From the 1970s to the 1990s, as many as 100,000
Cambodian refugees resettled in the United States. But far from finding a
sanctuary, many Cambodians in America have grappled with poverty, mental health
problems and social isolation.
WASHINGTON
DC — As a child, Jennifer Ka could not understand why her father was always
angry. He seemed unable to love her and her siblings.
“It was
very painful that I could not connect with him. He was really never there and
present with us because he was stuck in his trauma; he never told me what
happened to him in the Khmer Rouge,” said Ka.
Ka was
born to refugees who resettled in the United States in the 1980s. Her parents
survived the murderous Khmer Rouge regime, but were unable to leave behind the
memories of that time.
The scars
of the past were compounded by poverty once in America. “We always had to worry
about having enough,” she said.
From the
1970s to the 1990s, as many as 100,000 Cambodian refugees resettled in the
United States. But far from finding a sanctuary, many Cambodians in America
have grappled with poverty, mental health problems and social isolation.
Communication Breakdown
Many
Cambodian-American families experience a disconnection due to the trauma
suffered by the parents, says Mary Scully, program director at
Connecticut-based Khmer Health Advocates.
“Sixty
percent of parents who went through the Pol Pot regime have mental health
issues. If they have flashback, if they get anxious, then they go from being
connected to be disconnected with their kids, which is very confusing for the
child” said Scully, who has spent over 35 years working with the Cambodians
both in the refugee camps and in Connecticut.
“[Cambodian-American
children] think that their parents pull away from them because they were bad,”
she said. “Cambodian kids are worried about their parents, and those worries
often translate into anger, and wanting to get away from the parents.”
Since
early 1990s Mary Scully and other dedicated advocates have been conducting a
number of research on mental illness among the Cambodian community in the U.S.,
which show a strong linkage between mental illness and chronic diseases.
Compared
with the average across the U.S. population, Cambodian-Americans have twice the
rate of type 2 diabetes, seven times the rate of depression, and 15 times the
rate of post-traumatic stress disorder, she said.
“We were
seeing mental health problem in the community right from the beginning. The
people had bad headaches, nightmares. They are anxious. As time went on, we saw
that wasn’t going away,” said Scully.
But the
right kind of help was never enough in the community. “We knew what their
problems were. We knew that they needed an intense of help, but we never gave
it to them,” she said.
Things
were made worse when, in 1996, the U.S. Congress reformed its welfare policy to
cut down the assistance provided with food stamps, shelter, and other benefits,
and that affected the refugees who were not naturalized citizens.
Many
community-based organizations then had to shift their focus from what they were
mandated to do on economic development, to help people get citizenship. Today,
Khmer Health Advocates is one of only a few community-based organizations
supporting the community, compared with about 100 before 1995.
“We would
get a call in the middle of the night that people were saying, ‘If I lost my
food stamp, if I lost my housing, I can’t survive. I can’t go through this
again,’” said Scully. “They [lawmakers] had no idea of how that had the impact
on the community.”
The U.S.
government refuses to pay attention to the issue, Scully said. “Cambodians are
suffering in silence. They don’t make enough noise. They don’t have the big
voice to get resources.”
A Failed
Policy
The
policy of resettlement was fundamentally flawed, argued Professor Eric Tang at
the University of Texas. Tang recently published a book about Cambodian
refugees in the Bronx, New York City.
“It’s the
failure of a social state that doesn’t provide enough support for them as a
transition from being refugees to immigrants to resident, but sooner cut their
welfare and others from support that they need to really build the life here in
the U.S.,” said Tang.
Tang was
a community organizer working with the Cambodian refugee population in the
Bronx in the 1990s, where the refugees had a challenging resettlement
experience.
“The
first thing they were confronted with was harsh living conditions, bad
housing,” he said. “Many of the refugees were not equipped to take the good
jobs that were available, so they’re stuck in the state of working poverty.”
Additionally,
he said, there was no long term plan to help refugees to establish themselves
economically when they arrived in the U.S. “The resettlement policy doesn’t pay
attention to, for instance, job training. [It didn’t] allow people to heal from
their trauma, before we push them into sweatshop jobs,” he said.
That mean
that many children of refugees ended up unemployed, often becoming involved in
criminal gangs. Many of them were convicted of crimes, and have been deported
from the U.S. to Cambodia, a country that they may never have visited.
“The
truth is that from many of these young Cambodians, they continued to struggle
with working poverty,” said Tang. “Some do not go to college, and many are
profiled, targeted by criminal justice system, and subjected to deportation to
Cambodia.”
Ka,
however, returned voluntarily. She decided to visit Cambodia in her early 20s.
She was born in the U.S. and barely speaks Khmer, so knew very little about the
country. But, she said, she would come to call it home.
“Not
until I came to Cambodia, did I come to understand my history, be there with my
land, my people, and feel that I was finally home," she said. "Then I
started to deeply understand the pain my parents' suffered from the genocide
that I was not aware of before."
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