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| Phanith Sovann, the Cambodian-American who will compete in an international beauty contest next year. Photograph: supplied |
Wednesday, 22 August 2012
Seth Kimsoeurn
The Phnom Penh Post
A Cambodian-American singer who was nearly killed as a child by the Khmer Rouge will be the first Miss Cambodia to compete in an international beauty pageant since 2006.
Phanith Sovann has been selected as an entrant in next year’s Queen of the Universe 2013, an annual beauty contest in California.
Sovann, born in a refugee camp
in Kao-I-Dang, Thailand in 1989 to young parents who, orphaned by the
Khmer Rouge, escaped to the border, said her family was lucky to have
survived.
They were forced to run and hide
from Thai soldiers who raided the camps periodically, forcing refugees
who did not have permits back to the killing fields of Cambodia.
“My mother always said that my family almost died many times,” she said.
At the age of two, Sovann and
her family moved to the US with nothing but a few bags of clothes. They
lived in a small garage in California, where Sovann’s parents encouraged
her to learn her native tongue, Khmer.
By the time she was six, after
performing her first solo in church, her parents enrolled her in piano
classes, where she learned how to read notes.
By the age of eight, she had taught herself to play music by ear and tabulate it, and wrote her first song.
In 2004, Sovann won the international John Lennon Songwriting contest, and recorded an original song titled My American Dream.
Sovann is humble about her
chances of success at next year’s contest, but believes that taking part
is a first step in representing Cambodian beauty.
She said: “I want the world to
see that Cambodia is marvelous in so many ways. I have not seen Cambodia
represented in an international pageant for a while, so even if I’m not
perfect, I want to take that first step.”
The last Miss Cambodia to
compete in an international beauty contest was Sun Srey Mom, who
competed in Miss World in 2006. She was the first in more than 50 years
to vie for the coveted title.
Plans for beauty pageants inside
Cambodia have run into trouble in recent years. In 2006, Prime Minister
Hun Sen cancelled a Miss Cambodia contest, saying he would not allow
the event to go ahead until poverty had been more than halved.
Three years later, a beauty
pageant for victims of Cambodia’s millions of landmines was cancelled
after the government denounced the event as an insult to disabled
people.
Entrants to the competition, which will be held in California have to raise a minumum of $3,000 sponsorship.
Phanin has been given a letter of support from the Cambodian ambassador in the US, at home to back her campaign.
In a letter of support, backing
her application, Hem Heng, ambassador of the Kingdom of Cambodia in the
US, said: “Your efforts to represent as Miss Cambodia is a brave
commitment and a big gesture in your life, which I am sure is
appreciated by all Cambodians back home as well as Cambodian-Americans
here who have always thought of their native country Cambodia no matter
how far away they were compelled to live due to the necessity in one’s
life.”
Sovann said she hoped to set an example to young women.
“My hope in doing all of this is
to inspire young women and girls all over the world to pursue their
dreams. I want everyone to know that you don’t have to have a title to
become an ambassador of love, hope, and peace to the world.
“I want people to know that you
don’t have to be the tallest, or the most beautiful to represent your
country. You just have to have a good heart, compassion, vision, and
determination.”
On the day of the event there
will be an evening-wear round, a swimsuit competition and each delegate
will be questioned. Judges will pick a top 10 to go through to the next
round.


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