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The long awaited KROMA film is about to get its final cut....Thanks to In-Extremis, Sofia and Jean for all their help. We should shortly bring it to you...

30 Years Celebration PDF Print E-mail
Growing-Partnerships-full

Action IEC is collaborating with a wide number of NGOs to help in making a nice 30 years celebration of development of the country.

Since the fall of the Khmer Rouge regime, many actors from the civil society have played a crucial role in setting up today's Cambodia.

30 Years is a long time and it is good to take this small step back to review and take stock of what was done: the lessons learned, the good, the bad, and to start to develop a more cohesive picture of what the development actors of the future could be.

For more information, we invite you to visit: www.ngo30years.org

 


 
Award for Sophiline PDF Print E-mail

Congratulations Sophiline!

Below some experpts from VOA webiste on this happy event:

"Khmer choreographer Sophiline Cheam Shapiro was given an award by the National Endowment for the Arts, after co-founding the Khmer Arts Academy in California.

The National Heritage Fellowship is the highest form of federal recognition for folk and traditional arts. Shapiro and 10 others were awarded this year.

“The reason why I think her award today is so important is that it gives her the ability to continue the art,” Laura Richardson, a Democratic congresswoman from California who joined the Sept. 22 ceremony, told VOA Khmer.

“Art is so powerful because art doesn’t judge men, women, boys, and girls,” she said. “It’s preserving our cultures. By being able to show the art, it teaches young people to respect their elders. It teaches young people something special that they have and that no one has. So, I am hoping by her continuing to teach the art, we can help more kids in learning, rather than being out in the streets doing something negative, and she has been doing it for a long time and we value her and love her in our community.”

Shapiro said she felt honored to be given the award, which includes a grant of $25,000.

“It is important that I use this fellowship to support and continue to teach art at our Khmer Art Academy,” she said.

Shapiro began training in Khmer art form in 1981. Two years after moving to Long Beach in 2002, she co-founded Khmer Arts Academy in the hopes of preventing the loss of the art form in the aftermath of the Khmer Rouge.

Barry Bergey, the NEA’s director for Folk and Traditional Arts, told VOA Khmer that in any year, the endowment gets 250 or so nominations. Only 10 or 11 are selected.

“Sophiline, of course, was recognized not only for her artistic skills and choreography, but for the fact that she teaches and makes such a commitment to the art form, and the panel recognized that,” Bergey said. “There’s no requirement in any way in terms of using the money, but we know these artists are committed to their traditions [and] that they are most likely to carry on what they are doing.

“That is what we want them to do, to continue just what they do, make art, teach about the art form and interact with the public,” he said. “Sophiline has done that both in the United States and in Cambodia, and that makes her special.” "

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Kosal was in touch with Sophiline in the US over the phone and was happy to see the result of his cousins hard work over the years.

Sometimes artists can work for many years without any credit but that of seeing their own art moving forward.

Thankfully, the reach of Sophiline's work has always been large and comprehensive...what do you expect from quality....

Some things will just resist the test of time...Sophiline's work definetely will.

Again Congratulations!

 
Action IEC: the middle way PDF Print E-mail

We want make sure that what we do is worthy of the people we try to help. Our first aim is to deliver culturally appropriate media. This goes in the ways of using the Khmer culture to increase audience identification. This is what has made us experts in reaching rural populations across a board of media: books, leaflets, innonvative publications, comics, news, tv spots, documentaries and videos, radio programs and spots, and last but not least an entire range of innovative ways to bring the information directly to the rural places - the information BLACKHOLES.

We hold village data level that allows to pinpoint specific needs by villages and better measure our actual reach in our mobile shows. It can be quite impressive. We have reached at times over 12000 people and at times over 140% of our district populations (drawing audiences from far away in other districts).

 

 
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