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The Trouble With The 'Genocide' Label

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  • The Trouble With The 'Genocide' Label

    THE TROUBLE WITH THE 'GENOCIDE' LABEL
    Salil Tripathi

    Washington Post
    http://newsweek.washingtonpost.com/postglobal /needtoknow/2009/04/the_trouble_with_the_genocide. html
    April 28 2009

    The Current Discussion: Today is "Genocide Remembrance Day "in the
    Armenian community, a particularly strained time of year for Turkey and
    Armenia. What's a realistic first step forward toward reconciliation
    for each of these countries?

    Turkey and Armenia have begun the slow, tentative waltz of rebuilding
    relations, after President Obama spoke in Istanbul, but did not use
    the G-word.

    That was perhaps a wise decision, notwithstanding the strong emotive
    reason that propelled many to call a spade a spade, a machete a
    machete, and a genocide a genocide, leading to the Congressional
    Resolution. The truth is that ultimately only communities themselves
    can make the decision to leave the past behind. International
    leaders - even one as gifted as Barack Obama - can only play a
    limited role. (Sudan's conflict didn't stop when Colin Powell called
    the killings in Darfur a genocide, and few countries joined him in
    condemning the Sudanese leadership.)

    This is a peculiar period in the world annals of our coming to terms
    with genocide. Cambodia is trying to account for genocide and killing
    fields by indicting Kaing Guek Eav, also known as Duch. India's ruling
    party withdrew a candidate for Parliament, partially in response to
    a shoe-throwing incident. (Credible human rights groups allege that
    the candidate was involved in the 1984 Sikh massacre, after two Sikh
    bodyguards assassinated former Prime Minister Indira Gandhi.) Tamils
    in Britain accuse the Sri Lankan army of committing genocide in
    Sri Lanka. Bangladesh's newly-elected government sets its sights
    on bringing to justice those accountable for the Pakistani Army's
    widespread killings of Bangladeshis in 1971.

    And then there is Rwanda. This month is the 15th anniversary of
    the Rwandan genocide. In a recent issue of Paris Review, the French
    writer Jean Hatzfeld recalls the uneasy aftermath of dealing with
    released prisoners who had at one time massacred a community's loved
    ones. Hatzfeld's books - The Machete Season (2005), Life Laid Bare
    (2007), and The Antelope's Strategy (2009) -- are required reading
    for anyone who wants to understand the psyche of the perpetrator and
    the victim, of what makes a killer, and, as Hannah Arendt observed
    in the context of Eichmann, the banality of evil.

    The fixation with the word 'genocide' comes from its emotive
    power. Among human rights abuses, genocide is arguably the worst,
    which is why governments fight tooth and nail to prevent others from
    calling their heinous acts as genocidal. The definition, developed
    after we discovered the horrors of Auschwitz and Buchenwald, is written
    bearing in mind the Nazi atrocities against the Jewish community. Those
    abuses made every preceding abuse seem less significant. With the
    definition was so precisely drafted, what were we to call Stalin's
    purges - or even Pol Pot's bloody rule - where a single ethnic group
    wasn't targeted, and where the masterminds of those genocides did not
    always get around to implementing policies that would prevent future
    generations from being born? These were mass killings, massacres,
    crimes against humanity. But they weren't quite like the Holocaust -
    just as the Holocaust wasn't quite like what happened in Cambodia
    between 1975 and 1979.

    Genocide and Crimes Against Humanity are extremely powerful terms,
    which is why governments resent such characterization. The sad
    consequence is that diplomats then perform the delicate dance of
    defining the term more precisely, and argue whether a particularly
    horrendous abuse was genocide. Lost, amidst all this, are human
    impulses - of ethics, morality, revenge, justice, redemption,
    and compassion.

    What happened in Turkey nearly a century ago - as indeed in Rwanda,
    Cambodia, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, and Sudan - must never happen
    again. And yet Obama and other world leaders can only nudge governments
    to do the right thing. Ultimately communities and nations must
    develop the confidence and face the past, apologize where necessary,
    and forgive as appropriate. That requires a moral core, not legalism
    alone. The law helps and is of course necessary. But genocide is wrong
    not because the law says so, but because it is against our conscience.
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