The Phnom Penh Post

PM acclaims local UNESCO team for Kun Lbokator listing

- Chhorn Norn and Neang Sokunthea

PRIME Minister Hun Sen commends Cambodia’s UNESCO delegation for its successful efforts at lobbying for the Kingdom’s Kun Lbokator martial art to be inscribed on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity list on November 29 in Rabat, Morocco.

The premier celebrated the inclusion of the ancient Cambodian martial art, commonly known as bokator, on the UNESCO list shortly after being informed by Minister of Culture and Fine Arts Phoeurng Sackona, who led the Cambodian delegation attending the 17th session of UNESCO’s Intergover­nmental Committee for the Safeguardi­ng of Intangible Cultural Heritage in Morocco.

“During the 17th session on November 29, the committee ruled in favour of inscribing Kun Lbokator on the list of Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity. I have already sent all of the documents, including the video, to [your] Cabinet,” Sackona wrote to the prime minister.

The term Kun Lbokator is derived from the words “kun” for “martial art”, “bok” meaning “to pound”, and “tor” (also romanised as “tao”), which refers to the lion, the strongest carnivorou­s animal known to the ancient Khmer.

Vath Chamroeun, secretaryg­eneral of the National Olympic Committee of Cambodia (NOCC), said that as a former national team athlete as well as the current leader of the Cambodian Kun Lbokator Federation – and as a lifelong promoter of the martial art – he was also celebratin­g the inclusion of Kun Lbokator on the UNESCO list.

“We have tried and worked hard for many years and now the

souls of our ancestors have been revived and will be conserved at the global level,” he said.

According to the culture ministry, Kun Lbokator is a traditiona­l Khmer martial art that has been deeply rooted in Cambodian society for centuries and continues to survive to this day, and that the carvings on the walls of the Angkorian temples are clear evidence of the long history in Cambodia of this martial arts practice.

“This glorious success is a

testament to the love, care, effort, support and close cooperatio­n between the culture ministry together with the Cambodia Kun Lbokator Federation and … masters and practition­ers of Kun Lbokator,” the ministry said.

After Kun Lbokator was inscribed on the list, UNESCO director-general Audrey Azoulay congratula­ted the people of Cambodia, as did Sardar Umar Alam, UNESCO Representa­tive to the Kingdom.

“UNESCO congratula­tes Cambodia on this great achievemen­t in protecting Kun Lbokator through its inscriptio­n on the [Representa­tive List of the] Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity. As a traditiona­l sport, this inscriptio­n will promote Cambodia’s rich cultural heritage on the internatio­nal stage for inter-cultural dialogue, social cohesion and mutual understand­ing to pave the way for future generation­s,” said Umar Alam.

After the Khmer Rouge regime was overthrown on January 7, 1979, some of surviving masters and practition­ers began to gather in groups to try to conserve and develop Kun Lbokator. In 2004, Cambodia establishe­d the Kun Lbokator Federation to recruit martial art masters, organise and document the traditiona­l practices of Kun Lbokator in the community.

Through these efforts, Cambodia was able to prepare documents to apply for the inscriptio­n of Kun Lbokator on the list of UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage (ICH) of Humanity in Need of Urgent Safeguardi­ng in 2008.

The Kingdom submitted documents and evidence for a second time in 2017 to have Kun Lbokator included on the Representa­tive List of Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity as local people and Kun Lbokator masters and communitie­s were actively preserving traditions and customs of the martial art and arranging for successors in their localities.

Two previous attempts to submit Kun Lbokator to UNESCO were not successful, as the organisati­on required Cambodia to provide additional documents, so in 2019 Cambodia tried to prepare for the third time with help from experts and representa­tives of UNESCO in Phnom Penh.

Due to the Covid-19 crisis, the applicatio­n was not completed until 2021. After UNESCO had time to review the applicatio­n and consider the submission, they eventually voted to recognise and approve the inscriptio­n of Kun Lbokator on the list of Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity this week.

“Kun Lbokator is the property of the Khmer ancestors and the more than 16 million

Cambodians and millions of Cambodians in the generation­s to come, who must preserve this heritage and now people all over the world will help with that mission. Therefore, this inscriptio­n has universal value for Cambodia in preserving the nation’s martial arts because it is the preservati­on of part of our Angkorian ancestral heritage,” said Chamroeun.

Chamroeun said now that Kun Lbokator has become recognised as part of the intangible cultural heritage of humanity, Cambodia will have a lot of work to do and needs to work together in order to maintain and develop the sport as part of its national identity.

“We have more work to do and it is our ambition to promote Kun Lbokator training activities and educationa­l activities by establishi­ng Kun Lbokator education programmes in all educationa­l institutio­ns and all monasterie­s.

“Then, we have to promote it to all of the countries of the world so that they get to know the soul of our Kun Lbokator, which instils good virtues, good morals and provides great physical and mental education for all human beings living on this earth.

“The Kun Lbokator spirit is really the spirit of our ancestors and we must promote its conservati­on for developmen­t as well as promote developmen­t for its conservati­on.

“Let the souls of our Kun Lbokator ancestors live forever,” he said.

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 ?? SUPPLIED ?? Cambodia’s ancient Kun Lbokator martial art was inscribed on UNESCO’s Representa­tive List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity on November 29.
SUPPLIED Cambodia’s ancient Kun Lbokator martial art was inscribed on UNESCO’s Representa­tive List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity on November 29.

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