The Stomach-Churning Events Of The Killing Fields Of Cambodia

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  • Опубликовано: 2 янв 2023
  • Sadly, not many people outside Southeast Asia remember the tragedy of the “Killing Fields” of Cambodia, but in the late 1970s and 1980s, when the evil nature of the regime in that country from 1975-79 was publicized in Europe and the United States, the absolutely horrific acts of the Khmer Rouge (“kah-mair ruuj”) regime became front page news, an Oscar-winning movie and a quite popular punk rock anthem, “Holiday in Cambodia,” by the Dead Kennedy's in 1980.
    In 1996, an Oscar-winning actor was killed in an attempted robbery outside his Los Angeles home. A tragic thing to happen to anyone, but making this senseless act even more tragic was the fact that the victim was Dr. Haing S. Ngor. Ngor had come to the United States and made a successful life for himself as an actor, portraying another victim and survivor of the regime, Dith Pran, and winning the Best Supporting Actor Oscar for his role in the movie “The Killing Fields.”
    Dr. Ngor had been an obstetrician in Phnom Penh, the capital of Cambodia, when the communist Khmer Rouge took over the country in 1975. “Khmer Rouge” means “Red Khmer.” Rouge is French for “red”, the color of communism, and the French had ruled Cambodia for ninety years until 1953. “Khmer” is the Cambodian word for the dominant ethnic group in the country.
    The Khmer Rouge were on the extreme left of the political spectrum. The very extreme left - by the time they took power in Cambodia, Chinese Chairman Mao Zedong's China was coming out of a radical period itself - the “Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution”, and Mao himself would be dead within a year, beginning a shift in Chinese politics. You can find out more about this strange and amazing time in “A Day in History's” “The Most Bizarre Events in Chinese History” on our channel, but suffice it to say that the ideology of the Khmer Rouge made Mao look like a man living in the past.
    Though the Khmer Rouge looked to Mao and China for both guidance and financial support, the leaders of the movement, most notably it's #1 and #2 men, Pol Pot and Nuon Chea, known also as “Brother #1” and “Brother #2”, saw North Korea and Albania, the two most isolated and repressive communist regimes on Earth, as their role models. All three nations believed in “autarky” - complete self-sufficiency, though the smallest of the three, Albania, was the only one to come close to its goal.
    During the time of French control of the country, many Cambodians rebelled. Some carried out a small-scale and largely unsuccessful guerrilla war. Many people supported the Cambodian royal family, even though they were a puppet of the French military government. However, the heir to the throne, Prince Norodom Sihanouk (1922-2012), known within Cambodia by his traditional title of “Samdech Euv,” or “King Father,” became head of state in 1960 and again when crowned king in 1993, eventually led the country to independence in post-WWII talks with France.
    #killingfields #khmerrouge #history #cambodia #cambodiahistory
    DISCLAIMER: All materials in these videos are used for entertainment purposes and fall within the guidelines of fair use. No copyright infringement intended. If you are, or represent, the copyright owner of materials used in this video, and have an issue with the use of said material, please send an email to adayinhistory2021@gmail.com
    Copyright © 2021 A Day In History. All rights reserved.

Комментарии • 5 тыс.

  • @ADayInHistoryOfficial
    @ADayInHistoryOfficial  Год назад +255

    The rabbit hole of the CIA runs deeper. Proceed with caution => ruclips.net/video/P0RgB5QbG-s/видео.html

    • @hugh2hoob668
      @hugh2hoob668 Год назад

      meh i watch deep gore tube i have no doubt the CIA does such things

    • @aldelta19
      @aldelta19 11 месяцев назад +6

      be careful

    • @tickytacky8078
      @tickytacky8078 11 месяцев назад +7

      Fk this is PhD level of information

    • @fortunefair
      @fortunefair 11 месяцев назад +6

      Anytime someone is exposing a public facing organization which everyonehas heard of, they forget to consider the organization behind that organization.

    • @lmak-rf9fn
      @lmak-rf9fn 9 месяцев назад +3

      ​@@tickytacky8078this time in history, including the cultural revolution, is some of the most interesting.

  • @mikeys7536
    @mikeys7536 Год назад +16002

    I used to work with a Cambodian man named Sam who went through this. They killed everyone in his family but him. They stabbed him under his chin. The knife went up through his tongue and into the roof of his mouth and he was left for dead along with his family. He cried when he told me the story. It’s horrific what these people went through.

    • @xavierdionne6514
      @xavierdionne6514 Год назад +1421

      Damn, this man must’ve had a great trust in you to tell you about it. It was probably a relief for him to talk about it, thanks for being an empathic human!

    • @fritztopher
      @fritztopher Год назад

      This is wat the American lefts wants as well the left always resorts to violence at some point

    • @noneofyourbuizness
      @noneofyourbuizness Год назад +490

      Poor man living with ptsd

    • @maxxibro
      @maxxibro Год назад +1091

      We, Cambodians, are not afraid to tell the story of our horrific past because the world needs to know how much we endured and what we had to go through. For 3 years and 5 months, the world forgotten about Cambodia and leave millions of people to die. We will forever remember the time that we were ignored by everyone. But we will not let the past stopping us from moving forward.

    • @gobblegobble831
      @gobblegobble831 Год назад +120

      Sam Hyde origin story

  • @thainotthai6456
    @thainotthai6456 Год назад +6707

    When my parents decided to escape Vietnam during the war, we traveled through Cambodia. During that time we got caught by the Khmer Rouge when my dad was out foraging for food. When the soldiers brought us to the general, my mom thought that were were gonna get killed. Instead the general and a few of his trusted associates hid us and fed us while waiting for the right time to help us escape through the night telling us where we need to go to escape their sight. Eventually my dad found us and we went on our way towards Thailand where we lived in a refugee camp for a while until US missionaries helped us immigrate to America in 1983. I was 4yrs old at the time we immigrated.
    My mom did asked the general why he helped us and he told her something she’d never forget.
    He said
    “ I am not a bad person. I am who I am because it saves my family. It helps me save those I can from a torturous death. I saved you because I know I won’t get caught and my family will be safe. I know I will still go to hell“
    Probably not his exact word but it should be pretty close. My mom said he was our savior so she never forgot his words.

    • @abimon76
      @abimon76 Год назад +816

      " i know i will still go to hell" oh god...

    • @chayo4537
      @chayo4537 Год назад

      Your dad was probably in cohoots with them or you guys had money cause how did you get away?

    • @thainotthai6456
      @thainotthai6456 Год назад +265

      @@chayo4537 there are such things as luck and miracles. Not sure if our case was luck or a miracle but we are alive and greatful.

    • @thainotthai6456
      @thainotthai6456 Год назад +58

      @@abimon76 he probably knows that too.

    • @dancarter6044
      @dancarter6044 Год назад +81

      That's funny since the Khmer Rouge had a racial animus against the Vietnamese

  • @mikekennedy4572
    @mikekennedy4572 8 месяцев назад +527

    My hair cutter here in southern California is originally from Cambodia, and one day while she was cutting my hair, I asked her how she came to the US. I was stunned to learn that she and her younger sister made a dangerous escape from one of the prison camps where people were tortured and executed by the Khmer Rouge. She told me that several members of her family were imprisoned and it was a nightmare in the camp as she saw people die. She and her sister decided they would attempt to escape at night, knowing they would be executed if caught. But the way they looked at it, it would be better to die trying to be free than to await almost certain death in the camp. They had nothing to lose. So, they made their escape and traveled west through jungles for many days, hiding when they had to. Finally, they entered the safety of Thailand and lived in a refugee camp for a time. Eventually, she and her sister sought asylum in the US, and she is today a successful businesswoman and an American citizen. Sadly, however, she and her sister never saw their other family members again. FYI, her eyes were watery as she told me this story, and I had no idea it would unfold as it did. She is definitely a survivor.

    • @Daniboy0826
      @Daniboy0826 7 месяцев назад +13

      She's brave!

    • @Glenn-F-Rice
      @Glenn-F-Rice 6 месяцев назад +13

      ​@@Daniboy0826that sounds like the stories of people breaking out of North Korea.

    • @J_Eusebio
      @J_Eusebio 5 месяцев назад +6

      who TF says hair cutter 😂😂😂😂😂😂

    • @viktorbirkeland6520
      @viktorbirkeland6520 5 месяцев назад +10

      ​@@J_Eusebio people who speak English, largely. Hair cutter is obviously not what we say in other languages

    • @J_Eusebio
      @J_Eusebio 5 месяцев назад

      @@viktorbirkeland6520 🤣

  • @MegaCocobunny
    @MegaCocobunny Год назад +886

    As Vietnamese, we were taught about the crime of Pol Pot Khmer Rouge and are proud to defeat them. The stories of their brutalities and cruelties are not only written in History books but also told by adults to children.

    • @thebuddhaofknowledgemichae2486
      @thebuddhaofknowledgemichae2486 Год назад +38

      Vietnamese army saved Laos.

    • @billcorbell5362
      @billcorbell5362 Год назад +111

      Vietnam is a pillar of stability in South East Asia.
      What you did for the people of Cambodia did not go unnoticed in the U.S.

    • @Arthurian.
      @Arthurian. Год назад

      ​@@billcorbell5362 ok commie

    • @damianwashington8844
      @damianwashington8844 Год назад

      Your attractive trang

    • @reer1877
      @reer1877 11 месяцев назад +6

      good, keeping the oral tradition alive is invaluable.

  • @jasonyang.mortgage
    @jasonyang.mortgage Год назад +2073

    My mom and dad are survivors. I never really asked about their past until recently, and the stories of their struggles are unimaginable. They live a very simple and frugal life and I always questioned why they never wanted to do much. After hearing their stories and the suffering they went through every single day, I realize why they live the life that they live and that we take so many things for granted here in the USA.
    My parents lived a decent life before the war. My mother lived in the capital while my father on the outskirts. My father told me stories where they would drink water from puddles left from a buffalos imprint in the mud. Sometimes the water was fine, sometimes it had urine in it. My father, being the oldest, worked out in the fields from morning until night and only given a bowl of rice throughout the day. It's amazing that his entire family survived - he was 12 years old with four younger brothers and a younger sister.
    My mother had a different story. She watched her two sisters, brother, mother and father all die from starvation and disease. My mother also watched her friend get blown up by a bomb. My mother hardly even remembers what her dad looks like because she blacked out so many of the horrible memories at the time. My mother now has cancer and is only giving weeks to a few months to live. The fact that she was able to survive the war only for her life to end with cancer is truly unfair.
    Edit: After two long years of battling cancer, my mother passed two days ago. She can finally eat all the good food in the world and live pain free. Rest in peace, Ma.

    • @zachwells5049
      @zachwells5049 Год назад +64

      Always remember that she loves you and that she was able to move forward with her life and raise you and to insure that you had a better hand in life then she did

    • @aniiraqigawad6693
      @aniiraqigawad6693 Год назад +36

      God Bless your mother bro, I pray Jesus Christ rids her of all cancer and may she see many more years with you. I really wish you and your loved ones the best.

    • @logicrealitytruth
      @logicrealitytruth Год назад +7

      😢 Mankind’s inhumanity is truly a heart-wrenching evil .😱 God will stop these Satanic acts before long, and the suffering will end. The wicked will not survive. God also will resurrect the dead to an earthly paradise where cruelty will no longer exist. I have complete faith in these promises❣️Love will conquer, and evil genocidal acts will no longer exist. 🙏🏼😊✌🏽

    • @ZyciewKanadzieAnitaBeataVlog
      @ZyciewKanadzieAnitaBeataVlog Год назад +15

      I have visited Cambodia two times and the people there are among the kindest that I've ever met. some of them were telling me about those terrible times and at the S-21 I was able to met Mr. Chum Mey - one of the very few survivors of this awful place. God bless your mom's soul.

    • @alexdevries8761
      @alexdevries8761 Год назад +7

      wishing you nothing but strength.

  • @g.w.stanley2816
    @g.w.stanley2816 Год назад +3960

    My best friend went through that as a child. He moved to the States at twelve years old and could not read, write, or do any math when he arrived. He was one of the smartest people I have ever met, and a tremendous athlete. He became an engineer, scratch golfer, tennis player, and pool player.
    As he was dying of kidney failure, he told me that every day he thanked God for the United States of America and all the opportunities it afforded him. He loved and appreciated this country like no one else I've ever met.
    He had such a big heart and would give anyone his last dollar and the shirt off his back.
    I miss his friendship so much and look forward to the day when we will meet again.

    • @lordvader6172
      @lordvader6172 Год назад +63

      Wow! Amazing story.

    • @lukeodonnell2059
      @lukeodonnell2059 Год назад +69

      What a story, seemed like a true gent 👑

    • @khoatan9354
      @khoatan9354 Год назад +122

      Ironically, usa bombing Cambodia give pol pot some boost on his rising

    • @hankschrader7050
      @hankschrader7050 Год назад

      My family had to flee Vietnam after the Communists took over and all the food dissapeared. They love America. And these woke freaks have no idea how offensive their hilarious views on Communism are. They are so dumb.

    • @jamesamelia2812
      @jamesamelia2812 Год назад +6

      Wow

  • @phillip1092
    @phillip1092 8 месяцев назад +140

    My first job as a teen I had a boss that was from Cambodia, he’d tell us some heart wrenching stories from when he was a kid/teen. Gave me and my friends a lot of wisdom and taught us a lot about life. He was truly living the American dream. Happy to say he and his family are incredibly successful and I’ll always appreciate the opportunities he gave me.

  • @claflin7973
    @claflin7973 6 месяцев назад +131

    My neighbor survived the Killing Fields and she eventually went crazy from the PTSD and killed her granddaughters. I still remember horrible sounds of screaming and gunfire coming out of her house. I remember being so worried about my neighbor, she was just a sweet old lady. Now knowing exactly what she experienced, I get why she went crazy. I wish the killing fields had never happened. It has harmed generations.

    • @CW95981
      @CW95981 4 месяца назад +9

      🧢

    • @user-tx7wu3rn4v
      @user-tx7wu3rn4v 4 месяца назад +2

      Did this happen in Cambodia?

    • @VoteDemocraticNHA
      @VoteDemocraticNHA 3 месяца назад +2

      I'm sorry

    • @martymarta
      @martymarta 3 месяца назад

      @@CW95981na it’s true lol googled it, hectic story lol killed her daughters husband and two daughters, in Seattle

    • @claflin7973
      @claflin7973 2 месяца назад

      @@user-tx7wu3rn4v No, it happened in US. I’m sure if you dug around you could figure out where it happened, but I don’t want to share because privacy!

  • @Murcieful
    @Murcieful Год назад +2442

    Finally, a history as being taught in modern Cambodia being told properly in English. Watching your video surely make me miss my deceased father (1948-2020) who had always explain to me everything he had been through being a former Lon Nol Commando. "A hellish dream you never thought was real until you realize that you're the only one left" - said my mother. Keep up the good work.

    • @thetoecutta5716
      @thetoecutta5716 Год назад +38

      I can't even begin to imagine the things your parents had to endure no one deserves the suffering your people went through

    • @ernestcote3398
      @ernestcote3398 Год назад +38

      @@thetoecutta5716 I wonder what the young perpetrators of the killings now believe of themselves.

    • @lanthanumlanthanium6373
      @lanthanumlanthanium6373 Год назад

      Except for the part where he tries to state that their version of communism was an "extreme leftist" version. All forms of communism are evil and result in mass starvation, mass homicide, suicide, rapes, civil wars ect.
      Also they aren't "Nationalists." Nationalism has never resulted in what communism has. The argument of, "That wasn't true communism" is silly because it has literally been tried in multiple countries and never worked. Nationalism is never tried because it works and the bagel eaters don't want the people knowing that, so they spread lies through communism which they control.

    • @throttlegalsmagazineaustra7361
      @throttlegalsmagazineaustra7361 Год назад +12

      @@ernestcote3398 My exact thoughts as l was watching this.

    • @uncleho1945
      @uncleho1945 Год назад

      weird how the english telling of events seem to always ignore the 1970-1975 puppet state, and how the US and the "free world" of the west backed the Khmer Rouge from 1979-1992.

  • @LostLegendTrance
    @LostLegendTrance Год назад +2614

    I read Haing S. Nor's biography 'Survival in the Killing Fields' a few years back and it is one of the most harrowing books I have ever read. When you read what he went through and how his entire family died under the regime, the circumstances of his death are a literal gut-punch.
    For those that don't know, Haing managed to keep his wifes ID card when he escaped the country, the tiny mugshot on the card was the only picture he had of her and the only thing he could remember her by, so he had the picture cut out and made into a pendant which he wore all the time. When he was robbed, he handed over his wallet and cash but refused to hand over the pendant, so the robbers stabbed him and took it anyway.
    RIP Haing S. Nor. You deserved so much better! 😔

    • @vedantmehra6970
      @vedantmehra6970 Год назад +60

      Did he die of the stabbing?

    • @LostLegendTrance
      @LostLegendTrance Год назад +142

      @@vedantmehra6970 Yes, sadly.

    • @todddddddd3696
      @todddddddd3696 Год назад +227

      Idk but I respect that. That was something worth dying for, for him.

    • @BIGBLOCK5022006
      @BIGBLOCK5022006 Год назад

      Some folks believe that he was killed in order to keep him from testifying in the event that a tribunal was held at The Hague in order to punish the members of the Khmer Rouge.

    • @circumcisionismurder7415
      @circumcisionismurder7415 Год назад +26

      Who stabbed him in America

  • @kietack1203
    @kietack1203 8 месяцев назад +57

    My father was a young Vietnamese soldier who was amongst the first unit to enter Phnom Penh, he was just 18 at the time and just entered a prestige University of Technology, studying computer science. My maternal grandfather right after the Vietnam war, not too long after reunion with family after a long war, had to dispatch to Cambodia and stationed there for 10 years to train the Cambodian army, we still have all his letters he sent to my grandmother during the period. My father still keeps in touch with his Cambodian comrades who fought alongside him during the war.

    • @maciejguzek3442
      @maciejguzek3442 2 месяца назад +2

      Computer Science in 1979? Perhaps it was still under some other name, more like 'electronics' or something? Anyway it had to be a really rare/elite direction at that time

    • @gametri-eq6lj
      @gametri-eq6lj Месяц назад

      ⁠@@maciejguzek3442just searched it up it seems that the computer science major came out on the early 60’s

  • @B3achisme
    @B3achisme 11 месяцев назад +25

    My friend from Cambodia who escaped the killing fields. Told me he ran away in his late teens. He had to travel at night, because soldiers would patrol at day. He said, what a lot of people don’t realize. The jungle/woods at night we’re just as dangerous because of all the predators. He basically had to take a calculated risk and survived.

  • @royalsea
    @royalsea Год назад +2499

    My mum was 11 years old when she was taken away from her family and forced into hard labor. The things she's experienced are absolutely unimaginable. One of the most horrific being was when she and her cousin tried to escape and find their families. My mum was captured and hung from a tree. The soldiers had also captured another man who had tried to run away and they tortured him in front of her. They forced him to dig his own grave before cutting out his liver, leaving him to slowly bleed to death while they cooked and ate the man's liver. During the ordeal, they taunted my mother that she would be next and that they'd do everything they'd done to him to her. However, when they finished the man's liver they decided they were full so they instead settled on beating my mum to death. They finally left when they thought she'd died. My mum's cousin who had been hiding had seen everything and ran to find someone to help her cut down my mum. The injuries my mother suffered back then are still felt today and she still suffers from chronic pain.

    • @AnaLucia-wy2ii
      @AnaLucia-wy2ii Год назад +365

      I don’t know how a human could survive such horror and abuse. Please send her my love. Your comment made me cry.

    • @TheTsdaman
      @TheTsdaman Год назад +1

      Wait, I thought you said your mom got hung from a tree how is she still alive?

    • @Sudstah
      @Sudstah Год назад +2

      Holy fucking shit I am sorry you and your mother and family has to go through that, that's absolutely barbaric.

    • @royalsea
      @royalsea Год назад +79

      @@TheTsdaman She was tied by her shoulders and waist.

    • @royalsea
      @royalsea Год назад +171

      @@AnaLucia-wy2ii Thank you, my mum is such a happy-go-lucky woman that it's hard to fathom that she went through such horrors in her past.

  • @lomdisharma
    @lomdisharma Год назад +2307

    After visiting the killing fields, I have found that not only was the Khmer Rouge more brutal than I ever imagined, but their crimes were pretty much denied of ignored by much of the western world as Vietnamese propaganda.

    • @rcane6842
      @rcane6842 Год назад +34

      Is this worse than what the Black Americans experienced during the slavery period?
      Also with that of Japan towards China during world war, how do the atrocities compared to what happened in here (I'll watch the video soon)
      I'm also watching about medieval punishments during medieval ages and wanting to compare what period and events are worse.
      Edit:
      No one is crying, guys 🤣 just some questions thrown out in the comments section 🤣

    • @dogman-fx9ub
      @dogman-fx9ub Год назад +649

      @@rcane6842 Do you know what Whataboutism is?

    • @socialreject2156
      @socialreject2156 Год назад

      @rcane6841 There is no need to compare them; just think of it like this.
      Slavery is the epitomy of greed and what humans will do to gain benefits even if it's violates others' rights to live and the rights of freedom
      The Khmer Rouge is the epitome of human's savagery where people will kill each other just because of their beliefs in a singular twisted delusional individual
      And the Japanese occupation of china is the pure sadistic nature of a nation being brainwashed into willingly committing some of the worst war crimes to ever exist
      Major war and genocide events can not be compared to each other simply by the death counts; we can just take the details of the atrocities and acknowledge them for what they are, comparing them is a bit disrespectful to the victims of the atrocities.

    • @alligatorwithwifi6111
      @alligatorwithwifi6111 Год назад

      @@dogman-fx9ub A made up term used to deflect comparisons in an argument by people who can't intelligently defend what they just said without feeling some type of inferiority. Common use among African Americans.

    • @torpenhigalak5909
      @torpenhigalak5909 Год назад +161

      @@rcane6842 No, but it's ignorance is.

  • @swiftshirt1712
    @swiftshirt1712 10 месяцев назад +19

    As a Cambodian, I would like to show gratitude to you for creating this documentation video and insights. It was a really tragic that is instill in most Cambodian’s memories.

  • @eliasramos3968
    @eliasramos3968 8 месяцев назад +34

    My grandparents fortunately escaped Cambodia before anything bad could happen to them and my aunts and uncles. Unfortunately their other extended family didn’t make it out. When my grandparents were alive they absolutely refused to speak a word of what happened during pulpot. They shivered at the bare thought of what happened back in Cambodia. It’s nice to see someone covering a major event that my grandparents never talked about.

  • @Cold_Root
    @Cold_Root Год назад +1154

    I am Cambodian. I would like to extend my profound thank to you for making this documentation. It is truly heartbreaking for our country.

    • @RongDMemer
      @RongDMemer Год назад +8

      It's crazy that it wasn't that long ago
      Grandma told me great stories back in those day

    • @Cold_Root
      @Cold_Root Год назад +4

      @@RongDMemer Yes. I'm glad that you understand that story.

    • @trungbui1762
      @trungbui1762 Год назад +6

      as a Vietnamese, a bit more open and more neutral in political and historical view, i can understand what your elders went through. When we have a chance to lean our backs together again, Pol Pot's legacy still haunts and poison the next generations. Seriously, if we were to invade your country as what they say, they would not have had any chance of winning. It feels very confused when such atrocities only deserves little punishment. This is not only genocide, this is about destroying a country from their cultural roots, hurting it and almost every gens for at least 50 years, even centuries.

    • @Charlie_Tea
      @Charlie_Tea Год назад +1

      You're Khmer just like I'm Khmer. The Imperialist call us Cambodian. The proof is in our Khmer language.

    • @Honestandtruth
      @Honestandtruth Год назад +1

      ​@@Cold_Root ....The REAL killers of khmer people are them Viet Kong and the Chinese.....👎🇻🇳👎🇻🇳🇨🇳👎🇨🇳🇻🇳👎🇻🇳

  • @ariana8713
    @ariana8713 Год назад +28

    i am second gen american. my grandpa worked with american forces and allowed my grandmother to seek asylum. the stories my grandma would tell me would bring me to tears. she's such a kind, loving soul and i can even begin to imagine how horrifying it must be to have your family and homes destroyed. i wish cambodia would one day heal from our dark history

  • @HerroVanny
    @HerroVanny 5 месяцев назад +46

    I'm Khmer and I find myself telling people often that I'm anti-communist for very Cambodian reasons. They don't get it. Anyway, Thank you so much for making this video. We must know the dark truths in history if we want to avoid repeating them. The cruelty of what a man can inflict on another is so unfathomable but always a possibility.

    • @Stephaniepasqualino-de6qy
      @Stephaniepasqualino-de6qy 5 месяцев назад

      I think they are a pretty poor representation, considering they were backed by the United States and CIA. A communist regime backed by US is pretty unheard of. They used the popularity of the idea of communism in area at the time to seize control. Also don’t forget it was communists that took them out…Vietnam.

    • @shamachelon
      @shamachelon 23 дня назад

      For whatever reasoning, now communism is attempting to make its way into the black community. I am disgusted to think that that row of money can infect my people, we’ve been through enough, why as to the pain?!
      They don’t know what they’re asking for…I see why more and more Christ asked His Father to forgive them because they don’t know what they’re doing

    • @MSSHARIII
      @MSSHARIII 6 дней назад

      💯💯💯💯

  • @thinkingmushrooms2943
    @thinkingmushrooms2943 Год назад +882

    I went backpacking in Cambodia several years ago without any knowledge of the killing fields or what had happened. A taxi driver talked me into seeing the killing fields and the museum. It forever changed my view of the world.

    • @RideAcrossTheRiver
      @RideAcrossTheRiver Год назад +17

      See the 1984 film.

    • @indrajeet
      @indrajeet Год назад +16

      I visited the killing fields in 2019 - very soul shaking......

    • @fighterjetsteve
      @fighterjetsteve Год назад

      The world learned nothing from Nazi Germany that's for sure.

    • @chriskolb3105
      @chriskolb3105 Год назад +87

      How do you go to Cambodia and NOT know about the killing fields?

    • @kichop
      @kichop Год назад +45

      So you went to a country without knowing anything about it huh

  • @Brutalgruve
    @Brutalgruve Год назад +860

    I work for a large construction company that is very large and diverse that has employed over the years, many different cultures from around the world. Back in the 80's, we hired several Vietnamese and Cambodians and to this day are lifelong friends. One of the gentlemen, a Cambodian, told us his story a few years after being on our team. When he was 12, he watched his entire family be executed in their house as they were falsely accused of stealing rice. It was commonly used as an excuse to exterminate outlying communities. The death squads made up of mostly young men, some acquired a taste for human liver and thus would turn their eyes pink to red in color. These were the ones that killed his family, he barely escaped and eventually made to the US. The tales he shared and the things he saw were hell on earth, really disturbing stuff.
    I do not really know why i took the time to share this, maybe because so much of history is being hidden or untold.

    • @janinebelleestrada7096
      @janinebelleestrada7096 Год назад

      I know about the killing fields of cambodia because its been taught from our history class from grade 1 to 4th year old high school and everyone who went to school knowing about that has developed a hatred for commies(even though we aren't taught to hate cimmies but are taught that they bashed babies heads on the tree trunk to bring despair unto the mothers) which is good so no dumdum would start doing new age stuff pol pot has done.

    • @cam5816
      @cam5816 Год назад +31

      Incredible story. Does eating liver turn their eyes red though or did I misunderstand?

    • @Zaes223
      @Zaes223 Год назад

      @@cam5816 I don't know of that specifically but there's lots of records of people getting sick from different forms of cannibalism. A sickness in papa new guinea called the "laughing death" was caused by a protein that when consumed would destroy the brain. The scientists that discovered it won a nobel prize. So I can definitely see eyes turning red or pink as a side effect of cannibalism... weirder things have happened.

    • @Brutalgruve
      @Brutalgruve Год назад +25

      @@cam5816 Yes, that is the way I understand it

    • @royalsea
      @royalsea Год назад +66

      @@cam5816 My Mum (who is Cambodian) says it does. She was tied up and forced to watch as soldiers cut out and eat people's livers. She too describes their eyes as being red in color and that you could always tell which soldiers ate human liver.

  • @aasalaha
    @aasalaha 11 месяцев назад +80

    I am Cham. Hearing my families stories sbout fleeing the war haunts me to this day. My grandma passed away about a year ago, and they were never able to get the fragments of a landmine out of her leg while she was escaping with my family. I remember looking at her legs and seeing massive dents. She never compalined and was the hardest worker.

  • @raymondprum1660
    @raymondprum1660 10 месяцев назад +22

    My mom told me a lot of horror stories about running from the khmer rouge. She remembers being in a village, when the khmer rouge gathered everyone in 1 house to kill them. My grandma hid my mom underneath the floors of the house, with a bag of gold, that if my grandma died, my mom would have a way to support herself. She remembers hearing a man who was deaf, getting hit in the head with a shovel and screaming unaudible noises. And she ran away to thailand, only to come back to cambodia when she was 8.
    My dad also has a story of running away with his family, but getting lost in the crowd. He eventually travelled with another family, but was caught. He said they had to dig a hole and was promised that they would be fed if they finished. After they were done digging out the hole. The khmer rouge gathered everyone into the hole to be "fed" Then painted a grenade orange and threw it into the hole and killed many people. My dad ended up hiding, before going into the hole, which is how he still lived. He then fled to the jungle and somehow reunited with his mom.
    But there are way more stories about the khmer rouge from my family then I could possibly explain. Way too many stories. It always crushes my heart when I hear them.

  • @AdamB12
    @AdamB12 Год назад +500

    My dad befriended a Cambodian refugee at work who escaped from the Khmer Rouge with just the clothes on his back. Was truly a horrifying period of history.

  • @jj8818
    @jj8818 Год назад +1053

    I feel the need to mention that in one of the death camps, they had a Baby Bashing Tree. A literal actual Baby Bashing Tree. This was a specific tree where Babies and toddlers would be killed by being bashed head first against it. They would be grabbed by their feet and swung head first into the tree. This is one of the most mortifying things I have ever heard of.

    • @rebwolfe2702
      @rebwolfe2702 Год назад

      And then raped the mothers underneath that tree! The feeling looking at that tree is indescribable!!!!

    • @FrankFurther
      @FrankFurther 11 месяцев назад +102

      Oh yh yh I've got one of those in the garden

    • @itsfinnickbitch63
      @itsfinnickbitch63 11 месяцев назад

      what was the reason for doing that?

    • @iunnox666
      @iunnox666 11 месяцев назад +15

      Jesuit influence?

    • @Renee-eg9yw
      @Renee-eg9yw 9 месяцев назад +15

      Such a thing happened I never knew . Now I hate humanity even more 😏😭

  • @ljward6102
    @ljward6102 Год назад +14

    my grandparents survived one of the fields and escaped.Thank you for putting the knowledge out there on what the Cambodian people had to go through.🙏🏾

  • @ChanceReed
    @ChanceReed 8 месяцев назад +17

    I lived in Cambodia for 6 months. People are still recovering from this event and people highly respect the elders who lived through this. The local Khmer still refers to Cambodia as Kampuchea though in their language. They say Cambodia when they're speaking English, but when they're speaking Khmer, they'll say Kampuchea. There's even a beer called Cambodia and they jokingly call it Kampuchea.

  • @ronaldstewart6332
    @ronaldstewart6332 Год назад +1243

    A close friend whom escaped Cambodia during this time relates absolutely gut wrenching memories of the Red Army. He survived a village invasion by living in the community cesspool for 5 days, his brother was agonizingly killed horrifically in front of their mother, any food the army didn't take was doused with diesel fuel and human excrement...truly a sad truth that absolute power leads to absolute corruption.

    • @sisyphus_strives5463
      @sisyphus_strives5463 Год назад +72

      I don't think that there was a process of corruption, but rather that the person had quite the ugly soul to begin with.

    • @galemusgrove4589
      @galemusgrove4589 Год назад +22

      What a frigging
      Horrendous Time,,
      I remember the late 70's
      And hearing abit of this
      Blood bath..
      I was a teenager in western Canada,,
      Thinking how lucky I was,,,
      So Sad,,😕😢

    • @itskeagan3004
      @itskeagan3004 Год назад

      I think this is why it’s bad to give the government too much control over the people. History is pretty clear when it comes to authoritarian control in countries, power and money cause man to become evil.

    • @illspeakfrenchbetweenyourlegs
      @illspeakfrenchbetweenyourlegs Год назад +71

      "corruption" is too soft a word for what happened.

    • @Arthurian.
      @Arthurian. Год назад +81

      ​@@sisyphus_strives5463 no, that's socialism for you.

  • @hewkan8481
    @hewkan8481 Год назад +431

    my father was one of the Vietnamese soldiers to defeat this regime, he is now a retired doctor at the age of 62.

    • @Arthurian.
      @Arthurian. Год назад

      Your father is a communist then.

    • @kristineandres1093
      @kristineandres1093 Год назад +27

      Wow, he fought that war when he was in his 20's! Good luck to him!

    • @Arthurian.
      @Arthurian. Год назад +2

      @@kristineandres1093 that war he fought, likely caused your uncle's to be drafted.

    • @kristineandres1093
      @kristineandres1093 Год назад +10

      @@Arthurian. nah, I'm not American.

    • @Arthurian.
      @Arthurian. Год назад

      @@kristineandres1093 fair. So why you praising a communist?

  • @jamesbomb7068
    @jamesbomb7068 Год назад

    Thank you for spreading this history that’s super underrated

  • @clarysstoryboard3317
    @clarysstoryboard3317 Год назад +11

    The Cambodian Civil War and Genocide is one of the most haunting chapters of history I have ever learned about.
    It's difficult to even remotely grasp the horrors and levels of senseless violence that happened but I'd like to share a piece of information that really put it into perspective for me how big the scale of things must've been: in 1978, the life expectancy in Cambodia was less than 14.5 - almost a quarter of the entire population had been killed by the time the genocide ended.

  • @thomasmacdonough288
    @thomasmacdonough288 Год назад +340

    When my dad was a kid he moved to the US to avoid the coup d'etat in Nigeria. When he got here, he met another kid who had similarly fled the Cambodian civil war and they became fast friends. This man who I've always known as an uncle told me about the horrific fighting and how his brother swam across the rice fields with him on his back while being shot at, mind you they were just kids. He was separated from his family and didn't know their whereabouts until just recently. Very interesting but sad and horrifying stuff.

    • @dazzlebot8116
      @dazzlebot8116 Год назад +11

      Hey, you’ve got me interested in learning more about d’etat. My parents had to escape the heavy bombings in Laos during the Vietnam era, so learning about others and their history is important to me. I live in America and in schools we are barely taught about what goes on in the world and sugar coating tragedies.

  • @muckamucka8294
    @muckamucka8294 Год назад +309

    i have a Cambodian coworker and she was telling me about what she went through in Cambodia when she was a child ( i had no idea this had even happened in Cambodia) and she told me about how her and her siblings had to hide in the forest while men killed her father and uncles. She has the nicest heart out of the whole crew and its just terrible to know that she had gone through this.

    • @frjcde9392
      @frjcde9392 8 месяцев назад

      Meanwhile westerners openly welcome communism. Marxism has already taken over the media/education system.

  • @zanethind
    @zanethind 14 дней назад

    I'm glad chamnels like yours and others bring to light the horrifying story of what the khmer rouge was doing in Cambodia. It's not talked about enough and lots still don't know about this tragic event

  • @DobbyTheGamer
    @DobbyTheGamer 5 месяцев назад

    I had to rewind this multiple times, and that's not a bad thing
    It's rare to come across history docs on RUclips that are so information dense AND well presented with flashy editing and captivating photos

  • @sager3388
    @sager3388 Год назад +705

    I was friends with a guy who survived tje Khmer Rogue. His story is sad and how he ended up in the states(Not bad but not up to the standards he wanted)
    How own Uncle killed his parents and his Sister-Leaving him in the jungle to bury them with his bare hands. He said he refused to shed a tear because they'd kill him.
    His Uncle then recruited him to join the Khmer Rogue and so he did.
    Fast forward a few months later and His Uncle plannes to escape to Thailand and move to the US.
    He agrees to his plan and in a week or so they make a break for it and sneak into Thailand. After like 5 days he said they finally made it to Thailand and so he makes his Uncle hopeful he is going to escape and go in Thailand.
    They make it there and he said the Uncle was do excited to finally leave and go to the US but before he can step one foot in Thailand he shoots his Uncle in the stomach about 5 times and slowly lets him die.
    He made sure he was the last person his Uncle seen before he died-He also said his Uncle cried and begged him to help but he would do nothing because he killed his parents.
    He then comes to the States and lives a pretty average or mediocre life.
    He got addicted to smoking, drinking and gambling and he lives in his car but still maintains his job to support his habits(he works for the city)
    When he told me this story he said he still refuses to ever shed a tear because he got his revenge.
    He also said he couldn't have kids so his bloodline ends with him.

    • @alexandrasymeon5893
      @alexandrasymeon5893 Год назад +39

      Oh, my gosh!

    • @oliviasooooksk
      @oliviasooooksk Год назад +51

      Wow that’s fucked up…. Unreal to imagine being in that situation

    • @SoulCrapper
      @SoulCrapper Год назад +169

      That's patience. Imagine spending your days with the man who murdered your loved ones. Faking every smile. All while seething with unbrideld rage at being in this persons company. Up until the moment comes where you find your chance to kill the SOB. I imagine it must have been immensely satisfying to look him in the eye while he slowly bled out and died.

    • @sager3388
      @sager3388 Год назад +62

      @@SoulCrapper Seriously I couldn't even imagine doing that at all!
      But this Man was very stoic. Very calm and had very deep wisdom which is why I gravitated towards him...I mean you can't buy this type of wisdom.
      If you ever seen this Man he looks like the typical old Man refugee of Cambodian but much more calm and well spoken and deep in being stoic and Bhuddist.
      Also another thing is he is a huge Patriots Fan and loves watching football of all sport.

    • @ChicanoOne760
      @ChicanoOne760 Год назад

      Sounds made up

  • @sitheakewinphlong6579
    @sitheakewinphlong6579 Год назад +261

    As a Cambodian, I sincerely thank you for sharing what truly happened in English, as well as bringing light to the events that reset Cambodia's progress, thank you so much for this video.

    • @jamesclark6487
      @jamesclark6487 Год назад

      It must be horrifying for you to see the west bow to leftist ideologies.

  • @glkification
    @glkification 8 месяцев назад

    Thank you video creator for educating us in this history. Thank you to the people who commented on the video for sharing stories.

  • @mo_k7041
    @mo_k7041 6 месяцев назад +6

    I'm currently a highschooler and my father and his parents went through this, the stories they told are such a big part of my childhood and i feel so bad even thinking about the stories but i can't imagin living it

  • @HVLLOWS1999
    @HVLLOWS1999 Год назад +228

    My 6th Grade PE teacher
    Mr. Hib lived through that hell. He was only a child about 4 him and his family hid in the jungle covered in fire ants for hours. He believes an angel kept him from screaming and feeling the pain of the ants so not to alert the Khmer.

    • @oliviasooooksk
      @oliviasooooksk Год назад +12

      That’s so horrifying. Glad he made it out ❤

    • @MrD1ss666
      @MrD1ss666 Год назад +3

      An angel hey? Damn delusion is real

    • @denisepleines1513
      @denisepleines1513 Год назад +8

      Fire ants are absolutely brutal!

    • @BARBARYAN.
      @BARBARYAN. Год назад

      Lol

    • @amphrose
      @amphrose Год назад

      @@MrD1ss666 if u were bitten by a single fire ant, u would be screaming like a mf let alone thousands of them

  • @johnhaworth7034
    @johnhaworth7034 Год назад +297

    My tattooist who is buddhist monk grew up in cambo during the kymer rouge. The kymer rouge were rounding up all the intellectuals in his village, anybody who wasn't a rice farmer essentially and father was a dentist. All he remember is his father, two older brothers and a cousin. Being driven away on the back of flat bed truck to be 'processed'. He never saw them again.
    Truly heartbreaking beyond words.

    • @jamesclark6487
      @jamesclark6487 Год назад +8

      Both Pol Pot and China's Mao had Buddhist pasts, interesting eh.

    • @jcdenton1635
      @jcdenton1635 Год назад

      @@jamesclark6487 Both Pol Pot and Mao Zedong were also atheists and imposed state atheism on their respective regimes, killing their monks and destroying much of their historical artifacts.

    • @vinayj1763
      @vinayj1763 Год назад +11

      ​@@jamesclark6487 it doesn't matter, both these leaders were educated, Pol pot had studied in Paris.

    • @brandonandujar2289
      @brandonandujar2289 Год назад +7

      ​@James Clark Marx also had a long family history of rabbais, didnt stop him from wanting to remove their sort from standing in the way of his goals

    • @alexmartin3143
      @alexmartin3143 11 месяцев назад +2

      Yeah my tattooist is an Ex-Crusader Templar commander… I get it…

  • @mr2garage
    @mr2garage 11 месяцев назад +20

    My parents are survivors of the Khmer Rouge genocide. My dad was a teacher during this time and he was separated from my mom. They both lost family members through horrific means at the hands of these monsters. I never asked how my parents were reunited, but I believe he was helped by a friendly Khmer Rouge officer. My parents paid coyotes to help our family escape Cambodia to Thailand. They had to turn around the first time and try again. My grandma and other family members stayed behind. I was probably around 5 years old and my brother was around 2. My parents said the Thailand refugee camps were also horrendous because the Thai guards would rape, steal, and were ruthless to the refugees. Eventually we were sponsored to America in 1982. America, the land of the free where one has liberty and opportunities to pursue the American Dream.

  • @psyso999
    @psyso999 Год назад +19

    I visited the killing fields when I was 13, changed my life and the way I looked at the world forever. Seeing a tree covered in ribbons and asking why? That’s where soldiers would take babies and smash them against the tree. Cambodians are great people, I wish them well.

  • @Surannhealz
    @Surannhealz Год назад +492

    I listened to two audiobooks. “First They Killed My Father” & “Tomorrow I’m Dead”. Both were autobiographies of young people that lived through the Khmer Rouge. Both were astounding books. It was the most illogical way to run a society I can think of. It was senseless killings. The books were great, but were tough to comprehend the level of depravity those people went through.

    • @benchmarkerlovesgaming140
      @benchmarkerlovesgaming140 Год назад +16

      First they killed my Father is also a Netflix Movie as well.

    • @Aquascape_Dreaming
      @Aquascape_Dreaming Год назад

      This is why pure socialist and communist countries always implode. They are the stupidest forms of government ever. People in the West complain about, and criticise capitalism without realizing it isn't capitalism they're actually criticising, it's corporatism aka cronie capitalism. True capitalism has Safeguards against trusts and giant corporations forming. Unfortunately, corrupt politicians have allowed private companies to wield far too much power, even having a heavy influence on the making of self serving laws.
      People need to realize that they are not looking at capitalism when they complain about the west, rather opportunistic corporations deliberately manipulating the market and government in unscrupulous, and nefarious ways.
      The answer to corporatism isn't socialism or communism. It's a return to true capitalism.

    • @yyz4761
      @yyz4761 Год назад +8

      First They Killed My Father is a solid film documenting the Phnom Penh situation. Not a fan of Angelina Jolie but props to her for supporting the making of this film

    • @kingced741
      @kingced741 Год назад +15

      The irony that Vietnam the old Captialist boogy man was the one that stopped the Khmer Rouge despite the invasion from China that there Reserves(civilian and untrained soldiers) they beat them back too.

    • @chairmanmeow8388
      @chairmanmeow8388 Год назад +2

      I bought that book off a lovely man with no arms (landmine) in siem reap. Very harrowing book.

  • @bbokariseason
    @bbokariseason Год назад +139

    I was told about this by my father. He experienced this firsthand when he was about 6-7 years old. One of the stories he told me that I remember the most was about when he snuck out to find fruit to eat to survive. He started smelling something rotten as he climbed a mango tree, and then once he looked, he saw a mass grave with tons of bodies. There were actually still soldiers there beating someone to death. It is horrifying to think about. My condolences go out to all those who lost family members to the Pol Pot Regime.

  • @ActuallyJozu
    @ActuallyJozu Год назад +6

    I used to have a math teacher in middle school, around 2009-2010, that fled Camobia when he was a young boy, because of the brutalilty Khmer Rouge. He never went into explicit detail about the violence or ideologies, but he would talk about how he barely escaped with his brohter. He had a lot of family there that were killed or starved to death. He didn't even know exactly how old he was, because in the village he was from they didn't really keep strict dates like that and all of that information was lost. He was truly one the funniest and best teachers I had in middle school. He really was an amazing guy, even after going through all that.

  • @darcihuddleston8224
    @darcihuddleston8224 9 месяцев назад +7

    When I was in high school, one of my classmates had written her story of being a young toddler in the killing fields. They had to pick up any grains of rice that had fallen. If they missed any, they won't be beaten. She and her family had escaped, barely. I can't imagine having to grow up in that

  • @hayleyversailles6946
    @hayleyversailles6946 Год назад +339

    I lived in Cambodia doing research on social cohesion after “reset buttons” (cultural death) and accidentally stumbled upon Pol Pot’s grave in Anglong Veng one day. He didn’t die in a cave. He died under house arrest with lots of supporters around him. The Khmer Rouge is still alive in the northern mountains and biding time until they can do it again.

    • @yoooo1358
      @yoooo1358 Год назад +54

      Same goes with the CPP-NPA-NDF here in Philippines. The thing is, most of its supporters are loosely directly connected although given their highly organized structure (there are key officials, like Congressmen and Senators sympathetic to the communist movement, too.)
      They are also bidding time before they might mount another offensive again, although it is far from happening given that more and more rebels are returning to the folds of the law. (Good news)

    • @gfdchugh
      @gfdchugh Год назад +2

      my father and his siblings was recruited by the npa and force to do stuff when they took over their place they were force to learn on how to use weapons and kill people at a young age. idk how my father escaped and his brothers was force to change their names but he doesnt wanna talk about it that much. as much as i want to know all the things that happened to him i just dont wanna bother him anymore. its hard to think that even today these kind of groups still exist brainwashing native people on doing horrible doings.

    • @yoooo1358
      @yoooo1358 Год назад +16

      @@gfdchugh I am sorry for what has happened to your father and his brothers. I also have my father suffering the similar fate; he lost his father in an ambush.
      Till this day, those communist terrorists are still present. From what I knew, they are trying to regroup to influence the young people with their flawed ideology.

    • @ronnieallie8490
      @ronnieallie8490 Год назад +1

      @@yoooo1358 my father in law owns a lot of land in the Mindanao and paid off the CCP for protection. I'm never doing that. Id rather get rid of them and bury them. Maybe throw them in the Taal volcano 🌋

    • @yoooo1358
      @yoooo1358 Год назад

      @@ronnieallie8490 same. Actually, most of them infiltrated the academe. That explains why the military is holding peace forums to explain to the students the recruitment scheme of the CPP-NPA-NDF.
      Got threatened twice for speaking out about the recruitment scheme of their communist banditry and terrorism whenever and wherever I got the chance to. And everytime that happened, the govt agents got my back and support. Actually, it ultimately led to the attempted abduction of two "activists" whose relatives do have connections with the armed left before.

  • @eljayexplorer
    @eljayexplorer Год назад +129

    I had a friend in high school who was Cambodian. She told me how her grandmother (super sweet lady) had survived Khmer Rouge and was afraid to ever go back home. They buried her husband alive, and she’s still afraid of land mines.

  • @Bigdrip-jp9tp
    @Bigdrip-jp9tp 6 месяцев назад +4

    My mother is from Cambodia, born in 1972 but she told me she grew up in Thailand. Never really thought much of it but as I get older I can understand the history and makes me really curious on her story to America

  • @user-se2zg5he4q
    @user-se2zg5he4q 6 месяцев назад +4

    I met a woman on a bus in Cambodia. She spent her early childhood hiding in the forest almost starving. They lost track of time and were frightened to come out. She didn’t know how many years they were there.

  • @Ob33toUchiha28
    @Ob33toUchiha28 Год назад +131

    On my dad’s side he is the only survivor of his immediate family of 9 he lost 3 brothers, 3 sisters and his parents. He only survived because he went on vacation with his grandma to Thailand. On my mom’s side they were lucky to survive but her family had to live through the work camps until they escaped to Thailand. Watching the killing fields at a young age made me understand what they all went through.

  • @ADayInHistoryOfficial
    @ADayInHistoryOfficial  Год назад +988

    We don't shy away from challenging subjects, as you guys are aware. What else should we make videos on?
    Correction: Pol Pot died in his sleep of heart failure in 1998* Thanks everyone for pointing that out!

  • @user-tn2qg5pz6j
    @user-tn2qg5pz6j 10 месяцев назад +4

    I visited the museum during my trip to Cambodia when I was quite young. Although I did not know much about the history at that time, the museum was so memorable as I could feel the horror experienced by the victims in that place. Even until now, I still remember the paintings...

  • @vonglon9741
    @vonglon9741 2 месяца назад

    Thanks for sharing our really so sad history to Khmer nation 😢

  • @baarbacoa
    @baarbacoa Год назад +248

    I've been to the prison and the killing field site. At the killing fields site you can still find pieces of human bone and teeth on the grounds of the site. The stories are horrible.

    • @raulquiroz7492
      @raulquiroz7492 Год назад +17

      Damn that's crazy.

    • @juancarlos-uv4lh
      @juancarlos-uv4lh Год назад

      @@cudanmang_theog you clearly know how to write on a foreign language, off to the field you go.

    • @haydenzzz9997
      @haydenzzz9997 Год назад

      @@cudanmang_theogcry 😂

    • @davywavy6457
      @davywavy6457 Год назад

      Not more horrible than what your name represents

    • @baarbacoa
      @baarbacoa Год назад

      @@davywavy6457 My guess is that you are referring to the "666" and assume it refers to the Book of Revelation. It doesn't.

  • @marchelinogeorge
    @marchelinogeorge Год назад +456

    At 18:00, Pol Pot did not die in a cave. He was kept under house arrest during a power struggle and died in his sleep due to heart failure. And no, Sihanouk does not rule today. He's dead. You even mentioned in the video, that he died in 2012.

    • @casecao8412
      @casecao8412 Год назад +57

      Wait what he died in 2012?! What fucking disgrace of the justice system allowed him to live that long?

    • @Monatio79
      @Monatio79 Год назад +74

      @@casecao8412 Yes, Sihanouk died in 2012. Pol Pot in 1998.

    • @Monatio79
      @Monatio79 Год назад +59

      "Pol Pot died in a cave" LOL I did a double-take when I heard that.🤣

    • @lego5745
      @lego5745 Год назад +71

      @@Monatio79 yeah I have no idea where they got that information from. I had to do a double take as well.

    • @Monatio79
      @Monatio79 Год назад

      @@BobAg_ Really? I Never knew that he was "hung". You mean he was "hung like a horse"? I don't think there was ever any official anatomical autopsy carried out on the lower half of his body.🤣
      Now, if you mean that you thought he had been "hanged" then I guess you mean a la Saddam Hussein.
      A quick Google search would show that Pol Pot was overthrown in an internal power struggle and kept under house arrest in a hut near Anlong Veng, not far from the Thai border. He died in his sleep/committed suicide, according to some accounts. His hut may have been simple, but I wouldn't exactly call it a "cave". Fast forward to the present day, and the former hut and his nearby cremation site have become a macabre tourist attraction.

  • @the_timinator77
    @the_timinator77 11 месяцев назад +4

    When I was a teenager I read "To Destroy You is No Loss" and this was my first intro to the Khmer Rouge and their brutal, bloody regime. It was very sobering to say the least.

  • @OctJean
    @OctJean Год назад +255

    What breaks my heart is that this stuff isn’t taught in school anymore, my daughter is 18 and has no idea about any of this.

    • @whereswaldo5740
      @whereswaldo5740 Год назад

      That’s what communists want. Should make your school and all schools suspect.

    • @buckjofiden4804
      @buckjofiden4804 Год назад

      Now it’s all about “feelings” and gender confusion studies , served up by leftist indoctrinators. Who, are fans of the exact ideology that creates these horrible situations.

    • @mamachicken4602
      @mamachicken4602 Год назад +34

      Don't look for it to be added to the curriculum anytime soon.

    • @anygirl3598
      @anygirl3598 Год назад +29

      They mention it in history books when I was in high school, but it literally was just one sentence

    • @Trgn
      @Trgn Год назад +29

      The US and Nato allies once had their hands in supporting Polpot out of spite for the Soviet and its loss in Vietnam War. If Vietnam occupied Cambodia long term and expanded influence, then US's loss is just further humiliating. There was also a Sino Soviet split at the time and Vietnam was closer ally to Soviet, while Cambodia is an ally of China. US once supported China to destabilize Soviet. Obviously they would never want to bring up the name, for it leads to the fact that for the so called 'democratic' and human rights loving countries to even support such a shameful genocidal regime in the first place.

  • @reassmeaychuon7766
    @reassmeaychuon7766 Год назад +280

    Thank you for bringing light to the topic as being the only pure Cambodian in America in my generation. Only the last of my people who escaped the regime, my mother and father did not forget the horrors, screams and gore that happened. It is heartbreaking that when people hear "Cambodian" we're only known for the genocide. Our people are trying so hard to seem more than the bloody past. Thank you

    • @reassmeaychuon7766
      @reassmeaychuon7766 Год назад +5

      @xenomorph that is true besides many of them never had a bite

    • @simpinator2376
      @simpinator2376 Год назад +9

      For me, when I'm hearing the word Cambodia, all I remember is the beautiful traditional clothes tbh😅 Probably because beautiful clothes just fascinates me, especially traditional clothing from Asian countries. Anyway, I hope you and your parents have a very good and enjoyable life overseas, no one would ever know how horrible and devastating that event was without witnessing it firsthand, so I wish you and your family all the best.

    • @tatarchan5212
      @tatarchan5212 Год назад +6

      For Thais, whenever we heard of Cambodia we mostly think of their dark magic and supernatural tricks. The old big boss that once ruled South East Asia that have fallen from grace and become tragic little country lived next to us.

    • @jordanbabcock9349
      @jordanbabcock9349 Год назад +3

      Yeah, not at all. Cambodia makes me think of food and smiles.

    • @thetoecutta5716
      @thetoecutta5716 Год назад +1

      That's horrible your parents are good people who never deserved to witness such atrocities if it helps in any way when I hear Cambodia I think of amazing food and lovely lovely people I've worked with a few Cambodians and so has my dad and they were some of the kindest people I've ever met aroha (wich means much love in my countrys native tongue) to you and your family

  • @Vourne
    @Vourne 11 месяцев назад +8

    My father in law went through this with his entire family when he was 8. My wife retold the events when we first met, I then learned more from his first hand accounts. Truly horrific. The only reason his family survived was because his father at the time learned how to repair watches and jewelry the khmer rouge were looting from houses and corpses. He taught the skill to his 2 sons and so the three of them became valuable. He had a couple friends die though when they cut the tongue off a cow to eat it. They were caught and executed immediately. Horrific events and truly a stain on humanities history.

  • @TienTran-nm6ms
    @TienTran-nm6ms 9 месяцев назад +6

    I was always horrified and fascinated by the Khmer Rouge and in college read a stacks of books about the prisons, killing fields, refugee camps, and all of it. The most haunting thing was a database of photographs of prisoners at Tuol Sleng, taken before they were killed. They were all individuals like myself, looking straight at the camera. To this day I haven't read a satisfying account of what happened to humanity at that moment. The horrors are almost unimaginable. My mother worked with a Cambodian woman whose husband was beheaded before her eyes. It's something that makes me believe that evil is an active force in the world and that, deep down, we can go either way and many of us would go to the bad. On another note, much as I was raised in a partisan milieu that's bitterly anti-Communist, I have to admit that one of the Vietnamese Communists' finest hours was their invading Cambodia and putting an end to that insanity. I wish for peace and prosperity for Southeast Asia for a thousand years and for us all.

  • @xavierchen7054
    @xavierchen7054 Год назад +89

    My living mother survived the Khmer Rouge and she still tells us the horrors of this Regime. She also says that the 1984 film "The Killing Fields" provides a very accurate portrayal of this history

  • @gamebawesome
    @gamebawesome Год назад +168

    My mother is Cambodian, and told me the horrid and fear she had to experience. On how she was separated from her mother and siblings, forced to work in the fields while scrapping for whatever she can eat. On how she had to fear for her life every day. It was truly a horrific regime

  • @kggkxcb97
    @kggkxcb97 10 месяцев назад +4

    I’ve been to the killing fields when I went to Siem Reap back in 2019. Being there and learning about what happened there sent chills down my spine. You can still see skeletons on display, like a mass burial site.

  • @WhatWillYouFind
    @WhatWillYouFind Год назад +19

    Uncle Ho as he is known here in Vietnam was by all accounts the most Benevolent of all leaders in his time. The worst thing he was known for was a certain kind of cruel and coldness toward various groups and industries as he tried to reign in the country and stop strife from within and outside of his country. People went hungry and times were difficult for quite a number of years. He never committed genocide or explicitly commanded murder of his own people, which is why he is venerated here. You should do a full video on him

    • @bryantmissions4664
      @bryantmissions4664 11 месяцев назад +2

      He never committed genocide firsthand, but he helped establish communism in Cambodia and thereby committed genocide.

    • @youngvvyoungonevv8798
      @youngvvyoungonevv8798 11 месяцев назад +2

      @@bryantmissions4664 that doesn't make any sense. Cambodia has more of a close ties to china than Vietnam. Ho had to choose communism bc his back was against the wall when US broke thier promise in helping him liberate Vietnam from France. What you're saying is bc the west started colonization or imperialism than they have a had to every atrocities of colonization.

    • @Duy23803
      @Duy23803 24 дня назад

      @@bryantmissions4664 dude have you not watched the video? the US used communist Cambodia to fight communist Vietnamese. When communist Vietnamese fight the Khmer Rouge, the China goes into war with Vietnam to help China's beloved ally Khmer Rouge.

  • @maxsed8827
    @maxsed8827 Год назад +101

    A couple of years ago I went to Cambodia with my family. While we were there we visited the S21 torture prison. It's very hard to realise that some 40 years before I was there the most horrific acts happened there. It's incredible what one human is able to do to another, especially when you see all the different gruesome ways of torture they used. You also get to see al the different faces of the victims, which makes it harder to watch. The victims are no longer a number but a real person. While I was there I saw an old man with a couple of people surrounding him. Eventually I got to speak with him, but he could barely speak English. He was one of the few survivors of the camp. His name was Chum Mey. He was selling books there and telling people about his experiences. At the time he would've been around 88, now 92 or 93. One of the most incredible places i've been to and really left a mark on me. Please go there (if you think you can handle it). If you're lucky and you go around 12:00, maybe Chum Mey is there selling his and you'll be able to ask some questions

    • @rebwolfe2702
      @rebwolfe2702 Год назад +5

      I met Chum Mey and bought his books!

    • @ZyciewKanadzieAnitaBeataVlog
      @ZyciewKanadzieAnitaBeataVlog Год назад +8

      I have met him in that awful place. He is an amazing man. Bought a few books from him and cried while he told us his story.

    • @maxsed8827
      @maxsed8827 Год назад +4

      @@ZyciewKanadzieAnitaBeataVlog You met him too! I bet he stands there nearly every day telling his story and taking the time to talk with everyone.

    • @ZyciewKanadzieAnitaBeataVlog
      @ZyciewKanadzieAnitaBeataVlog Год назад +3

      @@maxsed8827 I think that he is there as often as he can. Let's hope that he lives a long life and is able to tell more and more people.

    • @waynemiller7382
      @waynemiller7382 8 месяцев назад +1

      I was there last month (Aug 2023). There were two different old men, selling their books of their stories .

  • @KodeyB
    @KodeyB Год назад +108

    My fiance was born in Cambodia but was adopted and brought to the United States as a baby, her parents talked about how even in the late 90s you could still see the scars from this time on the country. Truly a tragic time and event

  • @37Kilo2
    @37Kilo2 8 месяцев назад +8

    We knew a family when I was growing up. They went to the same church as my parents. The older family members had escaped from the Khmer Rouge regime. One of the women was describing their escape, down a river, where they were being shot at by the military. Unfortunately, her brother was shot in the head and died. They busted their asses off to ensure their children and grandchildren lived a happy and peaceful life.

  • @cheetahdechatty
    @cheetahdechatty 9 месяцев назад +4

    As a Cambodian, I'm so interested in hearing my country's history from Non-Cambodian perspective. Cambodia suffered so much from political struggle. Your video is a theory but there's another side of the story from the people who lived in Pol Pot regime but led a normal life.... it's a complicated and controversial topic regarding our neighboring countries and how the world closes their eyes on us. And there's no exact answer to the question `Who exactly is Khmer Rouge?`. They might not even Cambodian..... A mystery only time could tell and I hope I live to that day...

  • @madrx2
    @madrx2 Год назад +164

    Every time I revisit the Cambodian Khmer Rouge regime I end up in tears. I cannot even fathom how much PTSD this caused people that actually experienced it. My heart goes out to them.

    • @mickcraven980
      @mickcraven980 Год назад +3

      When I read "Sideshow" by Shawcross, I caught myself tearing up several times.

    • @DaveEntity
      @DaveEntity 2 месяца назад

      My mother, grandma and uncles are all survivors of the khmer rouge. They came in 1980 through missionaries from refugee camps. My mother succumbed to schizophrenia and ptsd and my oldest uncle as well. One uncle got psychological help and is doing well. Two of the uncles were too young to be psychologically affected but they're def not quite right.

  • @johnd9357
    @johnd9357 Год назад +80

    There is a family in my neighborhood that survived the Cambodian genocide. Their eldest daughter doesn’t even have a definitive birthday because their lives were in such flux when she was born. They don’t say much about it, other than it was a nightmare.

    • @TheKissyfer
      @TheKissyfer Год назад +7

      One of my very good friends in high school, his family escaped the Khmer in the mid to late 70's when he was a small child. It broke my heart when he told me and, yes, especially the part about he has no idea what his birthday is. They just had to kind of guess and pick a date once they came to the US. He became a citizen shortly after we graduated.

  • @arwenmenna9679
    @arwenmenna9679 4 месяца назад +2

    I went to Cambodia 5 years ago, travelled the country. It was just humbling and aweful to be at S21 and the killing fields, such horror. Ankor Wat was a nice joyful ending to an awe inspiring trip.

    • @phina8392
      @phina8392 18 дней назад

      Agree I was there 6 yr ago…

  • @berke2336
    @berke2336 9 месяцев назад

    I worked for an NGO archiving and recording stories of former KR soldiers and killing field survivors. This video only scratches the surface, the survivors and soldiers are STILL dealing with it as well as having to live alongside people that wanted them dead 40 years ago.

  • @ssoyboi7273
    @ssoyboi7273 Год назад +52

    My father and mother would always tell me stories of what they went through while under the regime. Their stories always hit me hard and made me appreciate where we are today. I really appreciate this video that will inform others of what horrors went on during that time in Cambodia.

  • @lettuce6321
    @lettuce6321 Год назад +143

    Read a book by Loung Ung called “First They Killed My Father” and man was I heartbroken and sick reading through what she and the people of Cambodia had to go through. I don’t usually show reactions when reading books but there are parts in the book that left my jaw open in shock. There were even times where I had to stop reading for a bit because of how sick I felt reading the things that occur. The worst part? That was only her story. There are millions of other stories out there, each with their own horrific experiences.

    • @sistamya9981
      @sistamya9981 8 месяцев назад +1

      Oh I watched that documentary on Netflix

    • @martinomanfredi4648
      @martinomanfredi4648 5 месяцев назад

      ​@sistamyais9981 is it good?

    • @WrongWayRomanGabe
      @WrongWayRomanGabe 4 месяца назад +1

      they did a film adaptation of it now

    • @SenzoTanaka
      @SenzoTanaka 2 месяца назад +1

      I think you mean you watched a movie on Netflix.

  • @OldGrizz59
    @OldGrizz59 7 месяцев назад +2

    OMG I remember it vividly. Our neighbor walked through those killing fields along with several family members ( over a period of several months apart ) 1 or 2 at a time made it to Thailand's refugee camps. He was an engineer and his wife was a pharmacist. What I know I heard through my uncle , a Vietnam War Vet, who married into the family. You never asked anything about Cambodia from them. The wounds , scars and missing pieces of anatomy spoke volumes. I think most anyone who had served in the Vietnamese War, was related to a Vietnam war theatre vet was very aware what happened.

  • @chantallamb8652
    @chantallamb8652 Месяц назад +3

    Pepole refuse to learn from the past and the scary part is all these evil acts can happen again anywhere 😢
    Poor pepole who suffered under this regime is heartbreaking .

  • @stynnguyen6085
    @stynnguyen6085 Год назад +54

    I went to Cambodia a year ago for vacation. I ended up visiting the place where 100 thousands to millions were kept and killed. It was detrimental. Many, many boards with at least a hundred faces on each side we're shown. Torture and execution sites and weapons/tools that were used on people. It was horrific. I got to go in many rooms where prisoners were held and it was left untouched, rusty, and a few splatters of blood here and there. It's so scary to know that the place you're standing in is the exact place hundred of thousands of people were trapped, tortured, harassed, and murdered. I got to meet two survivors and have both their books (they're authors). It was a brutal yet very special experience I cherish. Rest In Peace to all who have passed.

  • @chickenfriedrice2932
    @chickenfriedrice2932 Год назад +61

    I live in Cambodia. I am Canadian but have lived here for a bout six years. Let me tell you, these people have been through hell but they are some of the kindest people I have ever met in all my travels. True perseverance.

    • @godrilla5549
      @godrilla5549 Год назад +1

      Got any stories?

    • @chickenfriedrice2932
      @chickenfriedrice2932 Год назад

      @@godrilla5549 Many, but you should come here and make your own. Come see Angkor Wat!

    • @godrilla5549
      @godrilla5549 Год назад +2

      @@chickenfriedrice2932 you're just trying to steal my organs.

    • @gosnooky
      @gosnooky 3 месяца назад

      @@godrilla5549 Ignorant comment.

  • @PEACHPIG
    @PEACHPIG Год назад

    Awesome. Thanks

  • @Noober_Z
    @Noober_Z 2 месяца назад +2

    I learnt about this a few weeks ago, he truly believes in a quote “if you want to remove the weed, you must remove it’s roots too”
    Meaning killing every potential resistance before they becomes a problem.

  • @MERLINtheMagicMan
    @MERLINtheMagicMan Год назад +176

    The Killing Fields was a movie based on the true story of the genocide in Cambodia.
    It won several Academy Awards and was so well done it seemed real at times.
    Prayers for all the lives lost during the Kmer Rouge's rule of Cambodia. 🙏

    • @ThomasLoganHill
      @ThomasLoganHill Год назад +1

      That should be mandatory viewing for all commie larpers

    • @alexandrasymeon5893
      @alexandrasymeon5893 Год назад +9

      This was the real Holocaust.

    • @thepub245
      @thepub245 Год назад +25

      @@alexandrasymeon5893 Genocide is genocide no matter when or where it happens. Can you explain your comment further? Do you mean this was worse the the Nazi perpetrated genocide or are you saying the Nazi perpetrated genocide known as the Holocaust didn't happen?

    • @alexandrasymeon5893
      @alexandrasymeon5893 Год назад +1

      @@thepub245 This was a holocaust. Millions of Cambodians were killed under Pol Pot's Khmer Rouge. They were tortured and were made slaves and were not allowed to sleep but only rest. WWII was not started by Germany it was started by the Rothschilds who are of Jewish descent but are actually Satanists. They funded both sides of the war and their are reports Hitler was a Rothschild. G. Edward Griffin talks about this in his book the Creature from Jeckyl Island. I didn't spell Jeckyl right. The purpose of WWII was to create the illegal state of Israel in 1948. So the Rothschilds tortured their own people to get what they wanted and God never wanted for Israel to be rebuilt because He knew it would turn into the Synagogue of Satan all over again as told by our Dear Lord Jesus Christ 2,000 years ago. The Jewish people went through hell during WWII being separated from their families and the homes and businesses taken away from them. But there are things that they say happened that didn't happen. There were no concentration camps only work camps. There were no gas chambers during the war, those were place there after the war to create the horrific story of 6,000,000,000 Jews being gassed. Zyclon B was used to delouse the prisoners not kill them. The prisoners were starving because the allies wouldn't let supplies get. I'm sure many more atrocities happened so I think Cambodian Holocaust and the Genocide of the Jewish people during WWII were equally just as vile. Now in Israel the Israelis, have created the one, true holocaust when they kill Palestinian, men. women and children at random every single day. Children as young as 7 are being falsely arrested and taken to prison. Palestinian homes are being bombed and at times the Israelis even make the Palestinians destroy their own homes. 80% of the Palestinians live under the poverty line. Children with severe diseases are not able to be treated because their is an Israeli blockage preventing them from doing so. The Israelis have declared they are the master race and we are mere cattle to be ruled over. This is interesting because most of the Israelis are inbred. In 2014, Benjamin Netanyahu oversaw the killings of 500 Palestinian children. Israeli settlers destroy crops of Palestinians who still own land. Many more atrocities happen but I'll stop here. This is truly a Holocaust. In Uganda, Muslims are starving to death and they are mere bodies with bones laying out in the desert. Israel is funded by the United States to the tune of 40 billion dollars a year. Money that goes to NASA goes to Israel. The word NASA in Hebrew means deceit. All the European governments fund Israel and most countries do. This is the doing of the Rothschilds. Russia is fighting these atrocities and that's why he went to war with the Ukraine who supports Israel. Israeli infiltrated the Saudi government and there leaders are really Jewish. Okay there's a lot more but I'm done. Sorry for the harangue.

    • @remy12
      @remy12 Год назад +2

      That movie was amazing!! That is how I first learned about the genocide in Cambodia.

  • @KC_Smooth
    @KC_Smooth Год назад +156

    Whether it’s over religion, politics, resources, or power, humanity has always found an excuse to do absolutely brutal things to each other.

    • @thevein4571
      @thevein4571 Год назад +6

      Excuses are irrelevant, and is sidestepping the issue, power and greed is the problem here

    • @Light-ji4fo
      @Light-ji4fo Год назад

      @@thevein4571 About everything Hate for something different is the problem.

    • @thekamotodragon
      @thekamotodragon Год назад +14

      @@thevein4571 but the ideology is also the problem here, communism facilitates these things to happen.

    • @de_lontekk8019
      @de_lontekk8019 Год назад

      We’re the cancer of Mother Earth

    • @cpte3729
      @cpte3729 Год назад

      @@lavenderface9875 could you shut the hell up about wokeness for one goddamn second? This guy killed professors for being professors

  • @RT-qd8yl
    @RT-qd8yl 8 месяцев назад +6

    This is why I listen to Cambodian music. The Khmer Rouge tried to eliminate their budding rock/pop music scene as part of his "cleansing", killing amazing artists like Sinn Sisamouth, Pan Ron, and Ros Sereysothea. They may have died but their music didn't, and it evolved into great artists today like VannDa, Sreyleak, and HENG. The Khmer people are amazing musicians.

  • @jamessoth1479
    @jamessoth1479 5 месяцев назад +2

    My grandfather, Soth Im was killed in the fields, he was a scientist. My grandmother told me the story of soldiers invading their home and having them dump all their money into the river. My grandmother fled the country with her four children, it wasn’t easy. My mother was 7 years old at the time. They made it to the USA and thankfully was able to build a life. My grandmother kept working hard into her old age before retiring at like 68. She’s still kicking it, enjoying gardening and frequent visits from her grand children.

  • @jenicasung6428
    @jenicasung6428 Год назад +68

    My mom and her family were apart of it. She tells me stories about how they escaped but sadly she lost her mom, dad and the rest of her family. My mom was 4 when it happen. About 11 years ago she just reconnected with her brothers. Both her dad and brothers fought in the war. My dad escaped before they invaded they had to leave because my grandfather was a high rank military officer that's why they had to leave but sadly he lost his sister. Honestly it breaks my heart that people would do this to their own kind.

    • @Arthurian.
      @Arthurian. Год назад +3

      It makes me wonder if your family originally supported Pol Pot or not. He came to power by overwhelming support of the people that believed socialism was good.

    • @jenicasung6428
      @jenicasung6428 Год назад +10

      @@Arthurian. No my family didn't. My mom didn't know he existed until she ended up in one of the camps separated from her mother. My father escaped before they fully took over they had to leave because my grandfather was a military officer.

  • @dueinuremom5082
    @dueinuremom5082 Год назад +57

    My dad knew a guy who was a kid when this was happening and he was apart of the professional class and one day his parents went to a farm, gave him an ox and told him to walk with it. And that’s what he did, he walked an ox until the vietcong saved the day.

    • @iowa_lot_to_travel9471
      @iowa_lot_to_travel9471 Год назад

      That rescue only happened because the Khmer rouge crossed into Vietnam and killed innocent villagers. And 150000 soldiers with their families were executed. Leaving the border open

    • @Arthurian.
      @Arthurian. Год назад

      Vietcong were filthy socialists, not heroes.

    • @Boxingbear
      @Boxingbear Год назад +2

      That actually makes total and complete sense.

  • @hugh2hoob668
    @hugh2hoob668 Год назад

    nice pace to your narrating usually these history clips are sooooooo boring but you kept it moving fast

  • @shamefulswine888
    @shamefulswine888 Год назад +3

    What's truly terrifying is that there are similarities from how it started to what's going on now in America.

  • @deviltaste
    @deviltaste Год назад +24

    As a cambodian it still makes me sad knowing most of the world wont ever hear about this but I'm really grateful for this video thank you :))

  • @quochung9370
    @quochung9370 Год назад +71

    Don't ever forget that Vietnam troop went to rescue Cambodia and pretty much got internationally condemned and even invaded by China because Khmer Rouge was their allies

    • @tuandoan1969
      @tuandoan1969 Год назад +3

      Lol i dont see any cambodian that said something about vietnamese troop who risked their life to rescue them . Back to the day without vietnamese they combodian dont have a chance to comment on youtube like this . Shame people 😂

    • @Xilladan093
      @Xilladan093 Год назад

      @@tuandoan1969 cIown. Racist

    • @tuandoan1969
      @tuandoan1969 Год назад +1

      @@Xilladan093 say something ?? Dont be shy cambodian

    • @fasthracing
      @fasthracing Год назад

      yep

    • @Xilladan093
      @Xilladan093 Год назад

      @@tuandoan1969 im bIack u weak boi

  • @03Grunt-arrino
    @03Grunt-arrino Месяц назад +4

    @4:55: that’s exactly how people in US cities look at those in the “fly-over states.” Exactly what causes civil wars.

  • @WillJohns-tr1zt
    @WillJohns-tr1zt 8 месяцев назад +1

    My fiancé is khmer and I spend a lot of time in Cambodia . I find the people absolutely beautiful and happy even after everything they have been through

  • @anonview
    @anonview Год назад +47

    I once read a Reader's Digest article about the Killing Fields when I was twelve years old. A very hard read at that age, but definitely something that helped me learn about the negative effects of power, idealism, and violence.

  • @sunlyhour3340
    @sunlyhour3340 Год назад +28

    This is a very well-made video about Khmer history. Extremely informative to those doesn’t know about this and a great source for a historical reminder to the Cambodian people. Only critique i have, which I can’t really blame you for, is the pronunciation of the words since Khmer is a very hard language. One tip i would give for that is usually a lot of Khmer words written in English have softer tones. For example, in the name Pol Pot, it has a soft sounding P rather than a hard intonation.
    Great video and thank you for sharing this to the world with very high accuracy to reality

    • @plx01
      @plx01 Год назад

      Also heard Kampuchay instead of Kam-puch-ia

  • @frankhuston2616
    @frankhuston2616 6 месяцев назад +1

    Good stuff!!!!

  • @samhodgins9804
    @samhodgins9804 4 месяца назад +1

    Very interesting

  • @troydanielson4766
    @troydanielson4766 Год назад +41

    I had a girl friend that told me a story of how her father was taken and killed. She told me that the mother and kids were hiding while this happened. It's unbelievable the amount of evil that goes on in this world.