I am blessed to have a wonderful family. My
wife, Phal Mao Wright, and I met in Cambodia while working
together at the Cambodian American National Development
Organization (CANDO). Phal has worked in the past as a
receptionist, and as a translator, and is currently a full time
student at San Antonio College. We have three children: Jeffrey
Sovan (age 11), Michael Sopat (age 6), and Catherine Sophaline
Wright (age 5). All are students at Scobee Elementary. Jeffrey
is a Math whiz and is into Pokemon and video games. Michael is a
train enthusiast. Catherine is into being cute, smart and
helpful (she helped Michael with his 1st grade
homework even though she hadn’t been to school herself yet).
I was also blessed to have been raised in a
wonderful family where I was one of six children. My father,
James L. Wright, Sr., is a retired Los Angeles Superior Court
Judge and was actively involved in the community in Long Beach
with volunteer efforts with the local schools. He served for
many years on Long Beach’s Sister-City Committee, and has held
numerous leadership positions in our church. My mother, Janet
Wright, has a Masters in Religious Studies, can read and write
in Hebrew, and has been on archaeological dig in Israel. Mom has
taught early morning seminary classes for the youth of our
church (the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints), and
has also held numerous leadership positions. Currently, Mom and
Dad are in China teaching English at Xi’an International Studies
University, and having the time of their life. My older brother
Jim and his wife Marie live in Long Beach. Jim served a mission
in Korea, and works in the computer industry. He currently works
with Norton on their internet security software. I am grateful
for Jim’s work in keeping my computers safe. Marie is a
professional photographer. My younger sister Laurie (Dukes) and
her husband Tim and son Timmy live in San Angelo, Texas. We both
moved to Texas around the same time, and it has been wonderful
to have a sister just three hours away. Tim is an intelligence
office in the Air Force. Laurie has studied Chinese and lived in
China, and has taught middle school in California. She
volunteers her time at a local home for troubled girls. My
younger sister Connie (Wilson) and her husband Darrell live in
Long Beach with their 4 children (Nathaniel, Benjamin, Elijah,
and Susanna). Darrell works as a network administrator for
3-Day-Blinds. Connie previously worked providing assistance to a
disabled senior. My younger brother Mark served a mission in
Columbia and speaks Spanish. He and his wife Tracy live in
Riverside, California. Mark is a doctoral student at UC
Riverside in Anthropology, where he is focusing on Mayan studies
and learning to read Mayan Glyphs. Tracy is a middle school
music teacher. Finally, my youngest brother Jonathan is
currently serving a Spanish-speaking mission in New Mexico,
following a couple of months of missionary service in
Nicaragua.
I am often asked how I learned to speak
Khmer (Cambodian). I first began learning the language in 1986
while serving a 2-year mission for my church in Washington, DC,
where I had the privileged of working with and learning from
refugee families from Cambodia and Laos, and Vietnam. At the
time, my church did not provide training in Cambodian, so I
learned on my own. I obtained a book titled Modern Spoken
Cambodian (by Franklin E. Huffman and Im Proum) from Cornell
University, and later tracked down the tapes which accompanied
the book which were only available from Yale University. Each
day I would listen to tapes and follow along with the lessons
and drills in the book. As I went to homes of our Cambodian
members and friends, I would try out the new phrases I had
learned. Each effort was met with praise and laughter, and then
I was told “you talk like a book!” They would then teach me the
“real” way of speaking Khmer. I also learned to read and write
Khmer through self-study using the same authors’
Cambodian
System of Writing and Beginning Reader.
At the end of my mission, I returned home
to Long Beach, California, which I soon discovered was the
largest population of Cambodians outside of Cambodia. I was
quickly hired by the Long Beach Unified School District as a
bilingual teacher’s aide, and worked with Cambodian ELL students
in elementary and high schools. I participated in Khmer heritage
language programs in the community for several years, but
finally had an opportunity for formal study at Cornell University
through the Southeast Asian Summer Studies Institute (SEASII) in
the summer of 1991. I graduated from California State University
Long Beach the following year, and then spent a year and half
(1993-1994) in Cambodia as a volunteer with a U.S. AID funded
project called the Cambodian American National Development
Organization (CANDO). While my Khmer language skills were good
before I arrived in Cambodia, they improved dramatically in the
year and half I lived and worked there. After my return, I began
working as one of the first Khmer bilingual teachers in the Long
Beach Unified School District, in one of the only Khmer
bilingual programs in the country. Since then I’ve been able to
keep up my Khmer language skills by working on translation
projects, keeping in touch with Khmer friends and making new
ones, and enjoying Khmer music, videos, karaoke, news programs,
and books and magazines.
Hobbies
Music – French Horn
I love music, and have played the French
Horn and its variants (Mellophone, Marching French Horn, and
Alto Horns) since Junior High. I played in the Long Beach
Community Orchestra for over ten years. I’ve also played with
two Civil War re-enactment bands, the Americus Brass Band (from
1984-1986) and the Band of the California Batallion (from
1997-2000). These brass bands wear authentic uniforms and play
original music from the Civil War period. We performed at
cultural events around Southern California and at Civil War
Re-enactments throughout the country. I had to put my horn away
for a couple of years while I finished by PhD at Arizona State
University and as began my new career at the University of
Texas, San Antonio. However, I recently picked my horn back up
and joined the Alamo City Community Marching Band here in San
Antonio. This band performs in concerts and parades throughout
South Texas.
Photography
I don’t claim to be great photographer, but
I do love to take (and be in) pictures. Here are a few of my
favorites.