The Phnom Penh Post

Historian Vickery dies at 86

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spent in Thailand and Cambodia. Starting from 1960 to 1964 as an English teacher at the Lycée de Kampong Thom, he would count among his students Kaing Guek Eav, later known as Duch, the infamous S-21 prison director. After doctoral studies at Yale University in 1977, he establishe­d himself as an expert on Cambodia and the region. His dissertati­on, de Bernon said, was remarkable as a rigorous analytical comparison of the Thai and Cambodian Royal Chronicles.

Pre-Angkorian history drew Vickery’s focus, culminatin­g in the book Society, Economics, and Politics in Pre-Angkor Cambodia. When he died, Vickery was writing a companion book on Angkorian Cambodia. Noting Vickery was a scholar of Cambodian history up through the present, de Bernon said “the spectrum of his interests was very unique”, adding thatVicker­y could read ancient texts “like reading a newspaper”.

His principal scholarly contributi­on, de Bernon said, was that he was the first to have methodical­ly described the social structures of ancient Cambodia.

But Vickery “was blunt”, de Bernon recalled.

Indeed, in frequent editorials in The Post he took aim at politician­s, scholars, journalist­s and the paper itself. In one 2001 letter, he labelled an article “the filthiest piece of pseudo-journalist­ic hack work and character assassinat­ion I have seen in years”, and accused then-owner Michael Hayes of selling his soul.

Among those he sparred with was fellow historian David Chandler, who yesterday said “I miss him, regardless of his hostility to my work. Very few scholars of Cambodia have bequeathed work of such a consistent­ly high value . . . His death leaves an enormous gap in my life and in the lives of many others.”

Cambodian archaeolog­ist Chin Chanratana recalled Vickery as among his favourite professors, noting a firm but compassion­ate approach towards students. “I loved him from the bottom of my heart,” he said, noting that it was sad Vickery died in relative poverty.

At home, his foster daughter Amema “Mimi” Saeju, 36, recalled a warm animal-lover who raised her with his later-life partner Otome Klein, 87, a Dutch anthropolo­gist.

“When it comes to work it was his responsibi­lity to be extreme sometimes . . . [but] in the house he was quite a reasonable person,” she said. But above all she recalled his openness and candour about sex and relationsh­ips. “He loved to talk about women,” she said with a laugh.

Later, Vickery consulted with the late Ieng Sary’s defence at the Khmer Rouge tribunal. Ieng Sary defender Michael Karnavas, a friend for 22 years, said in an email that Vickery was “a fierce critic of sloppy critical analysis . . . a great conversati­onalist with a bent for provoking with offcolour and politicall­y incorrect remarks. Yet he was a gentle and generous soul, always ready to lend an ear and share his encyclopae­dic knowledge.”

“Michael was quirky and cantankero­us. He could drive you crazy with his politics,” he said.

Most relevant to the trials was Vickery’s rejection of what he called the “Standard TotalView”: the body of widely accepted – and, in his view, insufficie­ntly rigorous – scholarshi­p that suggested the Khmer Rouge was a monolithic entity. Vickery set a high bar for analysing historical facts, and challenged the popular version of Khmer Rouge history on such issues as death totals, sexual violence and how fragmented the regime was.

In all, Karnavas noted, “Michael Vickery was a Cambodian institutio­n, an old hand, and to many, a legend.”

But for many,Vickery’s conviction­s that he would work only to sustain himself, his disdain for materialis­m and his refusal to be tenured at a university in order to maintain the independen­ce of his voice ultimately caught up to him. He grew reliant upon the charity of his friends and relatives for support.

In his final months, Vickery lived with his brother-in-law, Meas Savuth, 72, who said that his dying wish was to have a Cambodian funeral. “He wanted to die in Cambodia,” he said, noting that many former students travelled from afar to pay their respects over the weekend.

Vickery died of a heart attack after a long period of illness at 11am on June 29. He is survived by his adoptive daughter Mimi, his partner Otome Klein, his inlaws and his ex-wife Angina Vickery, and their daughter Angelina.

 ?? SUPPLIED ?? An old portrait of the historian Michael Theodore Vickery, who passed away on Thursday in Battambang.
SUPPLIED An old portrait of the historian Michael Theodore Vickery, who passed away on Thursday in Battambang.

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