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NEVER AGAIN, AGAIN, AGAIN ...Genocide: Armenia, The Holocaust, Cambo

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  • NEVER AGAIN, AGAIN, AGAIN ...Genocide: Armenia, The Holocaust, Cambo

    NEVER AGAIN, AGAIN, AGAIN ...GENOCIDE: ARMENIA, THE HOLOCAUST, CAMBODIA, (VERSION ANGLAISE SEULEMENT)

    Tolerance.ca
    August 12, 2008
    Canada

    Communiqués

    Lane H. Montgomery's haunting and beautiful book NEVER AGAIN, AGAIN,
    AGAIN...Genocide: Armenia, The Holocaust, Cambodia, Rwanda, Bosnia and
    Herzegovina, Darfur is as educational as it is unnerving. Montgomery
    asserts that it's not that the average reader doesn't know about
    genocide -- digital cameras, cell phones, the internet and the
    immediacy of the media have taken care of that; most simply are unaware
    of the scope of genocide over the last century. More than 70 million
    people have been systematically murdered in the past 100 years. Most
    of the perpetrators responsible for these horrific killings have
    never been, and never will be, brought to justice.

    Montgomery is on the advisory board of the Harvard Humanitarian
    Initiative and is a member of the Center of the National Cathedral
    for Peace and Global Reconciliation in Washington DC. As an author
    and photographer, she's traveled worldwide in such places as Liberia,
    Rwanda, Haiti, Kosovo, Bosnia, Ethiopia, the Congo- where, humanitarian
    groups such as Americares, the International Rescue Committee (the
    IRC) and SIM (a Christian advocacy sponsor for children with AIDS)
    have taken her.

    In a particularly revealing moment, the characteristically stoic
    Montgomery admits that she was unprepared for the horrors of genocide
    in Rwanda. Upon entering a church full of clothed skeletons - Christian
    worshippers looking for sanctuary, only to be turned in to the Hutu
    machetes by their own pastor, Montgomery told her driver, a Tutsi,
    "I don't think I can do this".

    Interspersed among Montgomery's own steely narrative are deeply
    disturbing first-hand accounts of survival, reprints of interviews
    with war criminals, and editorials by ambassadors, academicians,
    human rights activists, and journalists. She has enlisted a handful
    of prestigious contributors: Chuck Sudetic, reporter for The New York
    Times from 1990 to 1996 on the collapse of Yugoslavia and other Balkan
    countries; Terry George, co-producer of the movie "Hotel Rwanda";
    Ambassador James Rosenthal, former Director of Vietnam, Laos, and
    Cambodia Affairs at the Indochine Desk of the State Department;
    Richard G. Hovannisian, American Educational Foundation Professor
    of Modern Armenian History at UCLA; Ruth Messinger, president of
    American Jewish World Service; and Rabbi Arthur Schneier, President,
    Appeal of Conscience Foundation.

    As for the photographs, Montgomery took over 40 of them. They range
    from archival black-and-whites to beautifully crisp full-color images
    worthy of the finest travel magazine. Divided into six sections by
    genocide, each includes a dramatic timeline separating fact from
    possible denial.

    By including such a cross section of contributors and a detailed
    photographic and written records of major genocides, Montgomery avoids
    making a political statement; she makes a human one, inviting us all
    to be affronted by the details of the tyranny and slaughter hidden
    from so many.

    Never Again, Again, Again...

    Genocide: Armenia, The Holocaust, Cambodia,

    Rwanda, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Darfur, 2008.

    --Boundary_(ID_ei9xi1FNc+noaH/Op8tFkQ)--
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