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Witnesses to Genocide

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  • Witnesses to Genocide

    Newsweek/Washington Post
    Dec 4 2008


    Witnesses to Genocide

    Christiane Amanpour



    For the better part of the past year, I have been interviewing people
    who found themselves witnessing history that made them scream bloody
    murder. They were trying to focus the world's attention on the world's
    most heinous crime - genocide - only to be shunned, ignored, or told
    it was someone else's problem.

    I wanted to know what made them do what they did. Some were
    idealists. Others were pragmatists. All were stubborn. And none
    considered themselves heroes.

    Even though the international community was indifferent when they
    tried to stop the killing, their moral courage gives us hope. For what
    they witnessed on their watch was genocide, unchecked evil that they
    would not let pass without a fight.

    Note: Please upgrade your Flash plug-in to view our enhanced content.
    I confess: there's much here I do not fully understand. As a young
    correspondent covering the war in Bosnia, my day often began with a
    trip to the Sarajevo morgue to count bodies. How else would a
    journalist know how many Muslim children were cut down by Bosnian Serb
    snipers? How else could we put names to civilians left faceless by
    mortar shells from the surrounding hills? I learned what it means to
    bear witness.

    In the 1990's in the heart of Europe, "never again" was happening
    again for the first time since WWII. The Bosnia war pitted Orthodox
    Christian Serbs against the Muslim population, in a quest to achieve
    an ethnically pure Greater Serbia as Yugoslavia exploded. Hundreds of
    thousands were killed, millions were forced to flee as refugees.

    But to this day, I ask myself what would have happened if roles had
    been reversed. If the principal aggressors were Muslim and their
    victims were Christian, would the West have intervened sooner to stop
    the slaughter of innocents?

    In Rwanda, in 1994 Roman Catholic Hutus turned with a vengeance
    against their Tutsi compatriots, often chasing them into churches and
    butchering them there. Yet today a strong Christian faith sustains
    many who find themselves on the path to national reconciliation. In
    Rwanda I watched as Iphegenia, a Tutsi woman who had lost her husband
    and five children, served lunch to Jean Bosco, the Hutu neighbor who
    had killed them. When I asked her how she found it in her heart to
    forgive, she responded "I am a Christian and I like to pray to
    forgive. In my heart the dead are dead and they cannot come back."

    I often wonder, when I've come back from a place like Rwanda or
    Bosnia, why people ask me: Is it really that bad? I guess they do not
    want to believe such evil can exist. Or perhaps they just do not want
    to be pushed into that moral space where they would have to take a
    stand and do something. The heroes we profile stood up to confront and
    speak out against the evil they saw. Their governments thought they
    too were exaggerating. They, too, were not believed.

    We're always told that evil happens when good men, and women, do
    nothing. Well these heroes did something, and the question -- my
    question as a reporter and as a witness to history is: Will we ever
    learn? Or will I or my children or my successors be reporting on this
    same kind of atrocity and inhumanity for years and years to come?

    Dec. 9 marks the 60th anniversary of the United Nations Convention on
    Genocide. Its commitment to prevent and punish this awful crime are
    inspiring words.

    Christiane Amanpour is CNN Chief International Correspondent. Her
    special report, Scream Bloody Murder, premieres at 9 p.m. Dec. 4 on
    CNN.

    http://newsweek.washingtonpost.com/onfait h/guestvoices/2008/12/scream_bloody_murder.html
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