Grace College Freshman Plans To Use Her Degree To Help Cambodia Heal From War

September 21, 2022 at 1:04 a.m.
Grace College Freshman Plans To Use Her Degree To Help Cambodia Heal From War
Grace College Freshman Plans To Use Her Degree To Help Cambodia Heal From War

By Staff Report-

WINONA LAKE – Grace College welcomed its second-largest class of 465 new students this year. The class also happens to be the most culturally diverse in school history, representing 20 different countries.

During the first few weeks at Grace, students were introduced to the campus theme this year: “Hope.” This theme will serve as a reminder to students that even when life gets hard, there is unshakeable hope found in Christ, according to a news release from Grace. This idea has resonated with one incoming student in particular.

Selina Saing was born in Phnom Penh, Cambodia’s capital city, which is still on the mend from Khmer Rouge, a communist regime that targeted the educated middle class, wiped out a quarter of Cambodia’s population and devastated the country. Now enrolled as a freshman studying English education at Grace, Saing plans to return to her country after graduation to help revive the education system and bring proper education to children who remain in the shadow of the devastation, the release states.

Saing’s father was 6 years old during Cambodia’s communist rule. He tragically lost several family members in the war, but successfully escaped to a province where his surviving family built a new life. At this time, the Buddhist family began listening to a Christian radio station, through which they heard and received the Gospel of Jesus Christ. Today, her father is a full-time pastor and leader of Shalom Mission Cambodia, a network with churches spread all across Cambodia – a place where just 30 years ago, Christians were meeting in secret.

Because of her father’s radical conversion story, Saing and her three younger siblings have been able to attend a Christian school and learn English – an opportunity many in the country cannot afford.

“The country is still facing a lot of poverty,” says Saing. “Since Cambodia is in the healing phase of the war, the education system is down. There are good schools, but they are exclusively for first-class people.”

As Saing began to think about her future, and the impact she could make with a college education, she became more and more interested in the idea of going to college abroad. She first learned of Grace College through John Hayden, a Grace alumnus who had visited her father early on as a church planter. Hayden and her father kept in touch through the years, and Hayden even hosted Saing’s father during one of his seminary visits to the states. He planted the seed that Saing should attend Grace.

“When I began researching Grace my sophomore year, I knew I wouldn’t want to go anywhere else,” said Saing.

Choosing an English education major was easy for Saing. Only around 22% of Cambodians know English, and according to Saing, increasing English education is key to fighting poverty.

“If you know English in Cambodia, you are considered smart, and you can find good job opportunities with good pay,” said Saing. “I want to bring what I learn at Grace back to Cambodia and provide good education at a lower price so that all children can do what they want to do.”

Saing specifically plans to work in the rural part of the country where the need for education is the greatest.

“I’ve been on missions with my dad to these provinces, on which I learned that so many children really want to go to school, but they don’t have enough money,” said Saing. “Since I’ve seen it with my own eyes, I have this passion for helping them. Our country has grown a lot after the war, but I would like to make it better.”

Eventually, Saing hopes to become a teacher of the teachers and to train educators how to administer proper English education. In a country where 65% of the population is under 30 years old, many see her generation as a new hope for Cambodia, and Saing is doing everything in her power to be just that.

Saing’s financial aid package at Grace relieved the burden of college costs so that she can make her dreams a reality. Grace College provides significant financial aid for students. Learn more about Grace’s new affordability measures for students at www.grace.edu/financialaid.

WINONA LAKE – Grace College welcomed its second-largest class of 465 new students this year. The class also happens to be the most culturally diverse in school history, representing 20 different countries.

During the first few weeks at Grace, students were introduced to the campus theme this year: “Hope.” This theme will serve as a reminder to students that even when life gets hard, there is unshakeable hope found in Christ, according to a news release from Grace. This idea has resonated with one incoming student in particular.

Selina Saing was born in Phnom Penh, Cambodia’s capital city, which is still on the mend from Khmer Rouge, a communist regime that targeted the educated middle class, wiped out a quarter of Cambodia’s population and devastated the country. Now enrolled as a freshman studying English education at Grace, Saing plans to return to her country after graduation to help revive the education system and bring proper education to children who remain in the shadow of the devastation, the release states.

Saing’s father was 6 years old during Cambodia’s communist rule. He tragically lost several family members in the war, but successfully escaped to a province where his surviving family built a new life. At this time, the Buddhist family began listening to a Christian radio station, through which they heard and received the Gospel of Jesus Christ. Today, her father is a full-time pastor and leader of Shalom Mission Cambodia, a network with churches spread all across Cambodia – a place where just 30 years ago, Christians were meeting in secret.

Because of her father’s radical conversion story, Saing and her three younger siblings have been able to attend a Christian school and learn English – an opportunity many in the country cannot afford.

“The country is still facing a lot of poverty,” says Saing. “Since Cambodia is in the healing phase of the war, the education system is down. There are good schools, but they are exclusively for first-class people.”

As Saing began to think about her future, and the impact she could make with a college education, she became more and more interested in the idea of going to college abroad. She first learned of Grace College through John Hayden, a Grace alumnus who had visited her father early on as a church planter. Hayden and her father kept in touch through the years, and Hayden even hosted Saing’s father during one of his seminary visits to the states. He planted the seed that Saing should attend Grace.

“When I began researching Grace my sophomore year, I knew I wouldn’t want to go anywhere else,” said Saing.

Choosing an English education major was easy for Saing. Only around 22% of Cambodians know English, and according to Saing, increasing English education is key to fighting poverty.

“If you know English in Cambodia, you are considered smart, and you can find good job opportunities with good pay,” said Saing. “I want to bring what I learn at Grace back to Cambodia and provide good education at a lower price so that all children can do what they want to do.”

Saing specifically plans to work in the rural part of the country where the need for education is the greatest.

“I’ve been on missions with my dad to these provinces, on which I learned that so many children really want to go to school, but they don’t have enough money,” said Saing. “Since I’ve seen it with my own eyes, I have this passion for helping them. Our country has grown a lot after the war, but I would like to make it better.”

Eventually, Saing hopes to become a teacher of the teachers and to train educators how to administer proper English education. In a country where 65% of the population is under 30 years old, many see her generation as a new hope for Cambodia, and Saing is doing everything in her power to be just that.

Saing’s financial aid package at Grace relieved the burden of college costs so that she can make her dreams a reality. Grace College provides significant financial aid for students. Learn more about Grace’s new affordability measures for students at www.grace.edu/financialaid.
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