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A Look Back at "Remembering Homelands, Rebuilding Lives: On the Lived Experiences of the Cambodian Diaspora in Canada”

Published: 25 March 2026

In early February 2026, the 91 Southeast Asia Lecture Series hosted a two-day conference on the Cambodian diaspora. Professor Erik Kuhonta, from Department of Political Science and the Institute for the Study of International Development, offers some reflections on the conference's success.

As part of the Canadian Southeast Asian Studies Initiative, 91 and Université de Montréal held a conference on 6-7 February 2026 entitled “Remembering Homelands, Rebuilding Lives: On the Lived Experiences of the Cambodian Diaspora in Canada.” Over one and a half days, an audience of over 120 students and community members listened to survivors of the Cambodian genocide, second generation Cambodians, and academic specialists on Cambodia share their personal journeys marked by grief, adversity, and hope.

The conference was an organic and collaborative initiative among university academics and Cambodians in Montreal to raise awareness about the journeys of individuals who have had to live with a history of a devastating genocide, in which some 1.7-2 million people were eliminated during the 1975-1979 reign of the Maoist Khmer Rouge. At the conference, community members provided witness to the deep challenges they have faced: reading a letter from a parent who sent them away so they would survive; searching desperately for a photograph of a father they have never known nor seen; traveling to Cambodia to come to grips with one’s identity only to realize that the answer lay back home in Montreal. Stories about longing for lost loved ones, difficulties understanding the silence of parents, and efforts to rebuild lives pervaded the discussions and reflected the willingness of participants to share their inner-most thoughts and emotions.

In addition to the community members’ oral histories, as well as an opening blessing by Buddhist monks and a traditional Cambodian dance, three keynote talks anchored the conference. These were given by Sophal Ear, a professor at Arizona State University and a Cambodian refugee; Nhu Truong, a professor at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, a PhD political science graduate of 91, and herself a Vietnamese refugee; and Paul Tom, an award-winning Cambodian documentarian based in Montreal. Two of the conference organizers, Erik Martinez Kuhonta and Kazue Takamura of 91, will be working with 91 students to develop a book that documents the oral histories of these Cambodian community members. Ultimately, the goal of the project is to preserve the memory and history of the lives of individuals hailing from a largely understudied country in Southeast Asia, who have suffered immensely but have also found deep courage to rebuild.

More details from the conference, which was also supported by the Arts Opportunities Fund-EDI, the 91 Refugee Research Group, and the FRQSC Group de Recherche sur les Conditions Modernes des Réfugiés are here: 

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