- Al Rockoff
Articleissues
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wikify = July 2008Al Rockoff is an American photojournalist made famous by his coverage of the
Vietnam War and of theKhmer Rouge takeover ofPhnom Penh , Cambodia's capital. He was portrayed in theAcademy Award winning film "The Killing Fields" by actor John Malkovich, although he has never been happy with this portrayal.Rockoff was born in
Pawtucket, Rhode Island and is 1/2 Russian 1/2 Irish . After enlisting in the Navy while underage, he subsequently became an Army photographer in South Vietnam.After several years in Vietnam, Rockoff came to the Cambodian capital of
Phnom Penh in the spring of 1973, when the US-backed government ofLon Nol was fighting the Chinese-backed Khmer Rouge insurgents. Both houses of Congress had voted to endUSAF bombing missions over Cambodia that summer, and many journalists expected that the fall of Phnom Penh was imminent.Rockoff was known to take tremendous risks to get his pictures at a time when any foreign journalist falling into Khmer Rouge hands could expect execution. In October 1974, he was badly wounded by shrapnel in an attack near the strategic city of
Kompong Chnang , and technically 'died' for several minutes before his heart was revived by a Swedish Red Cross team. In April 1975, Rockoff was one of five US newsmen to remain in Phnom Penh when the US embassy launched a helicopter evacuation of its staff. On the morning of the city's fall, he was visiting thePreah Keth Melea hospital withNew York Times reporterSydney Schanberg andJon Swain ofThe Sunday Times when they were arrested by a furious company of teenage Khmer Rouge soldiers. Only the intervention of Schanberg's assistantDith Pran saved their lives.Most westerners took refuge in the French embassy from which they were taken by truck to
Thailand two weeks later. But Cambodian citizens sheltering there, including government ministers seeking asylum, were ordered out. No exceptions were allowed, although some Cambodian women married to westerners could remain if they had documentation. Most did not survive the forced exodus to the countryside where they were expected to work in the fields. Rockoff tried to forge a passport for Dith Pran using an old passport belonging to Jon Swain. He is incensed at the way in which the 'Killing Fields' movie portrayed this, particularly scenes which appear to show him incompetently fixing up a dark room and chemical solution while a photo of Pran fades away. In reality, Dith Pran left the embassy of his own volition. As a result of this discrepancy, Rockoff and another journalist namedDenis Cameron have publicly disassociated themselves from the movie.Rockoff currently splits his time between his homes in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, and
Fort Lauderdale , FL where he still works as a photographer. Some of his images have been exhibited in The Foreign Correspondent's Club in Phnom Penh and he continues to work on a book of photos about Cambodian history since 1970. Controversy continues to surround his photography: He voted againstAl Gore in the2000 US Presidential election over an incident reputed to have occurred when both served in Vietnam.(See [http://www.geocities.com/asia_correspondent/cambodia00rockoffct.html Al Gore stole my Vietnam Photos] ).External links
* [http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/asia/archives/2000/04/16/32498 Being Al Rockoff: Shooting from the hip in Cambodia, Taipei Times, April 16th, 2000]
* [http://www.thingsasian.com/stories-photos/3569 Rockoff, Things Asian, March, 2006]
* [http://www.geocities.com/asia_correspondent/cambodia00rockoffct.html Al Gore Stole My Vietnam Photos, Richard S. Ehrlich, The Laissez Faire City Times December, 2000]
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