By Paul Chesser on 7.2.09 @ 12:00PM
I wonder how many of those huge portraits of dictators are
"commissioned" under threat of torture or death. That's what I
thought as I continue to follow the testimony in the
Nuremburg-type trials of the Khmer Rouge.
I wonder how many of those huge portraits of dictators are
"commissioned" under threat of torture or death. That's what I
thought as I continue to follow the testimony in the
Nuremburg-type trials of the Khmer Rouge. As
I mentioned yesterday, two of the men who survived the
torture administered at the S-21 under Cambodian dictator Pol Pot
were artists. This is
how Bou Meng survived, from AP:
The artist was put to work painting portraits that
glorified Mao Zedong of China and North Korea's Kim Il Sung and
another that mocked Ho Chi Minh, the father of Vietnam's
communist revolution.
"I was ordered to paint a picture of Ho Chi Minh's head on
the body of a dog," 68-year-old Bou Meng told a U.N.-backed
tribunal. Cambodia's archenemy was neighboring Vietnam, which
eventually invaded to oust the Khmer Rouge in 1979....
The beatings stopped when his jailers found out he had a
skill that could serve them.
"I survived because I could paint exact portraits of Pol
Pot," he said. His first job was to copy Pol Pot's image from a
photograph and make a towering painting that was 10 feet high
and 5 feet wide (3 meters high and 1.5 meters wide). It took
three months to complete.
Duch then ordered him to make three more paintings of Pol
Pot and the other communist leaders.
Duch would sometimes oversee his work and smile at him when
he did a good job or give him cigarettes, Bou Meng said.
Interesting how these dictators aren't always in one big
brotherhood (as we already knew with Stalin and Hitler). In the
eyes of Pol Pot, China was good; the Soviet Union and Vietnam
were bad (the latter also oweing to land disputes and other
neighbor-related conflicts).
topics:
genocide, China