First they killed my father : a daughter of Cambodia remembers

Title
First they killed my father : a daughter of Cambodia remembers

Personal Author EPSB
Loung. Ung

Summary
Ung was only five when the Khmer Rouge began their murderous siege of Cambodia in 1975. By its end in 1979, approximately two million Cambodians had died from torture, execution, or starvation. Ung begins her narration as the family was sent into exile, vividly describing their struggle for survival in a world gone mad. Only half of her family will survive. Few families were left whole when the campaign was over. What sets Ung apart is that her childlike innocence, so evident early in her story, gives way to a crude but certain instinct for survival. As a child laborer in a garden she witnesses the daily burials of whole families. "I see them dig a hole underneath the hut of the dead family. . . . There were times when such scenes terrified me, but I have seen the ritual performed so many times that I feel nothing." At one point, she looks hopefully at a beautiful sunset. "Maybe there are gods living up there after all. When are they going to come down and bring peace to our land?" But then her father is taken away, never to be seen again. Unlike other major horrors of this century, there has been little literature from the Cambodian tragedy. Perhaps Ung's memoir should serve as a reminder that some history is best not left just to historians but to those left standing when the terror ends. (See also Chandler, p.741.) --Marlene Chamberlain

Year Published
2006,
 
2000

Physical Description
238, 16 p. : ill., map ; 21 cm.

Edition
1st Harper Perennial ed.

Note
$18.00

Personal Subject
Ung, Loung.

Subject
Political atrocities -- Cambodia.
 
Children -- Cambodia -- Biography.

Geographic Term
Cambodia -- Politics and government -- 1975-1979.
 
Cambodia -- History -- 1975-1979.

Genre
Biography.

Summary
Ung was only five when the Khmer Rouge began their murderous siege of Cambodia in 1975. By its end in 1979, approximately two million Cambodians had died from torture, execution, or starvation. Ung begins her narration as the family was sent into exile, vividly describing their struggle for survival in a world gone mad. Only half of her family will survive. Few families were left whole when the campaign was over. What sets Ung apart is that her childlike innocence, so evident early in her story, gives way to a crude but certain instinct for survival. As a child laborer in a garden she witnesses the daily burials of whole families. "I see them dig a hole underneath the hut of the dead family. . . . There were times when such scenes terrified me, but I have seen the ritual performed so many times that I feel nothing." At one point, she looks hopefully at a beautiful sunset. "Maybe there are gods living up there after all. When are they going to come down and bring peace to our land?" But then her father is taken away, never to be seen again. Unlike other major horrors of this century, there has been little literature from the Cambodian tragedy. Perhaps Ung's memoir should serve as a reminder that some history is best not left just to historians but to those left standing when the terror ends. (See also Chandler, p.741.) --Marlene Chamberlain

ISBN
9780060856267

Publisher
New York : Harper/Perennial , 2006, c2000.


LibraryCall NumberTypeItem BarcodeStatus
Edmonton Christian High959.6 UNGBook30905000099337Non-Fiction