Keng Vannsak | |
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Paris, France (2005)
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Personal details | |
Born | 19 September 1925 Kampong Cham, Cambodia |
Died | 18 December 2008 Paris, France |
(aged 83)
Nationality | Cambodian and French naturalization |
Spouse(s) | Suzanne Colleville, French national |
Profession | philosopher, Khmer linguist |
Keng Vannsak (1925 – 18 December 2008), (Khmer: កេង វ៉ាន់សាក់), was a Cambodian scholar, philosopher and Khmer linguist. He invented the Khmer typewriter keyboard in 1952. He had lived in exile in Paris, France, from 1970 until his death in 2008. He died at the age of eighty-three at Montmorency hospital in Paris after suffering from a chronic illness.
In modern Cambodia, Keng Vannsak is known for being one of the influential figures for the next generations of Cambodian scholars and intellectuals. He left behind him a legacy in literature, including two drama plays, short stories, many poems and his research from the 1940s.
Keng Vannak was born in a small village in Kampong Cham province on 19 September 1925, the same year when Pol Pot was born. Vannsak mentored Pol Pot while both were in France. Both of them appeared to share an opinion on "original Khmer", considering Buddhism and Hinduism had contaminated the Khmer original culture.
After obtaining his baccalaureate in Philosophy in 1946 in Phnom Penh, Vannsak continued his studies in Paris on a scholarship and worked as a Khmer-language assistant at the National School of Modern Eastern Languages (Ecole nationale des Langues Orientales). During his studies, he spent two years teaching Khmer language at the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London.
He later married Suzanne Colleville, a French national, who shared with him a passion for Eastern languages. She held Diplomas in the Cambodian, Lao, and Thai languages, and also obtained a degree in Physical Science at the University of Caen, as revealed by the (unpublished) writing of Khing Hoc Dy, a former student as well as friend of Keng Vannsak.
In 1952, he returned to Cambodia with his wife and a bachelor's degree which he obtained at the Faculty of Literature and Human Science University of Paris in 1951. He later worked as a teacher at the prestigious Lycée Sisowath in Phnom Penh, and decided to stay there from 1952 to 1958.
The most radical of his friends began distancing themselves from him. He covered for the president of the Cambodian Students Association when the group was invited to attend "youngsters' world peace celebrations" in Berlin, but was eventually asked not to go with the group just before they were due to leave.
"Half a century later, Vannsak still fulminated" at the simple idea of it, Philip Short says. Keng Vannsak explained to him that the other ones wanted to get rid of him. Short quoted him: "They knew that I was not the tough kind like them. I thought too much. I was not a stubborn person and did not act with fanaticism nor like an extremist. Ieng Sary, a former high school classmate who later became Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Khmer Rouge government himself told me later: 'You are too sensitive. You will never be a politician. In order to make politics, you have to be tough. You will not get there, brother. You are too sentimental'".