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Lies Proliferate In The World's Killing Fields

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  • Lies Proliferate In The World's Killing Fields

    LIES PROLIFERATE IN THE WORLD'S KILLING FIELDS

    Canberra Times (Australia)
    May 3, 2008 Saturday
    Final Edition

    This remarkable but harrowing encyclopedia of genocide could induce
    repetition strain, outraged denials, possibly even a sorrowful yearning
    to join a kinder species. After Polish jurist Raphael Lemkin coined
    the term "genocide" postwar, the UN defined this as "acts committed
    with the intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, racial,
    ethnical, or religious group".

    Ben Kiernan, a Yale-based Australian historian, takes his main title
    from an ideological tract of 1930s Germany. The first two parts review
    "imperial and colonial" slaughters up to the early 20th century while
    the third considers a "multiplicity" of subsequent genocides. Kiernan's
    summation of the Third Reich restates his four perceived correlates
    of state-linked killing: "The Nazi killing machine" was "operated
    by interlocking ideological levers that celebrated race, territory,
    cultivation, and history". To make his case, the author is forever
    splicing unexpected and illuminating primary-source threads that come
    from years of practice. I was comfortable with his limited material
    on the recent past and substantial reluctance to forecast the near
    future. Yet I kept thinking of the elephant (I mean, the anthropoid)
    in the room our evolution and biology. The durable pre-Christian
    state of Sparta is typecast as "secretive, militaristic, expansionist"
    and as a source of myth for the short-lived Reich.

    Another potent idea surfacing early is that, by accident or design,
    artists and intellectuals supply lethal ammunition for politicians and
    generals. So you read Cato the Censor's famous interdiction against
    Carthage, but also Hesiod's and Virgil's poetry of the plough. Early
    Christian and Jewish writers, argues Kiernan, shunned racialist
    thinking, the term "race" only becoming prominent in medieval
    times. In the first of his case studies, he finds the Spaniards
    plumbing "intellectual depths" for God's consent to the Central
    American conquest.

    But he also reveals the to-and-fro of contemporary debate. Various
    citations from the early 1500s regret the Mexican and Guatemalan
    bloodbaths. "War" commingles with "genocide" in the East
    Asian examples. National role-reversals and repetitions become
    familiar. Under a metaphorical alliance of "writing and chariots",
    the Buddhist kingdom of Dai Viet crushes its formerly competitive
    rival Champa, only to pay a heavy price later. Inspired by "ancient
    precedents", Japan of the 1500s assaults Korea, but "genocide abroad"
    is a harbinger for "violent cultural suppression at home". Japan
    reappears in the context of its 20th century Chinese and Pacific
    incursions. The chronicle of England's 16th century Irish depredations
    resonates. A cabal of Elizabethan "neo-cons" appears to agitate,
    not only for rivers of tears in Ireland, but also for the later
    miseries of indigenous America and Australia. Although Elizabeth
    herself is "parsimonious" in support, there follow martial law and
    massacre. In the peculiar logic of extermination, the Irish locals
    don't quite cut it as proper yeomen, but kill one and you could go
    for the lot. Blood and Soil implies an 80-90 per cent decline from
    all causes in the indigenous North American (Australian) population
    over 1492-1800 (1788-1901). It suited English settlers in eastern
    America to discount the agricultural Native American settlements
    they displaced. But the "genteel, controlled, expanding rural idyll"
    of early 1700s Virginia could "explode in genocidal rage". George
    Washington's late- 1700s war secretary writes that colonial settlement
    has been "even more destructive to the Indian natives than the conduct
    of the conquerors of Mexico and Peru". The Jeffersonian democracy,
    in Kiernan's view, required Native Americans to yield up "their
    lifestyle, their lands, or their lives without the vote". Once the
    Cherokee nation is erased, the California indigenes are trampled in
    the dashes for "scientific racism" and precious gold. Next come the
    wars and woes of Australian settlement. Up to Federation, the author
    estimates that "multiple deliberate killings" by squatters, mounted
    police and others accounted for 20,000 Aborigines. He concedes that
    frontier interactions were diverse and some settlers abhorred the
    violence. But with racial "science" casting Aborigines as inferior
    nomads, "classical pastoralism" and government directives could drive
    an ideological program to convert indigenous lands. Denialism continues
    in Australia as elsewhere.

    This, I note, includes an animus towards "Genocide Studies" and the
    broad UN definition of genocide. Call it or count it as you will,
    the evidence repeated here is part of Australian history. It is that
    colonial agencies condoned or sometimes conducted the "dispersals",
    which were aired in their assemblies, investigations, reports
    and journals. If some of those Spanish imperialists and American
    republicans could 'fess up then, maybe we can now. The cynical
    collateral damage of the American and Australian land-rushes
    is distinguishable from the following Armenian and Holocaust
    slaughters. Typically, Kiernan first explains lebensraum, a
    geographer's neologism to accompany Germany's South West African
    occupation around the turn of the 20th century. From there, he picks
    at the rancid racial fears and florid territorial fantasies of Hitler,
    Himmler and supporting theoreticians. Sustained by myths of Sparta,
    Rome and ancient Germany, Hitler could claim his ancestors were "all
    peasants" and impose a Germans-only Hereditary Farm Law. It is often
    remarked that citizens, not psychopaths, were the Nazi functionaries.

    Kiernan doesn't go there much, apart from his neat opening point
    that genocidal enterprises require both "apocalyptic vision and
    prudent compromise". What he does illustrate is the even bigger
    territorial-ethnic engineering scheme the Reich had waiting in the
    wings. Soviet Russia is portrayed both as Nazi victim and Stalinist
    perpetrator of its own monumental program against the kulaks and
    the elite. But China is said to have exacted a famine toll far in
    excess of Stalin's. I'll leave the experts to determine whether state
    famine equals genocide. Blood and Soil concludes by touring the post-
    1950 killing fields of Cambodia, Rwanda, Indonesia, Pakistan (in
    Bangladesh), Guatemala (once again), Saddam's Iraq, Bosnia, and Sudan
    (Darfur). Khmer Rouge rhetoric is compared and contrasted with that
    of Rwanda's Hutu Power. At the outset, Kiernan guesses that the 21st
    century might be "bleak". He also nods to the surprising evidence that
    the genocide (or war or murder) toll is trending downwards relative
    to population. At the end, he remains convinced of his four great
    genocidal narratives. But surely his outstanding demonstration is that
    all through history the narrators of these themes are telling fibs. To
    what extent then are the themes correlates or causal factors in mass
    killing? The book, as it happens, cites the biological metaphors of
    genocide rather than the underlying biology. I believe that more of
    an interweaving from evolution, culture and technology would sharpen
    the expositions emerging from genocide studies. The human lineage,
    after all, appears to have been evolving and deploying its uncommon
    adaptation of territorial inter-group violence since Paleolithic
    times. When Carthage finally fell in 146 BC, it was long after men
    in militias had first sacked settlements, but long before six billion
    humans had stormed the planet.

    Stephen Saunders is a Canberra reviewer.
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