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A Flicker Of Light: Sparking Hope And Speaking Out To End Genocide

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  • A Flicker Of Light: Sparking Hope And Speaking Out To End Genocide

    A FLICKER OF LIGHT: SPARKING HOPE AND SPEAKING OUT TO END GENOCIDE
    By Taressa Stovall And Mark S. Porter of The Montclair Times

    Montclair Times, NJ
    May 3 2007

    Human rights activist Yahya Osman of Darfur at the 2d annual Rally
    to Save Darfur Sunday, April 29, at the Union Congregational Church.

    Staff photo by Adam Anik.

    A year ago, a rally of perhaps 2,000 people gathered in Watchung
    Plaza to decry the deaths occurring in Darfur.

    Speakers, including influential politicians, denounced the brutal
    rapes, the pillaging of villages and the undeniable genocide
    perpetrated by Sudan and pro-government tribal militias against the
    western region of the huge nation located in northeast Africa.

    A year later, the killings have increased.

    Terror has grown. Peacekeeping efforts have failed to slow methodical
    raids against Darfuri towns and refugee camps. Aid workers have been
    murdered, assaulted, or intimidated into departing. Sudan wields its
    oil wealth to win strategic support from China - and its leader's
    promise to resist the Islamic terror group al Qaeda has won at least
    acquiescence from the Bush administration.

    This year's rally, in Union Congregational Church, 176 Cooper Ave.

    sought to get people to take action - from sending e-mails to the
    White House to purchasing $25 solar heaters. These heaters already
    enable some of the more than 400,000 Darfuri refugees to prepare food
    in their destitute camps without risk of rape or murder, which often
    occur when they forage outside the camps seeking wood for stoves.

    "Just a year ago, only 15 percent of the American people knew anything
    at all" about the situation in Darfur," Gloria Crist, a leader of
    the Essex County Coalition for Darfur, which organized the rally,
    told the crowd. "Now that we know what's happening, what are we going
    to do about it?"

    The rally in Montclair coincided with more than 400 other gatherings
    throughout the United States on behalf of the "Global Days for Darfur"
    project.

    Along with hundreds of adults filling Union Congregational Church,
    participants included scores of college-age, teenage and younger
    students energized to effect change in an area where an estimated
    400,000 people have been killed and 2.5 million people have become
    refugees.

    "Silence is complicity," said Sen. Robert Menendez, who has actively
    worked to help Darfur through his strong support of the Darfur Peace
    and Accountability Act, and sponsored a $60 million appropriation to
    create a United Nations peacekeeping force.

    Menendez scornfully noted that this $60 million funding "sits in an
    account instead of saving lives."

    "The truth is that the situation in Darfur is a time bomb which could
    explode at any time," Menendez said, expressing his frustration at the
    lack of progress and calling for "serious sanctions" against Sudan,
    including a no-fly zone over Darfur and the possibility of bringing
    Sudanese leaders before the International Criminal Court.

    An escalating obstacle to helping the Darfurian people is the
    increasing danger to relief workers providing aid. "Several
    international aid agencies announced last Monday that they are
    suspending their efforts because of at-tacks," Menendez said.

    Menendez said that he plans to introduce a bipartisan Senate resolution
    to send a message to China, which pumps oil from Sudan while providing
    arms and money to the janjaweed. With China slated to host the 2008
    Summer Olympics in Beijing, "we cannot allow China to host the
    Olympics with blood on their hands," he said, as an enthusiastic
    audience cheered.

    "Chinese investments fuel the atrocities taking place in Darfur,"
    said Menendez.

    Rep. Bill Pascrell Jr., who co-sponsored the Darfur Peace and
    Accountability Act in 2006 and has supported several measures to
    stop the genocide and help the victims, said he was "heartened to
    see this mobilization," and "encouraged by our students. Never have
    I seen our youth so engaged in an issue.

    "While we love our young here, the children of Darfur are
    systematically being robbed of their families, their futures, their
    lives," Pascrell said. "We may be late, but we are not too late for
    hope. We will not be too late unless we allow ourselves to become
    silent."

    Yahya Osman, a Darfurian who is a leader in the Darfur Rehabilitation
    Project, a national organization based in Newark, thanked the crowd
    for their presence and commitment, noting that the students in the
    crowd provided "a sign of hope" for the future.

    "But we need to stop the genocide before it is too late," he
    emphasized. "I ask you not to forget the people who need your help."

    Noting that the lack of food, water medicine and schooling "is part
    of the genocide," Osman forcefully advocated reconciliation. "We
    don't want our people to grow up with hatred in a refugee camp."

    Before the event commenced, Osman told The Times: "We're asking the
    world to stand up and take action. We believe in people power. People
    can bring attention to the crisis by educating, by donating and by
    holding their leaders' feet to the fire."

    Assemblyman William Payne, who authored New Jersey's landmark Sudan
    divestiture law, spoke to the crowd, as did his brother, Rep. Donald
    M. Payne, who was one of earliest and most forceful supporters of
    securing peace in Darfur. Payne was responsible for a congressional
    resolution declaring that the onslaught in Darfur was genocide. Both
    men have visited the refugee camps.

    "There has to be a new attitude about ending the genocide," said Rep.

    Payne, who was appointed chairman of the Subcommittee on African and
    Global Health in February. "~TWe're demanding that China put more
    pressure on the government of Sudan." he said, adding that he is
    introducing legislation to get a no-fly-zone declared around Darfur.

    PERSONAL PERSPECTIVES

    Speakers referred to Darfur as the first - and hopefully the last -
    genocide of the 21st century. During a candle-lighting ceremony,
    speakers referred to other mass-murders such as the Holocaust prior
    to and during World War II, the rampaging killings in Cambodia, the
    slaughter in Rwanda, the genocide of Bosnian Muslims in the 1990s and
    widespread killings of Armenians by Turks early in the 20th century.

    "I am here as a genocide survivor to call the international community
    to action before it is too late," said Joseph Sebarenzi, who lost
    his parents, seven siblings and numerous other relatives during the
    genocide in Rwanda in 1994.

    Sebarenzi commended Montclair for its leadership in raising awareness
    and urging action to help the people of Darfur, adding, "I believe
    that the international community should press the government of Sudan
    to stop this genocide. I think the members of the United Nations
    Security Council have the legal and moral responsibility to protect
    the people of Darfur.

    "Allow a UN force to protect the people of Darfur," urged Sebarenzi,
    who said a UN force "should act without delay."

    Rabbi Steven Kushner of Temple Ner Tamid in Bloomfield and a founding
    member of the Essex County Coalition for Darfur, led a remembrance and
    vigil for Darfur. Survivors, descendants and representatives of 20th
    century genocide victims in Armenia, the Nazi Holocaust, Cambodia,
    Bosnia and Rwanda lit white candles "to return even a flicker of
    light to our world," Kushner said.

    Then Osman lit a green candle for Darfur, "to show us the way, how
    we can stop this genocide," he said.

    "Am I my brother's keeper?" Kushner asked. "It's a question we need
    to ask ourselves as well.

    "It strikes me that, if all we do is remember, we learn nothing,"
    Kushner said. "If not now, when?"

    The ceremony ended with Kushner sounded the shofar, a horn used in
    Jewish religious ceremonies to call people together and sound warnings.

    TOGETHER

    The Montclair Academy Drummers played before the rally, directed by
    Maya Milenovic Workman with Kevin Jones and Reggie Workman. Music for
    the program was performed by members of the Christian Love Baptist
    Church Youth Choir, Irvington; B'nai Keshet & Ner Tamid Choirs;
    and OSAU Choir, Montclair State University, under the direction of
    David Sanders.

    Sara Gold, a senior at Montclair High School who has been involved in
    the Darfur cause since attending the 2006 rally, brought her mother,
    Judy Becker. "She is definitely raising my awareness about Darfur,
    and it was just very moving to hear peoples' experiences from all
    genocide," Becker said.

    Cheryl Marshall-Petricoff, a founder of the Coalition, brought her
    three children, ages 9, 3, and the baby, now 8 months, she was carrying
    when she spoke at last year's rally. "I'm saddened that we're having
    a rally again and not much has changed," she said. "But my spirit is
    always very lifted when I see everyone come together in the commu-nity
    and work together to put more pressure to make change happen."

    The Rev. Charles Ortman of the Unitarian Church of Montclair told The
    Times: "We've allowed humanity too many opportunities to destroy itself
    in the past while we just sat there. We have to be present, stand up
    and raise our voices so our political leaders and our corporate leaders
    can take any measures they can to secure peace and protect human life."

    "Four years is enough," Sebarenzi said of the genocide in Darfur. "We
    need actions, not words."

    "President Bush, time is up," Menendez said. "It's time to save
    Darfur."

    http://www.montclairtimes.com/ page.php?page=14713
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