Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Walk against genocide

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

  • Walk against genocide

    my SanAntonio
    April 25 2014

    Walk against genocide

    April 25, 2014 : Updated: April 25, 2014 4:03pm


    SAN ANTONIO -- In 2011, the Texas Legislature proclaimed April as
    Genocide Awareness and Prevention Month. On Sunday, the San Antonio
    Coalition Against Genocide will sponsor the 3rd annual Walk Against
    Genocide from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. at the Campus of the San Antonio Jewish
    Community, 12500 NW Military Highway.

    San Antonians are invited to come hear a witness to the 1994 genocide
    in Rwanda, learn about conflict resolution and peace building, listen
    to the music of Dana Clark and Mar Gutierrez, and, of course, walk in
    solidarity with genocide victims and demonstrate that San Antonio
    cares.

    But does San Antonio care and why? The History Place website estimates
    that in the last hundred years, genocide -- the intentional destruction
    of a whole class of people -- claimed the lives of more than 17 million
    people in seven events, from Armenia in 1915, through the Holocaust
    during World War II, to Rwanda in 1994.

    Most recently, genocide, claiming as many as 400,000 lives has
    occurred in the Darfur region of Sudan. Violence against specific
    religious or ethnic groups continues to this very day in places as far
    flung as Myanmar, Syria and the Central African Republic.

    Do we care? San Antonio is justly proud of its multicultural past and
    present. But there are people in our community whose lives have been
    scarred by the memory of friends and loved ones who suffered horrific
    deaths, or who themselves witnessed, but survived, unspeakable
    atrocities before coming to our city as refugees. They are our
    neighbors.

    A common thread running through many genocide events is that good
    people and their governments turned a blind eye or stood by, taking
    only the mildest of actions -- or acting too late -- against the
    perpetrators.

    Josef Stalin's forced starvation of 7 million people in Ukraine, Adolf
    Hitler's murder of 6 million Jews, Pol Pot's 2 million victims of the
    Cambodian killing fields, and Slobodan Milosevic and his henchmen's
    slaughter of 200,000 Muslims in the former Yugoslavia are some of the
    most well known.

    Even today, despite being indicted as a war criminal by the
    International Criminal Court, Sudan's President Omar al-Bashir remains
    unrestrained in his campaigns of violence against native peoples,
    including fellow Muslims, in Darfur and Sudan borderlands.

    The San Antonio Coalition Against Genocide includes representatives
    from the Community Relations Council of the Jewish Federation of San
    Antonio, Interreligious Council of San Antonio, University
    Presbyterian Church, Holocaust Memorial Museum of San Antonio and
    other residents of our community.

    We are dedicated to promoting public awareness of ongoing genocide and
    mass atrocities in the world and advocating for more effective efforts
    by our own government to prevent this violence from continuing.

    Please come walk with us and show that San Antonio truly cares.

    http://www.mysanantonio.com/opinion/commentary/article/Walk-against-genocide-5430277.php




    From: A. Papazian
Working...
X