How is it that between the Cambodian Genocide and the Holocaust, over eight million people were killed? The similarities and differences between the Cambodian Genocide and the Holocaust are both disturbing yet interesting. To understand how alike and dissimilar these two events are you must consider three things, which are: the cause, courses, and effects.…
from France. Once France left they had to operate on their own and this is where the problem…
The Nanking genocide happened because of an intense hatred between the Chinese and the Japanese. During the Nanking genocide around 40,000 to 300,000 people died during the Nanking genocide. This genocide happened over a period of 6 weeks starting December 13, 1937. It was very obvious that the Nanking genocide was devastating.…
The Holocaust and Pol Pot in Cambodia were both horrible events in history. They were both similar and different in many ways. In both events victims were sealed from the outside world. Women, men, and children were being overworked and starved. And even after all the hard work thousands of them were being killed. Both leaders had different plans, but one thing they both had in mind was genocide.…
The central story that led to genocide in Cambodia was one of protecting the country from internal and external…
Soon after Pol Pot seized power he started to try to reconstruct Cambodia (Changed to Kampuchea now), trying to make it like communist China with collective farms. Anyone who opposed these plans, which intellectual people were assumed to be, were ordered to be killed. So afraid of death civilians were forced out of towns, even the old or disabled. Those who did not leave were shot. Here is a quote from a victim of this genocide; “They ordered the city evacuated. Everyone was to head for the countryside to join the revolution. They killed those who argued against leaving. Two million frightened people started walking out of the capital.”(Cambodian Genocide) All civil rights and political rights were destroyed. Children were separated from their families and put into different forced labor camps. These forced labor camps caused many to die due to overwork, malnutrition, and disease. They had a diet of one tin of rice, 180 grams, per person every two days. While this was going on purges killed all people who reminded soldiers of the “old life”. Many doctors, lawyers etc. were completely murdered, along with their stores and businesses. Basically, Pol Pot attempted to wipe out anyone who had anything to do with the “Old Life” because they were “threatening” his power. In the Holocaust, first Jewish people were stripped of their rights by the Nuremberg laws. Then they were sent to ghettos, sealing…
Pol Pot and the Khmer Rouge brutally killed millions of Cambodians through forced labor, torture, and starvation. Those who had previous ties with the former regime, people of the working class including lawyers, doctors, teachers, and even people who wore glasses were eliminated from this "purified Cambodia" (Chandler 58). The Khmer Rouge targeted ethnic Vietnamese, Cambodian Christians, Muslims, Buddhist monks, and twenty other minority groups (News VOA). An estimated 50% of the 425,000 Chinese living in Cambodia in 1975 perished - Muslims were also forced to eat port, those who refused were shot (Gavin).…
Cambodian genocide and the holocaust were two of the most brutal genocide we come to think about today. Cambodian genocide occurred in Cambodia and everything began and happened after a war. It was and inner war going ahead inside Cambodia and the Vietnam was additionally having one and this is the thing that prompted genocide. When Cambodia was seen as a frail power they began to get demise dangers from all over and this made them essentially surrender. They needed to surrender on the grounds that it was an enormous measure of nations that would simply take part in war with them and take them over.…
In this genocide about 750,000 to 1.5 million people were killed. The people acting on this genocide wanted to kill educated people, meaning people that wore glasses, people that had an education, and people that spoke a foreign language because many others were scared that the educated would take over. People in towns and cities were threatened with death and forced to leave their home. Everyone had to leave their home, including sick people, kids, disabled people no matter what their condition was. The people acting on this genocide were harsh and strict with everyone, anyone who disobeyed orders, anyone who took long to leave their homes, and anyone who didn't want to leave were killed.…
In the recorded conversations that Richard Nixon, the 37th President of the United States, had with his White House aides, he reveals his motivations and his assumptions about the American public: “Everybody says we’ve got to protect this one and that one and the other one. The main thing we’ve got to protect is the Presidency”. He felt that the presidency granted him immunity to the law. Under his Presidency, an air of distrust of government gradually grew amongst US citizens. He led a criminal presidency yet was never indicted or prosecuted. If he were not President of the United States, he would have faced greater consequences for his actions. In this light, perhaps he was right when he claimed, in his 1977 interview with David Frost, “When…
Confusion glided through me as I didn’t know that the Vietnamese ever went to war again after the Vietnam War. After my relatives elaborated on how catastrophic the war was on the citizens and the country itself, I assumed that Vietnam wouldn’t be ready to return to combat. Also, it was shocking that it only took two to three years for the country to stabilize and rebuild. However, what truly sparked this subject was when I remembered this reason: The Khmer Rouge received support by North Vietnam; the government which fought the Khmer Rouge a few years after the Cambodian Civil War. These components led me to have the ambition to analyze more on this…
The Cambodian Genocide was a genocide that was very harsh and ruined many people's lives forever. From April 17, 1975 to January 6, 1979, more than 2 million people died under the Khmer Rouge rule led by Pol Pot in the terrible genocide that we call the Cambodian Genocide. Pol Pot’s main reason to start this genocide was to nationalize the peasant farming society of Cambodia ideally overnight, in accordance with the Chinese Communist agricultural model. This horrific genocide took place in Cambodia and lasted 3 years, 8 months, and 20 days. Some causes of this genocide was the fact that Pol Pot wanted to nationalize the peasant farming society of Cambodia. Most Cambodians involved in the genocide died from starvation,…
Imagine leaving everything that was once a part of your life because a new government began ruling the nation you live in. Imagine watching innocent people being taken away, hearing screams and gunshots, and knowing that these individuals have been killed without even seeing it happen. This is what living in Cambodia during the Cambodian Genocide was like. Each day, instead of growing larger and stronger, children were growing weak. As a young girl, Loung Ung lived through this war. Years later, she wrote a novel called “First They Killed My Father”. In this book, Ung records the experiences that she and her family encountered while trying to live through the civil war. If I were to meet any of the individuals mentioned in this novel, I would…
In the article “The Charge: Genocide” by Lydia Polgreen and “Armed & Underage” by Jeffrey Gettleman, a claim that could be made is No real justice is being done for the people. So, Even though people responsible are undergoing investigation, children are still being forced to fight for their government and people are still being threatened by genocide. Including , According to “Armed & Underage” by Jeffrey Gettleman it states, “While the number of conflicts involving child soldiers has dropped since 2004 from 27 to 15, human-rights experts estimate that more than 200,000 children worldwide are still being used as combatants, usually against their will. And it isn't just boys: Girls are often pressed into duty as cooks or messengers. Many are…
If Holocaust were the worst mass murder of the world then, I thought Pol Pot was the most insane destruction in Cambodian. Pol Pot was born in 1925 in a farming family in central Cambodia, which was part of French Indochina. At age 20, he traveled to Paris on a scholarship to study radio electronics and absorbed in Marxism and neglected his studies. He returns to Cambodia in 1953 after he lost his scholarship and joined the underground Communist. 1962, Pol Pot became leader of Cambodian Communist Party and was forced to flee into the jungle to escape the wrath of Prince Norodom Sihanouk, leader of Cambodia. In there, he formed an armed group that became known as Khmer Rouge and waged a guerilla war against Sihanouk’s government.…