So why is dark tourism a thing, anyway?

After visiting Cambodia's Killing Fields and S21 prison, we asked ourselves; why is dark tourism a thing? This post tells you why.

After visiting Cambodia's Killing Fields and S21 prison, and spending time exploring former WW2 death camps in Germany and Poland, we asked ourselves the question; why is dark tourism a thing?


It’s snowing and bitterly cold as we’re marched through the grounds of Berlin’s Hohenschönhausen Prison.

A biting wind sweeps through the sprawling complex, coordinating perfectly with the drab collection of grey-brown buildings and the mood amongst us.

This is the kind of cold that cuts right through you and rises up through your soles to make your bones ache.

I’m cursing my thin, useless socks.

We walk in single-file as we begin to make our way up the stairs to the interrogation room, and as we cross the threshold the feeling of dread intensifies. The room is ominous in its sparseness, just a couple of desks angled in a T shape, a telephone, and a wall heater to furnish it.

No one’s really making eye contact anymore.

“This,” our tour guide finally speaks, “is where prisoners of this former Stasi Prison were interrogated between 1946 and 1989”.

"and that," she gestures right to the spot where my Dad is standing at the end of a long table, “is the exact spot you’d stand when you were tortured into false confessions of crimes against the state”.

Heavy.

The Common Wanderer_-4.jpg

The Hohenschoenhausen memorial was my first experience at a tragic historical site, and though harrowing, I also found it fascinating.

It wasn’t just the visual representation of what happened here; it was the way the rooms felt, the cold in our boots, the sadness in my throat, and a sense of deep empathy for the victims who passed through here and couldn’t walk back out the gates again.

Since then I’ve woven darker sites in amongst the more ‘regular’ tourism experiences during almost all of my travels, – including our current ones as The Common Wanderer. And we’re definitely not the only ones.

Over 33 million people have paid their respects at the 9/11 Memorial since it opened in 2011.

In 2015, the Auschwitz Birkenau Concentration Camp saw 1.53 million visitors pass underneath the harrowing ‘arbeit macht frei' (work makes you free) sign, and Cambodia’s Killing Fields (Choeung Ek) drew over 210,000 in 2014.

Then there’s Toshifumi Fujimoto, the Japanese trucker and photography enthusiast dubbed the ‘world’s most extreme tourist’ after being spotted on holiday in a conflict zone in Syria by a war reporter last year.

Dark Tourism-Auschwitz

They’re not exactly the relaxing or uplifting activities you’d associate with a regular holiday, and they also beg some pretty valid questions about the ethics of turning victims into some kind of commodity (the phrase ‘death Disneyland’s’ has been used!).

So why are an increasing number of us so drawn to this morbid sightseeing in places that have witnessed despair, disaster, and death on tragic scales?

The term ‘dark tourism’ has only really slipped into mainstream usage in the last 15 years or so, but it might surprise you to learn that the phenomenon itself isn’t actually symptomatic of some modern voyeurism or moral sickness.

It turns out that a fascination with death and instability has been one of tourism’s draw-cards for some time, and humans have been visiting tragic sites since long before the middle ages.

Our ancestors attended bloody Roman gladiatorial games, undertook pilgrimages to sites of religious martyrdom, and became spectators at public executions.

More recently, well-to-do gentlemen between the 17th and 19th centuries embarked on the cultural ‘Grand Tour’ of Europe, an educational rite of passage at the time which also took in darker locations like the Battle of Waterloo grounds and Pompeii.

Potentially the most horrifying tours of all were the open days at Victorian-era mental institutions, which afforded the wealthy elite the opportunity to gawk at the oft-chained clinically insane. Classy, right?

dark-tourism-Rome

Understanding why dark tourism sites are even a thing has experts pretty stumped generally.

The current debate swirls around personal connections with a place, an intrinsic desire to learn, morbid curiosity, remembrance or empathy with the victims, historical validation, an exploration of our own mortality, or a sense of social responsibility.

It’s been a lengthy debate and one that will probably remain conclusion-less forever, but what they definitely agree on is that the answers are found in a murky mix of curiosity and connection, history and heritage, and travel and tragedy.

Indeed, speak to any 'dark tourist', and you’ll soon discover how complex their motivations are. Where one goes to Auschwitz to better understand what their family members suffered through, another visits Ground Zero out of morbid fascination or validation that this huge history-changing event really did happen.

For us?

Well, it’s probably somewhere in the grey area between remembrance, wanting to better understand every shade of a country and its cultural memory, and a horrific – yet necessary – reminder of man’s ability to be cruel.

After a recent visit to Choeung Ek during our Cambodian travels, we walked out to meet our wonderfully cheerful Tuk Tuk driver and realised his age alone immediately stamped him as a survivor of the Khmer Rouge regime.

The old lady who had sold us fruit on the street that morning, beaming one of the warmest smiles we’ve ever seen?

She’d survived too.

Prior to the Khmer Rouge, Cambodia was far more advanced than neighbouring Thailand, Laos, and Vietnam. Now it lags behind somewhat, still picking up the pieces decades later, and yet its people are amongst the most kind, generous souls on the planet.

As with other recovering countries, to understand today's Cambodia, you really have to understand the Cambodia of days past.

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Done ethically and respectfully, dark tourism sites expose travellers to a broader understanding of the country they’re in, challenge perceptions, and surprisingly, have the power to inspire as the strength and resilience of people around the world is uncovered.

Yet there’s something more profound to it too. Prof J Lennon, (who actually coined the term ‘Dark Tourism’ in the early noughties) believes that it’s a crucial way for us all to learn the lessons of our past.

He says, “to remain silent, and not record and interpret these events for tourists, may encourage future generations to ignore or forget these terrible periods of human history".

"Dark tourism, like our dark history, occupies an important part of our understanding of what it is to be human”.

Maybe that's why it's a thing.



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TRAVEL INSURANCE

Whatever you do, don’t travel through Cambodia without travel insurance.

Whether it be a sprained ankle hiking in the jungles (or worse), stomach issues (we had many in Cambodia!), theft, or lost baggage, things can go wrong in Cambodia, and insurance is your only way of mitigating the issues!

BUY | Click here to get the best travel insurance deals with World Nomads

READ | Our ultimate guide to travel insurance


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CAMBODIA BACKPACKING ESSENTIALS

Travelling through Cambodia comes with a unique set of needs.

To help you have a comfortable, happy journey, we recommend bringing the following items with you:

Reusable water bottle | THE BEST INVESTMENT WE’VE EVER MADE! We use the Grayl water purification bottles, which allows us to fill up from any water source, anywhere in the world (including train taps!).

Biodegradable Wet Wipes | Keep clean without destroying the planet!

Hand sanitiser | not something we’d actually recommend normally, but in Cambodia it can be a bloody great investment.

A spork | to cut down on unnecessary plastic usage at meal times

Power bank | power does drop out… often! Don’t get caught out without power for your devices buy purchasing this power bank

READ | check out our eco-friendly packing guide to travel through Cambodia consciously and comfortably


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TRAVEL BETTER WITH THESE ESSENTIAL POSTS

KILLING FIELDS AND S21 | Our guide to the sombre Killing Fields and S21 museum

CHI PHAT ECO-TOURISM | Visiting Chi Phat, Cambodia’s incredible eco-tourism project

PHNOM PENH | A quickguide to Cambodia’s capital, Phnom Penh

AIRBNB GUIDE | Our essential guide to getting the best out of Airbnb

TRAVEL INSURANCE | Don’t leave home without travel insurance (seriously, don’t!). Click here to get the best deals with World Nomads, our trusted travel insurance provider

PHOTOGRAPHY | Love our photography? Wondering what gear we use to get all of our photos around the world?

Click here to view our detailed photography gear guide, as well as our top travel photography tips!

RESPONSIBLE TRAVEL | Responsible travel is important. REALLY IMPORTANT.

Learn our top responsible travel tips to help you, your family and friends travel more consciously around the globe

ECO FRIENDLY PACKING ESSENTIALS | Don’t leave home without our favourite eco-friendly travel essentials


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After visiting Cambodia's Killing Fields and S21 prison, we asked ourselves; why is dark tourism a thing? This post tells you why.
 

This post originally appeared on the Intrepid Travel blog.


 

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