Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Genocide Is Not Genocide In The Canadian Museum For Human Rights

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

  • Genocide Is Not Genocide In The Canadian Museum For Human Rights

    GENOCIDE IS NOT GENOCIDE IN THE CANADIAN MUSEUM FOR HUMAN RIGHTS

    http://massispost.com/?p=4007
    August 22nd, 2011

    An article titled, "Memory becomes a minefield at Canada's Museum
    for Human Rights," by Ira Basen in the August 20, 2011 issue of the
    Globe and Mail, provides an expose of the controversy surrounding
    the Canadian Museum for Human Rights. The appearance of this article
    calls for reflection on two critical factors regarding the museum,
    which have not been adequately discussed: the important relationship
    between human rights and genocide, and the requirement of federal
    institutions to adhere to Canada's official policy of multiculturalism.

    The CMHR's website displays a letter to the Globe & Mail, dated
    March 23, 2011, in which CMHR officials state that "The Canadian
    Museum for Human Rights is not a museum of genocide, it never
    was. It is a catalyst for change. The Museum is ... not a memorial
    to the past." The sentiment is echoed by the museum's CEO during his
    interview in the article. This adds a whole new set of issues to the
    existing controversy over the absence of an inclusive and comparative
    approach to cases of genocide.

    The Holocaust, to which the CMHR is devoting an entire gallery,
    is most definitely a genocide. Indeed, it is a prime example of
    genocide and should be a central part of the museum. Genocide is
    not a matter of the past: even those genocides that occurred many
    years ago continue to have major effects. Just as one can not teach
    about human rights without taking genocide into account, so one can
    not teach about genocide without taking the Holocaust into account,
    but through a comparative approach with other cases of genocide.

    To say the CMHR is not a museum of genocide ignores the inseparable
    relationship between human rights and genocide. The importance of
    this relationship is signalled by the fact that a) the UN Genocide
    Convention was the first human rights treaty adopted by the General
    Assembly of the United Nations; b) it is administered by the Office of
    the UN High Commissioner of Human Rights; c) it focuses attention on
    the protection of national, racial, ethnic and religious minorities
    from threats to their very existence and therefore sits directly
    within the priorities of both the United Nations and the modern
    human rights movement, aimed at eradicating racism and xenophobia;
    and d) it stresses the role of criminal justice and accountability
    in the protection and promotion of human rights. Genocide is the most
    extreme source of human rights violation; it must be in the forefront
    at the museum.

    The claim that "it never was" about genocide is surprising, given
    that the CMHR has issued press releases and promotional material in
    which genocide figures prominently. One press release, for example,
    titled, "20th Century Genocides," has on its first page the heading,
    "Stories of the 20th Century Genocides-The Vision," where one reads:
    "Prejudice, racism, grievance, intolerance, aggression, injustice,
    oppression-they all start small, and we need to spot and stop them in
    our own local orbits before they grow and get out of control. This
    means looking at the often long prehistory of genocide, as well as
    its symptoms in the present. Understanding these will help avert
    future horrors.

    "As the visitors to the Museum arrive on the third floor of the
    Museum, they enter a transition zone where an unfolding series of
    images, questions and quotes takes them onto a global stage and the
    dark side of the rights story-the denial of human rights that can
    result in genocide. The names of 20th century genocides-Armenia, the
    Ukrainian Famine, Nanking-appear with those of other crimes against
    humanity. The Armenian Genocide was the first genocide of the 20th
    century. This genocide, unpunished and denied, illustrated how crimes
    against humanity can escalate into genocide as seen in future genocides
    such as the Holocaust, Cambodia, Rwanda and Sudan."

    We agree. Only in this comparative way can one find general truths
    about the nature and mechanics of genocide as a general problem
    of humanity, which can help finding solutions to how genocide can
    be prevented.

    The museum does not have to be a memorial to the past, but it must
    certainly take account of, represent and explain the history, ongoing
    development of, and challenges to human rights, if it hopes to inspire
    learning and become a place of change.

    To do this, the Holocaust should be employed as a prime model of
    how to teach genocide. The Holocaust has been recognized by the
    world; its perpetrators have been tried and punished; the crime has
    been acknowledged by the perpetrator country; an apology has been
    extended, and reparations made. But it is critical to realize that
    other cases are necessary, as each provides its own particular lessons
    to be learned.

    In the case of the Armenian Genocide, for example, the perpetrators
    mostly escaped punishment; the perpetrator country continues to
    deny that genocide took place and aggressively pressures others to
    participate in this denial. This is despite the fact that on May 24,
    1915, the Allied Powers-France, Great Britain and Russia-declared
    that the Ottoman leaders would be called to account for their "crimes
    against humanity," for the slaughter they were committing against
    their own Armenian citizens, whereby the term entered international
    jurisprudence.

    The Rwandan Genocide is yet another model. In this case, UN
    peacekeepers were in the country, and the head of the mission,
    Canadian General Romeo Dallaire, made every effort to warn the UN of
    the impending genocide, and the world via the news media, once it had
    started. Yet, the world powers made every effort to avoid calling it
    genocide, so as to evade the responsibilities of intervention. Each
    case has an important contribution to the understanding of genocide.

    Taking these and the other cases of genocide into equal account
    would make all the various communities in Canada feel they are
    treated equitably, and that they are an important and integral part
    of the Canadian mosaic. It would help overcome the kind of thinking
    in cultural or ethnic "silos" that contradicts the objectives of
    Canada's official policy of multiculturalism. In 1971, Canada was the
    first country to adopt multiculturalism as an official policy. The
    Act's objectives are, in part, 1) to affirm the value, dignity
    and equality of all Canadian citizens regardless of ethnic origin,
    language, or religious affiliation; 2) to ensure that all citizens
    can preserve, enhance and share their cultural heritage, take pride
    in their ancestry, and still have a sense of being Canadian; 3) to
    encourage the accepting of diverse cultures and promote racial and
    ethnic harmony and cross-cultural understanding. One of the ways
    to foster these noble objectives, in the words of the Act, is to
    "encourage and assist the social, cultural, economic and political
    institutions of Canada to be both respectful and inclusive of Canada's
    multicultural character."

    The CMHR is a national cultural institution, whose stated mission is,
    in part, to establish "a national and international destination-a
    centre of learning where Canadians and people from around the world
    can engage in discussion and commit to taking action against hate
    and oppression.... inspiring research, learning, contributing to the
    collective memory and sense of identity of all Canadians... to explore
    the subject of human rights, with special but not exclusive reference
    to Canada, in order to enhance the public's understanding of human
    rights, to promote respect for others and to encourage reflection
    and dialogue."

    Taking a comprehensive and comparative approach to genocide as the
    ultimate violation of human rights would complement perfectly the
    objectives of Canada's official policy of multiculturalism. It would
    avoid differentiating and dividing communities. It especially would
    make those communities who feel their histories have been neglected or
    denied feel more welcome. One can not overestimate the psychological
    trauma of those who are part of a nation that has experienced genocide.

    Therefore, CMHR officials must recognize that genocide must be
    an integral part of the museum, as was envisioned and presented to
    Canadian society. This would facilitate the CMHR's adhering to Canada's
    policy of Multiculturalism, as well as its own mission statement,
    and make the museum a destination for everyone.

    Read the article in Globe and Mail
    http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/national/memory-becomes-a-minefield-at-canadas-museum-for-human-rights/article2135961/




    From: A. Papazian
Working...
X