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  • Darfur And Genocide: What Are The Facts?

    DARFUR AND GENOCIDE: WHAT ARE THE FACTS?

    St.Louis Jewishlight.com, MO
    http://www.stljewishlight.com/commentaries/2897 03526495108.php
    Aug 29 2007

    JEWISH LIGHT EDITORIAL

    The issue of the grave humanitarian crisis facing the people of the
    Darfur region of the Sudan, the accuracy of the number of victims
    and the appropriate meaning of the term "genocide" have been in the
    headlines recently, and some clarification is in order. Related to
    these issues is the news that Israel will no longer allow Sudanese
    migrants who enter its territory illegally to stay, and that it
    would institute a mandatory deportation policy. Each of these issues
    deserves discussion.

    - Regarding the estimated number of Darfurians killed and displaced,
    a recent op-ed piece in The New York Times chided advocates on behalf
    of the Darfur victims for using inflated numbers for those killed.

    The piece, by Time magazine Africa writer Sam Dealey points out that
    while advocacy groups have been saying 400,000 Darfurians have been
    killed, the actual number is closer to 200,000. The writer indicated
    that whether 200,000 or 400,000 have been killed, along with the
    nearly 2 million who have been driven from their homes, it is still
    appropriate to refer to what is happening in Darfur and in the refugee
    camps in Chad as a "genocide."

    - The term "genocide" was coined by the Polish-Jewish lawyer and
    Holocaust survivor Raphael Lemkin in his 1944 book Axis Rule in
    Europe. Lemkin played a major role in the introduction of the Genocide
    Convention by the United Nations at its first session on Dec. 11,
    1946, when it adopted Resolution 96, which condemned genocide as a
    crime in international law. The term "genocide" is defined as actions
    in which "their inherent intention is to destroy, wholly or partially,
    a national, ethnic, racial or religious group per se," and includes
    such actions as "the killing of persons belonging to the group;
    the causing of grievous bodily or spiritual harm to members of the
    group; deliberately enforcing on the group living conditions which
    could lead to its complete or partial extermination; the enforcement
    of measures designed to prevent birth among the group; the forcible
    removal of children from one group to another."

    - The term "genocide" became the focus of a major controversy recently,
    when Abraham Foxman, national director of the Anti-Defamation
    League, reversed himself on whether it was appropriate to describe
    the massacre of l.l million Armenians by the Turkish Ottoman Empire
    in 1915-1918 as a "genocide." Foxman had fired ADL's Boston-based
    New England Region director for having denounced that position in
    an interview with the Boston Globe. In what was described by the
    JTA as a "dramatic reversal," Foxman issued an official national ADL
    statement using the term "genocide" to describe the Armenian massacre,
    Foxman said he had consulted with his "friend and mentor" Elie Wiesel,
    the Holocaust survivor and Nobel Peace Prize Laureate, who supported
    using the term. Foxman indicated that on further reflection he agreed
    with the view of Henry Morganthau, Sr.

    that the Armenian massacres would have been called "genocide" if the
    word had been in use at that time.

    All of the verbal gymnastics and gyrations over the term "genocide"
    are unseemly in view of the fact that the mass murders continue in
    Darfur, and international action is still urgently needed to stop the
    bloodbath, regardless of whether official action is taken by the UN
    to label it a "genocide," which common sense indicates it is.

    Regarding the controversy in Israel on the deportation of Darfurian
    refugees coming in from Egypt, the Israeli public is understandably
    conflicted. On the one hand, the already weakened government of Prime
    Minister Ehud Olmert fears being overwhelmed by masses of refugees.

    The Olmert government did decide to grant asylum to about 500 refugees
    from the Darfur genocide who had crossed over into Israel from Egypt
    in recent months. Olmert's government was fearful that thousands of
    Sudanese migrants who had illegally entered Israel to seek work would
    attempt to gain permanent residence because of the crisis. A first
    group of about 50 deportees was sent back into Egyptian territory
    last weekend.

    Indeed, during the term of the late Prime Minister Menachem Begin
    it was decided to allow into Israel a number of Vietnamese boat
    people for the very reason that human rights groups are pressing for
    admission of the Sudanese refugees. Israel had also taken in Bosnian
    Muslim refugees during the civil war in the former Yugoslavia. While
    Israel certainly has an historic and moral obligation to do what it
    can to help bring relief to refugees from Darfur, so do the Arab and
    Muslim nations in the region, including Egypt, which has thus far
    refused to take them in, following the past practice of Arab nations
    refusing to absorb refugee populations, including the Palestinians.

    While Israel has an obligation to do its share, it is unreasonable to
    expect the small and overwhelmed Jewish State to be the sole refuge
    for refugees from Darfur.

    EDITORIAL

    DEFINITION OF GENOCIDE

    Darfur and Genocide: What Are the Facts?

    JEWISH LIGHT EDITORIAL

    The issue of the grave humanitarian crisis facing the people of the
    Darfur region of the Sudan, the accuracy of the number of victims
    and the appropriate meaning of the term "genocide" have been in the
    headlines recently, and some clarification is in order. Related to
    these issues is the news that Israel will no longer allow Sudanese
    migrants who enter its territory illegally to stay, and that it
    would institute a mandatory deportation policy. Each of these issues
    deserves discussion.

    - Regarding the estimated number of Darfurians killed and displaced,
    a recent op-ed piece in The New York Times chided advocates on behalf
    of the Darfur victims for using inflated numbers for those killed.

    The piece, by Time magazine Africa writer Sam Dealey points out that
    while advocacy groups have been saying 400,000 Darfurians have been
    killed, the actual number is closer to 200,000. The writer indicated
    that whether 200,000 or 400,000 have been killed, along with the
    nearly 2 million who have been driven from their homes, it is still
    appropriate to refer to what is happening in Darfur and in the refugee
    camps in Chad as a "genocide."

    - The term "genocide" was coined by the Polish-Jewish lawyer and
    Holocaust survivor Raphael Lemkin in his 1944 book Axis Rule in
    Europe. Lemkin played a major role in the introduction of the Genocide
    Convention by the United Nations at its first session on Dec. 11,
    1946, when it adopted Resolution 96, which condemned genocide as a
    crime in international law. The term "genocide" is defined as actions
    in which "their inherent intention is to destroy, wholly or partially,
    a national, ethnic, racial or religious group per se," and includes
    such actions as "the killing of persons belonging to the group;
    the causing of grievous bodily or spiritual harm to members of the
    group; deliberately enforcing on the group living conditions which
    could lead to its complete or partial extermination; the enforcement
    of measures designed to prevent birth among the group; the forcible
    removal of children from one group to another."

    - The term "genocide" became the focus of a major controversy recently,
    when Abraham Foxman, national director of the Anti-Defamation
    League, reversed himself on whether it was appropriate to describe
    the massacre of l.l million Armenians by the Turkish Ottoman Empire
    in 1915-1918 as a "genocide." Foxman had fired ADL's Boston-based
    New England Region director for having denounced that position in an
    interview with the Boston Globe. In what was described by the JTA as a
    "dramatic reversal," Foxman issued an official national ADL statement
    using the term "genocide" to describe the Armenian massacre, Foxman
    said he had consulted with his "friend and mentor" Elie Wiesel, the
    Holocaust survivor and Nobel Peace Prize Laureate, who supported using
    the term. Foxman indicated that on further reflection he agreed with
    the view of Henry Morganthau, Sr. that the Armenian massacres would
    have been called "genocide" if the word had been in use at that time.

    All of the verbal gymnastics and gyrations over the term "genocide"
    are unseemly in view of the fact that the mass murders continue in
    Darfur, and international action is still urgently needed to stop the
    bloodbath, regardless of whether official action is taken by the UN
    to label it a "genocide," which common sense indicates it is.

    Regarding the controversy in Israel on the deportation of Darfurian
    refugees coming in from Egypt, the Israeli public is understandably
    conflicted. On the one hand, the already weakened government of Prime
    Minister Ehud Olmert fears being overwhelmed by masses of refugees.

    The Olmert government did decide to grant asylum to about 500 refugees
    from the Darfur genocide who had crossed over into Israel from Egypt
    in recent months. Olmert's government was fearful that thousands of
    Sudanese migrants who had illegally entered Israel to seek work would
    attempt to gain permanent residence because of the crisis. A first
    group of about 50 deportees was sent back into Egyptian territory
    last weekend.

    Indeed, during the term of the late Prime Minister Menachem Begin
    it was decided to allow into Israel a number of Vietnamese boat
    people for the very reason that human rights groups are pressing for
    admission of the Sudanese refugees. Israel had also taken in Bosnian
    Muslim refugees during the civil war in the former Yugoslavia. While
    Israel certainly has an historic and moral obligation to do what it
    can to help bring relief to refugees from Darfur, so do the Arab and
    Muslim nations in the region, including Egypt, which has thus far
    refused to take them in, following the past practice of Arab nations
    refusing to absorb refugee populations, including the Palestinians.

    While Israel has an obligation to do its share, it is unreasonable to
    expect the small and overwhelmed Jewish State to be the sole refuge
    for refugees from Darfur.
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