Question: In the era of confusion, what is important is the person's family. Discuss. The first thing that was killed was my family 's survival record, which is very emotional and moving - a family gathering in a challenging era. In the Khmer Rouge period, the importance of Loung and its brothers and sisters to survive to their families can not be ignored. Basic familial values such as love for mothers' children, obedience to guardians advice, and mutual cooperation by opening up the differences are an important element of Loung's survival.
I would like to say something to you about my father. First of all, my father is a good person to serve his family. He is such a person, this man placed his family in the first place. He goes to bed on the floor so that the child can sleep. As he can eat, he hands the last dollar to his children. I know that my father's health is not good. Part of his stroke was due to pressure from his case. When sent to a residence on the upper floor of the 9,500 dormitory at 9000 in the county prison, I noticed that my father was not listening to his name, so we could not enter the same dormitory .
I am the only child in my family. My father passed by before my first memory. I lived in a green wall room since I was young. I was staring at the mirror and drawing a picture on the wall. My grandmother likes to keep silent in the house, but anyway I am a quiet child. Even when I was young, I like to wear ties and jackets, shoes are always beautiful, trousers are pushed neatly. My sister came when I was 6 years old. My father went to pick me up from school and we went to a nursing home. The only memory I had for my sister 's birth was to enter the one - puff box I found in the cabinet of my mother' s recovery room. Since then my sister and I were best friends. My mother, after school, told me I knew that I was always approaching home. She kicked her foot from the platform. I remember sitting on the cradle next to her. The cradle sometimes breaks, her head will hit the ground.
She gave up. My sisters and I give up on twice as many ancestors of family. On the other hand, my father's mother left two children out of the two fathers, and her eight brothers and sisters or her parents did not intervene to lend aid. They think that she is responsible for her situation and I think she is alone