Children of Cambodia's killing fields : memoirs by survivors /

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Bibliographic Details
Imprint:New Haven [Conn.] : Yale University Press, c1997.
Description:xvii, 199 p. : ill. ; 22 cm.
Language:English
Series:Yale Southeast Asia studies monograph series
Monograph series (Yale University. Southeast Asia Studies)
Subject:
Format: Print Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/2667655
Hidden Bibliographic Details
Other authors / contributors:Dith Pran, 1942-2008
DePaul, Kim.
ISBN:0300068395 (alk. paper)
Notes:Includes bibliographical references (p. 195).
Review by Booklist Review

With the Khmer Rouge, the genocidal Communist political group that wreaked havoc in Cambodia in the early 1970s, again poised to overtake Cambodia, Children is a timely reminder of the country's recent bloody past. More than two dozen accounts of the Khmer Rouge's reign of terror have been compiled by Dith Pran, whose own account of surviving Khmer Rouge "reeducation" and escaping to Thailand became the movie The Killing Fields. Children played a key role in Cambodia's genocidal endgame. They were to be the first generation of the "new" Cambodia and were subject to physical labor, violence, and forced separation from family to underscore the point. Most disturbing is the similarity of the accounts. The brutality is almost mesmerizing, demonstrating the universally horrid existence of those children's lives. --Ted Leventhal

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Dith Pran, the photojournalist whose horrifying story gave Pol Pot's genocidal regime a human face in The Killing Fields, continues with his wife DePaul in their mission to remind the world what happened in Cambodia. When the Khmer Rouge took control in 1975, the 29 contributors to this collection ranged in age from toddlers to teenagers. Separated from their relations by the Khmer Rouge, who hoped to use them as the basis of a new society, children had to work in the rice fields. These recollections provide a child's-eye view of their families' suffering. Living conditions were hellish: the children were fed one daily bowl of water with a few grains of rice; innocent people were tortured and killed; and often children were forced to watch as relatives were executed. What is apparent throughout is that while the Khmer Rouge was able physically to separate families, the children's memories of love and respect remained. The authors, most of whom now live in the United States, are shown in photographs with accompanying biographical data recounting how they rebuilt their shattered lives. While the testimonies of suffering and loss may become repetitive, this collection is still an important reminder of the darkest chapter in post-WWII history. (May) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

In this collection of 29 reminiscences by Cambodian refugees and assembled by a photojournalist for the New York Times, the brutality of the Khmer Rouge supports the theme that the forces of holocaust have emerged as a dominant aspect of civilization. The authors were children ranging from ages five through 17 during Cambodia's dominance by the Communist Khmer Rouge. Most of them came from middle-class urban families and suffered a series of horrifying experiences until the invasion by the Vietnamese and their subsequent escape through Thailand to the United States. Their stories coalesce into a common account of being driven from their home, often witnessing the murders of their family, and enduring disease, starvation, and beatings. In the main, their writings are simple, straightforward narratives. Despite the absence of historical or sociological method, the work bears a sense of painful credibility. Recommended for public libraries‘John F. Riddick, Central Michigan Univ. Lib., Mt. Pleasant (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Horrific childhood testimonies by survivors of the Khmer Rouge genocide in Cambodia. These 30 brief narratives were collected by Pran from now- adult survivors of Pol Pot's killing fields. Most of those included here currently reside in the US. Pran, a photojournalist whose story was featured in the movie The Killing Fields, is the founder of the Dith Pran Holocaust Awareness Project; his wife (and co- editor of the volume) DePaul is its executive director. Comparisons to Hitler's genocide are inevitable: Here, too, a government systematically exterminated millions of innocent men, women, and children through a program of relocation, starvation, forced labor, and outright massacres. The narrators, who were only children when the Khmer Rouge seized power in 1975, cannot, of course, explain why the regime ruthlessly murdered nearly two million of their compatriots, but perhaps criminal chaos is much of the point here. Uneducated (thus ``untainted'') village children were less likely to be worked, starved, or walked to death, and were indoctrinated to disavow family ties and show loyalty to all-powerful Angka (the Khmer Rouge regime). Many children were forced to watch executions of their relatives without flinching. A few became monsters, like the six-year-old recollected by one witness here, who attacked a pregnant woman with an ax. With too little room to present a picture of the narrators' lives before and after the hellish years of 197579, the recorded memories are saved from a tedious repetitiveness by a few remarkable descriptions, such as that of an emaciated malaria victim with a swollen belly looking ``like a frog,'' and a scavenging child finding duck eggs in a human skull. This compelling material might be even more powerfully disturbing had it been accompanied by additional explanatory and background material. (photos, not seen)

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