Life Changed By Pol Pot: Genocide In Cambodia

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In 1975 millions of people died. Pol Pot wanted to take control of Cambodia, so he constructed an army known as the Khmer Rough to help him destroy and reconstruct Cambodia. Life in Cambodia was forever changed because of the Cambodian Genocide; before the genocide life was calm and enjoyable, during the genocide living conditions were scary while also being depressing, and after the genocide life was poor, full of poverty, and starvation. Life in Cambodia was normal before the Genocide took place; Cambodians didn't worry about their family, but instead just lived happily. In 1954 Cambodia gained their full independence back, after almost 90 years of war. The people of Cambodia felt like they were a well-established country, and they took their first breath of freedom. The government had received about 300 million dollars from multiple country’s military and economics. Cambodia did not suffer with money, and each family was fed well, as long …show more content…
First, they overtook the government by overthrowing the prince, which led to a war, and in 1975 the Khmer Rouge won the war. Then, the Khmer Rouge started the mass killings. Everyone was taken from their families, friends, schools, and jobs. They were then sent to camps, where they would be put to harsh work, watch people die, and eventually rot to death. All businesses were shut down including hospitals, schools, universities, and factories. All religions were banned, and if you were Buddhist you would be shot automatically. If you wore glasses, spoke a foreign language, or even showed emotion, you were killed. People who escaped death were sent to labor camps and were not paid a cent. There was no medicine available, so if you got ill you would simply die. Innocent people who had done nothing wrong were suffering, all because one man imagined a “perfect” country, and was trying to make that