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ALHAMBRA - Mony Sing was 9 years old when the
Khmer Rouge took over Cambodia on April 17, 1975.
Three days later, her home was burned to the
ground; Sing's father and sister were murdered on the streets; and she
watched her brothers starve to death when they couldn't beg for enough
food.
Sing herself would barely escape a soldier's
brutal beating after he accused her of stealing fruit.
"The pain is horrible, unimaginable," the U.S.
Congressional field deputy told an auditorium of government and history
students at Alhambra High School on Friday morning.
Sing was among a panel of speakers touring area
schools with Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Pasadena, to raise awareness for the
current genocide in Darfur, Sudan, where around 400,000 people have been
killed by roving bands of Muslim janjaweed rebels, and hundreds of
thousands more have been displaced to primitive refugee camps.
"As we are sitting here halfway around the world,
a genocide is taking place," Schiff told the students. "People are
getting killed just because of who they are."
The teenagers sat in silence as Sing told personal
accounts of girls their age being summarily raped by soldiers and
innocent boys being forced to watch their parents die before being slain
themselves.
Isaac Mabior Amol, now a stu dent at Point Loma
Nazarene, recounted similar experiences as one of the "Lost Boys of
Sudan" of the Sudanese civil war.
In 1987, the then-4-year-old's village was
attacked and all adults killed. He and the other children ran to the
jungles and began their years-long journey from refugee camp to refugee
camp, hiding from both wild animals and Sudanese soldiers.
"I didn't have parents," he said. "I couldn't
understand why my own country wanted to kill me."
The Rev. Vazken Movsesian, director of In His
Shoes Ministries, sought to put the experience into perspective for the
teens.
"Your biggest decision is whether to pick up the
PSP or the Xbox 360," he said. "Imagine being 10 years old and making
life and death decisions every day."
While stopping a genocide half a world away could
seem a tall order for a high school student, Adam Sterling, national
policy director for the Sudan Divestment task force, urged the youths to
join organizations that are forcing companies in the United States and
abroad to divest in Sudanese oil. More than 70 percent of the country's
oil profits goes to the government, which backs the genocide, he added.
"It's very expensive for the government to support
death," he said. "They can't do it without this money."
Afterward, students quietly shuffled out of the
auditorium. But many conceded they weren't sure whether their classmates
would take action.
"I would hope yes - we'll talk about it ," said
Justin Chang, 17. "But we'll say `We're young. What can we do? We can't
make a difference."'
cortney.fielding@sgvn.com
(626) 578-6300, Ext. 4494 |