Cambodian Civil War Essays

  • The Fall Of Pol Pot And The Khmer Rouge

    274 Words  | 2 Pages

    “intellectuals, city residents, ethnic Vietnamese, civil servants, and religious leaders” (History.com). The Khmer Rouge finally came to an end when the Vietnamese military invaded Cambodia in 1979. Pol Pot died 20 years later without ever having been convicted of crime or clearing his name.

  • Genocide In Cambodia Essay

    1237 Words  | 5 Pages

    The Cambodian Genocide is considered to be one of the worst human tragedies in the last century.  The Genocide in Cambodia should be more recognized around the world for its severity and intensity.  Khmer Rouge, a communist group led by Pol Pot, seized control of the Cambodian government from Lon Nol in April of 1975.  He then renamed it the Democratic Kampuchea. The Cambodian Genocide lasted until Khmer Rouge was overthrown by the Vietnamese in 1978. It only lasted three years, but over 1.7 million

  • Cambodian Genocide Essay

    750 Words  | 3 Pages

    The True Impact of the Cambodian Genocide The Cambodian Genocide was a tragic event that took place in 1975 and lasted until about 1979. The genocide was led by Pol Pot and the communist party Kampuchea, also knowns as the Khmer Rouge. Millions of people were killed during this catastrophe. The Khmer Rouge was are the regime that controlled Cambodia from 1975 to 1979. Throughout the 196, the Khmer Rouge operated as the armed wing of the Communist Party of Kampuchea, the name, the party

  • Compare And Contrast Pol Pot And The Holocaust

    608 Words  | 3 Pages

    he joined an underground communist group that was formed due to the fact Cambodia had just been liberated by the French government. By 1962, Pol Pot had formed a communist party in Cambodia. He formed an army known as the Khmer Rouge or the Red Cambodians. When the United States bombed the Vietnam in Eastern Cambodia, instead hurting the Vitense the majority monarchy's troops were killed and he was replaced. On April 17, 1975, thirteen years after he claimed Cambodia his country, he had complete

  • Pol Pot: The Worst Person To Ever Walk The Earth

    713 Words  | 3 Pages

    ever walk this planet is Pol Pot. He killed many of his own kind because they knew how to read, or even wore glasses. Besides that, the Khmer Rouge, the organization Pol Pot was leader of, decreased half of the Vietnamese population during the Vietnam War. Right before his death he was still a nasty man. He had killed millions so he could go back to a simpler way of life. This essay will explain why Pol Pot is the worst person to ever walk the face of this planet. Pol Pot claimed he wanted to go back

  • Why Was Pol Pot Is Wrong

    302 Words  | 2 Pages

    Pol Pot was born Saloth Sar on May 19, 1925, in Kompong Thom Province, Cambodia. He rose to power leading the Cambodia’s Communist group. The Communists took control of the country in 1975, allowing for little freedom in citizens. In 1979, Pol Pot oversaw the deaths of one to two million people. Pol Pot believed that the “old society” should be executed because the group had hate towards them. This included intellectuals, merchants, Buddhist monks, former government officials and former soldiers

  • Khmer Rouge Research Paper

    817 Words  | 4 Pages

    their time of control was to kill all of the educated people of the country (“Poverty”). Cambodia ever since the Khmer Rouge has never been back to its state of peace, with violence happening almost twenty years after the Khmer Rouge starting with a Civil War. Ever since the Khmer Rouge took control of Cambodia there have been many bad changes to the government, economy and standard of living. Government, there has been

  • Pol Pot Collapse In Cambodia

    970 Words  | 4 Pages

    villagers looked at them as “class enemies”. Every people tilled their fields, fished the river, and raised their children, it didn 't matter if they were poor or rich. In 1929, a french official described Kompong Thom people as the most deeply Cambodian and the least to influence. But, the Saloth family were Khmer peasants with a difference, they had royal connections. Pol Pot’s cousin was a palace dancer, and she became one of King

  • Comparing Cambodians And Jews In The Cambodian Genocide And The Holocaust

    904 Words  | 4 Pages

    Similarly, the Cambodians and Jews have both stood witness to the executions of one race. During the Cambodian Genocide, Pol Pot the leader, wiped out millions of educated Cambodians who were doctors, teachers, lawyers, bilingual, etc. His overall goal was to make the Kingdom of “Cambodia” a utopian society where everyone was equal and he reigned as king. In fact, the Khmer Rouge rounded up and separated family members to work in different villages in Cambodia. In addition, older men and young boys

  • Cambodian Genocide Case Study

    1518 Words  | 7 Pages

    Introduction The Cambodian Genocide is one of the least known, yet most tragic and deadly genocides that happened in the 20th century. With the aim to restore the glory of pre-colonial times, which was to be achieved by purifying the Cambodian population, from 1975 to 1979 the Khmer Rouge regime killed between two and three million of the 8 million population (Kissi, 2004). The victims of the regime were the Vietnamese minority, which was completely swept out of the country by deportations or mass

  • Saloth Sar: The Khmer Rouge

    870 Words  | 4 Pages

    During the 1970s, a regime known as the Khmer Rouge desired to erase the current structure of the Cambodian state and to replace it with a classless society based on agricultural reform; however, their primary goals were not appealing to most of the population. This led the leader, Saloth Sar, known by his nom de guerre Pol Pot, and his organization to implement repressive and murderous rule to maintain control in restoring the country to an agrarian society. Due to the harsh conditions and the arbitrary

  • The Worst Ever: The Cambodian Genocide

    264 Words  | 2 Pages

    them so we can try to prevent Genocides from reoccurring. The Cambodian genocide was one of the worst ever. Over the span of four years between 1.7 to 2 million Cambodians were killed. It all started when a man named Khmer Rouge seized control of the Government in 1975. Shortly after, “they began a re-education campaign targeting political dissidents”(United to end genocide). The movement began officially after the first Indonesian war in the 1950’s and began to grow. America was also credited with

  • Cambodian Genocide

    1099 Words  | 5 Pages

    Animal Farm and the Cambodian Genocide are two very similar events because the influences of Animal Farm and the Cambodian Genocide had similar ways of ruling their ‘people’. The Cambodian Genocide was an event in history where a group named the Khmer Rouge gained control of Phnom Penh, Cambodia’s capital, and created Labor camps all throughout the countryside where many innocent people died of abuse, starvation, disease, and exhaustion. Firstly, Pol Pot, from the Cambodian Genocide is alike to

  • Pol Pot Research Paper

    256 Words  | 2 Pages

    Pol Pot was the leader of the Khmer Rouge which is responsible for the deaths of 25 percent of the country 's population from starvation, overwork, and executions. Pol Pot was born in 1925 to a farming family in Cambodia, a country formerly part of French Indochina. At the age of 20, Pot studied radio electronics in Paris but soon became occupied in Marxism resulting in him leaving his studies. Losing his scholarship, he returned to Cambodia and joined a secret Communist movement in 1953. In 1954

  • Pol Pot: Cambodian Genocide

    468 Words  | 2 Pages

    Pol Pot: The Leader of the Cambodian Genocide Pol Pot was the person in charge during the Cambodian Genocide. I believe that he is a terrible person and a horrible excuse of a “leader.” Pol Pot was a dictator in Cambodia who was a horrendous person because he caused the killing of the people of Cambodia, the economic downfall of Cambodia, and because he didn’t seem to realize how wrong the idea was. Pol Pot began to be involved with the Khmer Rouge Revolutionary Party which was an underground

  • Choctaw Dbq

    1193 Words  | 5 Pages

    com/Choctaws/Removal). In 1747-1750 the Choctaws experienced the Choctaw Civil War, it was recorded as being the most catastrophic event in Choctaw history (Everyculture.com/Choctaw/Relations with The Colonizers). The loss of so many members of their tribe left them severely

  • The Red Badge Of Courage Essay

    1029 Words  | 5 Pages

    When people think of great war books that actually realistically depicts the battles that rages on and what goes through a regular foot soldiers mind; what book pops into their minds? The Red Badge of Courage by Stephen Crane pops into mine. Novelist Harold Frederic claimed, “impels the feeling that the actual truth about a battle has never been guessed before” (Weatherford, 116). Stephen Crane is considered one of the best writers of realism. Also he is remembered for his classic works in literary

  • Analysis Of Stephen Collinson's Refugee Crisis

    556 Words  | 3 Pages

    appeared the body of a dead little boy, whom was struggling for survival. The article of September 4th, 2015, “Refugee crisis builds pressure on U.S”, written by Stephen Collinson, brings the awareness of the families fleeing from Syria, due to a civil war that is taking the lives of many innocents. Just like stated in CNN, ‘it took a tragic photo of a drowned toddler on a Turkish beach, to make the refugee torrent pouring into Europe a problem for America too (Collinson 2015, 1).’ When I first encountered

  • Thematic Ideas Of Abortion In Unwind By Neal Shusterman

    2161 Words  | 9 Pages

    Unwind by Neal Shusterman takes place in a post Civil War II America years after the Bill of Life was passed, making unwinding a legal and socially acceptable practice. This integration of Unwinding manipulates the people into separating any child that was deemed unwanted by their homes into an oppressive environment that views them as less than human. Society’s own ignorance allows them to live guilt free from the emotionally damaging deaths that children as young as thirteen are forced to endure

  • Mary Creagh: A Brief Analysis

    501 Words  | 3 Pages

    This article written by Mary Creagh (2015) who is working in Lebanon with the Birmingham Based charity Islamic Relief, to see for herself what has been happening with the refugee crisis. She has listened to many refugees' for a first-hand view and to understand the trouble the refugees deal with on a day to day basis. The British public have seen in the media recently of videos and pictures of refugees in distress. Creagh (2015) is trying to share these refugees’ stories, so the British public get