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AIC Project Marks Genocides Horror

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  • AIC Project Marks Genocides Horror

    AIC PROJECT MARKS GENOCIDES HORROR
    By Mary Ellen Lowney

    The Republican, MA
    April 18 2007

    Posted by The Republican Newsroom April 17, 2007 21:36PM
    [email protected]

    SPRINGFIELD - The northeast corner of the campus green at American
    International College is now a grim reminder of more than 11 million
    people killed in six genocides over the past century.

    The memorial - 25,000 popsicle sticks planted in the grass - was
    created Monday night through this morning by 30 students aiming to
    raise awareness of some of history's more gruesome moments. It will
    remain in place into next week.

    "It's important for us to build awareness of the issues facing the
    world," said freshman Darren A. James. "We get caught up in the local
    issues of our lives and forget to see the big picture."

    But for junior Edina Skaljic, who coordinated the effort, the Genocide
    Awareness Week memorial is far more than a history lesson.

    The 22-year-old is a genocide survivor, having lived through the
    Serbia-Bosnia war that resulted in the deaths of 200,000 Bosnians in
    the early 1990s. She looks back on the time as a childhood stolen.

    "I had no childhood. Every single day, someone died. People dropped
    like flies around you," said Skaljic, whose parents and younger
    brother now live in Boston.

    She lost a grandfather - he was burned alive - and several cousins
    to the war that officially went from 1992 to 1995, though the effects
    continued for years.

    Skaljic said that shortly after Feb. 26, when the United Nations
    International Court of Justice acquitted Serbia of committing genocide
    in Bosnia and Herzegovina during the Balkan war of the 1990s, she
    felt compelled to put genocide front and center on her campus and
    wherever she can.

    "I was there. I saw what happened," she said.

    Skaljic has spoken at American International College, as well as
    elsewhere, including Elms College in Chicopee, about her childhood
    and the horrors of genocide.

    Today's event was sponsored by the AIC International Club, the Model
    Congress and the Young Professionals for International Cooperation,
    a student group affiliated with the U.N.

    Students placed one stick for each 500 people killed in genocides
    since 1915. The holocaust section alone accounts for 12,000 sticks.

    The memorial spans nearly a century, starting with the Armenian
    genocide at the hands of the Turks between 1915 and 1918, when 1.5
    million Armenians were killed.

    Students put colored popsicle sticks in the Darfur section, because
    the genocide there is ongoing. Since 2003, 450,000 have died in the
    ethnic conflict in the Darfur region of western Sudan.

    "In Darfur, things can be changed. We can make it right. All these
    other places, it's too late," Skaljic said.
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