*Graphic content warning*
So far, most of our sightseeing has been quite lighthearted.
We’ve seen pandas and monkeys, temples and statues, and even a couple of
palaces. It’s been enjoyable and culturally enlightening. However, one of our
main sightseeing goals as we came to Cambodia was to focus on the horrendous
activities of the Khmer Rouge.
The leaders of the Khmer Rouge, or the Cambodian Communist Party,
instigated a terrible genocide, ultimately killing 3 million of Cambodia’s then
8 million population. I’ll spare you the history details, but if you want them,
see the Wikipedia page. For now, I’ll
just tell you about our experiences in the main Khmer Rouge prison—S-21.
A view of S-21 from the top floor of Building D |
As a brief introduction, S-21 used to be a high school, but
was taken over by the KR and used as a prison. Classrooms were either divided
into small individual cells where prisoners were held, used as pens for up to
70 people all chained together by iron shackles around the ankles, or as
interrogation/torture chambers. Prisoners were accused of being a danger to the
state and tortured until they confessed to crimes they didn’t commit, or died. For more information, see here.
S-21 is now the Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum, open to the
public for a mere $2. The rooms are open as well, and visitors can walk the halls
where murderers and their victims lived and died.
As Ricky and I entered the grounds, I immediately felt a
sort of heaviness, as if the air was just a little thicker here. I wondered if I could do this. I had heard
about how graphic and harsh some of the displays could be. But we pressed on.
The first room we entered housed skulls in glass cases, with
descriptions of the injuries showing how the person died, how old they were,
and what sex they were. More skulls and bones lined the walls. I wondered again if I would be able go
through with this.
Skulls and bone fragments fill the room. |
Next, there were displays of the torture items used. Popular forms of torture were removing the
fingernails or teeth with pliers and waterboarding. Graphic paintings showed how the tortures were done.
Waterboard used for torture. The watering can on the right was used to pour water on the victims' faces. |
Shackles used to hold prisoners together by the ankles in one large classroom. |
The rest of the first and second buildings featured displays
both victims and perpetrators. Mugshots
of victims that were taken when they arrived covered walls of several
classrooms. When I saw them, I thought
of the skulls at the beginning and I was reminded that those skulls were these
people, and these people were dead. It was a very sad feeling that washed over
me as I looked into these people’s faces.
Photos of victims, taken by their captors when they arrived at S-21 |
But their own expressions were more complex. There were some faces that
showed sadness, yes, but even more that showed fear, anger, defiance,
confusion, hatred. But even worse were the blank stares of those who felt
nothing, as if they expected nothing more or less than what was happening, as
if they were resigned to their fate.
It
made me wonder what kind of expression I would have on my face. Would I be
strong enough to feel anything more than simple acquiescence to injustice?
Along with pictures of the living, there were also pictures
of the dead, of those who were starved, beaten, and tortured. They had fallen victim
to the injustices of their own people.
In one display, photos of the surviving leaders that were
arrested in 2007 are accompanied by their personal biographies, a few
statements about their involvement, and the crimes they are charged with. They
are all defended by both Cambodian and western lawyers (Dutch, French, British,
American). Most, with the exception of "Duch," the leading officer in charge of S-21, were unapologetic, often saying that they had no knowledge of the atrocities going on in S-21, or even that it existed.
The second to last building we visited, building B, was the
home of the small celled rooms. They were made by constructing shoddy brick
walls to partition areas of about 3 feet by 8 feet. As we looked in the cells,
we saw that bloodstains still remained on the floor. I could only imagine the horrors that took place here, in these small dirty cells, their occupants chained to the floor by rusty shackles.
A classroom, divided into individual cells. |
A cell with blood on the floor. |
Building A, our last stop, was the main torture center and
remained nearly unchanged. Each room contained a bare bed frame and torture
elements. Some had chairs where the interrogators would sit and question the
victims. On the walls were photos of those found dead when the horrors of S-21
were discovered. Each room contained bloodstains and a sense of overwhelming
sadness and we decided it was time to go.
Before we left, however, we were stopped by an old man
selling books. As we looked closer, we saw that the sign below him said that he
was a survivor of S-21. He was a tiny old man, named Bou Meng, and of course I
bought his book.
Bou Meng, third from the right, is one of the 7 survivors of S-21 |
Bou Meng and his autobiography, which he signed for me. |
Ricky and I left the museum silently, pondering what we
had just seen. We both felt the weight of what had happened here and chatted
vaguely about justice and fairness. I’m still trying to wrap my head around the
whole thing, the nightmare of what happened there, and after our visit to the
Killing Fields today (Ricky will tell you more about that soon) I don’t know if
I’m closer or further away from understanding anything about it.