Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

A Brotherhood Of Suffering Holocaust Museum Gives Voice To Muslim Vi

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

  • A Brotherhood Of Suffering Holocaust Museum Gives Voice To Muslim Vi

    A BROTHERHOOD OF SUFFERING HOLOCAUST MUSEUM GIVES VOICE TO MUSLIM VICTIMS OF GENOCIDE
    By Eric Mink

    St. Louis Post-Dispatch
    January 9, 2008 Wednesday
    Missouri

    Fear? I get it. I've been afraid for my physical safety and my
    psychological well-being and for that of people close to me. I know
    that fear can warp people's judgment and lead them to do stupid,
    even terrible, things.

    But closely aligned with fear, yet actually its opposite, is something
    I do not get at all, something I can not even fathom: the human
    capacity to coolly and systematically create and carry out plans
    for the elimination of people on the basis of some largely arbitrary
    common trait - a religious belief, an ethnic heritage, a tribal or
    national affiliation, a racial feature.

    The Nazi extermination of Europe's six million Jews during World War
    II - along with millions of Slavs, Gypsies, blacks and countless others
    deemed unworthy of life - stands alone in the scale and sophistication
    of its killing systems.

    But there is no shortage of similar stains on the historical record,
    including the allegedly modern historical record. Every so often, it
    seems, one group of humans or another undertakes the vicious business
    of ridding itself of members of a group it has come to despise or
    find inconvenient. The early 20th century, for example, witnessed
    the slaughter of well over 500,000 Armenians - some estimates run as
    high as 1.5 million - by forces of the Ottoman Empire in what now is
    eastern Turkey and Armenia.

    Thirty years later, after we'd come to comprehend the magnitude of
    the Nazis' crimes against humanity, it appeared that we had learned
    something. There were the successful prosecutions of war criminals at
    Nuremberg, the birth of the United Nations and, in 1948, the adoption
    by the U.N. of the international Convention on the Prevention and
    Punishment of the Crime of Genocide.

    And yet organized, officially sanctioned mass murder has continued,
    including - among other instances - Pol Pot's reign of insanity in
    Cambodia in the late 1970s, tribal rage in Rwanda in 1994 and the
    forced expulsions, imprisonments, rapes, torture and murders of ethnic
    and religious groups in the former Yugoslavia in the early 1990s.

    As Samantha Power, a Pulitzer-Prize-winning author, academic and
    former journalist has put it, the failure of the world's nations -
    including the United States - to prevent or limit such massacres is
    accurately characterized not by the vow "never again" but by the phrase
    "again and again."

    On the Creve Coeur campus of the Jewish Community Center, the St.

    Louis Holocaust Museum and Learning Center keeps alive the documented
    record of the Nazi liquidation of the Jews, the chilling details of its
    methodical processes and the stories of some who, somehow, survived
    the ghettos, the rail transports, the forced labor camps and the
    death camps. The core exhibit marshals all the tools of professional
    museum storytelling - composition, lighting, historical artifacts,
    still photography, film and other multi-media technology - to create
    a powerfully affecting display of Jewish suffering and survival.

    And just steps away - in a separate, brightly lit hall filled with
    rows of folding chairs - 30 oversized posterboard panels affixed to
    the walls and a video presentation bear witness to more suffering
    and survival. Not of Jews but of Muslims.

    The impact of this simple, low-tech presentation - "Prijedor: Lives
    from the Bosnian Genocide" - catches you off-guard. On two Sunday
    afternoon visits, I moved slowly around the room, re-learning the
    chronology of the breakup of Yugoslavia and the human firestorms
    that followed. I learned for the first time the stories of victims
    and survivors who eventually made their way to the United States and
    the St. Louis area.

    The cumulative effect of the information and the personal accounts
    sickened me. Then I watched the video.

    It is a decidedly unsophisticated production consisting mainly of
    interviews of people against a stark white background. The picture
    occasionally jumps. The audio has a hollow, echo-y quality that
    sometimes requires extra concentration to hear. The interviewers -
    Fontbonne University students - are unseen. The on-camera interviewees
    are eyewitnesses to, and survivors of, brutality that would be
    unimaginable if it did not occur with such regularity - and if the
    evidence photos that are edited into the footage did not reveal it
    so clearly.

    Most of the people tell their stories in Bosnian, then sit silently as
    an off-camera voice translates their words into English. Even if you
    could not understand either language, you would know from their eyes
    - which seem to be peering at images deep inside their own heads -
    that they are describing terrible things.

    It is important to note that the "Prijidor" exhibit, which focuses on
    events involving the cities, towns and villages in the Bosnian district
    of the same name, originated within St. Louis' large and vibrant
    Bosnian community of some 50,000 people. Members of a group called
    the Union of Citizens of Prijedor brought the idea to the museum, then
    worked with museum staff, Fontbonne and Patrick McCarthy, who has spent
    years researching the Bosnian genocide, to put the exhibit together.

    It's also important to note that the exhibit draws virtually all its
    factual information and data from the report of a specially constituted
    United Nations Commission of Experts and other U.N.

    documents. The section of the commission report on Prijedor concludes
    as follows: "It is unquestionable that the events in the [district of]
    Prijedor since 30 April 1992 qualify as crimes against humanity.

    Furthermore, it is likely to be confirmed in court under due process
    of law that these events constitute genocide."

    The 1948 U.N. document establishing genocide as a crime - the United
    States did not ratify it until 1988 - defines it as policies and
    certain acts of violence "committed with the intent to destroy,
    in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group. .

    . ."

    The Commission of Experts report found that the number of Muslims in
    the Prijedor district - who were all but indistinguishable from their
    non-Muslim neighbors and represented about half the total population -
    fell from 49,454 in 1991 to 6,124 in 1993. The Bosnian Serb forces that
    seized power in Prijedor in 1992 pursued policies of forced expulsions
    of Muslims (called "ethnic cleansing"); their imprisonment of Muslims
    in camps where they were beaten, raped, tortured and starved; and
    the outright murder of educated and influential Muslim individuals
    and groups of men, women and children.

    On Dec. 10, 1986, Elie Wiesel traveled to Oslo, Norway, to accept
    the Nobel Peace Prize. In his remarks, the author, philosopher and
    survivor of the Nazi concentration camps said that "I have tried to
    keep memory alive, that I have tried to fight those who would forget.

    Because if we forget, we are guilty; we are
Working...
X