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Facing History and Ourselves

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  • Facing History and Ourselves

    Crimes Against Humanity and Civilization: The Genocide of the Armenians
    Facing History & Ourselves uses lessons of history to challenge teachers and their students to stand up to racism, antisemitism, and other forms of bigotry and hate.
    "All truth passes through three stages:
    First, it is ridiculed;
    Second, it is violently opposed; and
    Third, it is accepted as self-evident."

    Arthur Schopenhauer (1788-1860)

  • #2
    Genocide’s lesson timeless

    By Adam Strom/ As You Were Saying
    Saturday, April 29, 2006

    To prevent mass violence and genocide, we will need to summon the commitments of new generations around the world. Here, education in schools and in broad public venues holds the best promise.

    On April 24, 1915, the Ottoman Turk government began rounding up Armenian intellectuals and community leaders and executing them. It was the first phase of what soon became a full-fledged genocide - more than a million Armenians would eventually die and nearly every Armenian would be driven from Turkey.

    In the United States and Europe, journalists, politicians and ordinary people who knew of the horrors and outrages in Turkey’s Anatolian desert wrestled with how to respond. Most simply averted their eyes. Others, unable to remain silent in the face of the growing atrocities, challenged tradition by boldly proclaiming that responsibility for human life does not stop at national borders. Their solutions set important precedents for international law. In fact, the phrase “crime against humanity,” made famous as one of the counts at the post-Holocaust Nuremberg trials, was first used to describe the massacres of Armenian civilians in the spring of 1915.

    To many who had followed the bloody history of Turkey’s campaign against its ethnic minorities, the impunity enjoyed by those who had ordered and carried out the killings was unbearable.

    Raphael Lemkin, a Polish Jew and a law student, was one of them. Lemkin confronted one of his law school professors, “Why is the killing of a million people a lesser crime than the killing of a single individual?” His professor used a metaphor to explain that courts did not have any jurisdiction: “Consider the case of a farmer who owns a flock of chickens. He kills them and this is his business. If you interfere, you are trespassing.” But, replied an incensed Lemkin, “the Armenians are not chickens.”

    Lemkin dedicated the rest of his life to finding a way to make sure that the law would recognize the difference. In 1944 Lemkin coined the word “genocide” and later he drafted the United Nations Convention on Genocide. The convention was ratified on Dec. 9, 1948, one day before the adoption of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. The ratification was too late for Lemkin’s own family, many of whom were murdered in the Holocaust.

    In the 20th century more people died through genocidal violence and state-sanctioned murder than in wartime combat. The 21st century is not looking much better. The violence now taking hundreds of thousands of lives in Darfur is a vivid reminder of how little we learned from the last 100 years.

    To prevent mass violence and genocide, we will need to summon the commitments of new generations around the world. Here, education in schools and in broad public venues holds the best promise. Students can learn about the failures of democratic accountability that so often precede atrocity. Communities can learn about the dangers of blind obedience and about the power of bystanders to become what author Samantha Power calls “upstanders,” speaking out against hatred and violence.

    Even today, 91 years after the start of the Armenian genocide, the Turkish government and others seek to deny that the crimes ever occurred and some argue that teachers need to “tell both sides of the story.” These denials just deepen the effects of the crime; they allow today’s generation - and generations going forward - to ignore the truth and, in so doing, learn nothing from it.

    They pave the way for new genocides by disarming all of us, by not providing us with the knowledge we need to recognize the conditions that might create genocidal behavior and to see clearly when genocide begins.

    In April our calendar is stained with the memory of the anniversaries of four genocides - the Armenian Genocide, the Holocaust, the Cambodian Genocide and the Rwandan Genocide.

    Facing History and Ourselves believes that by facing history honestly, without distortions or denial, we can educate a new generation to realize Lemkin’s vision.

    Adam Strom is director of research and development for Facing History and Ourselves, an international nonprofit organization that was founded in Brookline 30 years ago. As You Were Saying is a Herald feature. We invite readers to contribute pieces of 600 words. Mail to the Boston Herald, P.O. Box 55643, Boston, MA 02205-5643, or e-mail to [email protected]. Submissions are subject to editing and become Herald property.
    "All truth passes through three stages:
    First, it is ridiculed;
    Second, it is violently opposed; and
    Third, it is accepted as self-evident."

    Arthur Schopenhauer (1788-1860)

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