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Robert Fisk: all the world is a mass grave

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  • Robert Fisk: all the world is a mass grave

    Robert Fisk: all the world is a mass grave

    June 18, 2011 - 12:42 AMT

    PanARMENIAN.Net - All the world is a mass grave, Robert Fisk says in
    an article he titled `We can't tell the victims to leave mass graves
    in peace.'

    `Why, only a few miles north of Jisr al-Shughour, the Syrian fields
    are still strewn with thousands of bones and bits of skulls; all that
    is left in just this one location of the one and a half million men,
    women and children who were murdered in the 1915 Armenian holocaust,'
    Fisk says.

    `Then there's there's a place called "Barbara's Pit" near a town
    called Lasko where the mass grave, only 66 years old this time,
    contains perhaps 1,000 skeletons about whom no one really wishes to
    talk.'

    `Where we can, we do now identify the dead. The vast 1914-1918 war
    cemeteries and the graveyards of the Second World War define our
    craving for individualism amid barbarism. Yet mass graves lie beneath
    every crossroads in Europe; from the war of the Spanish succession to
    the Hundred Years War, to the Franco-Prussian war, from Drogheda to
    Srebrenica and, of course, to the ash pits of Auschwitz. In 1993, I
    visited the remains of the Treblinka extermination camp in Poland just
    after a gale had unearthed trees from the ground. In the roots of one,
    I found human teeth,' he continues.

    `There's a mass grave only two miles from my home in Beirut - of
    Palestinian victims of the Sabra and Shatila massacre whom I watched
    being buried, only a few of whose names I know - and which will never
    be reopened. Not in our lifetime. And there are mass graves - of
    perhaps 30,000 Iraqi dead - buried alive by US forces in the 1991 Gulf
    War, unmarked, of course.'

    Fisk concludes, `I'm not sure where the search should end. Who would
    deny the relatives of the dead of Srebrenica - whose principal killer
    at last resides in the Hague - the chance of praying at the graves?
    Who would turn their backs on the mass graves of Buchenwald? Or the
    frozen hills of bones that mark the burial of the 350,000 Leningraders
    who starved to death in 1941 and 1942?'

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