Stories from our Partners

Healing Decades of Trauma through Oral History Healing Decades of Trauma through Oral History Healing Decades of Trauma through Oral History


“Cambodian-Americans have a culture of silence when it comes to sharing their story of the genocide.”

Healing Decades of Trauma through Oral History

From our related Focus Area: Kaiser Permanente Community Fund

During the mid-1970’s, the radical Cambodian Khmer Rouge killed nearly one-fourth of the entire Cambodian population through executions, torture, starvation, disease and exhaustion. The regime sought a nation completely exempt from Western influences such as education, religion, and city life. As a result, 1.7 million Cambodians lost their lives.

Many Cambodians escaped the war, and settled in Oregon and Southwest Washington in the early 1980s as refugees. Even after thirty years, many Cambodians are still traumatized from their experiences, and are still unable to speak about them. As Cal State Long Beach sociology professor Leakhena Nou pointed out in Street Roots Magazine, the long term stress of this trauma can linger for decades, manifesting in diabetes, stroke, drug addiction, alcoholism, and family violence. “When you cut yourself deeply, a scar remains. That’s how I see the state of mind for the Cambodians.”

By 2010, there were as many as 10,000 Cambodian-Americans living in Oregon and southwest Washington.

Funded in part by a $50,000 Kaiser Permanente Community Fund grant, the Cambodian American Community of Oregon (CACO), began a unique and creative project to help Cambodian-Americans begin to heal.

The Cambodian Oral History Project had young Cambodian-Americans interview their parents and grandparents about their lives, without shying away from the brutal and repressive years under the Khmer Rouge. Eventually the interviews would be compiled into a 35-minute documentary film, and screened for public viewing encouraging community members to speak out in order to heal.

“By having the youth understand their parents and grandparents history, they will hopefully appreciate the freedom and liberty they have; and take the opportunity to educate others about the effects of genocide,” said co-director of the project, Mardine Mao, “Similar to the Holocaust survivors, Cambodian-Americans have a culture of silence when it comes to sharing their story of the genocide.”

20 adults and 19 youth, age ranging from 13-75, volunteered to participate in the interviews. Interviewers were given formal training with a two-session oral history workshop. Interviews and recording were spread out over a two month period.

Many of the youth felt that the interview process brought them closer to their elders than before speaking about the traumatic experiences in Cambodia.

“I already think of my mother as wonder woman and my hero, but with this project it just makes me think even more of her, if that was even possible,” said Kimberly Im, who interviewed her mother with her sister as part of the project, “Learning about her struggles and her life story makes me put things into perspective.”

“She feared for her life, her family’s life. She had no food to eat, no safety, nothing. The experience robbed her and her other commmunity members of that. She lost her childhood and the innocence that I got to have freely and without struggles,” said Im.

The documentary has had viewings in over 15 venues, including high schools, universities, nonprofit and community-based organizations. CACO hopes to pursue a screening on public television.

“Being a part of this project opened my eyes. It made me more compassionate and aware. I am closer to my mother after this,” said Im.


More Stories:

  • Update on our Strategic PlanUpdate on our Strategic Plan

    Thank you for visiting the Northwest Health Foundation website. We are currently conducting a strategic planning process to ensure that our resources are achieving the greatest possible impact ...read on

  • Adelante Mujeres Nourishes the CommunityAdelante Mujeres Nourishes the Community

    In Washington County, research shows the health outcomes for Latinos are significantly worse than those of other ethnic backgrounds. The concentrated poverty for immigrant farmers, challenges of ...read on

  • Thomas Cully Park – A Dream RealizedThomas Cully Park – A Dream Realized

    When the sun is out, the children of Portland’s Cully neighborhood transform parking lots into soccer fields. The neighborhood, which shines with cultural flare and ethnic diversity, still has ...read on

  • Finding Workforce Solutions to a Dental Care CrisisFinding Workforce Solutions to a Dental Care Crisis

    What’s the best way to ensure that everyone gets good dental care? Hint: It’s probably not the system currently in place today. Northwest Health Foundation is now helping make space for the ...read on

  • Improving Health for Iraqi RefugeesImproving Health for Iraqi Refugees

    When calculating the costs of war, we often neglect the health and economic costs of traumatized immigrants coming to the U.S. as refugees from violent, and prolonged, conflicts in places such as ...read on

  • Healing Decades of Trauma through Oral HistoryHealing Decades of Trauma through Oral History

    During the mid-1970’s, the radical Cambodian Khmer Rouge killed nearly one-fourth of the entire Cambodian population through executions, torture, starvation, disease and exhaustion. The regime ...read on

  • Highlands Does Better with a Community CoachHighlands Does Better with a Community Coach

    The Highlands neighborhood in Longview, Washington has, for decades, gone without many of the advantages enjoyed by other communities – a strong retail district, an adequate park, thriving social ...read on

  • Health Grants for a Financial Institution?Health Grants for a Financial Institution?

    The answer makes sense once you know more about the nonprofit financial institution, Innovative Changes, and the grant maker, which in this case is the Kaiser Permanente Community Fund. Kaiser ...read on

  • Listening to YouthListening to Youth

    It’s becoming increasingly clear that improving population health and reducing inequalities is related to our ability to create more space for leaders from the “millennial” generation. We ...read on

  • Funding Friends of  Public Health - in Coos County, OregonFunding Friends of Public Health - in Coos County, Oregon

    County public health agencies throughout Oregon are struggling to deliver vital services, especially in rural counties hit hardest by the recession, and the recent loss in dedicated federal timber ...read on

  • Building Partnerships for Progressive Health Care ReformBuilding Partnerships for Progressive Health Care Reform

    Isn’t it ironic that the people most affected by the nation’s dysfunctional health care system tend to be from the same communities that are largely left out of reform discussions? To ...read on

  • Helping Raise the Voice of the Nurse LeaderHelping Raise the Voice of the Nurse Leader

    National Nurses Week is celebrated every year, from May 6 (Florence Nightingale’s birthday) through May 12 (National Nurses Day). For Nurses Week 2010, Northwest Health Foundation highlighted the ...read on

  • Building Capacity for Geriatric NursingBuilding Capacity for Geriatric Nursing

    Older adults use more than 80 percent of home care services and 90 percent of nursing home beds in the U.S. Yet, many of nurses are experienced in providing geriatric care, most have not received ...read on

  • Public Health WeekPublic Health Week

    As part of National Public Health Week, the Oregon Public Health Division wanted to spotlight the important role that government public health plays on improving health for all. However, fully ...read on

  • Fit Kids in Union CountyFit Kids in Union County

    Across America, too many kids are carrying too much weight. It’s no different in Union County, where a 2005 study found that almost 35 percent of K-12 youths were either overweight or at risk of ...read on

  • Moving the Health Care ConstituencyMoving the Health Care Constituency

    OSPIRG is a 35-year old advocacy organization, with a full-time legislative presence at the capitol, tens of thousands of members across Oregon, and an online activist network of thousands of ...read on

  • Nuestra Voz, Nuestra Salud - Our Voice, Our HealthNuestra Voz, Nuestra Salud - Our Voice, Our Health

    Hood River County has the highest proportion of Latino population for any Oregon county, many of whom harvest and process the orchard crops from the Hood River Valley. In some of the county’s ...read on

  • Funding a Farmers Market in LentsFunding a Farmers Market in Lents

    Demand for fresh, local, and affordable produce existed in Lents neighborhood of Portland, even thought there was no farmer’s market to provide it. That is, until a coalition called Healthy Eating ...read on