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Thursday, December 28, 2017

Hidden worship: The struggling to pray under KR

                               
By: Zahron Sokry

The worship to the God is one of the five main pillars in Islam, and every single Muslim has to pray five times a day. However, Cham Muslim could not fulfill this obligatory properly during the Khmer Rouge regime, since every religion was prohibited to practice. Cham Muslim in Khpob II village in now Tboung Khmum province struggled to pray despite the prohibition.

Before the dawn break about 4:45 a.m., the sound of calling people for Morning Prayer can be heard in an ethnic Cham Muslim village called Khpob II village. This village is about an hour far away from Soung city by riding motorbike.

As the Mu'adhin, the caller to prayer finished the calling, many people start walking to pray in the mosque together. They gather to pray peacefully without any distraction in the mosque called Shahidan mosque. Unlike nowadays, Cham Muslim people living under Khmer Rouge regime could not go to pray in the mosque, where they have to worship to the God.
Ke Tiveou, a victim in Khmer Rouge regime.
Ke Tiveou could not fulfill her praying obligatory properly, and she had to pretend to be sleeping in order to pray. When she was in the field, she had to tell a liar and make an excuse in order to pray.

She said “First we could pray openly but it became harder and harder later on. They (the Pot Pot spy) did not allow to pray, but I was pretending to sleep in order to pray. When there was quiet, I sat down to pray, but when they came, I broke the pray and spoke with them.

She sometimes had nothing to eat and felt exhausted, but she rarely stopped worshipping to the God. In a painful expression on her face, she said she was afraid of The Khmer Rouge spy seeing her too, but saying she feared God the most.
"In this world, I was afraid of their mistreatment, but in the hereafter I fear the God only, not them.
Looking up to the roof, Tiveou continued recalling her memories in the Khmer Rouge regime. She said even though she could not fulfill the praying on time, she tried to make it for another time.
I secretly prayed with my mother when the time of praying came. When I could not pray the noon prayer, I made and combined it to with the next prayer. I did these things because I lived under their (Khmer Rouge) control. I was quite scared that if I found praying, I would result in death. Luckily, they never found me in praying.

During Khmer Rouge regime, every religion was prohibited to practice, since the Pol Pot considered all religion to be reactionary.

A witness of Khmer Rouge regime Sos Mohammad Nour said Khmer Rouge forbad him as well as other people in his village since 1973.

 “Pray! We could not pray at all. We hid to pray, pray in a sleeping manner, pray in the water.

Mohammad Nour claimed Khmer Rouge put more restrictions on Cham Muslims because of Koh Phal and Svay Klaing villages’ rebillions.

A former rebellion in Koh Phal village, Sos Sles who is 67 years of age recalled what had happened in his village back in Khmer Rouge regime. He said in Ramadan, the holy fasting month of Muslims, Khmer Rouge cadres called the villagers to gather in a meeting. It started in the afternoon and lasted until about 8 p.m. The villagers became angry, as they could not have the iftar, the breaking of fasting on time.

“The commotion started around 7 or 8 p.m. because they (the Pol Pot) caused us to have no iftar, and then we clashed with them. They ran away because it was a night time already.

A research at Documentation Center of Cambodia (DC-Cam) Ms. Farina So said prior to Khmer Rouge took the power from Khmer Republic’s Lon Nol, about 60% of the country was already controlled by Khmer Rouge since 1973. The areas controlled by Khmer Rouge were named liberated areas. Koh Phal village was in the liberated areas too, and Khmer Rouge started to implement their policies to smash the religion and the customs. And the protest also started.

 Before the mass protest started, Khmer Rouge started to smash Koh Phal village until 1975.

Isa Osman, a former research at DC-cam, stated in his book Oukoubah that “Khmer Rouge’s goal was to kill Cham, to have Cham erase their customs and tradition, shut down the mosque and forbad worship.

Mr. Osman said Khmer Rouge prohibited ethnic Cham not to speak their language, and forced them to consumed pork. Khmer Rouge also killed hakim, religious leaders, and Taun, religious teachers.
Those who faced arresting in Khpob II village were mostly educated people. Village chiefs or hakims were all arrested, as they were considered educated persons.

After hearing the arrest of her brother, Tiveou felt painful and thought that her brother would be tortured and executed to death. She could barely cry in pain of the arrest of her brother.

 “Even nowadays, I always want to cry when I think of my brother. I don’t know where he was killed, and where he was buried. I had not seen my brother, as he was escorted at nighttime. I could not do anything but cried at the home. They arrested him as he was hakim and village chief.


According to Mr. Kienan Ben, a historian, saying that only 20 out of 113 ethnic Cham hakim survived in 1979.

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