02 June 2007

Tuol Sleng & Choeung Ek

Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum

The temples of Angkor are, some might say, a less important part of Cambodia's history. Certainly they are beautiful and awe-inspiring. They are, of course, very photogenic ... their images grace the postcards that are sold (12 for only US$1) at their feet and tourists clamour on, over, and in front of them for their own photos. But I think if you are going to see only one thing, or perhaps two things, while in Cambodia, they should be the Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum/Security Prison 21 (S-21) and the Killing Fields of Choeung Ek.

Memorial Stupa at Choeung Ek

Both sites are difficult to visit. The obvious reason is, of course, because of what took place there. But another reason is the atmosphere of both settings. Tuol Sleng has such a banality to it. The building was a high school and, other than the barbed wire, it still looks like a high school from the outside. Choeung Ek was an orchard on the outskirts of Phnom Penh; it retains that natural peacefulness, which was only reinforced by the beautiful sunny day on which we visited.

But then you get closer; you look closer. You see the open pits at Choeung Ek; you see the bars on the windows at Tuol Sleng. And you know that as disturbing as these images are, they are only that. Images. They cannot even begin to convey what it must have really been like ... to be imprisoned at Tuol Sleng, to arrive on a truck at Choeung Ek.

If you come to Cambodia, don't see just the temples. See Cambodia.

For more photos, see our Tuol Sleng & Choeung Ek photo album (please note, some of these photos are quite disturbing).

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