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Samantha Power Keynotes NCC 4/23 Event Marking Rwandan Genocide

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  • Samantha Power Keynotes NCC 4/23 Event Marking Rwandan Genocide

    Worldwide Faith News, Press Release
    April 7 2004


    Samantha Power Keynotes NCC 4/23 Event Marking Rwandan Genocide


    NCC TO COMMEMORATE 10th ANNIVERSARY OF RWANDAN GENOCIDE
    Pulitzer Prize-Winning Author Samantha Power to Keynote April 23 Event
    in Los Angeles

    April 7, 2004, NEW YORK CITY - The National Council of Churches USA
    will commemorate the 10th anniversary of the Rwandan Genocide with an
    April 23 event in Los Angeles. "Remembering Rwanda - Ten Years After
    the Genocide" will feature Samantha Power, who won the 2003 Pulitzer
    Prize for her book A Problem from Hell: America and the Age of
    Genocide.

    Free and open to the public, the 7 p.m. event will be held in Fowler
    Museum's Lenart Auditorium, on the campus of the University of
    California at Los Angeles. Preceding the program, at 6 p.m.,
    Kimberlee Acquaro's short film, Journey to Kigali, will have its
    premiere screening. The evening will close with a presentation of
    Rwandan music and dance.

    The event is being held as part of the World Council of Churches'
    Decade to Overcome Violence and of an international initiative called
    "Remembering Rwanda 1994-2004," which is inspiring commemorations this
    month in cities around the world.

    The Rwandan Genocide is a tragic chapter in the history of the 20th
    century. In April 1994, hostilities between the Hutu and Tutsi
    peoples were at such a point that, when the President, who was a Hutu,
    was killed in a plane crash, it touched off a genocide that resulted
    in the deaths of more than 800,000 Tutsi and several thousand moderate
    Hutu. While the events leading up to the genocide may still be
    debated, what is clear is that the international community - including
    the United States and the United Nations - failed to prevent it from
    taking place.

    Samantha Power is a leading authority on genocide. In A Problem from
    Hell: America and the Age of Genocide, she analyzes the genocides of
    the 20th century and the responses of the United States to these
    horrors.

    What she found is striking. As she writes: "It is daunting to
    acknowledge, but this country's consistent policy of nonintervention
    in the face of genocide offers sad testimony not to a broken American
    political system but to one that is ruthlessly effective. The system,
    as it stands now, is working. No U.S. president has ever made
    genocide prevention a priority, and no U.S. president has ever
    suffered politically for his indifference to its occurrence. It is
    thus no coincidence that genocide rages on."

    Citing a case in point in an April 6, 2004, op-ed in The New York
    Times, Power warned, "On this anniversary, Western and United Nations
    leaders are expressing their remorse and pledging their resolve to
    prevent future humanitarian catastrophes. But as they do so, the
    Sudanese government is teaming up with Arab Muslim militias in a
    campaign of ethnic slaughter and deportation that has already left
    nearly a million Africans displaced and more than 30,000 dead. Again,
    the United States and its allies are bystanders to slaughter,
    seemingly no more prepared to prevent genocide than they were a decade
    ago."

    "For all the horror of the Rwandan Genocide, it remains largely a
    forgotten episode in the recent history of the world for most
    Americans," said Dr. Antonios Kireopoulos, the NCC's associate
    general secretary for international affairs and peace.

    Dr. Kireopoulos said he looks forward to Ms. Power's remarks, during
    which she will dissect the Rwandan Genocide and offer proactive steps
    that the international community can take to prevent such horrors from
    happening again.

    "This is crucial for all of us, especially at a time when, in places
    like Sudan, the situation is looking alarmingly familiar," he
    said. "Can we afford not to learn the lessons of Rwanda?"

    The event "Remembering Rwanda - Ten Years After the Genocide" will
    also include remarks by Rev. Dr. Robert W. Edgar, General Secretary of
    the National Council of Churches; Dr. Richard Hrair Dekmejian,
    Professor of Political Science at the University of Southern
    California and an expert on the history of the Armenian Genocide, and
    Rabbi Allen I. Freehling, Executive Director of the Los Angeles City
    Human Relations Commission. The program also will include testimonies
    by Rwandan Genocide survivors.

    -end-

    National Council of Churches
    475 Riverside Dr, New York
    New York 10115-0050
    Media Contact: 212-870-2252
    [email protected]; www.ncccusa.org
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