平和を作っていく人

  • Home
  • HWPL News
  • WARP SUMMIT
  • DPCW
  • CULTURE
  • Issue
  • Life
  • Gallery

2026/06/23

[HWPL] Can simple respect stop a border conflict? How Cambodian youth are answering the call for peace in Phnom Penh

 美しい種     6/23/2026     Cambodia, HWPL, InterreligiousDialogue, IPYG, PeaceClub, PeaceEducation, PhnomPenh, sustainablepeace, WeAreOne, YouthPeaceCamp     No comments   

[HWPL] Inside the 2026 HWPL Youth Camp, where religious leaders and students are moving past grand ideologies to build peace through everyday empathy


With recent, heavy tensions stretching along the border between Cambodia and Thailand, it’s easy to feel like peace is something completely out of our hands. When nations clash, what can everyday people actually do?

On February 21, a rather remarkable gathering at Asia Euro University in Phnom Penh provided an answer. Bringing together over 100 religious leaders, students, and educators, the "2026 HWPL Cambodia Religious Youth Peace Camp" proved that the real antidote to division isn't politics—it's a conscious choice to listen.


The 'Sampeah' perspective: Peace in a simple greeting

​Conflict rarely starts from a vacuum; it grows when communication breaks down, leaving room for ignorance and fear. Venerable Hong Veasnar of Wat Nuon Mony Ram Temple brought this home during the camp by pointing to "Sampeah," the traditional Cambodian greeting of bowing with hands pressed together.

​"Peace doesn’t begin with grand, complicated ideologies. It starts with simple, everyday respect in our daily lives. Fear and conflict happen when we lack understanding of one another, but compassion and mercy are universal values that belong to all of us, no matter our religion."

​If a basic greeting carries the core of peace, then changing how we treat the person standing right in front of us is where real change begins.


Teaching kids how to listen, not just resolve
​The talk from the education sector was equally grounding. Chhom Sopheak, the principal of Prek Leap High School, shared a refreshing take on what it actually means to educate the next generation.

​"True peace education is a process of cultivating attitudes of listening, empathy, inclusion, and gratitude. It’s about helping students develop the ability to resolve conflicts on their own—that is what real peace education is."

Moving past the textbook, his school is taking immediate action by setting up a dedicated "Peace Club" right on campus.

The goal is simple: give students a physical space to practice tolerance and navigate disagreements constructively before they turn into deeper divisions.



Moving past theory: Real dialogue and youth action

​The event steered clear of being just a series of long lectures. During a mini talk show titled “Religion and Peace,” participants sat down in groups to talk through difficult topics with mutual respect. To close the session, every single group had to distill their conversation into a single, actionable “One Sentence for Peace,” turning theoretical ideas into immediate, shared goals.


​The second half of the camp shifted the spotlight directly onto the younger generation. Khean Ravyvuthika, president of the Rotaract Club of Phnom Penh Metro, reminded everyone that youth cannot afford to be passive onlookers:

​"For sustainable peace, the proactive role of youth is essential. Education must equip young people with the capacity to act for social harmony."


​To put those words into focus, the youth tested their knowledge on global harmony through a lively "Peace Golden Bell" quiz, and collectively read the "Religious Youth Peace Solidarity Pledge"—a formal commitment to choose understanding over division in their respective communities.


​A long-term commitment to stability

​The day wrapped up with a video showcasing HWPL’s ongoing grassroots work throughout Cambodia, followed by a live musical performance by a group of visiting Korean students. Watching youth from different cultures connect through music was a perfect reflection of the day's message.

​This camp forms part of a larger, structured blueprint by HWPL’s International Religious Peace Academy (IRPA) and the IPYG’s Youth Empowerment Peace Class (YEPC). It isn't a one-off seminar; it’s an ongoing, deliberate effort to unite religious figures, teachers, and young people into a steady network that builds long-term stability across Cambodian society.

Even when border disputes dominate the headlines, seeing an auditorium filled with people actively choosing empathy over fear reminds us where true security comes from. It isn't built by weapons, but by an everyday commitment to look at our neighbors with respect. What does a small act of peace look like in your community today? Let’s talk about it in the comments below

HWPL official website

👉 Event Homepage

  • Share This:  
  •  Facebook
  •  Twitter
  •  Google+
  •  Stumble
  •  Digg
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to Facebook
Older Post Home

0 개의 댓글:

Post a Comment

About Me

美しい種
View my complete profile

Featured Post

天の文化世界平和光復(HWPL) 紹介

Popular Posts

  • [HWPL] Why South Sudan’s Parliament Officially Adopted the DPCW Resolution! (2025 HWPL Global Peace Leaders’ Conference)
    [HWPL]Why South Sudan’s Parliament Officially Adopted the DPCW Resolution! Hello, everyone! I’m back today with some incredibly heartwarming...
  • [HWPL] Keeping Mongolia Green: 30 Tons of Waste Collected from the Tuul River Basin!
    [HWPL] Keeping Mongolia Green: 30 Tons of Waste Collected from the Tuul River Basin! ("Clean Mongolia" Campaign) ​ Hello, everyone...
  • HWPL Peace Education in Ukraine: Teaching Peace Amidst the War
    HWPL Peace Education in Ukraine: Teaching Peace Amidst the War How is peace education implemented during an ongoing war? The full-scale war ...
  • Changing the World Today! Meeting Marklon Bedward, National President of JCI Jamaica (An IPYG Affiliate)
    Changing the World Today! Meeting Marklon Bedward, National President of JCI Jamaica (An IPYG Affiliate) Hello, beautiful readers! I’m back ...
  • [IPYG] We are not just the future. An interview with JCI Jamaica’s Marklon Bedward on changing the world right now.
    [IPYG] We are not just the future. An interview with JCI Jamaica’s Marklon Bedward on changing the world right now How much can one small ac...

Pages

  • 홈
  • HWPL News
  • WARP SUMMIT
  • DPCW
  • CULTURE
  • Issue
  • Life
  • Gallery

LATEST POSTS

  • [IPYG] We are not just the future. An interview with JCI Jamaica’s Marklon Bedward on changing the world right now.
    [IPYG] We are not just the future. An interview with JCI Jamaica’s Marklon Bedward on changing the world right now How much can one small ac...
  • [HWPL] Keeping Mongolia Green: 30 Tons of Waste Collected from the Tuul River Basin!
    [HWPL] Keeping Mongolia Green: 30 Tons of Waste Collected from the Tuul River Basin! ("Clean Mongolia" Campaign) ​ Hello, everyone...

HWPL Homepage

HWPL Homepage

Categories

  • Gallery
  • HWPL News
  • Issue
  • 平和

WARP Summit Homepage

WARP Summit Homepage

Blog Archive

  • ▼  2026 (19)
    • June (4)
    • May (3)
    • April (2)
    • March (3)
    • February (1)
    • January (6)
  • ►  2025 (25)
    • December (8)
    • November (1)
    • September (2)
    • July (1)
    • June (5)
    • May (1)
    • April (1)
    • March (3)
    • February (1)
    • January (2)
  • ►  2024 (13)
    • December (1)
    • September (3)
    • July (1)
    • June (3)
    • May (2)
    • April (2)
    • January (1)
  • ►  2023 (16)
    • December (3)
    • November (3)
    • October (8)
    • July (1)
    • June (1)
  • ►  2020 (4)
    • February (3)
    • January (1)
  • ►  2019 (19)
    • October (1)
    • July (2)
    • March (3)
    • February (7)
    • January (6)
  • ►  2018 (1)
    • December (1)
  • ►  2017 (20)
    • February (9)
    • January (11)
  • ►  2016 (41)
    • December (12)
    • November (17)
    • October (5)
    • July (4)
    • May (3)

DPCW Homepage

DPCW Homepage

Pageviews past week

Copyright © 平和を作っていく人 | Powered by Blogger
Design by Hardeep Asrani | Blogger Theme by NewBloggerThemes.com | Distributed By Gooyaabi Templates