Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Extinguish Acts Of Hatred That Can Ignite Genocide

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Extinguish Acts Of Hatred That Can Ignite Genocide

    EXTINGUISH ACTS OF HATRED THAT CAN IGNITE GENOCIDE

    Rochester Democrat and Chronicle, NY
    Sept 26 2006

    Tatyana Seyko Chiley
    Guest essayist

    (September 26, 2006) - Genocide is "the deliberate and systematic
    extermination of a national or racial group." When I read this
    definition, it sends chills down my back.

    A well-known genocide is the Holocaust: the mass murder of Jews during
    the 1940s. Throughout world history, and up to the present day, many
    genocides have occurred. And it seems as if every time a genocide ends,
    people say, "Never again."

    Yet here we are today, in 2006, with too many people ignoring the
    Darfur genocide. However, it cannot be ignored no matter how hard the
    world tries. Once a genocide begins, the scars are deeply rooted in
    a people and nation.

    It takes just a single person to start a genocide, but it also takes
    a large group of believers to get the process going. If nations
    continue to ignore the warning signs, most definitely a genocide
    will start rapidly unwinding. In a short time, hundreds are dead,
    then thousands and then millions. Genocides occur mainly because of
    the four-letter word: hate. One group thinks it is superior, so it
    plans carefully to exterminate that target.

    Small acts of persecution, abuse and hate can rapidly spin out of
    control. How? Simple. No one stands up for the truth. Thousands watch
    on the sidelines, thinking, "It's not my fight," or "I'll get hurt
    if I try to intercede." I believe it's worth it to suffer for others
    rather than to idly watch them suffer.

    Genocides first start very small and quietly. Witnesses and even
    victims think that a mass murder will not occur from such a small
    event. Large, powerful nations hope the genocide disappears on its
    own. Why don't people show interest when millions are killed? Aren't
    a thousand innocent lives slaughtered enough to gain attention? The
    only way for a genocide to subside is if it is stopped or if the
    extermination is completed.

    Don't let small acts of hatred mushroom. If you see someone putting
    down someone or someone's belief, step in.

    We, as the new generation, cannot let history repeat itself. Don't let
    the Armenian genocide, Holocaust, Cambodian genocide, Bosnian genocide,
    Rwandan genocide or Darfur genocide go unnoticed or be repeated. If
    one person can send hate around the world, then one soul can also
    send love around the world and back! Little things matter.

    Tatyana is a ninth-grader at Greece Olympia High School.
Working...
X