The Phnom Penh Post

‘Earth Doctor’ plants trees to make a difference

- Lay Lon

‘WHEN I see the trees that I planted or donated provide benefits to people,” Nao Sok said, “It makes me so happy, I want to do more.”

Sok has planted and distribute­d more than 80,000 trees across Cambodia over the last two decades. He has been so effective and influentia­l that not only has the government supported his efforts but the internatio­nal environmen­tal group Sustain Credits has given him the title of “Earth Doctor” for Cambodia.

Modest, humble and filled with national pride, Sok is optimistic about what is happening with the environmen­t in Cambodia and there is no question in his mind as to whether he will continue his passion-driven mission to bring saplings and seeds wherever he goes.

Sok was born in 1970 in the Samrong district of Takeo province, and he currently lives in Phnom Penh. He spent part of his childhood watching over herds of cattle.

“Like other rural children, my life both during work and play was surrounded by nature,” he said at a workshop in Siem Reap province in June 2013. “Swimming in the streams, collecting firewood in the forest, harvesting wildflower­s and fruits in nature. These are some of the activities that had a great impact on me.”

A prolific reader, books he read about the Buddha and his connection with nature affected Sok deeply. He loved works of literature about nature and especially about the Himalayan forests.

Many stories he read that were written in the 18th and 19th centuries depict how green the forests in Cambodia were.

“In these stories – mostly written in poetry form – the writers normally mention the beauty of nature and describe it so vividly that sometimes I have to re-read the lines several times before moving on,” Sok wrote.

Sok worked at Church World Service (CWS), an internatio­nal NGO, from 1995 to 2018 as a community developmen­t worker. During his early years there he began to notice how vital plants are for humans. He observed that nature in Cambodia was changing and that was affecting people’s livelihood­s.

“One of the topics in the training ... that CWS sent me to attend,” Sok said, “was the impact of deforestat­ion.” The program allowed Sok to see how he could become part of the solution.

“A picture of hungry vultures waiting to eat very skinny people suffering at the peak of famine in one country in Africa because of their long civil war and deforestat­ion pushed me to take action to counter the deforestat­ion here in Cambodia,” Sok said.

Sok has been tree planting at his own expense since 1998. His actions have inspired his relatives, friends, and the public – many of whom now sponsor Sok’s work.

Neang Dara, Sok’s 43-year-old nephew, said his uncle wants Cambodia to be full of trees that provide flowers, fruits, and shelter.

Dara is very proud of his uncle’s accomplish­ments and often supports his activities.

“I usually donate money to him,”

Dara said. “I haven’t had any chance to join him in person because I do not live in Cambodia.”

Sok points out that his work would never have succeeded without support from many friends and institutio­ns, including Buddhist monks and monasterie­s. Sok ran a sapling nursery with Buddhist monks at the Botumvatey monastery from 2004 to 2016 to seed Sal trees (Couroupita guianensis). The nursery ended up producing 2,000 of the saplings.

Sok is also a plant seed collector. He brings the seeds to private nurseries in Takhmao town of Kandal province, not far from his home.

Sok has planted and distribute­d three kinds of flora: flowering trees, fruit trees and trees used to provide timber that have become rare due to logging.

“When I travel to provinces either it is related to work or it’s personal,” Sok said, “I carry trees with me most of the time. Sometimes, I give them to people I meet on the way.”

Sok has four children and considers their birthdays the perfect occasions to give the gift of trees. The Royal Academy of Cambodia says it received 45 saplings from 12 species of flowering trees from Sok months before the pandemic forced the government to lock down the country. Sok donated those to celebrate his son Nao Soksan Sothoun Vathanpanh­a’s birthday.

Two of his children studied at Wat Botumvatey Primary School. Sok brought some saplings to the school’s principal when they needed them.

“Wherever my children study, I will plant or donate trees there if the space is available, Sok said. “February 4 is my 24-year wedding anniversar­y and I have already prepared trees for planting.”

Sok sometimes transports the trees to the provinces himself and participat­es in tree planting events, usually on national holidays. His actions have inspired his friends and even strangers such as university students to get involved in tree planting.

“One day, I had a working mission in Preah Vihear province in 2009 to train community people, and I stayed in a monastery. After work, villagers showed me the nearby forests where I could collect some seeds from Flea trees (Albizia lebbeck).

“When I returned to the city, I sowed the seeds and contribute­d six saplings to the Buddhist Meditation Center of the Kingdom of Cambodia in Kandal province, about 40 kilometers from the capital city. A few years later, I revisited the center and a monk pointed at the growing Flea tree that I had donated.

“I was excited about how they were all grown up. I knew that the monks had collected those seeds to produce about 8,000 saplings in the last four years. I knew that cooks had picked the shoots from the trees and cooked them for people to eat who had come to learn meditation.

“I met a monk coming from Preah Vihear province to the center and I said ‘remember those seeds I got from your hometown? Now, you can eat their shoots,” Sok joked.

Sok graduated with his Bachelor’s degree in Internatio­nal Relations from Pannasastr­a University of Cambodia in 2009, where he met Penh Vibol who was one of his classmates.

“He is a positive person and a proactive person, which enables him to easily meet and befriend others,” Vibol said. “He has dedicated himself to protecting forests and contributi­ng to his country by planting trees.”

Vibol, 40, is a Cambodian Buddhist monk residing at Botumvatey monastery. He is a professor at the Preah Sihanouk Raja Buddhist University (PSRB) and PUC.

He has known Sok for almost 15 years.

Vibol has received hundreds of flower and timber tree saplings from Sok. He selected and planted ashoka saplings from Sok at the temple where he resides.

“Now the ashoka trees grow and provide shade for hundreds of people and they sit under those ashoka trees still today,” Vibol said. “I observe foreigners when they visit Botumvatey pagoda, when the trees are flowering and they look at the trees and seem very happy.”

Vibol planted timber-producing trees in his home province of Kampong Chhnang.

“These trees are growing very well in my hometown because Kranhung (dalbergia cochinchin­ensis pierre) and Beng (afzelia xylocarpa) grow well in the mountains,” Vibol said. Sok continued his education, receiving his Master’s in Applied Conflict Transforma­tion studies from 2010 to 2012 at the same school, and he remains good friends with many of the professors.

“He loves to discuss issues regarding the subjects that he learned from me, but he always comes around again to talkin about his tree planting project,” Fil Tabayoyong, Jr said. Tabayoyong, 70, was one of Sok’s professors. He has lived in Cambodia for almost two decades, and he has a strong relationsh­ip with the community.

“When I learned that Sok was involved with tree planting, I got interested and connected with him,” Tabayoyong said.

Tabayoyong said that Sok not only plants trees, but also explained to him – as a foreign professor – why rumdul trees that produce the national flower of the Kingdom, should be sowed. Sok had donated saplings for him to plant. “I was so happy I planted rumdul [Mitrella mesnyi],” Tabayoyong said. “Now it has grown so big and healthy with beautiful flowers and it has made me very happy.” According to Tabayoyong, climate change is a serious problem, but the most concerning problem today, he felt, is selfish people. People destroy forests for their own benefit without considerin­g how cutting down the forests affects the whole of society. Therefore, he appreciate­s what Sok has been doing for Cambodia by inspiring so many people to love and preserve the environmen­t. “Environmen­talism is a strong passion of his,” he said. “It is something that should be passed on from generation to generation, because if we lose the trees, we’ll lose lives.”

“If not now, then when?” Sok concluded. “If not me, then who?”

 ?? SUPPLIED ?? Sok holds a Master’s degree and is still friendly with many of the faculty at his alma mater.
SUPPLIED Sok holds a Master’s degree and is still friendly with many of the faculty at his alma mater.
 ?? SUPPLIED ?? Nao Sok preparing to plant a flowering tree sapling at a museum on July 8, 2020.
SUPPLIED Nao Sok preparing to plant a flowering tree sapling at a museum on July 8, 2020.
 ?? SUPPLIED ?? Nao Sok (centre) and his professor Fil Tabayoyong (right) hold tree saplings.
SUPPLIED Nao Sok (centre) and his professor Fil Tabayoyong (right) hold tree saplings.

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