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Students Raise Darfur Awareness

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  • Students Raise Darfur Awareness

    STUDENTS RAISE DARFUR AWARENESS
    by: Stacy Lee

    New University, CA
    UC, Irvine
    June 5 2006

    Students simulated a refugee camp on Ring Road in coordination with
    "Climb for Darfur" event in Lake Forrest.

    The Darfur Action Committee gave a new meaning to "on-campus housing"
    last Tuesday and Wednesday when members of the club slept in a crowded
    tent on Ring Road for two days to simulate the conditions of refugee
    camps in Darfur, a region in eastern Sudan where, according to the
    Coalition for International Justice, 400,000 people have been killed
    in a genocide.

    The event coincided with a "Climb for Darfur" rock-climbing fundraiser
    held on Sunday at Solid Rock Gym in Lake Forest. Camp Darfur was
    developed by Gabriel Stauring, a co-founder of Stop Genocide Now,
    an organization dedicated to educating the public about the genocide
    and finding means to stop it. Stauring and others organized the
    first Camp Darfur event back in April, held for five days in Lennox,
    Calif. next to LAX. Any interested parties were invited to sleep in
    tents to experience the life of Darfur refugees.

    Co-chairs second-year political science and history double-major
    Sevana Sammis and second-year political science major Yvette Shirinian
    attended the event and quickly took steps to organize another campout
    at UC Irvine.

    "We had to write a proposal to the dean of students to prove why it
    was a worthy cause," Sammis said. "We had to outline every single
    detail. Fortunately, we were sponsored by the School of Social
    Sciences and got support from the Vice Chancellor of Student Affairs
    Manuel Gomez."

    After a month and a half of seeking permission, 10 students were
    allowed to sleep in the small, drafty tent for two nights.

    "It was a great experience for all the DAC members to get to know each
    other while making a statement at the same time to the rest of the
    students that there's a genocide going on, [which is] important enough
    for us to spend two nights on Ring Road despite the uncomfortable
    conditions," Shirinian said.

    On Tuesday night, guest speaker Vazken Movsesian, who had returned from
    a trip to Rwanda a decade after its own genocide, presented a slide
    show to a crowd of approximately 30 students during a candlelight
    vigil. In several frames, he explained that the concrete slab he was
    standing under was a mass grave of more than 2,600 bodies, with four
    to 60 victims per casket. Another picture showed a woman with a scar
    across her right cheek, a survivor of the Rwanda genocide.

    "She showed me that 'machete,' is not a noun. It's a verb," Movsesian
    said. "You can't cut through with a single blow. You have to machete
    a person over and over to cut off a head, to kill."

    Students saw images of the Ntarama Church where over 5,000 died after
    a priest betrayed a whole community to the rebels. The church was
    left as a shrine with shelves of skulls and separate rows reserved
    for those of babies.

    "Why did they kill the children? Because they knew that one day they
    would grow up to become the enemy," Movsesian said.

    But Movsesian also showed images of hope, children playing soccer
    with a ball made from scraps, orphans of the genocide building homes
    for families and widows working to make a future for themselves and
    their children.

    "When I saw these women, I saw my grandmother [surviving through the
    Armenian genocide]. For a moment I saw beyond color. It didn't matter,"
    Movsesian said. "We need to remember that we are all people.

    We are all together."

    On the following night, DAC presented a screening of "Invisible
    Children," a documentary about children in Uganda who were abducted
    and forced to become soldiers. About 60 to 70 students attended and
    also saw a clip from former Marine Brian Steidle, who witnessed the
    Darfur genocide firsthand.

    With both Camp Darfur and the fundraising event over, the DAC plans
    to continue to work to end the genocide, even as the school year
    comes to a close.

    "Camp Darfur has definitely been a success. Now a lot more people know
    about the genocide," Sammis said. "Obviously there's a lot more we can
    do, but at least our first agenda [the UC divestment of UC funds from
    the region] was passed. Now we're waiting on statewide divestment."

    The club also plans to organize activist kits for students interested
    in becoming involved over the summer. For more information, contact
    [email protected].
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