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Genocide witnesses may be added to Holocaust survivors database

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  • Genocide witnesses may be added to Holocaust survivors database

    CTK National News Wire, Czech Rep.
    January 28, 2011 Friday 7:58 PM (Central European Time)

    Genocide witnesses may be added to Holocaust survivors database

    Prague Jan 28 (CTK)


    The centre of Holocaust history Malach could be extended in future
    with testimonies on the genocides in Armenia, Cambodia and Rwanda,
    Martin Smok told journalists at a conference on the first anniversary
    of the centre today.

    Smok cooperates with the Shoah Foundation of University of Southern
    California that has recorded the 52,000 interviews with survivors of
    concentration camps, particularly Jews, Romanies, German homosexuals,
    Jehovah's Witnesses and others, since the 1990s.

    The database is now accessible at the Mathematical-Physical Faculty of
    Charles University in Prague.

    Smok said the survivors talk about their experience from extermination
    camps as well as about their fates, emigration and the communist
    totalitarian regime.

    The database is visited mainly by students who need the information
    for their school works and by historians.

    "In Europe the survivors are afraid," Smok said in reply to a question
    whether the database could be freely accessible on the Internet in the
    future.

    Many of them fear that the data could be abused to persecute their
    descendants. Another obstacle are laws on personal data protection.

    The recordings come from 56 countries of the world and they have been
    made in 32 languages.

    The Malach centre offers for immediate access more than 500 interviews
    in Czech, further in Slovak and Polish.

    The data are physically stored at the University of Southern California, USA.

    Besides, they are accessible at another two centres in Europe, in
    Berlin and Budapest. The whole database is accessible at another 23
    places in the world.

    The Armenian genocide is blamed on Turks. The Armenians say the
    massacres and deportations in the years 1915-1917 cost 1.5 million
    lives. Turkey speaks about 300,000 to 500,000 people. However, it says
    it was not genocide, but that the Armenians fell victim to the chaos
    of the last years of the Osmanic Empire.

    In Cambodia, the communist regime in the latter half of the 1970s
    murdered 1.7 million people during an attempt to create a class-free
    agrarian society not knowing money, the rule of law, personal freedom,
    family relations, independent thinking and technological achievements.

    In Rwanda members of the Hutu majority tribe massacred some 800,000
    minority Tutsis and dozens of thousands of members of their own
    ethnicity during a three-month ethnic conflict in 1994.

    ms/dr/rtj




    From: A. Papazian
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