Tuol Sleng Museum: living reminder of human cruelty or a 'cheap' and cynical propaganda machine? |
'To put it in a nutshell, Tuol Sleng has been turned into a propaganda machine.’
by Serge Thion
Sometimes, some things cannot be left without a comment.
Lya Badgley's article, "Archives at Tuol Sleng Imperiled" (Phnom Penh
Post, June 18-July 1, 1993) is at some points misleading and raises a question
which deserves some more thoughts.
She is director of the Cornell University Library
Conservation (or Conversation?) Project. I know the library as I did research
there, many years ago under the very kind guidance of the late Professor John
M. Echols. This is the best place in the world to study Cambodia and many other
Southeast Asian subjects. The library has done an immense service to Khmer
history in microfilming the Tuol Sleng Archives. Later generations will
acknowledge this. I did my best, in January last year, to have the project
resumed after it had stalled because of the post-Agreements political
atmosphere. The documents, left over by Pol Pot's political police, cannot be
safeguarded for ever in a climate where all paper documents either disintegrate
or are sold on the market. Beside, they are political hot potatoes. The
killers' squad and their boss, nicknamed Deuch, had some R&R in Sakeo
(Thailand) in 1979 and are now roaming free in the forest.
Lya Badgley says these documents are a
"treasure". It is true. The fall of Phnom Penh on January 7,1979, to
the Vietnamese army was so sudden that Deuch and his team had no time to carry
away the bulk of the papers. Historians have thus the rare luck to have a
glimpse into the operations of a KGB-type of political police. But the utmost
caution should be applied because the documents contain an incredible mixture
of truths and lies. Torture produced many false admissions and, in fact, very few
of these documents have been so far accurately analyzed.
This "treasure" is now safely recorded. Khmer
Rouge were good record-keepers in any case and nothing indicates they would
have a policy of destroying documents. I believe they just do not care about
them. Is there anything else of value in Tuol Sleng that would require an
effort of conservation? The place, the buildings, according to Ms Badgley, who
says they "create an experience of an atmosphere unknowable from any
book".
I know the place. I knew it very well. I spent one year
teaching in these building in 1968-69, when it was called the Lycée Chau Ponhea
Yat. I remember the noisy crowd of schoolboys and girls, my Khmer and French
colleagues, the classroom where I tried to explain the contribution of Galileo
to the birth of experimental physics to pupils who had never seen a lab. Twelve
years later I was back on the old premises, then called Tuol Sleng. This
ordinary school was surrounded by barbed wire and corrugated iron, to prevent
you from looking inside.
But the place was not as it was when Deuch had left it.
Vietnamese experts had been brought in, soon after the discovery. Since 1975,
these North Vietnamese experts had created throughout Vietnam several political
museums. Some of them had been trained in Auschwitz, Poland. Auschwitz itself
had been closed for several years, in the 50's, to allow rebuilding and
redesigning. In Tuol Sleng also, many things have changed over time. In 1991,
the map made of skulls could not be seen anywhere. The huge pile of clothes,
deliberately reminiscent of WW II concentration camps photographs had
disappeared. The plaster busts of Pol Pot, which were probably brought in from
somewhere else in 1979, had vanished. Many other small changes had occurred.
What I want to convey is the idea that museification
implies an alteration of the place. Efforts are made to reorganize space and
display artifacts to create a meaning that was lacking or was not obvious
enough. This is quite conceivable when a museum is built for this purpose. But
when it is organized in the very place where events took place, you have to
transform the place in order to make it look more like what it was, to change
it to look more true. I find this paradox unbearable.
I knew this place, several of my friends were killed
there. But what I see now is not the real place. Why should we consider it
worth keeping if authenticity is lacking? The theatrical reorganization of the
place creates a distance. I believe casual visitors cannot really grasp what
really happened through just walking by horror pictures. This would require a
lot of knowledge on conditions in Cambodia at the time that either belong to
the realm of personal experience or to a strong will to understand history. And
books teach much more.
'To put it in a nutshell, Tuol Sleng has been turned into
a propaganda machine.’ I strongly believe that a struggle should be waged
against Pol Pot because the danger is still there, waiting in the wings. But a
Stalinist type of propaganda (Polish-communist origins of the Tuol Sleng
presentation) has, in my view, a very limited value. I do not believe that Tuol
Sleng should be kept as it is because some part of it is fake. This is not a
honorable way to show respect for the victims.
Moreover, I do not believe that Cambodians really accept
this kind of institution. Very few Khmers ever visit the museum. Prince
Sihanouk suggested to cremate all the human remains to appease the wandering
souls. If a stupa was then erected, crowds of Cambodians would gather there, I
am sure. Tuol Sleng was designed to attract Western support against Pol Pot by
equating, in a subdued way, the 1975-79 massacres to the Jewish drama during
the Nazi period. The use of the very word "Genocide" is a further
proof of it. This is cheap propaganda. It did not stop the West, and
particularly the U.S. government, supporting Pol Pot until quite recently.
Keeping monuments to educate for the future is an
illusion. The keeping of Auschwitz did not prevent Tuol Sleng. Tuol Sleng does
not prevent Sarajevo. Politics is not rooted in memory but in the thirst for
power. And memory in itself is not strongly related to justice. You want an
example? On the roster of the US. "Campaign to oppose the return of the
Khmer Rouge", you find William Colby, a former head of the CIA. Let's
forget the CIA. But this man was the head of the Phoenix program in the Mekong
Delta in 1968-69. As such, he ordered the killing of 60 to 80,000 civilians
suspected to be Vietcong. Where is the court which would declare this now
respected U.S. citizen a war criminal? Is this kind of man qualified to
patronize a Genocide Museum? Let us thank Cornell, the Luce and Christopher
Reynolds foundations for having saved the archives and let the Cambodians
decide for themselves what they will do with Tuol Sleng.
Serge Thion
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