¡@
Education key to healing: genocide
survivor
At the invitation of the Parent Teacher Association at
Taipei American School, Cambodian activist Loung Ung, author of ¡¥First They
Killed My Father¡¦ and ¡¥Lucky Child,¡¦ was in Taipei last week to talk about her
personal experiences as a child under the Khmer Rouge. She sat down with ¡¥Taipei
Times¡¦ staff reporter J. Michael Cole on Wednesday to talk about history, trauma
and reconciliation
Monday, Mar 22, 2010, Page 3
¡@
Cambodian genocide survivor, activist and
author Loung Ung pauses for a picture during an interview in Taipei on
Wednesday.
PHOTO: J. MICHAEL COLE, TAIPEI TIMES
Taipei Times (TT): Talking about the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of
Cambodia (ECCC) ¡X better known as the ¡§Khmer Rouge Tribunal¡¨ ¡X some people have
argued that we need prosecution before we can reach the point of true
forgiveness for the 2 million people who were massacred in the genocide. Do you
agree with this view?
Loung Ung: What¡¦s true forgiveness? Is that even possible? All these standards
and all these arguments from people with feelings of justice and true
forgiveness, this is verbiage that really isn¡¦t going to be possible. Whether
it¡¦s the ECCC or the tribunal, truth and reconciliation or the ICC
[International Criminal Court], I don¡¦t think we¡¦re ever going to be able to
find a method to give Cambodians true justice and true forgiveness.
It really is about education. This is an opportunity to centralize information
and to use it as a tool to educate the next generation. [Cambodian genocide
researcher] Khamboly Dy just came out with the historical textbook of the Khmer
Rouge era. That was only two years ago and it is now being used in school. When
I was at the tribunal last year on Feb. 17 ¡X the opening of the tribunal ¡X I was
talking with students who didn¡¦t know anything that was going on.
TT: For countries like Cambodia, and to a certain extent Taiwan, that went
through traumatic periods, what is the role of history?
Ung: History has to be known, it has to be passed on. It is very much relevant.
In the west we sometimes study history in a way that is very disjointed and
disconnected from who we are today and who we are as a nation. If you look at
the history of Rwanda and what happened to the Hutus and Tutsis, and if you look
back 50 years down that road you realize that what happened in 1994 [genocide]
is very much connected to that past, when the Belgians came in. With Cambodia,
Taiwan and the Holocaust, history needs to be taught because it¡¦s our umbilical
cord to each other. When we¡¦re disconnected from history, it¡¦s mere facts and
events, but the role of history is to go beyond that. We must personalize
history in such a way that we become more connected to it, then we give it more
relevancy. Then it¡¦s no longer something that happened in 1947 in Taiwan, but
something that happened to their parents and how different their lives are today
because of that.
TT: Can there be too much focus on past atrocities?
Ung: You cannot have too much focus on atrocity, but you can have too much focus
on one aspect of atrocity. The Killing Fields and the Genocide Museum are valid
places for Cambodian students and foreigners to learn about the Khmer Rouge, but
what those places lack ¡X you get the horrors and the atrocities ¡X but you¡¦re
missing the heart of the people who went through it, the heart of the survivors
who experienced it and the sacrifices they made so that their grandchildren
could be there. Textbooks and the media sometimes focus too much on one aspect
of the history, whether it¡¦s for political or ideological purposes, and that¡¦s
not real, that¡¦s manipulation.
TT: When I was visiting Cambodia in October I was somewhat disturbed by what
looked like the commercialization of the genocide, where it has almost been
turned into a tourism industry with T-shirts, DVDs, museums and so on. Any
thoughts on this?
Ung: There¡¦s definitely an aspect of that, but it¡¦s very small. This happens
everywhere. A couple of years ago, someone tried to open a Khmer Rouge
restaurant in Cambodia, where they had blaring Khmer Rouge slogans and songs.
The waiters would come in with their black shirts and pants and serve rice gruel
and water. The government shut that down; that was going way far in
commercializing atrocity. That¡¦s part of the darker side of human nature. Those
who commercialize it know there¡¦s a demand [mostly by foreigners], even it
focuses on a small four-year blip in 2,000 years of history. The main point of
reference for foreigners coming to Cambodia is the movie The Killing Fields, so
that¡¦s what they know about the country, but there¡¦s so much more to it.
TT: Can fixation on past atrocities hinder reconciliation? For example, the
opposition party in Taiwan has often been accused of focusing too much on the
228 Incident and the White Terror.
Ung: Fixation on anything can hinder progress. If I were fixated on what I
address in my book [First They Killed My Father] it would be a negation of who I
am as a person because there¡¦s so much more to me. When I was giving a
presentation at TAS (Taipei American School), one of students seemed to expect
that I would still be that five-year-old in the book. That said, fixation often
does not happen in a vacuum ¡X there are reasons for it. For many survivors, we
felt that our voices hadn¡¦t been heard, so we fought.
TT: You¡¦ve lived in the US for many years now. What¡¦s your impression of young
people today, their understanding of history?
Ung: When you and I were growing up, the act of finding information slowed down
how we absorbed it. Now information is moving at such a fast speed, this instant
flood of information, we¡¦re at risk of losing our ability to feel and to
connect. In the west, it¡¦s a little disheartening. We¡¦re talking about the
global world, and yet we look at everything else around us in a very divisive,
black and white kind of way ¡X Republican versus Democrat, Christian versus those
who are not. And yet the world isn¡¦t black and white. How do you interact with
the world when you¡¦re raised like this? We¡¦re only paying lip service to
becoming a globalized world. For young people, how you go from local to global
is going to be difficult to make when the bridge isn¡¦t being provided.
TT: To this day there are Americans, including diplomats, intelligence and
military officials who were in Asia around the time the genocide took place who
deny that the US played any role in the rise of the Khmer Rouge.
Ung: They¡¦re in complete denial. It¡¦s on record. The defining moment was when
the US backed military coup to oust [King Norodom] Sihanouk from power in 1970
and put in his place General Lon Nol, who opened the door wide open for the US
to come into Cambodia. This is not to mention the secret bombing campaigns that
went on, unknown to the US Congress or the American people.
TT: During my discussions with reporters in Cambodia, I was given the impression
that the conditions that gave rise to the Khmer Rouge decades ago ¡X iniquity,
poverty, government corruption ¡X are re-emerging, which could give rise to
similar extremism. Have you seen this in your travels through Cambodia,
especially in the countryside?
Ung: That¡¦s news to me. I go in three or four months a year. The international
community is stronger there and there no longer is superpower interest in the
country. I spend a lot of time in the countryside and I don¡¦t feel that. There
is more peace and prosperity there now than there was when I first went back in
1995. I feel safer now asking questions and people are more willing to answer,
which to me says that they feel safer to speak. I travel everywhere.
If there was a sense of danger, my brothers and sisters would not let me leave
their sight.
¡@
|