Khmer people Essays

  • Cultural Revolution In The Film Mao's Last Dancer

    860 Words  | 4 Pages

    educators and counter revolutionaries. The Cultural Revolution was largely characterized by terrible acts of violence that were carried out by the Red Guards mostly against teachers and intellectuals (Source B). This torture was so grusome that many people died. Despite this, the film failed to portray these acts of violence and instead portrayed the propaganda and fear of western imperialism of the Chinese Communist government. This was depicted when the Chinese government was reluctant to allow Cunxin

  • Year Zero History

    753 Words  | 4 Pages

    Cambodia is a country that has been deeply affected by political warfare since the 1960s but was greatly affected by the reign of communist party known as the Khmer Rouge. Pilger, in his film Year Zero speaks to the shocking state of Cambodia after the genocide that was led by Pol Pot and his regime. The film gives an in depth understanding of the effects after the four years of the regime in rule and gives further clarification to how it impacts politics within Cambodia for decades to come. Year

  • Pol Pot Collapse In Cambodia

    970 Words  | 4 Pages

    Phnom Penh were people were seriously and brutally injured or killed by a group called Khmer Rouge. Pol Pot was born on May 19, 1928, the youngest of seven children. Pol Pot’s father, Saloth, was owner of nine hectares of rice land and three of garden land. Few 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

  • Khmer Rouge Research Paper

    817 Words  | 4 Pages

    Approximately 1,000 people die to Khmer Rouge each year even after thirty years. Before the Khmer Rouge, Cambodia had one of the most advanced economies in South Asia. During the Khmer Rouge two to three million people were killed which is almost one fifth of the population of Cambodia. The thinking of the Khmer Rouge during 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

  • The Fall Of Pol Pot And The Khmer Rouge

    274 Words  | 2 Pages

    Pol Pot was the leader of the communist Khmer Rouge in Cambodia that ruled from 1975 to 1979. Under the regime, approximately 2 million people died from execution or lack of food or illnesses. Many detention centers are also said to have conditions so harsh that only a handful of the thousands of people in them survived. This mass extinction was a result of aiming to create a classless peasant/farmer society. Believing this, Pot and the Khmer Rouge worked to rid the country of “intellectuals, city

  • Genocide In Cambodia Essay

    1237 Words  | 5 Pages

    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 people were killed by means of torture, starvation or being overworked.  It left lasting impacts on many of the countries around the world. Khmer Rouge was the communist

  • Pol Pot: Cambodian Genocide

    468 Words  | 2 Pages

    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 communist movement. As he became involved in this group he gradually worked up the chain of importance while his hatred

  • Review Of Patricia Mccormick's 'Never Fall Down'

    1021 Words  | 5 Pages

    Cambodia, so they help the get rid of the Khmer Rouge. Arn was the only child who did not run away from the fight and he ends up going to the hospital for being sick. Then he is discovered by a really nice man that takes him and many other children to New York. He teaches Arn that he was chosen to survive, and to tell the story of Cambodia and the Khmer Rouge to the rest of the world. One connection I saw with the book and class material was that many people that go through a struggle in a different

  • The Khmer Rouge Regime During The Cambodia Genocide

    384 Words  | 2 Pages

    Did you know the Khmer Party killed about one in half to three million people during the Cambodian Genocide? They killed many people just because the Democratic Republic of Vietnam didn’t agree with the Khmer agreement they offered. They didn’t accept the Chinese agreement too. On January 17, 1968, Khmer Rouge launched their first offense. It was aimed at gathering weapon and spreading propaganda. The Khmer Rouge regime was extremely brutal. The executed people who could work or make the journey

  • Cambodia Genocide Essay

    1515 Words  | 7 Pages

    throughout the Vietnam War, the country struggled to find a peaceful balance between the ideologies of capitalism and communism. Due to this internal struggle, more than 21 percent of Cambodian’s population was ruthlessly maltreated and murdered by the Khmer Rouge. Pol Pot’s four-year plan, announced on April 21, 1976, was to create a state where socialism controlled every aspect of the country including; agriculture, industry, health, and education. Pol Pot’s philosophy was the same as many communist

  • Pol Pot: The Cambodia Genocide In Cambodia

    658 Words  | 3 Pages

    “The Cambodian Genocide refers to the attempt of Khmer Rouge party leader “Pol Pot” to nationalize and centralize the peasant farming society of Cambodia virtually overnight, in accordance with the Chinese Communist agricultural model.” When Sihanouk becomes the head of state, he breaks ties with the US and allows North Vietnamese guerrillas to set up based in Cambodia. In return, the US begins to plot secret bombings against the North Vietnamese on Cambodia soil. In 1970, Sihanouk is overthrown

  • Cambodian Genocide And Holocaust Similarities

    911 Words  | 4 Pages

    The Holocaust and the Cambodian Genocide were two major events in history that caused millions of innocent people and even children to die. Although the actions that occurred during the Holocaust differ from those that occurred during the Cambodian Genocide, they happen to have many similarities. Since October 24th, 1945, the United Nations had the intention “to engage diplomatically as armed conflict is absolutely unacceptable” . Even though the United Nations stated this, genocides still continued

  • Cambodia Killing Fields Research Paper

    1868 Words  | 8 Pages

    and the growing communist party, Khmer Rouge, who was allied with Northern Vietnam. Some lost mothers and fathers, others lost sons and daughters. Aunts and uncles, infants and elders; there was no exception to the killings of the Khmer Rouge. Kill or be killed, that was the message to the military of the Khmer Rouge during

  • First They Killed My Father Essay

    903 Words  | 4 Pages

    The Khmer Rouge was a Communist regime that ruled Cambodia from 1975 to 1979. Led by Pol Pot, the Khmer Rouge sought to create an agrarian utopia by eliminating all traces of modern society and turning Cambodia into a classless society. They abolished money, private property, religion, and traditional Khmer culture, and forced the entire population to work in collective farms and labor camps. Loung Ung is the author and protagonist of First They Killed my Father. The story is told through Loung’s

  • Cambodian Genocide Essay

    654 Words  | 3 Pages

    forever. The Cambodian genocide started when the Khmer Rouge attempted to nationalize and centralize the peasant farming society of Cambodia (Quinn 63). These ideas came from the Chinese Communist agricultural model. Cambodia had a population of just over 7 million people and almost all of them were buddhists. The genocide started from a harsh climate of political and social turmoil (Krkljes). The Cambodian genocide had taken the lives of many innocent people just as the Holocaust had taken the lives of

  • Cambodia Genocide

    427 Words  | 2 Pages

    in accordance to Chinese communism ideas and beliefs by Khmer Rouge part leader, Pol Pot. The Khmer is the predominant ethnic group of Cambodia, accounting for 90% of the entire population and is extremely relevant to the genocide, while the Khmer Rouge was The Communist Party of Kampuchea. During 1970, Prince Sihanouk of Cambodia was overthrown in a military coup, where lieutenant-general Lon Nol was elected as the new president of the ‘Khmer Republic. As vengeance, Sihanouk and his forces formed

  • Big Brother And The Khmer Rouge: A Comparative Analysis

    870 Words  | 4 Pages

    the communist leader of Khmer Rouge during the 1970’s, was considered one of the worst regimes in history and was responsible for countless deaths and genocide. Many of the Khmer Rouge’s philosophies and structure can be found in George Orwell 's 1984. 1984’s Big Brother and the Inner Party controlled all aspect of the people Oceania, much similar to that of the Khmer Rouge. Both had many similarities, but the many of the core beliefs are noticeable. Big Brother and the Khmer Rouge had similar ideologies

  • The Khmer Rouge: The Cambodian Genocide

    1193 Words  | 5 Pages

    genocide;also a sin and immoral action of those upstanders and bystanders that witness, initiate or, participated in the Cambodian genocide. These people that initiated the Khmer rouge and set forth the Cambodian genocide are sinners, mass murders, and cruel. To kill a babies, the elderly, and enslave many children and adults. To starve and exterminate them as well. The Khmer rouge and all its members should be tried and sentenced for their sins against the innocent. The actions and events leading

  • The Khmer Rouge's Decisions And Beliefs

    562 Words  | 3 Pages

    Khmer Rouge's decisions and beliefs were what caused their society to fail. From 1975 to 1979 The Khmer Rouge took over Cambodia in an attempt to make a communist society. Although they ruled for 4 years it was a mess of a ruling due to their bad decisions such as how they treated their citizens, the amount of trust they put in Vietnam and their military training. Pol Pot made many mistakes leading up to Vietnam's invasion. Pol Pot and his fellow Khmer Rouge members tyrannized their authority by

  • Vietnam In Pol Pot's Communist Regime

    457 Words  | 2 Pages

    in which Khmer Rouge, a faction of the Cambodian people, took over the country. An interesting scene occurs when the movie opens with the Americans depicted as aggressors invaders- especially when there are news and depictions of the aftermath of an American bomb landing in a different Cambodian city- a scene that captures the bombings of the countries surrounding Vietnam during the war. However, things quickly change. At first glance, it appears that a faction of the Cambodians- the Khmer Rouge under