Imagem da capa de Survivor : the triumph of an ordinary man in the Khmer Rouge Genocide

Survivor : the triumph of an ordinary man in the Khmer Rouge Genocide

Chum Mey (Autor), Documentation Center of Cambodia (Órgão emissor)
"Chum Mey personifies the tormented history of his country, surviving gunfights and rocket attacks during a civil war, losing his wife and four children during the brutal Khmer Rouge regime, and dragged blindfolded into Tuol Sleng prison, where more than 12,000 people were chained and tortured and sent to a killing field. Only a handful survived, and Chum Mey’s story provides a rare glimpse inside the workings of a brutal and highly organized assembly line of death. At least 1.7 million people died between 1975 and 1979 when the Khmer Rouge ruled Cambodia. It was his skill as a mechanic that saved him, when after 12 days and nights of beatings and repeated electrocution, he was plucked from among the other prisoners and put to work repairing the typewriters his torturers used to record their forced confessions. Chum Mey himself confessed to a wild fantasy of counter-revolutionary work for the CIA, an organization whose name he had never heard before his torture began. He was ready to say anything in order to stop the pain. His confession is one of the few that have been translated into English and is reproduced in this book, the first of thousands of Tuol Sleng confessions to be published." -- page four of cover

Livro impresso, English, 2012
Documentation Center of Cambodia (DC-Cam), Phnom Penh, 2012