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Standup Against Hate: We Must Learn The Lessons Of History To Avoid

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  • Standup Against Hate: We Must Learn The Lessons Of History To Avoid

    STANDUP AGAINST HATE: WE MUST LEARN THE LESSONS OF HISTORY TO AVOID THE HORRORS HAPPENING AGAIN
    by Benjamin Zephaniah

    Birmingham Post
    January 23, 2009 Friday
    UK

    Genocide is an appalling crime against humanity that we hope will
    never again be repeated. Today, as we approach Holocaust Memorial Day,
    we might stop and reflect on the fact that it still has the potential
    to be repeated and perpetrated around the world, unless we are on our
    guard and understand that our actions today have consequences tomorrow.

    The use of the term genocide can be problematic and contentious
    but it shouldn't disguise historical fact. One of the first modern
    day genocides took place in Armenia, a part of modern day Turkey in
    1915. This massacre of 1.5 million people, indiscriminate of age or
    gender, is still not acknowledged as genocide by Turkey - long after
    it took place. The United States did not recognise or act on the
    events at the time and consequently Hitler admitted looking at the
    Armenians and deciding that if they can get away with it, he could
    also. If people don't recognise something, its entire existence is
    erased. It begs the question - if the United Kingdom and United States
    had not recognised the Holocaust when it happened, would anyone think
    it had ever existed? Who decides what we remember and what we don't -
    and does it mean that things we don't remember or recognise didn't
    exist and don't count?

    My earliest recollection of hatred was in the late-60s when I was
    eight years old and I still have the scar to prove it. I was walking
    home from school in Hands worth, Birmingham, when another boy camecy
    cling past with a brick in his hand. He hit me across the back of
    my head with the brick and shouted 'You black bastard!', as he rode
    off. When I got home, blood pouring from the back of my head, my
    mother told me that some people in the world are just like that and
    it's something we have to live with. It was not even a consideration
    to report the crime - it would have been ignored anyway. This incident
    was the first time I realised I was different and that people actually
    hated me for who and what I was. The scar on the back of my head is
    a constant reminder of this.

    People have to understand the past to see the future, they have
    to start recognising the dangers of the present to prevent them
    escalating into the Holocaust of the future. A close late friend
    of mine recently told me a story of how, when she was very young,
    she went to a political meeting in Austria with her mother and
    auntie. After the meeting, the two adults were debating the event,
    concluding that the main political figure, who was a radical speaker,
    would never amount to anything and should just be ignored. That main
    figure was Adolf Hitler.

    When people don't recognise these dangers, the problems start. Call it
    innocent ignorance, call it optimism, however you want to look at it,
    unless we recognise and stand up to these figures, who knows where
    it can lead?My friend's mother and auntiecertainly would never have
    imagined what Hitler could go on to do in the years that followed
    that meeting.

    Bob Marley said in one of his songs 'Well the biggest man you
    ever did see, was once a baby', and that is what interests me as a
    writer. Hitler was once a baby looked on adoringly by people. He
    then went on to become one of the most powerful men in history,
    orchestrating the killings of hundreds of thousands of innocent
    people. The boy who racially attacked me in Hands worth may have
    gone on to abuse and physically hurt other people since. His attack
    onmewas left unchecked so what's to stop him?

    It is so important that we have Holocaust Memorial Day in January
    to remind us to acknowledge how bad we can be to each other, whether
    it's direct and intentional or indirect and unintentional.

    All it takes is one discriminatory group to gain power and it can
    all fall apart. We must join together to recognise where these acts
    of hatred, regardless of size, can lead if left unchecked.

    I urge all Britons to 'Stand up to Hatred' and recognise the impact
    we can have on our future. By considering these things, next time we
    see, hear, or experience any act of hatred anywhere and in any form,
    we can make a better future.

    Benjamin Zephaniah is a Handsworth born poet

    THE HORROR OF HOLOCAUST

    The word Holocaust comes from the Greek words holos, meaning
    completely; and kaustos, meaning burnt. It is used to describe the
    total destruction of people on a massive scale.

    During the Holocaust in Germany, more than six million Jews, gypsies,
    homosexuals and opponents of the Nazi regime were murdered in
    concentration camps.

    The mass murder, which Hitler referred to as "the final solution to
    the Jewish question", wiped out two thirds of all Jews in Europe.

    There were 39 camps throughout the Nazi territory. At the height
    of the exterminations, more than 9,000 people were killed per day
    in Auschwitz.

    Germany was not the only place to suffer from a holocaust. The mass
    murders in Rwanda, Cambodia and Armenia have also been referred to
    as holocausts.

    People have to understand the past to see the future, they have to
    start recognising the dangers of the present to prevent them escalating
    into the Holocaust of the future.
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