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The Gate
 
 

The Gate (Hardcover)

by Francois Bizot (Author)
3.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (18 customer reviews)

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French ethnologist Francois Bizot's The Gate offers a unique insight into the rise of the Khmer Rouge. In 1971 Bizot was studying ancient Buddhist traditions and living with his Khmer partner and daughter in a small village in the environs of the Angkor temple complex. The Khmer Rouge was fighting a guerilla war in rural Cambodia; during a routine visit to a nearby temple, Bizot and his two Khmer colleagues were captured by them and imprisoned deep in the jungle on suspicion of working for the CIA. On trial for his life, over the next three months Bizot developed a strong relationship with his captor, Comrade Douch, who would later become the Khmer Rouge's chief interrogator and commandant of the horrifying Tuol Sleng prison where thousands of captives were tortured prior to execution. The portrait Bizot gives of the young schoolteacher-turned revolutionary and their interaction is simultaneously fascinating and terrifying.

Finally freed after Douch had pleaded his case with the leadership, Bizot became the only Western captive of the Khmer Rouge ever to be released alive, but his story does not end there. On his return to Phnom Penh, due to his fluency in Khmer, he was appointed interpreter between the occupying forces and the remaining western nationals holed up in the French embassy. As the interlocutor at the eponymous gate, he relates with dreadful resignation the moment when the Khmer nationals in the compound were ordered out by the Khmer Rouge forces for "resettlement."

Bizot's is a touching and gripping account of one of the darkest moments in modern history and it is told with a unique voice. As a Cambodian resident, a lover of Cambodia and a fluent Khmer speaker, Bizot shows an understanding of the prevailing mood in the country that other Western commentators have failed to capture effectively, while as a Western academic he is able to see the forces at work and how Cambodia fits into the bigger picture of South East Asian conflict. What emerges is a tale of a land plunged into insanity and Bizot tells it like a eulogy for a dead friend and a confrontation of old demons. The Gate is a stunning book and a must for anyone interested in this grim period of Asian history. --Duncan Thomson



From Publishers Weekly

"It's better to have a sparsely populated Cambodia than a country full of incompetents!" The speaker of this chilling statement is Douch, the Khmer Rouge true believer who ran the camp that held French ethnologist Bizot for the closing months of 1971, several years before the Marxist revolutionaries unleashed massive bloodshed on the small Southeast Asian country. In 1975, the Khmer Rouge's chaotic occupation of Phnom Penh confined the small French community in the city to the premises of the French embassy, the portal of which supplies this volume with its title. Married to a Cambodian citizen, Bizot was an unusual Westerner there, in that once the terror started, he showed little inclination to flee the country. Bizot exploited his status as a rare Khmer-speaking Westerner not only to escape execution but also to extract a measure of autonomy for himself. He frequently showed remarkable defiance toward his heavily armed and ruthless captors. Bizot's account maintains a melancholy tone throughout. Despite his frequent heroic acts, Bizot emphasizes his own frailty and weakness-when he's not looking to set the record straight. He remains especially angry at Western leftists who insisted that the Vietnamese played little role in Cambodia despite ample evidence to the contrary. What's especially striking is the apparent contradiction between Bizot's sympathetic portrait of Douch and his description of the countless murders Douch committed in the name of the revolution. For many Americans, the senseless tragedy of Cambodia remains a mystery; this elegant volume helps outline the contours of that tragedy from a unique perspective. Maps. 40,000 first printing.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.

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Customer Reviews

18 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
3.2 out of 5 stars (18 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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1.0 out of 5 stars Pathetic and Self-Serving, Jun 3 2004
By A Customer
This review is from: The Gate (Paperback)
Francois Bizot's "The Gate" is more a story of Bizot's inaccurate and self-serving portrait of himself as a selfless hero than a story of the true tragedy that was the Cambodian Holocaust ... of which he was involved in only a small and insignificant way. The story revolves around two encounters he experienced with leaders of the Khmer Rouge during his initial capture and later during the evacuation of the French embassy in Phnom Penh.

In his interactions with his captors, he portrays himself as a skillful manipulator and negotiator, when in fact he was merely a fortunate foreign survivor in the path of a tragic era in Cambodian history. Bizot, in fact, seemed to have little or no control over any of the events surrounding him or even his own destiny ... and was more a patsy of the Cambodians than the master manipulator he purports to be in this work. While innocent Cambodians were being murdered, worked to death, and betrayed by their own family and friends ... Bizot complains about his own trivial personal deprivations, such as being forced to eat cold soup. His narrative evokes very little sympathy for his plight ... and he ultimately comes across in the work as an arrogant French colonial who suffered through a shortage of cognac while his idyllic colonial lifestyle came to a sudden end. The irony of the story is that Bizot saves noone but himself and then bemoans the suffering of the Cambodian people that he did so little to alleviate.

This book says little of value in regards to the triumph of the human spirit, the bravery of an individual through adversity, or the depths of the human soul. It is a story of a victim, like so many other victims of the Cambodian Holocaust, who was swept forward in the tides of the bloody revolution of Pol Pot's Khmer Rouge. Spare yourself the agony of suffering through this text ... there are many other books written by or about the Cambodian people who truly lived through this tragedy and deserve to be heard, as opposed to a Westerner's self-serving reflections on his loss of a Cambodia that better suited his fancy.

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3.0 out of 5 stars Missing Pieces, April 29 2004
By Melvin Scott "MJS" (Toronto, Ontario Canada) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
In many instances, I found Bizot's narrative compelling, and there are some very stirring moments throughout the book. However, as a story on a whole, I felt that there were too many gaps. For starters, there was not a beginning. We jump straight into Bizot's first encounter with the Viet Cong, without a peep on the background of who he was, why he was there, or even who he was with. He seemed totally infatuated with 'Douche', to the point where the book lost crediblity. He must have a great memory to recall those long dialogues thirty years later. Then as sudden it is five years later. More holes. His description of his time in the capital is intriguing, but again there are too many loose ends that were not wrapped up. Even after the convoy to Thailand, there was only mention in passing of what happened to just a few of the characters we meet in the book. Kampuchea in the Khmer period can fill a thousand books with engrossing material, and that is the strength of this book as well. I would nonetheless state that this book is worth reading. Still, when I finished the last page, I couldn't help but feel that the story was not completed.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Classic, but.., April 19 2004
By Pavel Illner "pavka" (New York United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
As LeCare said: "a rare thing, a new classic. A fascinating view into the psyche of the victims of an absolutely totalitarian regime.
My problem: the translation is so poor, you can see or feel the French original behind English sentences so convoluted that you have to reread them to decipher the meaning. The translator's French is probably impecable but not his/her English. A pitty as it obscures the message that should be as clear as it is important.
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Most recent customer reviews

2.0 out of 5 stars No more sunsets...PLEASE
The bottom line is Francois Bizot's book is certainly no classic, as Le Carre would like us to believe. Read more
Published on April 1 2004 by SuzieMac

2.0 out of 5 stars Book was OK, I didn't like it when facts are not straight
I read that book a while ago. I like David Chandler's "Voices from S-21: Terror and History in Pol Pot's Secret Prison" much better. Read more
Published on Jan 28 2004

1.0 out of 5 stars Too Many Silences
It must be remembered that this book was written thirty years after Bizot's capture by comrade Duch. Read more
Published on Jan 2 2004

5.0 out of 5 stars Truthful and Insightful
This historical autobiography offers a truthful and insightful view into the development of the Khmer ROuge in CAmbodia during the early 1970s. Read more
Published on Dec 21 2003 by R. Ruitinga

2.0 out of 5 stars Is Bizot Telling the Truth?
Bizot critizes the Americans for their "irresponsibility, their colossal tactlesness, their inexcusable naivety... Read more
Published on Oct 11 2003

3.0 out of 5 stars Beautiful first half - second half wasn't as engrossing
The story of Bizot's internment in the camp, and his conversation's with Douch, are incredibly vivid and take one as far as it probably possible to go into the mind of a committed... Read more
Published on Jun 29 2003 by Gulley Jimson

5.0 out of 5 stars Compelling personal account
If you're looking for a history book-this is not the one for you.

I greatly enjoyed reading this book and it is nothing more than what it claims to be: a personal account of... Read more

Published on Jun 14 2003 by KB

5.0 out of 5 stars To Reppraise Everything
In the final chapter of "The Gate" Francois Bizot writes, "There are experiences that make us reappraise everything. Read more
Published on Jun 9 2003 by Thomas Belfield

3.0 out of 5 stars Interesting, not brilliant
I found this book a very interesting read, particulary Bizot's experiences with the sinister Duch. Also I found his writings about life in the French Embassy in Phnom Penh highly... Read more
Published on May 13 2003 by cccp

2.0 out of 5 stars Le Carre's introduction remains the best part of the book
In brief, I would not recommend this book. The map of Cambodia, the chronology of events between 1953 and 1998, and the prologue by the author, all within the first part of the... Read more
Published on May 12 2003 by S. Park

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