- Cambodia Town, Long Beach, California
Cambodia Town (also known as Little Phnom Penh or Little Cambodia) is the official name for a roughly one mile long business corridor along Anaheim Street between Atlantic and Junipero avenues in Long Beach,
California . [cite news
title = Cambodia Town Is Now Official! Ethnic district designation would honor refugees
url = http://www.cambodiatown.org/1.html
work = Long Beach Press-Telegram
publisher =Los Angeles Newspaper Group
accessdate = 2007-10-08] This area has numerous Cambodian restaurants, clothing stores, and jewelry stores. Churches, temples, and service centers for Cambodian-Americans are also found in the area. In addition, there are many more general businesses in the area, such as auto repair shops, that are also Cambodian-owned.With approximately 50,000 Cambodians in Long Beach and surrounding communities,Fact|date=February 2007 Long Beach is home to the second largest population of Cambodian immigrants outside
Southeast Asia (there are approximately 1.4 million Cambodians inThailand and approximately 1,055,174 in southernVietnam , where they are known asKhmer Krom ), and the city has its ownCambodia nconsulate . Many of the Cambodians in Long Beach came to the United States as refugees fromDemocratic Kampuchea from 1975 to 1979, as well as the 1978 invasion and occupation of Cambodia byVietnam .The City of Long Beach also has an annual
Cambodian New Year celebration.The quest for official recognition
Since 2001, some local Cambodian community activists worked to obtain Long Beach city council approval to officially designated the Anaheim Street corridor as "Cambodia Town". Some community activists preferred the name of "Little Phnom Penh."
Some community members questioned any official designation for the area, saying that it could increase the Cambodian-
Latino rivalry in the area, and that official recognization for a single ethnic community would be divisive in the ethnically diverse city of Long Beach. OnOctober 25 ,2006 , the city council voted for a 90-day review period to allow more input from the community. In the end, official approval was obtained at the city council meeting on July 3rd, 2007:"After lengthy discussion and several public comments, the City Council voted 8-1 to designate the stretch of Anaheim Street between Junipero Avenue and Atlantic Boulevard as Cambodia Town. The area houses many Cambodian businesses, and Long Beach is home to about 17,000 Cambodian-Americans, according to the city." Published on July 4, 2007, Long Beach Press-Telegram [cite news
first = Jang
last = Mira
title = Debate is a lesson in democracy
url = http://www.presstelegram.com/search/ci_4551480
work = Long Beach Press-Telegram
publisher =Los Angeles Newspaper Group
page = A1
date =2006-10-26
accessdate = 2006-10-27] [cite news
first = Jang
last = Mira
title = Cambodian community divided over new district
url = http://www.presstelegram.com/search/ci_4534802
work = Long Beach Press-Telegram
publisher =Los Angeles Newspaper Group
page = A1
date =2006-10-23
accessdate = 2006-10-27]References
External links
http://www.cambodiantown.comhttp://www.cambodiatown.org
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