New Life Where Death Once Reigned

April 20, 2019

Christian Standard

He survived the killing fields, led murderous general to Christ By Mark Ellis He grew up in the palace of the king, but after the Khmer Rouge came to power in Cambodia, he lost his privileged lifestyle and nearly his life. After he found Christ in a refugee camp, he became a soul-winner himselfรขย€ย”bringing hope … Read more

He survived the killing fields, led murderous general to Christ

By Mark Ellis

He grew up in the palace of the king, but after the Khmer Rouge came to power in Cambodia, he lost his privileged lifestyle and nearly his life. After he found Christ in a refugee camp, he became a soul-winner himselfรขย€ย”bringing hope to one of the most notorious monsters of the killing fields.

รขย€ยœI was raised in a Buddhist family,รขย€ย says Christopher LaPel, founder of Hope for Cambodia. His father worked in the palace of King Sihanouk and as a boy, Christopher often spent time there.

One day as he explored the palace, he approached an engraver working in the basement. รขย€ยœCould you make a cross for me?รขย€ย he asked the man.

Christopher had seen the iconic symbol atop churches in Phnom Penh and in movies but didnรขย€™t know what it meant. He felt drawn to it, however, and was pleased when the man agreed to make one for him out of ivory. Christopher began to wear the cross on a necklace.

One evening at the dinner table with his parents, he leaned forward and the ivory cross slipped into view from inside his shirt.

Christopherรขย€™s father grimaced when he saw it for the first time. With a low growl, he let out an expletive and then said, รขย€ยœI donรขย€™t like you to wear that cross.รขย€ย

Set back in his chair by his fatherรขย€™s visceral reaction, the younger LaPel agreed to take it off. รขย€ยœEvery meal I removed it, even though I loved it,รขย€ย he recalls.

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Khmer Rouge Takes Power

In 1975, when Christopher was in his late teens, the Khmer Rouge came to power. Led by Pol Pot, they changed the name of the country to Democratic Kampuchea and began to model their governing style after Maoรขย€™s China.

The Khmer Rouge forced people out of the cities and sent them on forced marches to rural work camps. Their aim was to refashion the countryรขย€™s agriculture on an 11th-century model and discard all Western influences. They even destroyed temples and libraries.

They demanded that all 2.3 million people in the capital city of Phnom Penh vacate within three days, including the elderly, children, monks, doctors and nurses, hospital patients, wounded and sick people, even mothers who had just given birth.

Christopher saw masses of people swarm through the streets and the entire city emptied.

The Khmer Rouge said people would be away from the city for only a few days, but the evacuation turned into a three-year ordeal, with most of the population enduring extreme hardships. รขย€ยœNearly everyone was either executed, faced starvation, or were worked to death,รขย€ย Christopher recalls with sadness. During the Khmer Rougeรขย€™s violent rule, 2.5 million perished, almost one-third of the population, in what became known as the Cambodian genocide.

Christopherรขย€™s parents both died, along with his brother and sister. รขย€ยœThey forced my father to work until he died,รขย€ย he says. His mother and sister worked 14- to 16-hour days doing hard manual labor until they died. His brother was executed.

Christopher worked in the fields with other young people and then spent time helping to build a dam. รขย€ยœWe worked 16-hour days with our hands,รขย€ย he says.

His body grew weaker due to the workload and lack of adequate nutrition. Christopher got sick and missed work for three days. รขย€ยœUsually they kill you if you miss work three days.รขย€ย

On the third night, he was told to report to Khmer Rouge army headquarters. รขย€ยœEveryone they called at night never came back; they disappeared,รขย€ย Christopher says.

After he reported, they took Christopher to a hut where they yelled at him to get down on his knees. รขย€ยœAre you really sick?รขย€ย one officer demanded.

Weak and almost delirious from fever, Christopher could barely keep from falling over. His cross fell from his neck and he grabbed it.

รขย€ยœHe really looks sick,รขย€ย one officer said. รขย€ยœWhy donรขย€™t we let him rest?รขย€ย

Christopher couldnรขย€™t believe his ears. Even more amazing, he was transferred to a hospital. While he couldnรขย€™t understand the meaning of the cross, he felt in some mysterious way it bought him a measure of grace in these desperate circumstances.

Christopher recovered sufficient strength to return to work, but shortly after that, Vietnam invaded Cambodia. He was only 35 kilometers from the Thai border, and one night, the Khmer Rouge disappeared. รขย€ยœThat night we ran for our lives,รขย€ย he recalls.

He had no idea where his family might beรขย€ย”or if any of them were still aliveรขย€ย”but he fled across the border into Thailand and landed in the Khao-I-Dang refugee center run by the United Nations. When he arrived at the camp, he realized that somehow, in the chaos and confusion of his flight, he lost his ivory cross.

On that first day at the camp, a call went out for translators, and he was chosen because he could speak some English and French.

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The Cross Gains New Meaning

At a supplementary feeding center, he met a missionary from the United Kingdom working with Christian Outreach. รขย€ยœShe told me that Jesus Christ died on the cross for my sins,รขย€ย he recounts. His eyes grew wide as he suddenly understood the meaning of the cross.

รขย€ยœThis is the answer Iรขย€™ve been waiting for,รขย€ย he said excitedly.

The woman explained the gospel message to him, and Christopher surrendered his life to Jesus Christ.

รขย€ยœI rejoiced in that moment,รขย€ย Christopher recalls. He felt peace, joy, love, and hope flood his soul.

รขย€ยœI want to tell my people about Jesus,รขย€ย he told the woman. รขย€ยœI want to serve him the rest of my life.รขย€ย

As Christopher began to follow Jesus, he experienced a รขย€ยœ180-degree changeรขย€ย in his life. He also met and married a young Christian woman named Vanna.

Through some remarkable circumstances, they immigrated to the United States in 1980. รขย€ยœWe were married only a week and we arrived in Lincoln, Nebraska,รขย€ย he recalls. รขย€ยœIt was all white and super cold.รขย€ย

Five years later, they moved to Long Beach, California, and Christopher attended Hope International University. He eventually was ordained and became active in a Cambodian-American church.

In 1992, he made his first trip back to Cambodia. Then he began to minister in the refugee camps, just as he had been ministered to as a younger man. He also searched for his family. Sadly, he discovered the horrible outcome of the killing fields for his parents and two siblings. But four of his brothers and sisters were still alive!

รขย€ยœI found my brothers and sisters and they were all able to come to America and become believers,รขย€ย he says.

He and one elder from his U.S. church went to Cambodia and planted a small fellowship of believers in the Battambang area. รขย€ยœWe started with one, then it grew to five, then the fellowship grew to 27, then 56,รขย€ย he says. Today, there are 150 churches planted in northwest Cambodia that grew from that one fellowship. Average Sunday attendance at these churches is 7,500.

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A Killer Comes to Christ

Where death once reigned in the killing fields of northwest Cambodia, new life has arisen in Christ. One of the most remarkable stories of a transformed life happened after Kang Kek Iew, also known as Comrade Duch, showed up at one of Christopherรขย€™s leadership training seminars in 1995.

At the time, Duch was using an assumed name, Hang Pin, and did not want anyone to know his true identity. He had been in charge of internal security for the Khmer Rouge and headed the infamous S-21 prison camp in Phnom Penh, where thousands were tortured and killed. Of the 17,000 who entered S-21, only 10 are known to have survived.

After prisoners were interrogated and tortured, Duch personally ordered their executions with chilling notations to his underlings. Notes found after the war included his command to รขย€ยœsmash to piecesรขย€ย on a list of teenagers and children, and รขย€ยœtake away for executionรขย€ย or keep for รขย€ยœmedical experimentรขย€ย on a list of women.

Blood was drained from more than 100 prisoners to use for transfusions on wounded Khmer Rouge soldiers. In many ways, Duch ranks as one of the worst war criminals in modern historyรขย€ย”seemingly beyond redemption.

Christopher took note of him when he came to one of the prayer meetings. รขย€ยœHe had recently lost his wife and he was hopeless and depressed,รขย€ย Christopher says.

At the end of the meeting, Duch approached Christopher to talk.

รขย€ยœMy sin is so deep,รขย€ย he told Christopher.

รขย€ยœAs long as you confess your sins and turn away from them and believe on the Lord Jesus, you will be saved,รขย€ย Christopher told Duch.

Duchรขย€™s head hung down, as he recognized his responsibility for thousands of deaths and atrocities in the killing fields. As tears rolled down his cheeks, he confessed his sin, and realized that the penalty for all those sinsรขย€ย”and the enormous burden of guilt he carriedรขย€ย”had been transferred to Jesus on the cross.

รขย€ยœThe next day I baptized him, and his life completely changed,รขย€ย Christopher says. รขย€ยœHe moved from the back row of the church to the front row.รขย€ย Christopher knew Duch had done some horrible things in his past, but still didnรขย€™t know the former Khmer Rouge officialรขย€™s true identity or the extent of his war crimes.

After two weeks, Duch went back to his village and started a house church that quickly grew to 14 families. With Christopherรขย€™s training and oversight, Duch became a lay pastor. Christopher also led Duchรขย€™s sister to Christ.

In late 1998 or early 1999, Duch sent Christopher a letter asking for prayer. Duch planned to publicly confess his crimes and turn himself over to government authorities. What kind of crimes did Duch commit? Christopher wondered.

Christopher learned Duchรขย€™s true identity after he received a phone call from an Associated Press reporter. Upon learning the truth, Christopher could barely speak. The man he led to Christ was one of the key leaders of the Khmer Rougeรขย€ย”the regime responsible for the deaths of his parents and two siblings, and more than a million of his countrymen.

In 2007, Duch was formally charged with war crimes and crimes against humanity by a United Nations-backed court in Cambodia.

During the trial, Duch was taken to the site of the former prison camp. Overwhelmed by the horrible memoriesรขย€ย”and Godรขย€™s transformative power in his lifeรขย€ย”he said, รขย€ยœI ask for your forgiveness. I know that you cannot forgive me, but I ask you to leave me the hope that you might.รขย€ย

Duch admitted his crimes before the court, including his role in the deaths of some 12,000 prisoners, and received a 35-year sentence. This was later changed to life in prison with no chance of appeal due to the รขย€ยœshocking and heinousรขย€ย nature of his crimes.

Christopher testified at Duchรขย€™s trial. For an hour and a half, Christopher spoke about the power of Christ to lead a person to repentance and of Godรขย€™s grace. He talked about Christรขย€™s ability to transform and rebuild a life. He did not ask for leniency for Duch, but he did speak about the reality of his remarkable change. International lawyers, judges, and 500 spectators listened in rapt attention.

After Duch was imprisoned, Christopher did not see him face-to-face again for 10 years. When they met, Christopher did not react with hatred or anger due to the prior deception or Duchรขย€™s role in his own familyรขย€™s loss. Instead, Christopher looked Duch in the eyes and said, รขย€ยœI love you and I forgive you.รขย€ย

Today Duch is still in prison; he has worn out one Bible and Christopher has replaced it with another. รขย€ยœI meet with him every time I go to Cambodia,รขย€ย Christopher says. รขย€ยœWe pray, break bread, and have Communion together,รขย€ย he says.

รขย€ยœWe are all guilty sinners,รขย€ย Christopher notes. รขย€ยœJesus Christ is the only hope of the Cambodian people. He is the only one who can change a life from a killer to a believer.รขย€ย

ร‚

This article first appeared on God Reports (http://blog.godreports.com). Used by permission.

Mark Ellis is the founder of God Reports, a website devoted to promoting Christian missions by sharing stories and testimonies from missionaries and mission organizations.

Christian Standard
Author: Christian Standard

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