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Is It Never Again Or Nevermind?

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  • Is It Never Again Or Nevermind?

    IS IT NEVER AGAIN OR NEVERMIND?
    Gail Chatfield - North County Times

    North County Times, CA
    April 30 2007

    I'm not a fan of T.S. Eliot's poetry, but he does have an opening line
    that I find pretty accurate. "April is the cruelest month," he wrote.

    April 24 is commemorated as the beginning of the Armenian genocide.

    Ninety-two years later and there is still debate if the deaths of 1.5
    million Armenians by torture, starvation, deportation and massacre
    should be called "genocide."

    Holocaust Remembrance Day, which memorializes the deaths of over 6
    million Jews under the Nazi regime, was April 16 this year.

    April was also the 13th anniversary of the slaughter of 800,000 Tutsis
    by rival Hutus in Rwanda.

    But we cannot forget the Nanking massacre, 300,000 dead; Cambodia
    genocide, 2 million dead; and the Bosnia genocide, 200,000 dead. In
    Darfur, Sudan, 400,000 people have been killed and over 2 million
    civilians have been displaced since 2003.

    Call it genocide, ethnic cleansing or casualties of war, but definitely
    call it repetitive. Has "Never again" become "Nevermind"?

    I had the opportunity to hear Benson Deng speak recently at Chalice
    Unitarian Universalist Congregation in Escondido. Benson, along with
    his cousin and brother, wrote the book, "They Poured Fire on Us From
    the Sky."

    Benson was only 7 years old when he and 26,000 other Sudanese boys
    ran from their burning villages in the late 1980s during a civil war
    between the Muslim, Khartoum-based government in the north and the
    Christians and animists in the south. The war continues to this day.

    The 26,000 are known as the Lost Boys of the Sudan. Some of them were
    as young as 5 years old as they walked thousands of miles with no food,
    no water and no adults to the relative safety of Ethiopia. When that
    country forcibly kicked them out, the boys walked to Kenya. They were
    shot at by soldiers, attacked by lions and crocodiles, and killed
    by starvation and disease. Thousands and thousands of unknown little
    boys died.

    The boys were relatively lucky, though. Usually tending their animals
    in the fields, they were able to escape and join up with other young
    boys to form this massive children's exodus. Since girls stayed at
    home, they were killed or kidnapped when the horsemen arrived and
    massacred the villagers.

    Benson, his brother and cousin were lucky once again. Sponsored by the
    International Rescue Committee, they came to San Diego in 2001 after
    their 14-year ordeal. They went to school, got jobs and adjusted to
    their new life. Benson is studying computers and hopes to return to
    his village in southern Sudan to develop clean water sources.

    Benson did answer the question that was on everyone's mind. He
    suggested donating to organizations like Doctors Without Borders and
    the International Rescue Committee. Benson also suggested contacting
    our government representatives.

    Why does suffering continue in the region? The Muglad Basin in
    southwestern Sudan has 3 billion barrels of crude oil. The Darfur
    area has unexploited oil and gold reserves, much needed farmland and
    possibly uranium, bauxite and copper. Never again or nevermind?

    http://www.nctimes.com/articles/2007/0 4/30/opinion/chatfield/42907162601.txt

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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