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Sacramento State hosts international genocide conference

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  • Sacramento State hosts international genocide conference

    Sacramento State University (press release), CA
    Sept 23 2004

    Sacramento State hosts international genocide conference

    Leading scholars, along with Holocaust and genocide survivors, will
    examine some of the most horrific events of modern history at the
    second International Conference on Genocide, Oct. 14-16 at California
    State University, Sacramento.

    The conference is particularly timely given the ongoing situation in
    Sudan, which was recently labeled genocide by U.S. Secretary of State
    Collin Powell. Sessions are free and open to the public, and will
    take place in the University Union.

    Presenters from around the world will share scholarship on events
    including the Holocaust; genocides in Armenia, Burundi, the
    Phillipines, Rwanda, and South Africa; the genocide of Native
    Americans in California; and Japanese biological warfare in World War
    II. More general topics will include the causes of genocide and
    genocide denial.

    What promises to be one of the most poignant sessions will be 1 p.m.,
    Saturday, when genocide survivors and eyewitnesses will describe
    their experiences.

    The conference's keynote speakers will be John Steiner, a Holocaust
    concentration camp survivor and senior researcher at Sonoma State;
    Henry R. Huttenbach, editor of the Journal of Genocide Research and
    professor at the City University of New York; and Christian P.
    Scherrer of the Hiroshima Peace Institute at Hiroshima City
    University.

    The first genocide conference at Sacramento State took place in 1998.
    Proceedings were later published as Anatomy of Genocide:
    State-Sponsored Mass-Killings in the 20th Century.

    Like the first one, this conference is organized by Alexandre
    Kimenyi, a Sacramento State ethnic studies professor who occasionally
    teaches a course on genocide and the Holocaust. A native of Rwanda,
    Kimenyi lost family members in that country's 1994 genocide.

    `After the Jewish Holocaust, the world said `Never again,' ` Kimenyi
    says. `But the whole 20th century was characterized by genocide.
    There were at least four. The twenty-first century started also with
    terrorism and genocide. And the world is debating whether the
    massacres in Darfur constitute genocide before the international
    community can intervene. Universities have a responsibility to remind
    the world of this serious crime and to find solutions to eradicate
    it.'

    Also helping organize the conference are Boatamo Mosupyoe and Annette
    Reed, both Sacramento State ethnic studies professors. Mosupyoe has
    studied recent African migrants in the United States, and, like
    Kimenyi, has a devastating personal experience. She lost family in
    atrocities in South Africa, and later made her way to the United
    States with the help of Archbishop Desmond Tutu. Reed is director of
    the Sacramento State Native American studies program and an expert on
    the Tolowa people of Northwestern California.

    The conference is free and open to the public, and all sessions will
    be in the University Union. Tickets for the dinner and performance by
    internationally known Rwandan singer Jean-Paul Samputu at 7 p.m.,
    Saturday, Oct. 16 are $20.

    More information is available by contacting Alexandre Kimenyi at
    (916) 278-6802 or [email protected]. Kimenyi's website has detailed
    information on the conference - www.kimenyi.com.
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