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  • The End of Genocide

    The End of Genocide
    Monthly Review, VA
    May 08, 06
    by Michael Steinberg
    In an age dominated by brute force and overwhelming military power -- in
    other words, any age at all -- it is hard to remember that the simplest addition
    to our vocabulary can change the world. This was what Raphael Lemkin
    accomplished in 1944, when in a study on the Nazi occupation of Europe he coined
    the word "genocide."
    Just four years later, the concept entered international law in _the
    Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide_
    (http://www.ohchr.org/english/law/genocide.htm) , passed by the General Assembly of the
    United Nations on December 9, 1948. That Convention gives the following
    definition:

    [G]enocide means any of the following acts committed with intent to destroy,
    in whole or in part, a national, ethnical [sic], racial or religious group,
    as such:
    (a) Killing members of the group;
    (b) Causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group;
    (c) Deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to
    bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part;
    (d) Imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group;
    (e) Forcibly transferring children of the group to another group (Article 2).

    This makes "genocide" a peculiar type of crime. It is what lawyers call a
    mens rea offense, one which encompasses a wide range of conduct whenever it is
    done with a specific intention. Mass killing is what genocide calls to
    mind, of course, but the prohibited acts include mass maiming, reducing the
    living standards of people below the level needed to maintain the population,
    forced sterilization and probably forced contraception, and the mandatory
    surrender of parental rights.
    Lawyers could go further. They know that "calculated" is a legal term of
    art which refers to an objective standard of conduct. An act is calculated to
    bring about a result if a reasonable person would know that the result was
    likely to follow. Throwing someone overboard in the middle of Lake Superior is
    calculated to kill the victim even if the person doing the throwing intends
    nothing more than a harmless prank.
    Put this way, there are a great many countries which have committed genocide.
    Was apartheid not the imposition of serious mental harm on Black South
    Africans, even those who never got in trouble with the police or the army? Didn't
    _Canada_ (http://www.irsr-rqpi.gc.ca/english/historical_eve nts.html) take
    First Nations children from their parents well into the twentieth century? How
    about the 500,000 Iraqi children whose deaths due to _sanctions_
    (http://www.commondreams.org/views/070700-103.htm ) was considered a price worth paying
    by that gentle liberal _Madeleine Albright_
    (http://www.fair.org/index.php?page=1084) ? And might not neoliberal "shock treatment" qualify under subhead
    (c), considering that living standards in the former Soviet Union were brought
    so low as a result that _the population declined dramatically_
    (http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/3984951.stm) ?
    These are all highly debatable questions, of course, and I don't plan to
    debate them. They're offered only to show that the specific definition of
    genocide to which the world community adheres makes sense only within the context
    of its birth. Genocide, as a crime, is a generalized description of Nazi
    race policy. Each of the subheads was derived from a specific practice: (a)
    from the death camps, (b) slave labor, (c) confinement in ghettos, (d) the
    forced sterilization program, and (e) a little-known but real program to "rescue"
    Aryan children from less suitable parents.
    That's not all. Lemkin (or the UN) did more than allow the Nazis to define
    the physical acts constituting genocide. In a way which is proving far more
    troubling, they also let the Nazi paradigm define the other part of the
    offense, the intent or mental state required. The new crime was limited to acts
    intended to harm not specific, concrete human beings but "a national, ethnical
    [sic], racial or religious group, as such." It is a crime which combines
    violence with categorization. Given the breadth of the definition, in fact, it
    is the categorization itself which stands at the heart of the offense.
    Genocide is thus a crime of the imagination. It is harm with the belief
    that every individual act of violence is a step towards the elimination of a
    group. But this raises a question. Why does this intent convert murder into
    something worse than murder?
    The question is most horrifyingly pressing in contemporary Africa. The
    victims in Darfur are described as Africans and the perpetrators as Arabs.
    Genetically these two "groups" are identical, and there are reasons to believe that
    the underlying conflict is one between farmers and pastoralists, but that is
    irrelevant; what counts is the construction of group identity which allows
    the killing and the burning of villages to be seen as the destruction of one
    group by another. It is a murderous and largely -- though not entirely --
    one-sided struggle, and it has produced hundreds of thousands of victims. The
    heart-wrenching TV footage and the finger-pointing editorials may all be
    merited. Yet while the "genocide" label makes Darfur the object of humanitarian
    concern -- or at least the simulacrum of concern, aid budgets still not being
    increased -- _the far vaster, longer, more horrendous slaughter in the Congo_
    (http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2004/11/24/world/ main657774.shtml) goes on
    with hardly a mention even on the inner pages of our newspapers of record. To
    what point is one classified as genocide and the other as a mere civil war?
    Is blood redder in Darfur?
    Nor does the elimination of every sort of group fall within the definition of
    genocide. In 1965 and 1966, for example, hundreds of thousands -- _perhaps
    more than a million_ (http://www.frif.com/new2002/shap.html) -- people were
    murdered in _Indonesia_ (http://www.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/NSAEBB/NSAEBB52/) ,
    mostly because of their real or rumored membership in the Communist Party.
    Entire villages were wiped out. It was a slaughter that in its scope, its low-tech
    brutality, and the resigned acquiescence of most of its victims seems an
    eerie presage of Rwanda. But it was not genocide, because political groups are
    not entitled to the protection of the convention. (Neither was _Stalin's
    liquidation of the kulaks_ (http://www.loc.gov/exhibits/archives/coll.html) ,
    because "social class" doesn't make the list either.) To hack a Communist to
    pieces with a machete is only murder; to hack a Tutsi to death in the same way
    is something else
    And the mens rea of genocide is also a delusion, a delusion which seems to
    have the power of contagion. Its almost inevitable failure is not due to the
    technical difficulty of killing large numbers of people. It is the group
    itself which slips away. Individuals may or may not escape; but the boundaries
    of the category are certain to blur. The problem with the concept of
    genocide is that, like the crime itself, it insists that things are otherwise.
    Categories are always artificial, provisional, inaccurate, misleading. You
    can group people any way you wish, but nothing will assure you that every
    person so categorized will act the same as any other or that those uncategorized
    will not turn out to be fifth columnists. The unitary organism that the
    Nazis called "World Jewry" never existed. This was part of the insanity of the
    theory. It insisted that a merchant banker from Hamburg, a Talmudist from
    Vilna, and a dock worker from Salonika were identical for all important
    purposes. And it was part of the special horror of the Holocaust that everything
    about its victims but the bare datum of their Jewishness was obliterated before
    the actual living Jews, personal lives and family histories stripped away
    with their clothing, were obliterated themselves.
    This is the other problem with the concept of genocide. The Nazi world view
    was fundamentally racist, and the essentialism built into that world view is
    impossible to remove from its afterlife in the newly-minted crime of
    genocide. It has merely been reversed. To the Nazis the SS were heroes and the
    Jews sub-human vermin. In today's discourse the killers are killers, which is
    usually fair enough; but the victims are granted a kind of plenary indulgence
    and appear to us as helpless innocents. One can kill in self-defense and
    wars are routinely fought between equally guilty parties. Only in situations of
    genocide are good and evil so clearly drawn.
    That moral clarity -- to use a Bushism that seems to have fallen from favor
    -- is genocide's public relations strength, but it is the concept's undoing as
    a tool of analysis. The price for that clarity is the same obliteration of
    personal, family, and social history perpetrated by the Nazis. The victims
    have no identity but their group membership.
    For example, suggest some human sympathy towards _a Serb household in Kosovo_
    (http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/628880.s tm) , and you're treated as
    if you were Slobodan Milosevic himself. It is all but impossible to discuss
    the possibility that _the 1994 plane crash which killed the then-president of
    Rwanda_ (http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/africa/694660.st m) and served as
    the excuse for the slaughter there was the work of _Paul Kagame's Tutsi
    rebels_ (http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/africa/694660.st m) -- though some
    students of the events believe that this was the case. It is just as difficult to
    point to _the Rwandan army's later incursions into the Congo_
    (http://www.economist.com/world/africa/displaySto ry.cfm?story_id=3446358) _and its hold on
    some of the area's mines_
    (http://www.globalpolicy.org/security/issues/kong idx.htm) . Having been victims of genocide, the sins of Kosovars and Tutsis both
    past and present are washed as white as snow. The same is true of rebels in
    Darfur after the savage repression licensed by the Sudanese government; only
    now, and only in a few places, does one hear that not all of the atrocities
    were the work of the Janjaweed.
    We do not need a concept that simplifies political struggles beyond
    recognition or gives preferential attention to those calamities where leaders of one
    side happen to claim that their enemy is a specific ethnic, racial or
    religious group. Lemkin and the UN were not to blame; none of this was likely to
    have been foreseen in 1948. The notion of genocide emerged from an
    understandable sense that Nazi crimes were somehow unlike the crimes of the past and
    must never be repeated. But it remains too closely tied to those crimes, and to
    a particular explanation of them, to be of any use in today's world. There
    is no such thing as genocide. There are cruelty, oppression, murder, and
    torture. Those are real, and they need to be stopped. Genocide is imaginary.
    It is time we did away with it.
    _Michael Steinberg_ (http://www.monthlyreview.org/tfoatw.htm) is the author
    of _The Fiction of a Thinkable World: Body, Meaning, and the Culture of
    Capitalism_ (http://www.monthlyreview.org/tfoatw.htm) published this year by
    Monthly Review Press and essays in professional journals in history, music, and
    law. He is a member of the literature collective _Cat's out of the Bag._
    (http://www.catsoutofthebag.com/) He and his wife _Loret_
    (http://photography.rit.edu/faculty-work/pages/st einberg-1.html) , _a photographer and professor of
    documentary photography_ (http://www.rit.edu/~lgfpph/work.html) , live in
    Rochester, New York, under the supervision of two domestic medium-hair cats.

    (http://www.catsoutofthebag.com/)
    (javascript:HaloScanTB('steinberg080506');) (http://mrzine.org/)
    (http://www.statcounter.com/) (http://www.statcounter.com/)
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