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Students educate peers on horrors of genocide abroad

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  • Students educate peers on horrors of genocide abroad

    Nashua Telegraph, NH
    April 14 2006


    Students educate peers on horrors of genocide abroad

    By MICHAEL BRINDLEY, Telegraph Staff


    With picture after picture of dead bodies displayed on the screen
    behind her, Sarah Weinstein talks about the history of genocide in
    the world. Nashua High School South students put on two assemblies
    Friday to educate fellow students about the atrocities that have
    claimed so many lives in Darfur, Sudan, and other parts of the world.

    Order this photo

    The uneasiness was palpable, as the audience had just finished
    watching a slideshow depicting the horrors of mass genocide over the
    past several decades. That was precisely the reaction the students
    putting on the presentation were hoping for.

    `It just seemed like no one said a word,' said Kelci Adams, a junior
    at Nashua High School South. `It was just silent. One girl was
    crying. We weren't expecting that.'

    On the overhead projector in the Nashua High School South auditorium,
    the audience, made up of students and school staff, was shown
    gruesome images of human brutality, dating back to the Armenian
    genocide, which spanned from 1915-17.

    Moving ahead in time to the Holocaust and advancing to the 1994
    genocide in Rwanda, the students making the presentation finally made
    their way to the focus of Friday's assembly - the genocide occurring
    in Darfur, Sudan.

    Adams is part of the student organization `Not In Our School,' a
    tolerance committee associated with the student senate. The group
    hosted two assemblies Friday to help students understand the
    atrocities that continue today in other parts of the world.

    `We just want people to know what's going on,' said senior Sarah
    Weinstein, chairwoman of the group. She helped start it last year
    after learning in her French class about the genocide occurring in
    Darfur.

    `I had no idea what Darfur was,' she said, but she knew she wanted to
    learn more about it and do what she could to help.According to
    savedarfur.org, at least 400,000 people have been killed in a
    conflict in the region that has spanned more than three years. In
    addition, 2 million civilians have been displaced, forced to leave
    their homes.

    A militia group known as the Janjaweed is responsible for the
    killing. Just last month, as many as 400 people were killed during a
    single incident in Chad, an African country that borders the Darfur
    region.

    Last year, Weinstein made a DVD about the genocide and displayed it
    in the hallways as students went to their classes. But she said that
    wasn't effective, so this year, she wanted to organize an assembly.

    During the presentation, junior Vijay Setty tried to put the number
    of people killed into perspective for the audience, by using the high
    school's 2,000-student population as a measuring stick.

    `In less than a week, we would all be dead,' he told the audience.

    Outside of the auditorium, there were sign-up sheets for a `peaceful
    gathering' outside of City Hall on May 19. There were also handmade
    bracelets for students to take with them, as a reminder of the
    genocide.

    The students began planning the assemblies in November. Weinstein
    said the group had to fundraise to buy the bracelets, so they could
    be provided to students for free. The money for the bracelets went to
    help the people in the region.

    Weinstein said the group has also sent letters to U.S. Sens. Judd
    Gregg and John Sununu, and she received letters back, explaining what
    they were each doing to bring attention to the situation in Darfur.

    Adams said she and other students would be collecting new and used
    blankets to send over to the Darfur region, as part of the Blankets
    of Love project for the area.

    As part of the presentation, students heard a prerecorded interview
    with Assumpta Gakuba, a 2005 graduate of Nashua South, who survived
    the genocide in Rwanda, although she lost most of her family.

    Gakuba is now a student at the University of New Hampshire. Weinstein
    reinforced to students that Gakuba was one of them.

    Tom White, coordinator for educational outreach for the Cohen Center
    for Holocaust Studies at Keene State College, spoke at the morning
    assembly and told students if they felt anything after seeing the
    images, they had a responsibility to take action.

    `It won't count unless you do something,' he said. `Buying a bracelet
    is just the beginning.'

    He urged students not to rely on the media to tell them what's
    important, because they aren't going to cover issues like the Darfur
    genocide.

    Young people need to educate themselves and to make sure elected
    officials understand their concerns, he said.

    `The most significant thing you can do right now is protest,' he told
    students.

    http://www.nashuatelegraph.com/app s/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070414/NEWS01/204140355/ -1/news
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