Thousands Attend Samdech Patriarch Oum Sum Funeral

In a solemn, beautiful and sometimes magical ceremony, thousands of Cambodians said goodbye Monday night to Sam­dech Patriarch Oum Sum, one of their most beloved religious leaders.

Shortly after sundown, King Norodom Sihanouk raised a flam­ing torch and lighted a fuse that sent an arc of fire leap­­ing to all four corners of the patriarch’s ela­borate crematorium.

In an in­stant, four two-story trees of fire flamed to life, shooting sprays of gold and silver sparks into the night air as a bamboo flute imitated the sound of an elephant’s cry.

The display symbolized the ascent of Oum Sum’s soul to heav­en as the fire consumed his mor­tal remains.

“Please, let his soul live peacefully in the heavens,” people prayed as the cremation begin. Some had waited for hours to ho­nor the man revered as the King­dom’s most educated monk.

Many were people from the provinces who had journeyed to Phnom Penh to pay their re­spects. “It’s very important to be here,” said Chouk Mai, a 53-year-old Buddhist nun from Takeo.

This morning, Oum Sum’s ash­es will be collected from the crematorium, said Min Khin, chairman of the cremation committee.

Bone fragments will be placed in a special stupa at Wat Moha­montrei, where he was head monk, while his ashes will be thrown into the waters in front of the Royal Palace, at the place called Chaktomuk, where three rivers meet.

Min Khin said scattering the ashes on water is a sign of re­spect, so that no one will ever walk on them and they will rest in a cool, peaceful place.

Earlier Monday, the monk’s body rested in state in a golden casket set inside the specially built crematorium in front of Wat Botum. The three-story structure, evoking a classic Khmer pagoda, was richly painted in greens, reds and gold, and drap­ed with filmy white-and-gold hang­ings.

Dozens of top government officials shared the dais with the King and Queen Norodom Mo­ni­neath, the diplomatic corps and the country’s four top Buddhist leaders.

Deputy Prime Minister Sar Kheng spoke at length about Oum Sum’s life and achievements. He was the 12th and last child born to a farming family in Kompong Cham and rose to be the third-highest ranking monk in the nation.

Every top leader in the Cam­bodian Peoples’ Party was present except Prime Minister Hun Sen, who was represented by his father, Hun Neang. After all had paid their respects at the bier, the King beckoned Hun Neang over for a brief private word.

The King appeared frail but alert during the ceremonies. Aides carefully helped him up and down stairs and hovered nearby as he walked from the dias down a red carpet to the monk’s casket.

But he seemed buoyed by the crowd’s enthusiasm, nodding and waving cheerily at the ranks of adoring faces.

The ceremony drew thousands of people from across the country, many of whom had ne­ver seen Oum Sum but who had listened to him for years on radio and television. An estimated 10,000 attended.

Leab Lath, 55, of Prey Veng, felt particularly close to Oum Sum because his son is a monk at Wat Mohamontrei. “He was a very gentle person, very soft-spoken and intelligent,” he said.

All the mourners spoke of how much they respected his scholarship. In addition, said Rath Vong, a monk from Wat Samaki Ransei in Stung Meanchey, “He did so much good in this life that his next life should be wonderful.”

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