To understand the significance of visiting the Killing Fields and S-21 you need to know the history of
Cambodia. Back in the 1970s there was discontent and a revolution in
the country. But the good guys (if there even were good guys) didn't
win the fight, and instead the Cambodia Communist Party took over.
Their leaders were Pol Pot and a man that came to be known as Duch.
We don't know if you pronounced that dutch, duke, or doosh, but we've
all decided to call him Douche after learning more about him. Pol Pot
and Duch are equal with Hitler in the crimes they have committed
against humanity. They are the lowest of the low, and hell isn't even
good enough for them. They took over the country, and began rounding
up anyone who appeared to be intelligent. This included anyone with
an actual education, most storekeepers, doctors, lawyers, and other
professionals, and inexplicably anyone who wore glasses. Nobody knew
what they were doing with them. They just all disappeared.
Right in
the middle of Phnom Penh was a high school. The communist army
marched in one day, killed everyone inside, and took over the school.
This was your average American sized high school with a few hundred
students. And they just marched in and killed all of the unarmed
students. The school came to be known as S-21. The army brought all
of the “intelligent” people there, calling them all spies, and
supposedly interrogated them. Tortured them to death is a more
accurate description. Over 3,000 people were taken there to be
“interrogated” and only 10 survived. Of the 10, 3 were artists
who were forced to make pictures and painting for the army and Pol
Pot. One of the artists who escaped went on to paint a series of
depictions of what it was like in S21 and out at the killing fields,
and the original paintings now hang in S21. The paintings hang in the
actual rooms where the torture depicted occurred. And because many of
the torture devices were built in the rooms they cannot be removed,
and are still in the rooms. You could still see the blood stains on
some of the walls, and places where prisoners in the solitary
confinement cells had scratched tick marks into the walls. The
buildings smell terrible. One classroom was filled with glass shelves
holding hundreds of skulls. On many of the skulls you can easily see
the hammer marks, nail holes, and other cracks and dents from the
torture.
I would easily compare this place to
Auschwitz. You can't feel happy there. Just being in the buildings is
dark and depressing. There is a terrible feeling about the whole
place.
After that we left to go to the
“Killing Fields.” I had actually said I had no interest in
visiting such an awful place. But when the time came, I went anyway.
I'm glad I did now, but still, it was just as horrible as I imagined.
Not unlike how the Nazis rounded up the
Jews and killed them, the army did the same thing here. They rounded
up people from the slums, the intelligent people, and anyone they
felt was not of a pure blood, stripped them naked, forced them into
trucks, and drove them to a field 15 km outside of Phnom Penh. Its
nothing more than a large field at the edge of a lake or river (I
never could tell which). They first made the prisoners dig deep, huge
holes. And then made them all go stand down inside the hole, where
they shot them. They then covered the holes back up and left. They
killed over 300 people a day for 2 years like this. But after a while
they had too many people arriving and not enough space left to hide
the bodies. So they began torturing the women by taking the babies
away from them, and smashing the babies' heads into a tree, forcing
the mothers to watch. After the women had then been tortured into
submission they forced them to work in the fields, preparing them for
the next round of prisoners. This work often involved pouring
chemicals over the dead bodies (including their own children) to make
them decompose faster. There was one mass gave of over 100 bodies
found of women holding their babies' heads. All signs indicate that some
of the women had been buried alive. I don't even want to know the
rest of the story.
We walked around the killing fields,
which really weren't that big, for an hour or so. There is a small
museum on-site that we went into and read about everything. Pol Pot
died in captivity in the 1980s and was never tried for his crimes.
Duch is now about 65 yrs old I think, and has been in prison off and
on since the 1980s. (He was in exile for over 10 years.) He was only
tried for his crimes in 2009, and was sentenced to a mere 35 years.
He did take the credit and blame for the atrocities committed under
him, and apologized to the people. Many of the other leaders never
did that.
When you look around Cambodia you do
notice a missing generation. There are very few old people, and even
fewer people between 40-60. And the few people in that age range you
do see tend to be very poor and uneducated. Anyone who was educated
in that age range would have been killed. These atrocities were
committed at the same time as Mom and Dad when they were newlyweds
and when Natalie and I were born. If our family had lived in Cambodia
we probably all would have been killed. Dad is a lawyer and Mom wears
glasses, which is all it would have taken for them to be tortured for
supposedly being spies, and then been killed.
When you learn about all of these
things it is easier to understand how there can still be such an
uneven divide in the wealth of the country, and why there are still
so many slums and poor people. You have to understand Buddhism to
appreciate the rest. Buddhists believe you are always preparing for
the next life. Your gifts to Buddha are more important than your acts
to others. So they do not help the poor people around them. They
think it is more important to go to the wats and make offerings to
Buddha. They would rather put $100 in the donation plate for Buddha
than give $5 to a starving person. Combine that mentality with the
missing older generation, and the fact that no one has an educated
elder to look up to, and you start to understand how they got where
they are. The best thing we can do here is give anyone who wants one
a better education. Give them a chance to break out of the cycle of
poverty. Just 30 years ago their families lost everything- their
parents, their homes, their money. Then their country went through a
deep depression, and struggled to rebuild. It hasn't been that long
but they are making progress.
wow. just wow.
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