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Research brings relief

Kyle James, Phnom PenhMarch 13, 2013

Driven by revenge, Youk Chhang began documenting the horrors that befell his people during the genocide in Cambodia. Now he's convinced his country must confront its past to be able to shape its future.

https://p.dw.com/p/17lQ0
Youk Chhang
Image: DW/K.James

Youk Chhang was 14 in 1975 when his life changed forever. A native of Phnom Penh, he had learned to live with dread as the war raging in the Cambodian countryside between the radical Khmer Rouge communists and government forces got closer and closer to the capital. The sounds of explosions outside the city had become commonplace; refugees streamed into the city, seeking escape from the rural violence. Phnom Penh residents, weary of years of war, just wanted peace, and quiet.

A sort of peace did descend, briefly, in April when Phnom Penh fell to Khmer Rouge forces. Chhang was home alone since his mother and sister had gone to a different part of the city looking for a safer place to stay after a small rocket had landed near their home the day before. They planned to come back for him when they found a refuge, but the road was cut; they couldn't get back. On April 17, Chhang woke up to a very unusual silence. 

"All the sound I had heard for three or four years was gone," he said. "I felt peaceful and I will never forget that feeling. But then suddenly I began to hear footsteps coming close and then guns again."

Those approaching sounds were Khmer Rouge soldiers, who forced Chhang and all the residents of the city to leave for the countryside, the first step in the new regime's radical experiment to turn Cambodia into a self-sufficient, agrarian utopia. The national nightmare had begun.

Bitter medicine

Chhang, separated from his family, would not see them again for months. He was thrown into jail and would have been killed were it not for the efforts of an older prisoner, who sacrificed his own life so the teenager would have a future. His sister died after having her stomach slashed open by guards; his mother had to stand by while he suffered regular beatings, unable to do anything to protect her son.

Somehow, he and his mother survived, and Chhang even prospered, ending up at Yale University in the United States in the mid-1990s. There he began working with the Cambodian Genocide Program, a project that sought to find out as much as possible through scientific research about what had happened and who was responsible for the deaths of almost two million people, or about 21 percent of the population.

Skulls in Choeung Ek Killing Field Genocidal Museum outside Phnom Penh (Photo: David Longstreath)
Nearly 2 million people were killed by the Khmer RougeImage: AP

"Honestly, first I came to this research for revenge," Chhang said about the anger that used to be his constant companion. It was fury that he wasn't able to save his sister, fury that his mother still carried deep scars from the period. "But through research and school I began to change. The research helped me heal."

Documents of terror

Today Chhang, 51, is the director of the Documentation Center of Cambodia, which was born from the Yale program. Based in Phnom Penh, it is the world's biggest archive of Khmer Rouge material, with almost 160,000 pages of documents, 6,000 photographs and even sound recordings of revolutionary songs that were played to indoctrinate people or cover up the sounds of death in the killing fields.

Documentation Center of Cambodia
The center has become a valuable source of information on the genocideImage: DW/K.James

For Chhang such work is not easy. Like anyone who works closely documenting human rights abuses, be they in Germany, Bosnia or Rwanda, the research can take its toll. He says the hardest part of his job is reading the personal letters written by parents to children, or husband to wife, correspondence which was captured by Khmer Rouge guards. The authors were almost invariably killed. 

"It is so difficult to read how much people wanted to live knowing that they would be executed the next minutes, but they still wrote," he said. "That's difficult."

Still, he sees it as his mission to document what happened, and his center organizes exhibitions and talks, helps people trace relatives still missing. It also assists the Khmer Rouge Tribunal, which is trying some of the movement's top leaders, and has written a textbook and curriculum that are now mandatory in all the country's high schools.

Too scared to talk

Chhang says that many Cambodians still avoid talking about that time, especially since so many Khmer Rouge soldiers and lower officials live among the general population. But he thinks this reluctance to confront the past directly hurts the country's development, making it difficult for people to speak out, express their views and engage in the democratic process. The fear is still deep seated, he says.

He talks about his mother, who took a different path than he did regarding those horrible years in the 1970s. While he chose scientific research as a tool to help him cope and even flourish, she retreated into religion. And still, she does not like to talk about what happened. It is still too painful. He, on the other hand, says talking about it is the only way forward.

"Not everybody agrees with what I do," he said. "But through openness, sincerity and honest research, I think that we can help shape the future of this country."