. Instead, they would get together as a group and pool all of their money together. Some of my students never had any money whatsoever to contribute. Their parents sent them to school every day without any money at all. Others came to school with a dollar, some with two or sometimes five dollars that their parents had given them.
It didn't seem to matter to them. They would pool whatever they could into one collection. Then two students would go to the canteen with the pool of money, and return with a big box of assorted treats. Crisps, candy, nuts, chocolate, bottles of Coke, Fanta etc... you name it.
Before anyone was given anything, they'd open every single thing that was in a packet, crisps, chocolate, nuts, candy etc and empty everything into the box, so that the box was filled with all sorts of treats that people could just simply dip their hand into and help themselves.
They'd then all sit around the box and help themselves to the snacks as they watched the movie. Not once did I ever hear anyone say "You can't have any because you didn't put any money in". Not once did I ever hear anyone say "That's not fair, you're eating more than everyone else". Not once did I ever see anyone put their hand into the box and greedily try to pull out as much as their hand could manage. They would simply casually put their hand into the box from time to time and pull out whatever they managed to get, almost in a lucky dip fashion.
I would often sit and observe them as they watched the movie, fascinated that not one of them even attempted to take more than was their fair share.
The notion that everything was there to be shared, regardless of who contributed what, was as natural to them as night follows day.
I think there are some Khmer values that us westerners could learn a lot from.