Cambodia
Tuŏl Tumpung

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    • Day 351

      Phnom Penh

      August 19, 2023 in Cambodia ⋅ ☁️ 33 °C

      19. + 20. August
      Besuch des Tuol-Sleng-Genozid-Museums, das ehemalige Gefängnis S-21 der Roten Khmer (Kommunistische Partei)
      Unglaublich was sich vor gut 40 Jahren (1975-1979) in Kambodscha abgespielt hat. Es dient als Erinnerung an die dort begangenen Verbrechen während der Zeit des Demokratischen Kambodschas. Die ehemalige Schule wurde als Gefängnis und Folterzentrum umfunktioniert und über 18'000 unschuldige Frauen, Männer, ja sogar Kinder wurden dort zum Tode verurteilt...Read more

    • Day 41

      Phnom Penh - S-21

      February 10, 2023 in Cambodia ⋅ 🌙 30 °C

      We went to S-21 which has now been turned into a museum. This was somewhat even more upsetting than the killing fields. We paid for the guide, who was a local woman who was 8 at the time of this genecide. She escaped to Vietnam with her mother and 1 sister but her father and brother and sister were murdered. She told us how she wanted to lesnr English so she could be a tour guide to tell people about what happened but she used to cry every day but now she is okay. The prison was once a secondary school, where the classrooms had been turned into prison cells. We first saw the rooms where it was 1 persons cell. These were people who once worked for the regime but Pol Pot was a paranoid man who didn't trust anyone and they would end up dead. He killed for anything, he wanted anyone clever dead and anyone who didn't agree with him but he would make up reasons why they should be dead. We saw the shackles where they would be tied to the metal hospital beds. The once volleyball beams were turned into a torture system where they would tie their hands behind their backs and hang them up and put them in the water jars. We saw prisons cells which had 11 cells in a room. These were build up with cement and brick. Nobody was allowed to talk. There were 20000 prisoners and only 7 survived + 4 children. One of the survivors was an artist, who drew many of the pictures on display to show us his experience such as the water hose into the room as their 'shower' every week. The finals prisons were 16 in a room and separated with wood. They would sleep with their feet in shackles sometimes 20 people in a row. They were tortured beyond belief. There were pictures of the victims everywhere and there were so so many faces, with many young faces in and amongst along with the babies and their mothers. We saw photographs of how some victims were found. There was still blood on the floor from the tortures and the deaths and the rapes. The museum was really informative and provided many documents including from the trials. The sickening this is, none of this was known about universally for another 20 years. By the time there was a trial, Pol Pot was dead at the age of 73 and there were 5 more senior leaders. The man named Duch was one of the main leaders who ran the prison.

      Later on, we went for our final meal with Aron and Rachel to a delicious vegan Indian restaurant and had a 'dopa' daal and paratha. We then went to a rooftop bar and enjoyed cocktails before finally parting ways!
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    • Day 20

      Tuol Sleng Genozid Museum

      January 18 in Cambodia ⋅ ☀️ 34 °C

      Sehr ergreifende Erfahrung im Tuol Sleng Genozid Museum. Ehemalige Schule, die von den Roten Khmer zum Foltergefängnis umfunktioniert wurde. Unglaublich, zu was Menschen fähig sein können und wie schnell eine Gruppe Macht gewinnt und unfassbare Gräueltaten verüben kann. Besuch nimmt wirklich mit, aber ein Muss, wenn man in Phnom Penh ist. 😥 Die goldene Stupa ist den vermutlich 18.000 Inhaftierten und Ermordeten gewidmet.Read more

    • Day 34–35

      The capital

      January 30 in Cambodia ⋅ ☁️ 33 °C

      Initially not planned, I make a stop in Cambodia's capital Phnom Penh because it's on the way to Siem Reap anyway and I really want to visit the Genocide Museum.
      Apart from the S21 Museum and the Royal Palace, which in my opinion is not really worth seeing, the city doesn't really have much to offer apart from a few other temples.

      But the Tuol Sleng S21 is definitely worth a visit! In the Cambodian genocide between 1975 and 1979, around 20% of the total population was killed - 1.5-2 million people.
      In S21, which was previously a school and then turned into a prison, around 20,000 people were held, tortured and mostly murdered on the so-called killing fields.
      Some of the original cells still exist today.
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    • Day 51

      Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum

      February 17 in Cambodia ⋅ ☀️ 30 °C

      I wanted to see the Tuol Sleng genocide museum (Prison S21). It is one of 196 genocide prison sites that occurred under Pol Pot's Khmer Rouge's totalitarian regime (1975–79). Chris wanted to chill at the hotel. At this site, over 18,000 were killed. I took a self guided tour with audio, which explained the site as I walked through. The torturing and suffering that occurred here was unbelievable. After the Americans dropped more bombs in Cambodia during the Vietnam War than in all of WWII, a lot of Cambodians moved to urban centers. Pol Pot's revolutionary army moved into the urban centers, and many people were initially happy as they saw it as a save from what they just experienced. But his goal was to kill all educated people, politicians, monks - who he deemed as "new" people. He moved these people into the prisons where they were tortured until they admitted that they were basically against the movement and they were killed. An estimated 2 million Cambodians were killed (1 in 4 Cambodians) during these short years. S21 was a school that was turned into a secret torturing prison where no one left alive, except 12 people at the end when Pol was defeated. Prisoners were shackled together laying down in a room, some were in small rooms with an old ammunition tin for their toilet and if they overfilled it they had to lick the floor clean, the old school swing was converted into a gallows where people were hung for torture and then lowered into a big pot of urine and feces. The rules for obeying until death were posted. It was a surreal experience that must have been so horrific.Read more

    • Day 48

      S21

      February 23 in Cambodia ⋅ ⛅ 34 °C

      In a set of buildings that were once a high school, 18,000 people were interrogated, tortured and sent to the killing fields. The Prison was set up to force people to confess to being enemies of the state, even if they weren’t. The Angkor was never wrong; if you had been sent to S21 you must be guilty so don’t argue and write your confession. Only 7 survived the ordeal.Read more

    • Day 29

      Genocide Museun

      February 27 in Cambodia ⋅ ☀️ 34 °C

      Okay das sind eindrücken die ich erstmal verarbeiten muss.

      -----
      Paar eindrücke zum ausfirmulieren

      Wie ein KZ.

      Bevolkerungbsolltebklassenlosngemacht werden, intellektuelle, Künstler wurden ermordet, schon eine brille reichte.

      Wer in diesen Gefängnis war kam nicht raus, viele foltermethoden bis Geständnis unterschrieben wurde, dann wurde man ermordet.

      Die ganze Familie mit

      Menschen hatten keine Namen mehr nur noch Nummern, nur die Unterhose.

      14 Häftlinge wurden noch auf den folterbetten tot gefunden, keiner weiss ihre Namen.

      Sammelzellen, kleinzellen, fussFessel, man. Musste immer liegen bleiben, kaum was zu essen

      Gefängnis war vorher eine Schule vorher

      Phnom Penh entvolkert

      3 Tage nach der Besetzung war Phnom penh entvolkert, wer in s21 ankam, musste seine Kleidung abgeben

      12 Personen überlebten

      Zwangsarbeit man musste als Landwirt Hand arbeiten - modernes landwirtschaftliche gerät verrostete
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    • Day 77–80

      Phnom Penh - Killing Fields und S21

      February 28 in Cambodia ⋅ ☁️ 30 °C

      Heute habe ich die Killing Fields sowie das Völkermordmuseum besichtigt. Von 1975-1979 wurden hier und in anderen Stätten in ganz Kambodscha unter der Herrschaft der Roten Khmer insgesamt 1,7 Mio. Menschen zur Zwangsarbeit geschickt, gefoltert und anschließend hingerichtet. Dies sind ein Viertel der kambodschanischen Bevölkerung.Read more

    • Day 13

      S21, la machine de mort Khmer Rouge

      March 5 in Cambodia ⋅ ⛅ 27 °C

      Titre du film :
      "S21, la machine de mort Khmer Rouge", où bourreaux et survivants sont confrontés

      Tuol Sleng est un musée situé à Phnom Penh, la capitale du Cambodge. Il traite des crimes du régime khmer rouge et du génocide commis entre 1975 et 1979 lors de la période du Kampuchéa démocratique.

      Au départ, Tuol Sleng est une école qui fut transformée par les forces de Pol Pot en prison et en centre de torture nommé « S-21 », la plus connue des quelque 196 prisons que la dictature des Khmers rouges avait disséminées à travers le Cambodge durant les années 1970. Elle était dirigée par Kang Kek Ieu, alias « Douch »(Kang Leck Iev alias Duch) et elle dépendait directement des plus hauts dirigeants du régime. Environ 18 000 personnes y ont été détenues dans une « machine de mort », avec une « élimination systématique des prisonniers ».

      Tout détenu envoyé à Tuol Sleng était un coupable obligé, dont il s'agissait d'obtenir la confession de crimes si besoin imaginaires, notamment au moyen de la torture, avant son exécution pratiquement inéluctable.

      Le musée est devenu un lieu de mémoire très fréquenté par les touristes mais peu par les Cambodgiens pour des raisons d'histoire familiale et politique[
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    • Tag 146 - Kratie

      December 21, 2023 in Cambodia ⋅ ☀️ 27 °C

      Am Nachmittag kamen wir nach einer äußerst unbequemen Autofahrt endlich in Kratie an. In einem Mini-Van, der 8 reguläre Sitze hatte, aber 16 Personen und Pakete mit Keramikfliesen transportierte, fühlte sich die Fahrt eher wie eine komplizierte Version von "Reise nach Jerusalem" an. Es gab Momente, in denen wir lachten, aber bei einer fünfstündigen Fahrt war es auch zwischenzeitlich eher zum ausrasten. Naja, wir sind ja zum Glück angekommen.Read more

    You might also know this place by the following names:

    Tuŏl Tumpung, Tuol Tumpung

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