The Killing Fields. Sounds intense, right?  There are over 300 hundred so called
“Killing Fields” throughout the country of Cambodia.  During the 1970s a Communist dictatorship had control of the
country, in an effort to create equality among all the people of Cambodia
everyone was forced to move out into the country side and become rice or other
crop producers.  Anyone who had an
advanced degree, wore glasses (because they made people look intelligent), or
in any way seemed “above” others was put in prison and killed.  One-fourth of the population of
Cambodia died during the reign of the Khmer Rouge (the Red Khmer- Red for
Communism, Khmer for the native people of Cambodia). Tens of thousands were
murdered as political threats, but many died of disease and starvation because
of forced labor.  The people of
Cambodia are still suffering the effects of this genocide; they are decades
behind their neighboring countries in almost all academic, medical, and
technological fields.  Most of the
country doesn’t have electricity, paved roads, good schools, or even access to
medical care.

 

Skulls of the victims.

In order to remember the people killed by the Khmer Rouge
the current Cambodia government has documented and memorialized some of the
previous killing fields, turning them into a place to learn and reflect on this
time in Cambodia’s history.  My
teammates and I visited one of these killing fields outside of Phnom Penh, Choeung Ek.  Thousands
of people were killed in just this one killing field, men, women, children,
government officials, soldiers of the Khmer Rouge, and even a few
foreigners.  One of the 80 mass
graves contains the remains of over 100 women and children, the women with no
clothing, and the babies with heads smashed in from being beaten against a tree
next to the grave. 


Clothes found in the mass graves. 

 

Gruesome
thoughts, but it was a reality so many of the people of Cambodia. None of the
victims were killed using guns, (bullets were too expensive) so they were
bludgeoned in the head with various farming equipment or had their throats slit
using palm branches and then covered with DDT just in case some of them were
buried alive.  We listened to story
after story of murder, rape, and torture as we walked around this now peaceful
field that is the resting place for so many.  Bones and clothing continue to be exposed as more of the
soil washes away each rainy season, almost like a continued reminder of what
happened in this place.

 

Bones and cloth that have surfaced recently from one of the grave sites. 

We then visited a prison called S-21 where prisoners were
held chained to the ground in tiny cells, or strapped to bed frames and
tortured for hours and days at a time until they confessed to whatever crimes
they had been accused of.  After
their confession they were transferred to the previously mentioned killing
field and brutally murdered with farm equipment. 

Political prisoners as well as
every day people were held here: men, women, and children.  When a prisoner was found to be guilty
of whatever crimes they had been accused of their entire family was then killed
as well to prevent anyone being able to bring revenge on the Khmer Rouge in
later years for the death of family members.

Some of the victims of the Khmer Rouge.

 The children we taught in our English classes are the future
of this country.
  Some of these
children want so badly to learn more; they show up early for class so they can
hear us speak English to the other classes.   These children have so much to do, and so little
preparation.  I pray over this
country and its next generation as they continue to rebuild their nation, as
they grow and develop into the doctors, government workers, lawyers, business owners,
pastors, and parents of Cambodia that the Lord will bless them, that He will
make Himself known in that country and that He will wash over that whole nation
with His mercy and grace.  There is
so much potential in Cambodia, I’ve seen just a small example in our village,
but what I see gives me hope, gives me faith in the Lord’s plan for them and
their nation.