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Dallaire event offers message of tolerance

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  • Dallaire event offers message of tolerance

    DALLAIRE EVENT OFFERS MESSAGE OF TOLERANCE
    BY BESSIE BORWEIN, SPECIAL TO THE FREE PRESS

    London Free Press (Ontario, Canada)
    September 13, 2004 Monday Final Edition

    There was an event of great importance in London in August, namely,
    the Gen. Romeo Dallaire Summer Institute on Teaching the Holocaust
    and Genocide.

    It ran for five days in a room at the Ivey School of Business at the
    University of Western Ontario. About 40 teachers were there to learn
    ways of teaching the centrality of tolerance for the preservation of
    our democratic society and its human rights.

    The event was planned by the London Association for the Elimination
    of Hate, with the collaboration of the Holocaust Literature Research
    Institute at UWO founded by Alain Goldschlager and the London Jewish
    Federation.

    A major topic was genocide, what it is and what it is not. Genocide
    is essentially the deliberate, organized, systematically planned
    murder of a people, targeted for who they are with the intent to
    wipe them out. It is not a term to be used casually and carelessly.
    Genocide always involves hatred and is preceded by the indoctrination
    of hatred of the targeted people, delegitimizing them as humans by
    calling them cockroaches, pigs, apes, or caterpillars. Genocide is
    a political ideological tool.

    In the last 100 years, there have been, among others, the Rwandan
    and Armenian genocides and the Holocaust. The study of these formed
    a crucial component of the Dallaire summer institute. Other terrible
    slaughters in that time have included those in Cambodia, the former
    Yugoslavia, the Congo, the Iraqi gassing of the Kurds and the millions
    killed by the former Soviet Union (the Gulag), in the Chinese Cultural
    Revolution, and by the Japanese in China and Southeast Asia, and in
    the rape of Nanking. A terrible century.

    In Rwanda, there were at least four years of preparation by extremist
    Hutus for the genocide of the Tsutsis, by the indoctrination of hate
    by hate-filled language (the radio was important in this) and the
    stockpiling of half a million machetes.

    In the genocide, not only were more than 800,000 Tsutsis killed in
    100 days (a greater rate of killing even than that at Auschwitz)
    but they also murdered moderate Hutus (bystanders). They planned to
    leave no witnesses and no evidence.

    As he watched the horror unfolding, Dallaire, in Rwanda with a
    UN peacekeeping mission, pleaded with Kofi Annan for permission to
    intervene and for additional help. Dallaire disobeyed Annan and saved
    40,000 Rwandans.

    Canadian Maj. Brett Beardsley, who was Dallaire's right-hand man
    in Rwanda, gave a powerful address to the institute. He described
    watching the unfolding of the horror of the well-planned genocide,
    the impotence of the UN, and its unwillingness to give Dallaire the
    authority and the means to stop the killing. He also referred to the
    embedded corruption at the UN.

    A few years ago, Londoners Elaine Pensa and Laila Norman persuaded
    London city council to set up an informal committee to address the
    presence here of hate-language, and assaults on persons, properties
    and identifiable groups. From the deliberations of that committee
    resulted the establishment of the Association for the Elimination of
    Hate, supported by city council.

    I would like to pay a tribute to Rich Hitchens and Debbie Lee for
    their work in getting the institute going. It is hoped that it will
    be a model for other Canadian cities.

    The Dallaire summer institute will be held annually and there are
    plans to build in London a tolerance education centre.

    Teaching of tolerance is the best way to protect our liberty, democracy
    and civil society. We cannot tolerate the teaching of intolerance,
    which threatens our precious human rights and our freedom.
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