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For Students, A Shocking Brush With Genocide

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  • For Students, A Shocking Brush With Genocide

    FOR STUDENTS, A SHOCKING BRUSH WITH GENOCIDE
    By Willy Fluharty

    The Virginian-Pilot(Norfolk, Va.)
    September 26, 2005 Monday The Virginian-Pilot Edition

    In May, Willy Fluharty, a teacher in Cape Henry Collegiate School's
    international studies department, took a group of seniors to Cambodia
    and Vietnam. Here is his account of the trip to Cambodia:

    As our group of 15 Cape Henry Collegiate seniors gingerly walked around
    fragments of femurs and skulls that "floated" to the surface after a
    recent monsoonal rainfall, Vanta, our guide at the Killing Fields in
    Cambodia, told of his personal experience under the genocidal regime
    of Pol Pot and his Khmer Rouge.

    Vanta was only a few years old when the Khmer Rouge came and evacuated
    his neighborhood in the eastern part of Siem Reap near the ancient
    Khmer capital of Angkor Wat. His family was forced into an agrarian
    commune as slave laborers -- as was the entire population of 6 million
    after the Khmer Rouge took over in 1975.

    Thousands died of starvation in the beginning of the communist
    Utopian vision of Pol Pot, which supposedly was short for "Political
    Potential." Vanta survived on two spoonfuls of rice mush per day and
    porridge of indigenous plants that his mother cooked each evening. He
    recounted how she was sure he wouldn't survive because he did not like
    the taste of weed soup. So his mother begged the camp cook to help
    supplement his diet. The cook obliged, but was caught and executed.

    During the 3 years, 8 months and 20 days of the Khmer Rouge reign
    of terror, a time frame seared into the memory of every Cambodian,
    an estimated 2 million were killed, or 30 percent of the population,
    in an act of insane genocide. The trauma this genocide inflicted on
    the people is evident in the titles we witnessed at the Central Market
    book stand in Phnom Penh. Books like "First They Killed My Father,"
    "Stay Alive My Son," "Year Zero" and "When Broken Glass Floats"
    fill the store with morbid tales of genocide and survival.

    Few elderly Cambodians are seen because many did not survive the
    killing. The median age is 19. At our first stop in Phnom Penh,
    at the Buddhist Wat Phnom, our group walked between saffron-robed
    monks and a mob of limbless beggars who had the unfortunate fate of
    stepping on one of the millions of land mines left over from decades
    of civil war. Then came the child beggars.

    The students were taken aback by the masses of poor. It's one
    thing to read about economic development and GDP per capita, but
    it's another when students witness first-hand the reality of a $350
    average annual income.

    But the students were most shocked at the magnitude of the genocide.

    After visiting the powerful Killing Fields memorial, a five-story glass
    building with thousands of skulls, one of my Cape Henry students,
    Brandon Flynn, asked, "We know so much about the Holocaust, why
    don't we know anything about this?" He had just stepped over bones
    and clothing that were recently exposed.

    Each day someone walks through the mass grave site of an estimated
    17,000 people, and gathers the bones and clothes and piles them up
    for later removal. For about an hour, I didn't hear one of my students
    say a word as they absorbed the gravity of the Cambodian genocide in
    all of its barbarity.

    Cambodia was only one of many, many tragedies that man has thrust
    upon himself; Armenia, Tibet, Rwanda, Bosnia and the present crisis
    in Darfur are a few more examples.

    "Why didn't we intervene in Cambodia to stop the killing?" asked
    student Whitney Fulton.

    We had just lost 58,000 young Americans in neighboring Vietnam so
    we let the Khmer Rouge have their way with the people. We tried and
    failed in Southeast Asia. It was someone else's turn to be the global
    cop. Turns out, it was Vietnam itself that was forced to intervene
    in Cambodia to stop the killing in 1979.

    For our Cape Henry students, the "discovery" of the Cambodian
    genocide and the massive poverty created the perfect educational
    environment. "How can you stop such genocide?" they asked. "What can
    we do to stop global poverty?"

    After silently walking through the Tuol Sleng torture prison that
    was converted from a high school under Pol Pot, the students saw
    blood-splattered walls and floors along with hundreds of pictures of
    the tortured and executed.

    "How many must die before we do something about it?" As a teacher, I
    welcomed being asked the question. Will I have to take another group of
    Cape Henry students to another field of bones before I hear it again?

    E-mail the author at [email protected]

    GRAPHIC: RICHARD VOGEL/ASSOCIATED PRESS; A former soldier lays incense
    at Cambodia's Killing Fields memorial, where thousands of skulls are
    on view.
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