National Day of Remembrance (Cambodia)
The National Day of Remembrance, formerly called the National Day of Hatred, which falls on 20 May, is an annual event in Cambodia. It commemorates the Cambodian genocide at the hands of the Khmer Rouge regime that ruled the country between 1975 and 1979. It became a national holiday in 2018.
The English name 'Day of Hatred' is somewhat of a mistranslation. The Khmer name, when instituted in 1983, was ទិវាចងកំហឹង – Ti Veer Jrong Komhuoeng. The name could also be translated as 'Day of Maintaining Rage'.
History
A National Day of Hatred after the fall of the Khmers Rouges
The 'National Day of Hatred' was first launched in the People's Republic of Kampuchea on 20 May 1984. The commemoration was initiated by a 12 September 1983, conference in Phnom Penh of around 300 intellectuals and clergymen. The date was selected since it marked the beginning of mass killings in Democratic Kampuchea on 20 May 1975. It was also the date that the Khmer Rouge had initiated forced collectivization in southern Takéo in 1973.In the PRK, the full title of the event was 'Day of Hatred against the genocidal Pol Pot-Ieng Sary-Khieu Samphan clique and the King Sihanouk-Son Sann reactionary groups'. The National Day of Hatred was an important holiday in the PRK, and the Kampuchean United Front for National Construction and Defense mobilized Kampuchean mass organizations to ensure popular participation.
In the PRK, the policies of the United States and the People's Republic of China were also targets of dislike during the Day of Hatred. The 1983 conference had formulated that the objective of the National Day of Hatred was to mobilize international public opinion against the Khmer Rouge, their allies and their foreign backers. In particular, the issue of the representation of the Coalition Government of Democratic Kampuchea in the United Nations was highlighted.
During the 1980s and 1990s, the National Day of Hatred was marked by fiery speeches and the burning of paper effigies of Pol Pot. During the PRK years, the National Day of Hatred represented one of very few spaces for victims of the Khmer Rouge to publicly discuss their experiences from the Democratic Kampuchea period. Also, the event provided an increased space for religious institutions to hold functions.