Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Camp Darfur To Fight Genocide

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

  • Camp Darfur To Fight Genocide

    CAMP DARFUR TO FIGHT GENOCIDE

    The UCLA Daily Bruin
    Nov 5 2008
    CA

    November is Genocide Awareness Month. As a result, the Darfur Action
    Committee (DAC) is holding events throughout the month to educate and
    inspire students against genocide and the ongoing conflict in Darfur.

    Today in Wilson Plaza, the DAC will present Camp Darfur, a series of
    tents modeled after refugee camps.

    Each interactive tent will represent historic genocides including
    Armenia, Cambodia, Rwanda and the Holocaust.

    Participants will gain insight through photographs, videos and
    testimonies from actual camp visitors.

    Kristen Savage, the DAC's Publicity Committee Chair, said, "These
    events create common ground. They put names and faces to the sheer
    numbers."

    On Thursday, the DAC will screen "God Grew Tired of Us," a documentary
    following three of the Lost Boys of Sudan who fled wars in the 1980s
    and escaped to America. The screening will take place in the Kerckhoff
    Art Gallery at 1 p.m.

    Tiffany Man, the DAC's Event Programming Committee Chair, emphasized
    that this film helps students understand how the Sudanese Civil War
    has affected and continues to affect genocide in Darfur today.

    Finally, the DAC, along with the American Indian Students Association,
    will sponsor American Indian Awareness Day on Nov. 25.

    Accordingly, they will screen "The Canary Effect: Kill the Indian,
    Save the Man," on Nov. 25.

    This documentary traces the history of the United States government's
    abuse and genocide of American Indians.

    The DAC members each possess a unique reason for their passion about
    genocide awareness.

    "It is outrageous that in the modern world, nothing has been done,"
    said Anjana Puri, the DAC's outreach and external relations co-head.

    Savage added that stopping genocide in Darfur is a pressing issue
    because basic human rights have been violated atrociously.

    "This crosses cultural, racial and socioeconomic lines," she said. "We
    need to take a stand against genocide,"

    Man's reason for involvement springs from an ability to relate to
    the persecuted.

    "The victims are similar to us. They have family and friends too,
    but they live in constant danger and fear.

    "We need to experience their pains and triumphs and realize our common
    humanity," she explained.

    Members of the DAC offered the following advice to students who wish
    to promote awareness and peace in Darfur: Educate yourself and others,
    lobby officials to affect change, vote for candidates who will help
    Darfur, and donate money to organizations like the Red Cross, Amnesty
    International, or the Jewish World Watch's Solar Cooker Project.

    The Jewish World Watch's Solar Cooker Project is an organization that
    allows refugees to prepare meals with solar cookers near their homes.

    Puri, the Director of High School Activism Outreach Project, further
    encouraged educating high school students about genocide so that they
    may in turn spread knowledge within their communities.

    Savage emphasized that the DAC needs volunteers of all commitment
    levels, whether large or small.

    "We have grown incredibly in the past year, and we hope to see it grow
    even more," she said. "We want not only to educate, but to engage."
Working...
X