Cambodian Genocide Dead bodies everywhere you turn. The smell of gunpowder‚ filth‚ and death choke your lungs. You wonder everyday whether it will be your last. All your body feels is pain; all your heart feels is emptiness. One might think this is how life was for Jews during the Jewish Holocaust. In reality‚ this is how life was for many Cambodians during the reign of Pol Pot between 1975 and 1979. This event‚ known to many as the Cambodian genocide‚ left a profound mark on the world around us
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out of control. It’s amazing how ignorant and stubborn the human race can be. This is exactly the response of many nations when it comes to genocide. Genocide is the systematic killing of all the people from a national‚ ethnic‚ or religious group. Two of the most recent genocides in history are the genocide of Rwanda and the genocide of Cambodia. The genocide of Cambodia started on the year of 1975 and ended on 1979. This is considered the Khmer Pogue period‚ where Pol Pot ‚ Nuon Chea‚ Ieng Sary
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Genocide is a sin from our past that now still plagues us in our modern world. In our modern world‚ we cannot even imagine how it would be to be part of a genocide. However‚ many people still experience it today. We must learn to accept the diversity that flourishes in our world and see differences and respect that no one is the same. Through respect for our fellow man we can work to stop genocide. Genocide has destroyed many people‚ millions of people‚ and we‚ as humans‚ must stop this unforgivable
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One and a half to three MILLION people died in the Cambodian genocide. Genocide is the extermination of an entire race or group of people‚ or trying to completely wipe them out. That means there is murdering of the people‚ causing serious physical or mental harm‚ inflicting on group conditions to cause it’s destruction‚ terminate births within the group‚ or transferring people from the group to another group. In a genocide the most disgusting things are done‚ people are tortured‚ raped‚ worked to
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From the dawn of time up to current day‚ genocides have been happening throughout history. Some earlier genocides have not even been recorded or documented. Genocides happen because one group wants complete control and absolute power over another. People can be killed for having different ideas or not being similar to to the opposing group. Knowing this‚ one could see that genocides only end with senseless and brutal discrimination which results in many deaths. From 1975 to 1979‚ Pol Pot and the
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government in Cambodia after the U.S.A carpet bombed Cambodia and made it politically unstable. The genocide that followed this was horrendous. The effects of it still remain. The Cambodian Genocide followed the eight steps of genocide and negatively impacted Cambodia for years to come. Classification categorizes people based on their ethnicity‚ race‚ religion or nationality. A classification in this genocide was the Old People and the New People system. The people that were kicked out of the urban cities
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Jessica LeVasseur Anthropology of Crime Kandel October 26‚ 2012 Cambodian Genocide Cambodia‚ a southeastern Asian country‚ has endured many feats in history and has often been conquered but never has it seen such a devastation as heinous as in the year 1970. With a population of roughly 7 million people at the time‚ almost all Cambodians prior to genocide practiced Buddhism. The country was reigned by France for nearly 100 years and finally gained independence in 1953. Cambodia then became
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In the Cambodian genocide‚ 1975 to 1979 one third of the population died. Two articles about genocide survivors are “killing fields’ survivor documents Cambodian genocide” by Jennifer Hyde and “Why the arts are as important as hospitals in Cambodia” by Emily Wight. Individuals and societies who suffer a trauma such as genocide can heal through using art or bring guilty people to trial. Some people heal through art‚ like music. If Pond was a slow learner‚ he would have been killed by Khmer
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Genocide As stated by the United Nations Genocide Convention‚ genocide is a coordinated plan to destroy‚ in whole or in part‚ a national‚ ethnic‚ racial‚ or religious group‚ by killing‚ causing serious bodily or mental harm‚ inflicting conditions designed to bring about its destruction‚ preventing births within the group ‚ or removing children from the group. The term did not exist until Raphael Lemkin devised the word in 1944. Therefore there was no legal mechanism for the international community
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Genocide: For the Dead and Living We Must Bear Witness Article 1 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights states: Everyone has the right to life‚ liberty and security of person. The right to life seems like the most basic right; a person is born‚ and they have the right to breathe air‚ drink water‚ and make any other necessary decisions to live. However‚ every now and then someone (or a group of people) decides that a person‚ or an entire race‚ does not deserve to live. Genocide‚ the purposeful
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