“To spare you is no profit. . . to destroy you is no loss.”

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
U.N. Definition of Genocide Est. December 1948 Genocide means any of the following acts committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national,
Advertisements

Antoni Randhawa Shawn Song Eric Baxter. Ethnically The targets were Vietnamese, Chinese, Muslims, and Buddhist monks. People residing in urbanized areas.
Cambodia Genocide Led by Pol Pot and Khmer Rouge (Red Cambodians) million deaths.
The Cambodian Genocide Genocide? Or Politicide?. The Killing Fields Context of the Vietnam War Communist Khmer Rouge Revolt against Prince Sihanouk.
Cambodia.
Cambodia: The ‘Sideshow’ of Vietnam The neutral country that becomes an inferno in the 1970s.
Crimes Against Humanity The Cambodian Genocide "All humanity is one undivided and indivisible family, and each one of us is responsible for the.
War in Southeast Asia Chapter 15 Section 4.
The Killing Fields of Cambodia. The Khmer Rouge were the ruling party of Cambodia from 1975 to 1979 They were responsible for one of the worst mass killings.
Introduction to Cambodia World Studies. About Cambodia  Small country located in Southeast Asia.  Capital city is Phnom Penh  Population is approx.
Augugliaro/ Kempton/ Patten.  In 1953 Cambodia gained independence from France after nearly 100 years of colonist rule.  The population of Cambodia.
***Castle Learning Regents Review due Friday***.
CAMBODIAN GENOCIDE HOPE PROJECT Darcie Stanton and Deanna Harris 'To spare you is no profit, to destroy you is no loss.‘ -Khmer Rouge Slogan.
Vietnam Socialist Republic of Vietnam Population: 84.4 million Capital: Hanoi Largest city: Ho Chi Minh City (Saigon)
TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Vietnam War and Southeast Asia.
The French ruled Cambodia from 1864, after King Norodom signed a treaty making Cambodia a protectorate of France Cambodia formed a part of French Indochina,
Cold War Spreads to Asia (continued). Today’s Agenda Vietnam Discuss split, war, and leadership during Cold War Video Clip Cambodia Discuss rise of Khmer.
Objectives Describe events in Indochina after World War II.
Germany A Tragic History. Setting the Scene In 1961, a policeman named Conrad Schumann stood guard at a barbed wire fence separating East Berlin from.
Asia History. 1) Explain how India’s caste system influenced the religion of Hinduism and the teachings of Buddha. Caste system -rigid grouping of social.
Cambodian Genocide What do these kids all have in common?
20 th Century Genocide 7 th Grade Humanities Mr. Hardy RMS IB Middle School 1948 the United Nations defined the Crime of Genocide as "any of the following.
Genocide in Africa. What’s happening in the Sudan? The fighting started in early 2003 Black Africans from Darfur rebelled against the country’s Arab.
Genocide A Retrospective
The Cambodian Genocide By: Max Kelly. Background Info  Before 1975, Cambodia was under the rule of Prince Norodom Sihanouk  In the 1960’s, the Khmer.
Vietnam War in Cambodia Cambodia: a neutral state in the war Cambodia: a neutral state in the war 30,000 poorly equipped Cambodian soldiers vs. 180,000.
Khmer Rouge: Pol Pot Genocide By Jessica Sokol, Chris Laug, Kristen Oettinger, Corin Geoghegan, and Sophia Bastedo.
The Cambodian Genocide Located in Southeast Asia between Thailand and Vietnam Is the size of half of California Was granted independence from France in.
Background: Vietnam Civil war broke out in Vietnam in 1954 North – Viet Kong, communist, supported by China, hid in South Vietnam South – supported.
BELLWORK 1.Why did President Nixon expand the Vietnam War into Cambodia? 2.Why did it take so long to establish a peace negotiation in Vietnam? 3.What.
WELCOME BACK What does Genocide mean? Give 2 examples
What is Genocide? Kirsten Farabi UCD Teacher Candidate 2009.
Southeast Asia and The Pacific Rim Ch. 17 Sec. 4 We read the lengthy poem paradise lost it was written in the seventeenth Century by john milton.
Cambodian Holocaust.
9 th - 14 th Century: Khmer Empire ruled – Angkor- seat of Khmer Empire- world’s largest pre-industrialized civilization – Angkor Wat- the most famous.
Cambodian Genocide By: Shardei Lozada. Vocabulary: Communism: A type of government where the government owns all businesses and farms and provides health.
Abbas and Nana. Ruling Party of Cambodia from 1975 to 1979 They were responsible for one of the worst mass genocide of the 20 th century Led by Pol Pot-Real.
Cambodian Genocide. 1.What important event happened in 1953? Gained independence after century of French of rule Almost completely Buddhist Ruled by Prince.
Bell Ringer Read “The Long War: America in Vietnam” (pgs ) Respond, on your own paper, to the following questions 1.What role might the U.S. play.
Cambodian Genocide Nora Irma.
Cambodia From the depths of the Killing Fields.
Cambodia Genocide By: Brendan Anderson and Bryce Hartzel.
Cambodia By; Meghan P, Olivia E, Hannah L. South East Asia Capital: Phnom Penh Less than half the size of California Independence from France in 1953:
Vietnam War: Introduction America’s Unpopular War.
CH 15 SEC 4 War in Southeast Asia I. Indochina After World War 2 The French had controlled much of Indochina from the 1800’s until World War 2. During.
Cambodia KRISTA AND KIMIKO. Before the Genocide  Cambodia was caught up in the war between America and Vietnam. They were one of the many battlefields.
Cambodia Genocide. Perpetrators When: April 17, 1975 – January 7, 1979 Who: Khmer Rouge (Marxism/Maoism) Pol Pot ( ) Secretary General Khmer Rouge.
***Castle Learning Regents Review due Friday***
TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Section 4 Vietnam War and Southeast Asia.
Cambodia’s Killing Fields
Chapter 18 – The Cold War Section 4: Vietnam War and Southeast Asia
Vietnam War and Southeast Asia
Vietnam War and Southeast Asia
Only 20 school days left!!.
Cambodian Holocaust.
WELCOME BACK What does Genocide mean? Give 2 examples
Genocide in Cambodia
The Cambodian Genocide
What does this image represent?
WHAT IS THIS?.
Before the Cambodian Genocide
Vietnam Conflict.
War in Southeast Asia Chapter 15.4.
COLD WAR CONFLICTS WH Unit 8 Lesson 5.
Southeast Asia.
Vietnam War and Southeast Asia
Cambodian Genocide
Vietnam War and Southeast Asia

Presentation transcript:

“To spare you is no profit. . . to destroy you is no loss.” The Cambodian Genocide

Genocide According to the Dictionary . . . The deliberate extermination of a racial, religious, or ethnic group. According to the United Nations . . . “Any of the following acts committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial, or religious group, as such: killing members of the group; causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group; deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life, calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part; imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group; [and] forcibly transferring children of the group to another group."

Cambodia? What? Located in South East Asia Once the center of the ancient kingdom of the Khmer; their capital city was Angkor. The present day capital is Phnom Penh In 1953, Cambodia gained its independence after nearly 100 years of French rule The population of Cambodia in the 1960’s was over seven million; almost all of whom were Buddhists.

What is a “Buddhist”? Buddhism is a family of beliefs and practices considered by most to be a religion and based on the teachings attributed to Siddhartha Gautama, commonly known as "The Buddha" (the Awakened One). Buddhists recognize him as an awakened teacher who shared his insights to help sentient beings end their suffering by understanding the true nature of phenomena, thereby escaping the cycle of suffering and rebirth, that is, achieving Nirvana.

What is a “Buddhist”? Among the methods various schools of Buddhism apply towards this goal are: ethical conduct and altruistic behavior, devotional practices, renunciation of worldly matters, meditation, physical exercises, study, and the cultivation of wisdom. Karma Buddhist schools disagree on what the historical teachings of Gautama Buddha were, so much so that some scholars claim Buddhism does not have a clearly definable common core.

The Four Noble Truths of Buddhism Life as we know it ultimately is or leads to suffering in one way or another. Suffering is caused by craving or attachments to worldly pleasures of all kinds. This is often expressed as a deluded clinging to a certain sense of existence, to selfhood, or to the things or phenomena that we consider the cause of happiness or unhappiness. Suffering ends when craving ends, when one is freed from desire. This is achieved by eliminating all delusion, thereby reaching a liberated state of Enlightenment Reaching this liberated state is achieved by following the path laid out by the Buddha.

The Military Coup In 1970 Prince Sihanouk was deposed; the leader of the new right-wing government was lieutenant- general Lon Nol, he was made president of the ‘Khmer Republic’. Prince Sihanouk and his followers joined forces with a communist guerrilla organization founded in 1960 known as the Khmer Rouge; they attacked Lon Nol’s army and civil war began.

The Role of the Vietnamese War Cambodia is neighbored by Vietnam to the East Cambodia had preserved neutrality during the war by giving a little to both sides: Vietnamese communists were allowed to use a Cambodian port to ship supplies The United States was allowed to bomb Viet Cong hideouts in Cambodia; when Lon Nol took over, U.S. troops felt free to move into Cambodia, essentially turning it into part of the Vietnamese battlefield Resulted in 750,000 deaths Drove more recruits to the Khmer Rouge

Spread Too Thin Lon Nol’s army was kept busy trying to suppress not only Vietnamese communists (Viet Cong) but also the rising Khmer Rouge . . . In 1975, Lon Nol was defeated by the Khmer Rouge; more than 156,000 had died during the civil war . . . half of them were civilians.

A New Nation Pol Pot, the leader of the guerilla movement, and the Khmer Rouge then embarked on a mission: The Reconstruction of Cambodia Model: Mao’s Communist China Population must be made to work as laborers Anyone in opposition must be eliminated Mao Zedong Pol Pot

The ‘Reconstruction’ Plan Under threat of death, all inhabitants were forced to leave their towns and cities People who refused to leave were killed, as were those who didn’t leave fast enough. All political and civil rights were abolished Children were to be taken from their parents and placed in forced labor camps Factories, schools, and universities were shut down; so were hospitals Lawyers, doctors, teachers, engineers, scientists ,and professional people in any field (including the army) were killed along with their families Religion was banned Buddhist monks were killed Temples were all destroyed Music/Radio sets were banned It was possible to be shot simply for knowing a foreign language, wearing glasses, laughing, or crying.

The Survivors Became unpaid laborers Worked on minimum rations Worked impossibly long hours Were discouraged from having personal relationships; expressing their affection Many people became weak from overwork and starvation and often fell ill . . . The only treatment was death.

Other Targets Racism in the Khmer Rouge Also targeted: Minority groups Ethnic Chinese Vietnamese Thai Cambodians with ties to any of the above ancestry lines Christians Muslims

The Toll Civilian deaths during this period from: Executions Disease Exhaustion Starvation . . . Are estimated to be at well over 2 million.

The Fall of the Khmer Rouge Links with China created hostility between the Pol Pot government and Vietnam In 1978, the Vietnamese invaded and overthrew the Khmer Rouge and set up a puppet government composed mainly of defectors from the Khmer Rouge, this government was: Socialist Comparatively benign, but had difficulty organizing because of the “Reconstruction” which had . . . Ruined the economy Left all competent professionals, engineers, technicians, and planners dead (Oops)

America to the Rescue (What the . . . ?!) The Khmer Rouge, in retreat, had some help from American relief agencies (that’s cute . . .) In addition, we also ensured that the Khmer Rouge (rather than the Vietnamese-backed communist government) held on to Cambodia’s seat in the United Nations The West’s fueling of the Khmer Rouge help up Cambodia’s recovery for a decade (Thanks, guys) Uhh . . . WHY?! The Cold War continued to dictate what allegiances existed The United States hated the Soviet Union, the Soviet Union was an ally of Vietnam, therefore, the United States hated Vietnam

The Return of Prince Sihanouk Under international pressure, Vietnam finally withdrew its occupying army from Cambodia Approximately 65,000 people were killed over the course of the twenty year conflict between the two countries; 14,000 of them were civilians. A temporary coalition government formed: Once again, it was legal to own land The state religion, Buddhism, was restored The last troops left Cambodia in 1989, and its name was officially restored In 1991, a peace agreement was signed between the opposing groups, and in 1993, peacekeeping troops were arranged and the former monarch, Prince Sihanouk, was elected to lead the new government once again. When Pol Pot’s trials began, many of the Khmer Rouge entered into deals to get immunity from prosecution; not surprisingly, they blamed everything on Pol Pot and claimed no knowledge of the mass murders.

In-Class Essay Having learned both about the Jewish Holocaust and the Cambodian genocide, what similarities and differences do you see in what happened in Cambodia and what happened in Europe twenty years earlier? What recurring themes are visible? (Hint: in terms of Western – particularly U.S. - involvement) What responsibility do you believe we have to intervene in such affairs?