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'Devil Came on Horseback' details genocide in Darfur

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  • 'Devil Came on Horseback' details genocide in Darfur

    Deseret News, UT
    April 1 2007

    'Devil Came on Horseback' details genocide in Darfur

    By Dennis Lythgoe
    Deseret Morning News

    THE DEVIL CAME ON HORSEBACK: BEARING WITNESS TO THE GENOCIDE IN
    DARFUR, by Brian Steidle and Gretchen Steidle Wallace, Public
    Affairs, 230 pages, $29.95

    Genocide, the systematic destruction of an entire race of
    people - or an ethnic or religious group - has been practiced around
    the world for centuries. Often it is ignored by the rest of the world
    because it seems too complicated to intervene.
    During the past century we saw documented examples of genocide
    when the Turks killed more than a million Armenians in 1915, Hitler's
    Nazis slaughtered 6 million Jews during the Holocaust, Indonesia
    purged hundreds of thousands of alleged Communists in the 1960s, the
    Khmer Rouge conducted huge massacres in Cambodia in the '70s and '80s
    and tribe-on-tribe slaughter overwhelmed Rwanda in 1994.
    Now it is happening again in Darfur.
    Brian Steidle, a former U.S. Marine, was one of three Americans
    hired by the African Union to document the situation in Darfur, which
    had been classified as genocide by September 2004, the month he
    arrived. He thought that if he witnessed and documented numerous
    incidents of genocide, outside governments would intervene and stop
    it.
    When it didn't happen, Steidle resigned his position and began
    an effort to educate people around the world to the atrocities he has
    seen. Essentially, "The Devil Came on Horseback" tells the story of
    the Arab government's systematic destruction of its black African
    citizens, during which, allegedly, anyone of any age who is
    considered "too dark" must be killed.
    Steidle wrote the book with his sister, Gretchen Steidle
    Wallace, as part of his campaign - and a documentary played at the
    Sundance Film Festival this year. It's a seamy, horrendous account of
    massive killing with impunity.
    The author swears to the accuracy of his descriptions of what
    he witnessed, as recorded in audio journals, e-mails, recollections
    of phone conversations from Sudan, still photographs, notes, maps and
    sketches written in many notebooks.
    In graphic terms, Steidle describes the huddling together of
    children who were then burned alive; he saw large groups of men also
    burned alive because they were trying to protect their families; he
    met a woman carrying a wounded child, a child shot through the back
    before her mother was brutally killed.
    Incident after incident - and he had no power to stop it.
    The question he asks is why doesn't the United Nations and/or
    the United States jump into this catastrophic situation before
    millions more are killed?
    The book is sobering and disturbing.
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