These photos were taken on a harrowing visit in 2002 to the Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum, which is housed in what was Security Prison 21 (S-21), a former high school that was converted into an interrogation and torture centre by the Khmer Rouge. During 1975-79, more than 17,000 people held at S-21 were subsequently executed there or at the Killing Fields of Choeung Ek. One of the most striking aspects of the museum is that it shows genocide 'on the cheap'. The high school looks as if little more than a week's effort was made to convert it into a torture centre, with the torture implements themselves simple household items or gym equipment from the school. Intentionally, we have not been to the museum many times, even though everyone who visits Cambodia should see it, because it is so distressing. We finally took Martin in 2008, as it seemed time for him to see with his own eyes what we had only talked about before, and he was willing to see it; Lisa has yet to go.
The pictures show the prisoners' security regulations; a torture room (with a photograph of the last vistim on the wall); the faces of the dead; the function of Building 'C'; some of the cells; and a view through the barbed wire into the courtyard.
Saturday, October 24, 2009
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