timeline - Wing Luke Museum
Transcription
timeline - Wing Luke Museum
presents On display in the Special Exhibition Gallery December 11, 2015 – November 13, 2016 KHMER AND KHMER AMERICAN TIMELINE KHMER AND KHMER AMERICAN TIMELINE 1st–6th CENTURIES AD Funan Empire, the earliest recorded state along the Mekong Delta. Documented trade with Rome, China, and India. From the 6th to 8th centuries, the Chenla Kingdom dominates. 550– 650 AD Incursions from Java along the coast push Khmer people inland. Several Khmer states emerge around the Tonle Sap Lake in NW Cambodia. Khmer influence extends into present day Laos. 802– 850 AD Jayavarman II consolidates Khmer rule and begins to build an empire. 9th–13th Golden Age of Khmer Empire. The great temple complex Ankgor Wat is constructed in the 12th Century. CENTURIES AD 15th–18th CENTURIES AD Angkor is abandoned in 1432. As the Khmer Empire collapses, it is squeezed between Siam (Thailand) and Vietnam. The royal capital moves from Longvek (1561-1618) to Udong (1618-1779) and finally to Phnom Penh in 1861. 1863 King Norodom signs a treaty establishing a French protectorate over Cambodia. 1884 The French impose a treaty limiting the king’s power, abolishing slavery and establishing a colonial bureaucracy. The following year, armed revolt breaks out in the countryside, targeting Norodom’s Frenchbacked government. The revolt is suppressed in 1886, and the French retain control of Cambodia until WWII. 1896– 1907 French return Angkor, Battambang, Siem Reap, and Banteay Meanchey Provinces from Siam to Cambodia. 1915 Khmer monk Botumthera Som publishes “Tum Teav,” a tragic love story based on a popular legend. 1941 The French Governor General appoints Prince Sihanouk to the throne. 1941– 1945 Japan occupies Cambodia during WWII. France regains control when the war is over. 1944 Thailand occupies the provinces of Battambang and Siem Reap. In 1947, France helps King Sihanouk regain control of Siem Reap. 1950 United States establishes diplomatic relations. 1952 France formally gives the area including Prey Nokor (now Ho Chi Minh City) to Vietnam. The Khmer bitterly resent this loss of land they claim as their own. 1953 Following a long campaign by King Sihanouk, Cambodia gains its independence from France. 1955 King Sihanouk abdicates the throne to his father, founds the Popular Socialist Community Party, and becomes prime minister. Sihanouk eventually names himself Chief of State and Head of Government. He was and still is known as the “father of the nation,” ruling in a highly authoritarian centralized government until 1970. 1960s– mid ’70s Golden Age of Cambodian music includes the well known stars Sinn Sisamouth and Ros Serey Sothea. This golden period ends with the rise of the Khmer Rouge. 1965 U.S. Immigration and Nationality Act abolishes national origin quotas and opens up immigration from Asian countries. Cambodia severs diplomatic relations with the United States, whom they held responsible for air attacks by South Vietnam. Relations are restored in 1969. 1969 The U.S. begins a secret bombing campaign, targeting North Vietnamese forces on Cambodian soil. 1970 While on a trip to the U.S.S.R., Sihanouk is overthrown by General Lon Nol, a pro-U.S. military leader. Lon Nol proclaims the Khmer Republic and abolishes the monarchy. Sihanouk lives in exile in Beijing and allies himself with the Khmer Rouge, who also oppose Lon Nol and the U.S. 1973 The U.S. launches massive bombing, destroying infrastructure and killing up to 150,000 people. This action increases support for the Khmer Rouge. 1975 APRIL 17 The Khmer Rouge conquer Phnom Penh, overthrow Lon Nol, and establish Democratic Kampuchea under the leadership of Pol Pot. Over the next four years between one and three million people die from torture, execution, overwork or starvation. Longstanding antipathy for the Vietnamese re-emerges, and in 1977 the Khmer Rouge launch attacks along the border with Vietnam. APRIL 30 The U.S.-Vietnam war ends with the Fall of Saigon and the evacuation of the American Embassy. Later that year the U.S. closes its embassy in Cambodia as well. 1978 The Vietnamese invade Cambodia and capture Phnom Penh in 1979. Pol Pot flees to the jungles along the Thai border. From there a guerrilla war continues. 1979 Vietnamese install the People’s Revolution Council, led by Hun Sen, that continues to be the dominant political force in Cambodia today. Prime Minister Hun Sen is often referred to as the “Strongman of Cambodia.” 1980 United States Refugee Act, signed into law by President Carter, “provide[s] a permanent and systematic procedure for the admission of … refugees of special humanitarian concern.” 1979– 1992 Opposition groups, dominated by the Khmer Rouge and united and headed by the exiled Sihanouk, oppose the Vietnamese puppet government. In 1981 the pro-Vietnamese Kampuchean People’s Revolutionary Party wins parliamentary elections, but the international community refuses to recognize the new government. Sihanouk’s government-in-exile holds Cambodia’s U.N. seat. 1984 Haing S. Ngor receives an Academy Award for his portrayal of Cambodian photo journalist Dith Pran in the movie “The Killing Fields.” Ngor is the first Asian male actor to win an Oscar. 1985 Hun Sen becomes prime minister. Guerilla warfare continues. By 1987 more than 250,000 Cambodian refugees are living in Thai border camps. 1989 The Cambodian People’s Party establishes the State of Cambodia. Vietnam withdraws from the country, leaving four competing groups seeking control. 1990 The United States raises the number of refugees allowed into the United States, with an emphasis on family reunification and certain new employment-related criteria. 1991 A peace agreement is signed in Paris, establishing transitional U.N. authority. 1993 A three-party coalition government is formed, and the monarchy is restored, with Sihanouk as King again. 1994 The Khmer Rouge surrender under government amnesty. U.S. Embassy re-opens in Cambodia. 1997 Deputy Prime Minister Hun Sen launches a coup against the Prime Minister, Prince Radnariddh. 1998 Pol Pot dies in his jungle hideout. 2002 Five hundred Khmer Americans are deported to Cambodia. U.S. laws passed in 1996 mandated that non-citizens be deported if they committed a crime, even minor infractions. These laws have affected thousands of Khmer Americans, mostly young men. Many were born in refugee camps in Thailand and have never been to Cambodia. 2003 The Rajana Society is founded by a group of Khmer students at the University of Washington. The Society strives to promote and advance Khmer arts and entertainment. The Cambodian Cultural Alliance of Washington is founded to “create opportunities for diverse communities to understand and appreciate traditional Cambodian art through events and other cultural activities.” 2005 U.N. approves a plan to try Khmer Rouge leaders in a tribunal. In 2007, Khmer Rouge member Nuon Chea is arrested and charged with crimes against humanity. In 2010, KR leader Kang Kek Iew is convicted and sentenced to life in prison. Tuy Sobil starts Tiny Toones, a youth program serving at-risk kids in Phnom Penh. Tuy Sobil, known as KK, was born in a refugee camp in Thailand and grew up in Los Angeles, where he got involved in a gang. He was deported to Cambodia, where he started teaching kids in his neighborhood to break dance. Today the organization teaches English and computing classes, as well as dancing and music. The Tiny Toones troupe performs all over the world. 2006 Southeast Asian Young Men’s Group and film program, sponsored by the Asian Counseling Referral Service in Seattle, launches from a group bringing together Asian Pacific male students to discuss their culture, history and personal experiences. 2007 Khmer In Action is founded in Seattle to address issues impacting local communities regarding institutional oppression, with the hope of building a stronger more active Khmer community. 2010 1LoveMovement is founded in Philadelphia, in response to the detention and deportation crisis targeting Cambodian Americans. It continues to work to address root issues of migration, poverty, deportation and the criminal justice system. 2011 Khmerican, an online media news platform, is launched in Long Beach, CA. Serving the Cambodian diaspora, Khmerican currently reaches an average of 750,000 readers each month. 2012 President Obama becomes the first U.S. president to visit Cambodia. 2014 First annual Cambodian Music Festival held in the United States, in Hollywood, California. AUGUST 29 “Remembering the Past & Welcoming the Future: 40 Years Since the Killing Fields,” held in Seattle, commemorates victims of the Khmer Rouge Genocide of 1975–1979. 2015 SUMMER 2015 SEA2KHMER education and service project, brought together by community leaders Sameth Mell and Baron You with Rajana Society, and Che Sehyun with Experience Education, brings support and learning opportunities to the children of Phnom Penh and Siem Reap. LEAD SPONSORS MAJOR SPONSOR The Peach Foundation ADDITIONAL SPONSORS 4Culture Humanities Washington KeyBank Foundation U.S. Bank Foundation 719 South King Street, Seattle, WA 98104 (206) 623-5124 • www.wingluke.org Museum Hours: Tuesday – Sunday, 10 am – 5 pm First Thursday of the Month, 10am – 8pm Closed Mondays