Cafe Khmer Rouge
Tags: cambodia weblog khmer rouge
Imagine if you were, say, French. And all people knew about, wanted to ask about, was the Vichy French period. As if there were no other aspect of culture and history.
Via Beth's Blog, I notice that there's a radio show slated about the very sexy topic of Cambodia blogs. http://www.radioopensource.org/cambodias-nascent-bloggosphere/
We're less interested in the, "hey! digital media technology is spreading to the Third World!" factor, and more interested in the notion that Cambodians are using online writing as a way of dealing with their painful, not often discussed past. Their blogs are recording personal and collective memory, sorting through the country's history of brutal repression under Pol Pot and the Khmer Rouge, and talking openly about wounds that have never really healed.
"sorting through the country's history of brutal repression"
"talking openly about wounds that have never really healed"
Um, which blogs are these? I don't think I've seen them yet. Sounds like this story is already written. (Prove me wrong, guys!)
My recommendation to our friends in the press: explore your story without preconceptions. You may find something new.
Most local tech-savvy Khmer webloggers are under 30, and were born after the Khmer Rouge era. They're products of the postwar baby boom.
Why is it that foreigners are so interested in the Khmer Rouge time? There are activists who would contend brutal repression is going on in the present day. There are plenty of wounds in a society that has huge difficulties with human trafficking, rural poverty, and laws that are poorly enforced.
I find many projects from overseas want to focus on Cambodia's history of war, not its history of art, scholarship, and peace that has survived the very brief Khmer Rouge era and lives on today.
The Khmer Rouge Tribunal is an extremely important issue that has some good people working on it. It certainly is horrific, but must it be used to frame every story? It's actually pretty difficult to find much about the KR time in contemporary Cambodian culture.
This foreign interest comes with dollars attached. Cambodia is not a rich country. The result? Genocide Tourism.