63 pages 2 hours read

Loung Ung

First They Killed My Father

Nonfiction | Autobiography / Memoir | Adult | Published in 2000

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Themes

How Young People Cope with Survival

This memoir is all about survival, though not necessarily survival of the fittest. In the Killing Fields, survival was not based on strength, but on luck and food. The Khmer Rouge systematically killed Cambodians who were educated and worked in government jobs. They chose to reward Cambodians who lived simple lives in small farming communities. The Ung family is educated, and Pa worked for the government, causing roughly half the family to die during the Cambodian genocide.

Loung Ung figures out how to work the system by learning from her father and watching her mother. She quickly realizes that she needed to be mentally strong to survive starvation and the deaths of her family members. Adaptation is the key to Loung’s survival, and each journey to a new camp brought more opportunities for the young girl to learn by watching the failures of others.

Her most important survival tactic is her ability to withdraw mentally during periods of emotional and physical suffering. For example, when she hears that her sister Keav is very ill in another village, Loung copes with Keav’s absence by imagining the events that led up to her sickness.