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Panelists say situation in Darfur demands less talk, more action

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  • Panelists say situation in Darfur demands less talk, more action

    New Jersey Jewish News, NJ
    March 16 2007


    Panelists say situation in Darfur demands less talk, more action

    by Ron Kaplan
    NJJN Staff Writer

    How many here are under 25?' asked Matthew Emry, facing an audience
    at Drew University in Madison. `How many over 55? How many female?'

    Innocent questions, perhaps, but for Emry, a senior program officer
    with the American Jewish World Service, they were a way to bring home
    the tragedy of Darfur, the region of Sudan where more than two
    million people have been killed or displaced during a regional
    genocide.

    `When we look at any given population who are being impacted by
    conflict and crisis, you are seeing a majority of the population
    being children, adolescents, and women,' he explained.

    Emery was part of a forum at the Darfur Day of Conscience hosted at
    the university on Feb. 7.

    The forum was the final event in a day-long program that also
    featured a morning workshop for middle and high school teachers and
    an afternoon presentation by Abdelbagi Abushanab, president of the
    Newark-based Darfur Rehabilitation Project.
    The program was sponsored by the university's Center for
    Holocaust/Genocide Study and a range of campus groups as well as the
    New Jersey Amistad Commission and the NJ Commission on Holocaust
    Education.

    Dr. Geraldine Smith-Wright, a professor of English at Drew, served as
    moderator for the concluding panel, which included Dr. Matthew
    Levinger, director of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum's
    Academy for Genocide Prevention, and Assemblyman William D. Payne
    (D-Dist. 29). She said she hoped the audience would come away from
    the forum with the idea of moving `from talk to walk.'

    In his remarks, Emry outlined the scope of the genocide in Darfur,
    where women are particularly vulnerable and rape is a weapon in the
    Khartoum government's war on black Darfurians. With husbands, sons,
    and parents missing or among the dead, women and young girls in
    displaced persons' camps are forced to walk miles in search of water
    and wood for fuel, leaving them at the mercy of the Jangaweed, the
    militia sponsored by Omar al-Bashir's government.

    Because of the social stigma of rape, victims are reluctant to come
    forward and often forgo the opportunity for medical and emotional
    counseling. They also lose their economic future, Emry said. `Women
    who are raped do not wed, plus they must care for the children, who
    are shunned by the community as well.'

    Emry offered several suggestions for bringing more attention to the
    crisis, including increasing financial support, contacting media
    ombudsmen to demand more coverage, and holding more educational
    programs like the one at Drew.

    Levinger and Payne said American reaction too often comes down to
    economics: $50 million that had been earmarked for African Union
    peacekeepers in the region was stripped from the 2006 budget.
    Thirty-four senators signed a letter to President George W. Bush,
    asking for `specifically designated and robust funding to meet the
    emergency needs in Darfur' for the 2007 fiscal year and the upcoming
    supplemental appropriations request. Political leaders `have to be
    persuaded that the costs of inaction outweigh the costs of action,'
    Levinger said.

    Emry expressed little faith in political promises, however. `It makes
    me laugh when [they] say, `We're going to pass a resolution, pass a
    bill, launch an investigation...'' said Emry. `We can write reports
    till our faces are blue, but unless real action is taken, they don't
    mean anything. They can't just sign their name and think they've done
    enough.'

    Never again?

    Levinger described his department at the Holocaust museum as a new
    initiative of the its Committee on Conscience, which was created to
    respond to contemporary genocides.

    `We owe an obligation to our fellow humans anywhere in the world to
    act to resist violence that aims to destroy entire populations,' he
    said. `We talk about the lessons of the Holocaust, but the Holocaust
    really has no lessons. The only lesson is that humans are capable of
    incomprehensible cruelty. The lessons lie in our response to that
    encounter with mass violence.'

    Levinger said that there are currently 7,000 monitors in the Sudan, a
    figure he called inadequate. `[W]e can't just say `These people are
    nuts and there's nothing you can do about it.' A robust peacekeeping
    force...would send a clear message that the international community was
    not prepared to tolerate that kind of deterioration.'

    Payne also lamented that the international community has not learned
    from the past.

    `We've heard `Never again' over and over. The phrase has lost its
    meaning.' He compared Darfur with the genocides of World War II and
    those in Armenia, Cambodia, Rwanda, and Bosnia. `They cried out for
    help, and we did not help.'

    Payne, who serves as vice chair of the State Assembly budget
    committee, was the primary sponsor of a bill prohibiting investment
    of pension funds in foreign companies doing business with Sudan. The
    bill was signed into law by then Gov. Richard Codey last July.

    Recalling the protests of the late 1960s, the assemblyman urged
    students to take the point in the continuing struggle. `Regardless of
    how far away it is, we have to speak up and do something about it,'
    said Payne, brother of U.S. Rep. Donald M. Payne (D-Dist. 10), who
    has taken a lead role in Congress on the Darfur issue.

    `The educational community - university students, high school
    teachers, members of the community at large - are essential audiences
    to our work,' Levinger said. `Often it is students who have been
    among the most creative and passionate advocates for recognizing our
    common humanity.'

    Two organizations geared especially for students are
    HelpDarfurNow.org (middle and high school) and Standarfur.org
    (college).
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