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Tuol Sleng Prison, S-21: The Khmer Rouge Prison which Fed the Killing Fields Cambodian genocide, perpetrated by the Khmer Rouge, during the
Pol Pot regime (1975-1979) is one of the most unique and horrific events in world history. By the
end of the Khmer Rouge period, nearly a quarter of the country's population had been killed.
Modern Cambodians are dealing with the remnants of a war, which they fought against
themselves.
Travel agents in Phnom Penh were able to give me brochures about Disneyland, the City of New York, and the casinos in Las Vegas. They didn't, however, have any information about the American Indian Genocide Museum. Travel agents in other countries might have information about Auschwitz, but October Fest seems to draw the most tourists to Germany. Many countries have survived wars and genocides. But what if you were from a country, where the second largest tourist attraction was the genocide museum? And what if that museum was located in the original prison, where thousands of your fellow countrymen were slain? Taking it several steps further, what if every person in your country, over the age of twenty-four, was either a victim or a perpetrator of what has often been referred to as the world's only auto-genocide? And, what if victims, torturers, and executioners all lived side-by-side, in the same community? This is Cambodia. tuol Sleng Prison, also called S-21, is the name of the Cambodian Genocide Museum, and it is one of the largest tourist attractions, after Angkor Wat. Under the French, the building had housed Public School 21. After the Khmer Rouge outlawed education, the school was converted to a torture and confession center for Khmer Rouge members accused of treason against Angka, the Khmer Rouge political organization. Prisoners were subjected to the most inhumane torture until they finally broke, at which point they would sign erroneous confessions. One of the more common confessions was being a member of the CIA or KGB. The fact that many of the agents were aged 12-15 and had no idea what CIA or KGB were, was of little consequence. The confession was all that mattered. After the confession, the prisoner was executed. The bodies were dumped in mass graves at a site later called The Killing Fields Cambodia's third largest tourist attraction.
Only seven former inmates of tuol Sleng prison survived. To date, only two remain alive, to serve as witnesses if the Khmer Rouge Trials ever actually take place. As a side note, only two former Khmer Rouge have ever been imprisoned for their crimes against humanity. Vann Nath, the painter from tuol Sleng, is the most famous survivor, one of only seven. His horrific paintings of Khmer Rouge torture remain on display at the prison, and serve as a haunting testament of man's inhumanity to man.
Perhaps one of the most frightening aspects of a visit to S21 is seeing how detailed and how
organized the slaughter was. The Khmer Rouge photographed every prisoner, and refused to
execute them until after they had signed a confession. Many of these photos remain on display at
the museum. The look of fear on the faces of the victims as well as the obvious youth of many,
stirs up deep emotions of revulsion and anger. The question "WHY?" Reverberates through your
mind as you take in the hundreds of portraits of the dead. Even worse is the knowledge that these
photos represent a small fraction of the total number of lives which were stamped out in the
name of an insane ideology. My photographer and friend Richard, after visiting S 21 for the first time, said "Primo Levi said of Auschwitz: people doing that kind of crime do it so that no one can tell them it was a mess. As if they wanted someone, after the fact, to say that they had done a good job." He added, "Maybe that kind of documentation separated them from what they were doing here, and made it just another corporate work assignment." "As soon as we read the placard in the front, which tell the basic story of the museum, we began talking about our grandparents and the Second World War," said Heike, a German student, who I met while she was on a visit to the prison with a group of friends. "But Hitler was different," said Arnt, Heike's classmate. "Hitler hated a defined list of people; Jews first, but also gypsies and gays. With Hitler, you knew if you were on the list or not. But with the Khmer Rouge anyone was a target at any time." Some Khmers were killed for being capitalists or intellectuals. But many were killed for no discernable reason at all. The vast majority of Khmers were not killed in the more than 140 prisons located around the country. They were murdered in the villages where they lived, and in the rice fields where they worked. In Europe, many have raised the question of who, apart from the Nazi soldiers or the leaders, bore guilt. But in Cambodia, such deep-piercing questions need not be asked. In Cambodia anyone could have been a Khmer Rouge, and could have killed or been killed. As Richard put it "Every single Khmer either has blood on his hands, saw his family killed, or both." "When we were in Germany planning this trip, we thought of Angkor Wat," said Heike. "We didn't think of S-21." Heike looked around at the dusty, cold stone buildings, most likely remembering the thousands who were systematically executed there. "We didn't know that humans could behave in such a way."
The Tuol Sleng Museum is located at Street 113 and Street 350. It is open every day including holidays.
For more information visit wikipedia.org-Tuol Sleng
Born to Italian parents, Antonio Graceffo is originally from New York City. He currently lives in Cambodia, while preparing for his next adventure in Borneo. His writing has appeared in publications too numerous to list including: Bangkok Post Escape Artist, Travel in Taiwan, Travelmag (UK), Good Morning Chiang Mai, Travellers Impressions, Marco Polo, Canoe (Canada), Views Unplugged, Kung Fu Magazine, Yellow Times, Bike China, The Rose and Thorn, Blueberry Press, Go Nomad, Close Quarters Combat, Go World, and Black Belt Magazine. Antonio's book about his studies at the Shaolin Temple, The Monk From Brooklyn has been published by GOM Publishing, and is available at Barnes and Noble and GOM Publishing. His book about his adventures in the Taklamakan Desert, The Desert of Death on Three Wheels has just been published. You can find this book and other books by Antonio Graceffo at Amazon |