The Last One

An Orphaned Child Fights to Survive the Killing Fields of Cambodia

by Marin R. Yann

The Last One
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The Last One

An Orphaned Child Fights to Survive the Killing Fields of Cambodia

by Marin R. Yann

Published Mar 12, 2013
340 Pages
Genre: BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY / Historical



 

Book Details

Memoirs of an Orphan Child


"A child 's unvarnished truth...stunning...heartbreaking...wrenching." The more I try to forget, the more the memories haunt me. Imagine that you are six years old. You have lost your father, mother, and siblings within the last year because of war. Imagine making a trip across a jungle infested with landmines. Imagine chasing snakes for food. Imagine a childhood spent taking beatings from soldiers and not being able to fight back. I was barely five years old in April 1975 when my family in Cambodia were forced by the Communist Khmer Rouge to leave our home. In our jungle encampment, among hundreds of other frightened evacuees, my younger brother became ill and died. After our next relocation, the soldiers took my father to build a canal to water the rice fields. He never returned. My older sister was forced to live in a girl's work camp, far away. After I recovered from a deadly illness, my mother died from an illness, in front of me. I was now alone. There was no one. I was six years old. Left to my own wits, I caught and ate flying termites, grasshoppers, crickets, fish, and snakes, anything edible. I was always hungry. Like a starving puppy, I stole leftover bones and sucked the juice out of them. Then, confined in various encampments with thousands of prisoners who were forced to build canals, I also was forced to help with the backbreaking labor in the water-laden rice fields. I kept running away, back to the forest. After three years and eight months under the brutal Khmer Rouge, the horrors of my life experience were not over, and surviving without any relatives was just the beginning. It was nine harsh years until I emigrated to America. My rebellious spirit kept me alive. "This is the breathtaking story of an orphan who survived the Khmer Rouge regime. Marin was condemned to a nightmare that few can imagine--growing up with the murderer of his family. Torn between love and hate, this is an incredible story about survival and forgiveness." --Youk Chhang, Director of The Documentation Center of Cambodia

 

About the Author

Marin R. Yann

Marin R. Yann lives in Long Beach, California, USA. He has a Bachelor in Criminal Law and a Master in Public Administration. He works as an advocate for the Cambodian-American communities. He volunteers for Friends Without A Border, an agency that builds and supports Angkor Hospital for Children in Siem Reap, Cambodia. Marin also serves as a board of director for Building Your Future Today, a non-profit organization in Cambodia. Helping the poor and needy children in Cambodia has become his purpose in life. "You feel great when you help a child who is in great need. You feel even better if you help to save a child's life."

 

Multi-Media

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