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  • Samantha Power, Rwandan Genocide Survivors Address NCC Event

    Samantha Power, Rwandan Genocide Survivors Address NCC Event

    >From "Carol Fouke" <[email protected]>
    Date Mon, 26 Apr 2004 18:24:27 -0400

    For Immediate Release

    Samantha Power, Rwandan Genocide Survivors Address NCC"s April 23
    Commemoration

    By James N. Birkitt, Jr., for the NCC

    April 23, 2004, LOS ANGELES - A commemoration of the 10th anniversary
    of the Rwandan Genocide, held here today and sponsored by the National
    Council of Churches USA, recalled the horror of the genocide and
    offered a word of counsel and hope - genocide can be prevented.

    Keynote speaker was Samantha Power, recipient of the 2003 Pulitzer
    Prize for her book "'A Problem from Hell': America and the Age of
    Genocide," which focuses on the failure of America, other Western
    governments and the United Nations to respond effectively to genocide.

    Power called on United States to redefine its "Evital interests" to
    include genocide. Currently, long-standing American policy permits
    military intervention only when America's security or economic
    well-being is threatened.

    Another positive step, she said, "would be for the U.S. to replace its
    "all or nothing" diplomatic approach with a continuum of responses and
    options that may stop genocide before it occurs. The failure of the
    U.S. government to act is always an implicit signal to other
    governments as well as a green light to the perpetrators of genocide."

    Power noted that such actions would be necessary to prevent a
    repetition of this horror in Sudan. She pointed out that even the
    slightest condemnation by the U.S. Government of policies of the
    government in Khartoum results in the easing up of hostilities.

    An eclectic gathering of religious leaders, educators, public policy
    experts, students and activists attended the event, titled
    "Remembering Rwanda: Ten Years After The Genocide." Held at the
    Fowler Museum in Los Angeles, the April 23 event featured
    presentations by genocide experts, testimonies by survivors, and the
    premiere showing of a documentary film on the Rwandan Genocide.

    The 1994 Rwandan Genocide, the result of escalating violence between
    Hutu and Tutsi peoples, began in April 1994 and led to the murder of
    more than 800,000 Hutu and moderate Tutsi, and the rape of 250,000
    Hutu women, during 100 days of terror.

    Power's research on the world's failure to intervene in Rwanda notes
    that the response of the United States and other Western countries is
    shaped by decisions made prior to the start of genocide, rather than
    in response to it. She also noted that a series of missteps and mixed
    signals by the United States and the United Nations emboldened the
    perpetrators of the Rwandan Genocide.

    In her remarks, Power highlighted ways future genocides might be
    prevented. In addition to calling on the U.S. government to expand
    its definition of "vital interests" to include prevention and
    intervention in genocide, Power called on journalists to focus world
    attention on genocide, encouraged faith communities to raise their
    voices, and suggested governments note "the early warning signals that
    are always part of the cycle of genocide, including smaller massacres
    that serve as trial balloons to test international response and the
    demonizing of specific groups by the government or the media."

    Power also called on governments to find new ways to conduct
    diplomacy. "Diplomats are so conditioned to be diplomats that they
    consistently offer conventional responses in the face of
    unconventional horrors. Governments must replace the pantomime of
    response with robust, effective responses."

    The NCC event included the premiere of "God Sleeps In Rwanda," a
    documentary by filmmakers Kimberlee Acquaro and Stacy Sherman. The
    film highlights ways genocide decimated Rwandan families, destabilized
    the culture, and contributed to the dramatic increase of HIV and AIDS
    among Rwandan women and children.

    During his remarks, Rev. Bob Edgar, General Secretary of the National
    Council of Churches, noted, "It is important that we remember what we
    failed to do, and that includes churches and church people. We must
    ask forgiveness for our silence. Those of us in faith communities must
    honor God's call to love and care for the least of our brothers and
    sisters."

    Dr. Richard Hrair Dekmejian, an expert on the Armenian Genocide and
    professor of political science at the University of Southern
    California, noted that despite the current international focus on
    terrorism, "Terrorists have killed relatively few people when compared
    with genocide."

    Dekmejian, noting the NCC program was being held on the eve of the
    89th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide, called for a three-point
    commitment by faith communities and people of conscience to "bring the
    perpetrators of genocide to justice, work for compensation for its
    victims, and influence governments to prevent and intervene in future
    genocides."

    Gerry Caplan, founder of the international coalition Remembering
    Rwanda, suggested four groups who must be remembered one decade after
    the Rwandan Genocide: "those who died; the victims who survived; the
    perpetrators, most of whom were never brought to justice; and the
    international community, or more accurately, international bystanders,
    who actively chose not to get involved."

    Caplan laid broad blame for the failure to intervene in the Rwandan
    Genocide on parties including churches within Rwanda, the governments
    of the United States and Europe and the United Nations.

    Also participating in the program was Rabbi Allen I. Freehling,
    Executive Director of the Los Angeles Human Relations Commission.
    Rabbi Freehling closed the program with words from the Hebrew prophets
    exhorting all people to love their fellow human beings.

    Two Rwandan Genocide survivors vividly described the destruction of
    entire villages and towns, the use of rape as a tool of genocide, the
    mass psychosis of genocide, and the lasting impact on survivors. In a
    powerful and moving moment, one survivor said, "I recently looked
    through my photo albums of my friends and family from Rwanda - and
    realized that everyone in those photos is dead. Except for me. I am
    called to bear witness."

    The "Remembering Rwanda: Ten Years After The Genocide" commemorative
    event was held as part of the World Council of Churches' Decade To
    Overcome Violence.

    Reflecting after the event, Dr. Antonios Kireopoulos, the NCC's
    Associate General Secretary for International Affairs and Peace,
    commented that "What was quite compelling was Samantha Power's
    assessment that the lessons of Rwanda could be applied today to
    prevent another tragedy in Sudan. If we have learned anything as an
    international community from our various commemorations of the Rwandan
    Genocide, it is that we must apply these lessons to situations that
    come before us. Otherwise, we will be resigned to saying yet another
    time, 'Never again!'"

    -end-

    NCC Media Liaison: Carol Fouke, 212-870-2252; [email protected];
    www.ncccusa.org James N. Birkitt, Jr., Director of Communication of
    the Universal Fellowship of Metropolitan Community Churches, Los
    Angeles, filed this report.
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