Wednesday, April 22, 2009

For some NIU students, Cambodian genocide hit close to home

Professor Kheang Leang sits at his desk recalling his memories as a child working in the farming camps under the Khmer Rouge in Cambodia. Leang, who used to be an interpreter for the United Nations, currently teaches Cambodian at NIU (Photo: James Tschirhart | Northern Star)

Justice may come soon for Khmer Rouge leaders

04/21/2009
By JAMES TSCHIRHART
Northern Star (Northern Illinois U, Illinois, USA)

The Khmer Rouge Tribunals are under way in Cambodia bringing justice to those responsible for the deaths of 1.7 million people. While the tribunals are about 8,500 miles away from DeKalb and address something that happened 30 years ago, there are those at NIU who have been directly affected by the genocide.

“My family was affected by what happened, but not only them; every Cambodian lost at least one family member to the Khmer Rouge,” said anthropology graduate student Socheat Nhean.

Nhean is from Cambodia and arrived in the United States in March 2007. He has been attending NIU since August 2007 and is now working on his thesis paper about the Khmer Rouge regime and its chain of command.

From 1975 to 1979, the Khmer Rouge, a radical communist group, gained control of the Cambodian government and instated a program to begin the country anew, referring to 1975 as Year Zero.

As part of its program, the Khmer Rouge cut ties to the country’s modern ways and removed foreign influence by separating children from their parents, closing schools, killing millions who they thought suspicious and relocating people from urban areas to country farms for forced labor.

Kheang Leang, an NIU professor who teaches Cambodian, can still recall his days as a 10-year-old being forced into the farming camps.

“I saw what was going on at that time, and I still have that fresh memory in my mind,” Leang said.

Leang remembered he had lost his youngest sister at the time to starvation, and his father was the only one of 10 siblings to survive.

Today, after 30 years have passed, five top members of the Khmer Rouge are being brought to trial for their actions amidst alleged corruption in the court system and slow proceedings.

Judy Ledgerwood, chairperson of the NIU anthropology department, has researched Cambodia and Cambodian refugees since 1988 and believes many Cambodians will feel that justice is served. But she also believes that many will not be satisfied.

“It wasn’t the top people like Pol Pot that killed a person’s mother,” Ledgerwood said. “It was people of a lower level cadre who still live down the street from that person to this day who may not be brought to trial.”

Nevertheless, Ledgerwood said the tribunals still hold a meaningful message.

“In some ways it’s the world trying to say that genocide and terrible crimes against humanity won’t be tolerated, even if it takes us 30 years to get there,” she said.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

"Justice may come soon for Khmer Rouge leaders"
What's the fuck?? Until now, it's already 30 years ago.

How many year did they already spent their happy life before the trail?
How much money did those justice have to spend for the trail?

Isn't that suck or what?

Anonymous said...

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http://ki-media.blogspot.com/2009/04/9-lives-of-norodom-sihanouk-part-1-in.html

http://ki-media.blogspot.com/2009/04/9-lives-of-norodom-sihanouk-part-2-in.html

"yo-hak vétak hak-ror ,phikhu yugn chhati puthsané sor-imaing lokaing ,paphear séti akphea mutorvak munti mear"

"Even a young monk who devotes himself to the teaching of the Buddha,illumines this world as does the moon freed from a cloud"

Anonymous said...

another clown, self-claimed Khmer Rouge survivor, is up for yapping for attention and sympathy again. Get a real job, chump!