Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

A Crime Called Genocide

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • A Crime Called Genocide

    A CRIME CALLED GENOCIDE
    By Bud Mortenson

    University of British Columbia, Canada
    Nov 1 2007

    UBC Okanagan Scholar Seeks Knowledge from the Heart of Darkness

    Near a small town in Bosnia this summer, Adam Jones watched in the
    rain as a mass grave was exhumed, the remains of dozens of nameless
    people brought forth from the sodden earth. It was a solemn reminder
    of a terrible truth: "Genocide is woven inextricably into the fabric
    of modern history," he says.

    "We're coming to a greater understanding of just how pervasive
    this phenomenon has been throughout history," says Jones, an
    Assoc. Prof. of Political Science who joined UBC Okanagan this year
    from Yale University.

    Until 1943, it was called the "crime without a name." Today, genocide
    is a label judiciously applied to atrocities around the globe, as
    experts like Jones build new understanding about what motivates one
    group to seek the extermination of another.

    "In studying genocide, I've come to appreciate how many societies
    have been vulnerable to it. When we talk about genocidal prevention,
    we're coming to terms with the legacy of the past," he says.

    "Hopefully, that makes us more aware of the destructive processes
    when they arise today."

    Jones has traveled the world to learn more about the places and people
    involved in genocide. From Bolivia to Bosnia, he has seen first-hand
    the horrific damage inflicted by one group against another.

    The author of a new textbook, Genocide: A Comprehensive Introduction
    (www.genocidetext.net), Jones was drawn to UBC's Okanagan campus
    by an interdisciplinary approach to research, and an opportunity
    to delve ever deeper into what he calls "the heart of darkness" --
    genocide through history and around the world.

    He's keenly interested in the role of gender in genocide. Examples of
    gender-selective atrocities -- "gendercide" -- are found in the witch
    hunts of Europe, colonial North America, and even modern-day Africa.

    Gendercide also permeates Africa's long history of conflict, where
    invading forces cull battle-aged males from the population, thwarting
    any resistance. In one historical case, that of Shaka Zulu's imperial
    armies in the early 19th century, the oppressing army did the opposite,
    killing all the women and children, forcing the men into service
    as soldiers.

    "The role of gender in atrocities is under-explored," Jones says.

    "I'm now looking at women and men as victims, perpetrators and
    bystanders in genocide. Understanding the role of gender helps us
    better understand the dynamics of genocide."

    Jones has developed tools to expose and record genocide -- so the
    crime, the perpetrators, and their victims are not nameless.

    Gendercide Watch, a non-profit organization he founded under the
    auspices of the Gender Issues Education Foundation, is one of these
    tools: collecting and publishing online a wide range of gendercide
    case studies, from Armenia during World War One to Rwanda in 1994, and
    more recent world media reports on gendercide. He has also published
    a comprehensive look at media coverage and human-rights reports about
    gender-selective killings in Darfur, Sudan.

    Jones takes some comfort in knowing that against considerable
    cultural odds, great social victories have been won in the past --
    over slavery and in advancing women's rights, for example. "Maybe
    there is a chance to engineer similar transformations when it comes
    to genocide," he says.

    Two years ago, his explorations took him to Potosí, Bolivia, and
    the Cerro Rico mountain, the richest silver mine in history. "For
    two centuries, this mine fueled the epic excess of the Spanish
    monarchs," Jones writes on his genocidetext.net website. "Still today,
    it is excavated -- mostly for other minerals -- by a small army of
    poverty-stricken miners whom I had the honour of joining for a couple
    of hours deep in the humid bowels of the mountain."

    During the colonial period, at least one million forced labourers,
    and perhaps as many as eight million -- mostly Aymara Indians, but
    including some African slaves -- died in the mines of Cerro Rico.

    "There are grounds for believing that the Cerro Rico is the world's
    greatest single tomb," says Jones. "Potosí reminds us that our journey
    into genocide is only beginning -- and with it, our reckoning of our
    past and present barbarisms, and our potential to banish the scourge
    for good."

    http://www.publicaffairs.ubc.ca/ubcre ports/2007/07nov01/genocide.html

    --Boundary_(ID_6 D8wR6m8MBFy7FaKPB5AwQ)--

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X