May. 7, 2012
Written by
Keith Uhlig
Wausau Daily Herald
If you go
What: A community presentation by author/activist Loung UngWhen: 7 p.m. Tuesday
Where: The auditorium of Wausau East High School, 2607 N. 18th St.
Cost: Free
You should know: Ung’s presentation is sponsored by A Walk in Their Shoes, a collaborative effort by north central Wisconsin educators who work to put a personal face on historical events.
For more information: Colin Hanson at 715-352-2727 or colin@edgar.k12.wi.us.
A survivor of the Cambodian genocide of the late 1970s will tell her story in Wausau this week.
Loung Ung, author of the award-winning memoir "First They Killed My Father: A
Daughter of Cambodia Remembers" will speak in a community forum Tuesday
at Wausau East High School. Ung's presentation is sponsored by A Walk
in Their Shoes, a collaborative effort by a group of north central
Wisconsin educators. The goal of A Walk in Their Shoes is to bring
history to life for students and community members, linking personal
stories to world-changing events.
The
group has sponsored presentations by people who witnessed wars in
Rwanda and Sudan in Africa, and the son of a leader of a Jewish guerilla
army that fought the Nazis during World War II.
Ung
was a young girl in 1975 when Pol Pot and the Khmer Rouge conquered
Cambodia, killing some 2 million people. Among them were Ung's parents,
two sisters and 20 other relatives.
She
managed to live, and was brought to the United States. As an adult,
she's worked as an advocate against violence and a peace activist in
Cambodia. In addition to "First They Killed My Father," she has written
two other memoirs, "Lucky Child" and "Lulu in the Sky." "Lucky Child" is
about her childhood growing up in America, a story she juxtaposes with
the story of one of her sisters, who stayed in Cambodia and also
survived. "Lulu in the Sky," a book recently published, is about her
young adult years, dealing with depression and post-traumatic stress
disorder.
Ung, 41,
now living in Cleveland, will speak about the struggle she went through
in Cambodia and "what it takes to survive the peace, long after the
war," she said in a phone interview Friday from Boston, where she was on
a book tour.
She'll also underscore how the good in humanity remains even in the worst of horrors.
"It
hasn't been easy," Ung said. "But's it's possible to be OK. ... I found
healing love with my country, with myself and healing with work in
activism."
Colin
Hanson, an Edgar Elementary School teacher who is one of the founders of
A Walk in Their Shoes, said Ung was chosen to speak because of her
compelling story, and also because she is from Southeast Asia.
"I hope it builds a connection with the people from Southeast Asia living here in central Wisconsin," Hanson said.
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