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  • Protesters demand halt to `genocide'

    Boca Raton News, FL
    Aug 26 2004

    Protesters demand halt to Sudan `genocide'
    Boca Raton religious leaders


    by Dale M. King


    Death is rampant in the Sudan.
    And South County religious leaders want it to stop.
    Some 40 people, many carrying signs, gathered at noon Tuesday in
    front of Boca Raton City Hall to demand an end to the senseless
    carnage and to pray for the victims.
    `We are gathering out of moral imperative,' said Rabbi Richard Agler,
    senior rabbi and spiritual leader of Congregation B'nai Israel in
    Boca Raton.
    `The world has seen entirely too much of this,' he said. `We know
    that such evils are most likely to occur when people are either
    unaware or looking away. We are doing our part to make sure that
    people are both aware and informed.'
    Leaders from several congregations joined the demonstration held one
    day before the `Sudan Day of Conscience' on Wednesday.
    `In situations like this, it is incumbent upon all decent human
    beings to make their voices heard,' said the Rev. Henry Willis,
    pastor of Ebenezer Missionary Baptist Church in Boca Raton.
    `Whether mass murder of the innocent is taking place in Europe, Asia
    or Africa, it cannot be tolerated,' he said. `This time, it is
    Africa. Next time, it may be somewhere else. But as religious leaders
    of conscience, we say that is something the world cannot tolerate.'
    The Very Rev. Nareg Berberian of St. David Armenian Church in Boca
    Raton added his voice, saying that humanity cannot `stand idly by
    while another genocide takes place.'
    `Given the history of the 20th century, which has included so many
    genocides,' he said, a genocide in the 21st century `cannot be
    tolerated.'
    While demonstrators massed at City Hall, the International Committee
    of the Red Cross this week airlifted supplies to Sudan's troubled
    Darfur region which has been scourged by a war between African rebel
    troops and Arab militia known as the Janjaweed.
    The United Nations reports that more than 30,000 people have been
    killed and 1.4 million were forced from their homes during the past
    18 months of fighting.
    In a passionate address, Rabbi Agler said `organized mass murder of
    the innocent, state-sponsored or at least state-aided murder of the
    innocent' is happening `before our very eyes.'
    Organizers of the event said they will call on the government of the
    Sudan to halt all activity that is causing the mass murder, rape and
    plundering of villages in the Darfur area.
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