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Tuol Sleng is an absolute "must visit" if you are ever in Phnom Penh. $5 entrance fee. It's a testament to what happens when we allow politics and anger to overtake our humanity. Get there right at 8am when it opens to have the place to yourself - it's a very spooky feeling. Once the tour groups and school students start rolling in after 8:30, with the noise, running around etc. it loses some of its effect.
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Tuol Sleng is an absolute "must visit" if you are ever in Phnom Penh. $5 entrance fee. It's a testament to what happens when we allow politics and anger to overtake our humanity. Get there right at 8am when it opens to have the place to yourself - it's a very spooky feeling. Once the tour groups and school students start rolling in after 8:30, with the noise, running around etc. it loses some of its effect.
The experience itself is rather bleak and depressing. Obviously, the place holds a dark history and one can feel the pain and suffering that took place there. Lots of people but they remain polite and it’s not as noisy as one would expect. Didn’t get a private tour guide, just as good to get the audio and walk about yourself but can be hard to keep track of which audio to play when. Regardless, still worth visiting to appreciate the history and what the Khmer people have been through.
To understand and.appreciate what our Cambodian bothers and sisters experienced during teh Khmer Rouge, this museum is the closest to the.city. you get the chance to meet survivors and chat with them about their book. The.place is accessible for those with mobility challenge.
The Prison Museum is located in the south of Phnom Penh, Cambodia, where it was originally a high school school, and was used as a concentration camp for prisoners during the Bob period, also known as the S-21 prison. The camp, which had imprisoned more than 17,000 intellectuals, civilians, women and children, was a daily torture of countless people until the Hengshan Forest regime invaded Phnom Penh in 1979, leaving only 14 bodies and seven survivors. The torture equipment and presentations displayed in the museum were horrifying. Documentary films are also shown daily at 10 a.m. and 3 p.m.
S21 The Prison Museum is located in the south of Phnom Penh, which was originally a high school school and was used as a concentration camp for prisoners during the Bob period. The camp, which had imprisoned more than 17,000 intellectuals, civilians, women and children, was a daily torture of countless people until the Hengshan Forest regime invaded Phnom Penh in 1979, leaving only 14 bodies and seven survivors. The torture equipment and presentations displayed in the museum were horrifying. Documentary films are also shown daily at 10 a.m. and 3 p.m.
It's a museum, you might get emotional looking at the photos and the place. We also met survivor of the genocide that took place over there.