0% found this document useful (0 votes)
291 views

Searching For Dad

1) The poem is about a son searching for his father after they were separated by Pol Pot in Cambodia in 1975. 2) When the son last saw his father, his father was meditating and living on just Buddha while his body became covered in sores from lack of food and water. 3) When the son returns in 1979 after being separated, he finds that his father is gone and searches the landscape for clues as to where his father's grave may be, begging the grasses and trees for any information on his father's final resting place.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
291 views

Searching For Dad

1) The poem is about a son searching for his father after they were separated by Pol Pot in Cambodia in 1975. 2) When the son last saw his father, his father was meditating and living on just Buddha while his body became covered in sores from lack of food and water. 3) When the son returns in 1979 after being separated, he finds that his father is gone and searches the landscape for clues as to where his father's grave may be, begging the grasses and trees for any information on his father's final resting place.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 1

Searching for Dad

A Poem by U Sam Oeur


Translated by Ken MC Cullough
When I left, dad sat on his bed,
wanting to go through his shakes in private.
With no food or water, dad lived on Buddha
while his body became covered with sores.
He refused to leave. He wanted to meditate.
Pol Pot separated me from my Teacher.
When I return, I find he is gone.
Dad, what miseries did you suffer?
In ’75, it was ashrams everywhere.
Old men and women who were fed up
with reincarnating into this life of pitfalls
sought ways to reach Nirvana.
Now, in ’79, I see only aquatic bushes.
I break into a cold sweat. I get dizzy;
No matter what the ideology du jour,
there is always the same lament.
Oh trees in whose roots the fish spawn,
in the dry season of ’75, my dad was still here.
He was alive under the sanctuary of worship.
Now in what grave does his skeleton lie?
He was a builder, followed the precepts, gave alms.
He built temples, chateaux, palaces, stupas.
Yet Pol Pot killed him.
Annihilated his genius without regret.
O grasses, your grandson begs you-
if the grandfather grasses know
the whereabouts of my father’s grave,
I shall shave my head in thanks.
O grass of thickets, grass
of sticking burrs, where is
the skeleton concealed?
Tell-and I shall ask no more of you.
*
The horizon is like the hem of a mosquito net, pelican feet
like duck feet. We’ve been living in misery
because of our king, eclipsed because ladies adore diamonds,
our forest turned to deserts out of ignorance.
Oh, God! Why Cambodia?

You might also like