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1933 Assyrian Genocide In Iraq Inspired The Word 'Genocide'

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  • 1933 Assyrian Genocide In Iraq Inspired The Word 'Genocide'

    1933 ASSYRIAN GENOCIDE IN IRAQ INSPIRED THE WORD 'GENOCIDE'

    Assyrian International News Agency, CA
    Jan 16 2007

    Internationally acclaimed as the man who coined the term 'genocide',
    Raphael Lemkin was born to Jewish parents in Eastern Poland in 1901.

    It is ironic that it was not the persecution of his own people which
    led Lemkin to not only invent the phrase but to dedicate his life
    to fighting its reality. This struggle did not start, as might be
    expected, after the atrocities of the Second World War but some years
    before they had even begun.

    Raphael Lemkin was educated at home together with his two brothers.

    He studied philology at the University of Lwow before deciding
    on a career in law. He gained a doctorate from the University of
    Heidelburg in Germany and in 1929 began teaching at Tachkimoni College
    in Warsaw. He became a public prosecutor and for the next five years
    represented Poland at conferences all over the world. A prominent
    international figure Dr Lemkin also served on the on the Polish Law
    Codification Committee and helped draft the criminal code of a newly
    independent Poland.

    In 1933 Dr Lemkin was deeply disturbed by the massacre of Christian
    Assyrians by Iraqis. His distress was compounded by earlier memories
    of the slaughter of Armenians by Turks during the First World War and
    the international jurist began to examine these acts as crimes in an
    effort to deter and prevent them. He presented his first proposal to
    outlaw such 'acts of barbarism' to the Legal Council of the League
    of Nations in Madrid the same year. However, the proposal failed and
    his work incurred the disapproval of the Polish government, which was
    at the time pursuing a policy of conciliation with Nazi Germany. He
    was forced to retire from his public position in 1934. Undeterred Dr
    Lemkin continued his work in private law practice until the German
    invasion of Poland in 1939 led him to experience at first hand the
    very acts that he was working to prevent.

    Dr Lemkin was wounded whist fighting the Nazis outside Warsaw. He hid
    in the Polish forests for six months before finally escaping to Sweden
    by way of Lithuania and the Baltic Sea. The exile was to save him. He
    and his brother Elias were the only members of the forty-strong Lemkin
    family that were to survive the Nazi occupation.

    Now a refugee in Sweden Dr Lemkin worked as a lecturer at the
    University of Stockholm, using his time in exile to study Nazism from
    the standpoint of jurisprudence. He analysed the legal decrees that
    had allowed the Nazi occupation and identified the instruments that
    had worked to systematically eliminate a people. He labelled this
    premeditated crime 'genocide' from the Greek prefix genos meaning
    race and the Latin suffix cide meaning killing. His work was later
    published in 1944 in the landmark book Axis Rule in Occupied Europe.

    His analysis was used as one of the bases for determining the Nuremberg
    trials programme in 1945, where he served as. legal adviser to the
    US Chief Prosecutor.

    The recognition of genocide in the Nuremberg trials was a considerable
    achievement. However since the trials handled cases of war guilt only
    and genocide in times of peace was not punishable under those terms,
    Dr Lemkin resolved to carry on his campaign for the establishment
    of genocide as a crime under international law. He presented a draft
    convention on the prevention and punishment of genocide to the Paris
    peace conference in 1945. As in 1933, his proposal failed. He had no
    funding, no office, nor did he represent any government or accredited
    organisation. Yet with the dogged determination that had become
    characteristic of Dr Lemkin's life, he continued his struggle.

    His persistent and persuasive lobbying paid off the following year
    when a further resolution in favour of an international convention
    was put before the United Nations. The resolution was approved and Dr
    Lemkin became an adviser in the writing of an international treaty to
    that effect. On December 9th 1948, the Convention on the Prevention
    and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide was adopted unanimously by
    the United Nations General Assembly. It represented a triumph in the
    struggle that Dr Lemkin had begun some 15 years earlier.

    Once the convention was in place Dr Lemkin continued to lobby
    relentlessly for its ratification. He did so until his death in 1959.

    Dr Raphael Lemkin was twice nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize for his
    work and was honoured with a number of other awards. These included the
    Grand Cross of Cespedes from Cuba in 1950 and the Stephen Wise Award
    of the American Jewish Congress in 1951. On the 50th anniversary of
    the Convention entering into force Dr Rapael Lemkin was also recently
    honoured by UN Secretary-General as an inspiring example of moral
    engagement.

    www.europaworld.org
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