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Charles Kaiser remembers Dith Pran and Syd Schanberg

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THROUGH HIS LENS Dith Pran on assignment for the New York Times at a 2006 rally for immigrant rights. He died March 30 at age 65 (Photo: Getty Images)

In Memoriam

Dith Pran died last week of cancer in a hospital in New Jersey at the age of 65. When he worked with New York Times reporter Syd Schanberg in 1975, during the fall of Cambodia to the Khmer Rouge, they produced the greatest war correspondence of their time.

Dith was the de facto dean of the Pnom Penh press corps in the 1970s: the go-to man for every savvy Western correspondent covering the war in Cambodia. If you were Elizabeth Becker, a 25-year-old freelance tenderfoot, he might loan you his Volkswagen beetle for weeks (and for nothing) until you got a decent monthly retainer from a newspaper back home. If you were anyone else, he would tell you where to find the best story, pay the bribes to get you there, and always, somehow, keep you alive.

One day I turned to Schanberg and asked, "What ever happened to Dith?" He flinched at the question. But at the same moment, he drew himself up and declared, "Someday, Dith will come out!"By 1975, the New York Times was monopolizing Dith's services. Now he worked exclusively with Schanberg. The intensely ambitious 41-year-old Jewish guy from the Times and the wily 32-year-old son of a civil servant from Siem Reap were unlikely collaborators, but they flourished together. They shared all the same instincts: a passion for Cambodia, a taste for danger, and, eventually, a brotherly love that bound them together, forever.

In the spring of 1975, the two men were documenting the fall of Cambodia at the very moment when Saigon was about to fall to the North Vietnamese, bringing that part of the war in Indochina to an end. Because of America's gigantic involvement in Vietnam, the war there had always received most of the attention of the American press.

But in the newsroom of the New York Times in April 1975, where I was a newly minted reporter, the articles that kept us on the edge of our seats all carried the byline of Sydney H. Schanberg. They had immediacy and a drama unlike anything I had ever read in the paper before. On April 13, 1975, we learned that Schanberg had defied his bosses and stayed behind in Pnom Penh with the trusty Dith. Then nothing for eight days—until we read that both men had taken refuge in the French embassy in the Cambodian capital. Finally, two weeks later, Schanberg reached Bangkok. We all marveled again when we learned how he had been detained by a group of heavily armed Khmer Rouge soldiers on the day Pnom Penh had fallen. Almost as soon as he was detained, Schanberg had been certain he would be executed. "But Mr. Dith Pran saved our lives," Schanberg wrote, "first by getting into the personnel carrier with us, and then by talking soothingly to our captors for two and a half hours and then convincing them that we were not the enemy but merely foreign journalists covering their victory." Apparently, the two of them were the ultimate survivors.

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PULITZER WINNER Sydney Schanberg (Photo: www.nndb.com)
Fast-forward 13 months. In May 1976, Schanberg returned to New York in triumph. He was the new assistant metropolitan editor—a track that could put him on his way to succeeding Abe Rosenthal, the paper's top editor who had returned from his final foreign posting to become metropolitan editor 13 years earlier. On May 3, my friend Marty Arnold (who was also my "rabbi" on the paper) invited me out to lunch to meet Schanberg, who would be my new boss. We all knew the Pulitzers were being announced after lunch, and we all knew Sydney was going to win one for his Cambodian coverage. But no one mentioned that during lunch. Instead Sydney pumped both of us for newsroom gossip and story ideas. Finally, as we were about to leave the restaurant to go back to 43rd Street, I turned to Syd and asked, "What ever happened to Dith?"

Schanberg flinched at the question. But at the same moment, he drew himself up and declared, "Someday, Dith will come out!"

I had no idea what I had done. What I didn't know—because nothing had been written about it in the paper—was that just after Dith had saved Schanberg's life, Dith's life had been jeopardized by his decision to stay on in Pnom Penh with the colleague he loved, after practically everyone else—including Dith's family—had been evacuated. A few days after the two of them had taken refuge in the French embassy, the Khmer Rouge had demanded the expulsion of all the Cambodians inside the embassy. Years later, Schanberg described the moment: "I ask [Dith] if he understands—we have tried everything we can think of but we are stymied. He says yes, he understands. But it is I who do not understand, who cannot cope with this terrible thing. He saved my life and now I cannot protect him. I hate myself." But at that moment in 1976, I knew nothing about that. Later that day, Schanberg accepted the Pulitzer on behalf of himself, and Dith.

Schanberg happened to be the deputy to the most unpopular metropolitan editor in the paper's modern history. For months, we all prayed that he would somehow displace his boss, but we never believed it could happen. Then, the miracle occurred: Just a year after Schanberg's return to New York, Abe Rosenthal made him metropolitan editor. Kids like me rejoiced; that night, we feted Sydney in a boisterous party in a reporter's apartment—the only Times function I ever attended where marijuana was part of the celebration, at least in the kitchen.

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