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  • Genocide - is it a question worth answering? Add to ...

    The Globe and Mail, Canada
    Oct 19 2013

    Genocide - is it a question worth answering? Add to ...

    by Doug Saunders
    The Globe and Mail


    Imagine if the Turkish Prime Minister issued this statement: `The
    Canadian aboriginal people experienced terrible suffering and loss of
    life. Our parliament has adopted a motion that acknowledges the native
    Canadian genocide and condemns this act as a crime against humanity.
    My party and I supported this resolution, and continue to recognize it
    today. We must never forget the lessons of history.'

    Ottawa would reject it, and many Canadians would be outraged to see
    their country put in the same column as Nazi Germany. Many would point
    out the hypocrisy of such a statement coming from the Turks.

    Some Canadians would cheer it. This past year has, for First Nations,
    been something like what 1963 was for African-Americans, and as part
    of that awakening, the word `genocide' has risen in popularity. In
    this view, the mistreatment and suffering that native and Inuit people
    suffered must be seen as a deliberate attempt to exterminate an entire
    people, and should be recognized as such internationally.

    This week, when the United Nations Envoy on Aboriginal Affairs paid a
    study visit to Canada, prominent native and Jewish figures sent him a
    letter asking that Canada's treatment of aboriginals be recognized as
    a genocide, encouraging him to make a statement like the one at the
    top of this column.

    Of course, those words were not uttered by the Turkish Prime Minister.
    Rather, they come from a statement made last year by Prime Minister
    Stephen Harper, with `native Canadian' substituted for `Armenian.'

    The persecution and mass expulsion of Armenians by Ottoman forces in
    1915 involved truly grotesque crimes against humanity, a string of
    atrocities that deserve condemnation. Many people, especially
    Armenians, consider it a genocide, although this definition is
    controversial.

    Mr. Harper's Conservatives have officially applied the `G' word to the
    Armenian experience at least four times. This has not gone over well
    in Turkey, even among those who are pressing for an atonement and full
    apology to Armenians. Because of campaigns like Canada's, the word
    `genocide' has become a fixation among both Armenians and Turks - one
    that many feel has stood in the way of actual reconciliation.

    Canada may soon face the same tension. Was our history genocidal?

    The UN Genocide Convention, which Canada ratified more than six
    decades ago and has applied against other countries, defines the crime
    as including `any of' a list of acts committed against an identifiable
    group, including not just mass killing and mass physical or mental
    harm but also `deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life
    calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or part,'
    `imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group,' and
    `forcibly transferring children of the group to another group.' You
    can find sustained examples of many of these in Canadian history, plus
    acts of cultural destruction such as forcing thousands of Inuit to
    replace their names with metal number plates.

    Were those acts, as the genocide convention requires, committed with
    `intent to destroy, in whole or in part' the group's population? In
    both the Turkish and Canadian examples, this is an open question. The
    Beothuk people of Newfoundland were literally exterminated, in part
    through deliberate acts. Some Ottoman and Canadian officials did
    appear to want all Armenians and natives gone. You could make a strong
    case, but not a completely waterproof one: Crimes against humanity,
    even awful ones, are not all genocidal.

    It feels petty and mean to tell people whose family histories have
    been defined by cruelty and loss that the atrocities they suffered
    weren't quite up to the definition of genocide. On the other hand,
    it's an injustice to truly unambiguous genocides, such as the
    near-successful mechanized slaughter of Europe's entire Jewish
    population or Rwanda's mass slaughter of Tutsis, to attempt to apply
    the term to every mass atrocity.

    Nobody wants to be labelled genocidal. Modern Turks live in a state
    that was created in the 1920s in opposition to the Ottomans who
    committed the Armenian atrocities. Post-1967 Canadians tend to see
    indigenous mistreatment as the act of less tolerant Dominion-era
    Canadians.

    And yet Canada's impoverished, racially segregated aboriginal
    communities are still a source of shame. Progress won't happen without
    full and honest atonement. In both countries, it may be better to
    avoid a generation-long fight over the `G' word, and instead to speak
    officially of `crimes against humanity that some consider genocidal.'
    If we want to end the accusations, that's the kind of compromise that
    is needed.

    http://www.theglobeandmail.com/commentary/genocide-is-it-a-question-worth-answering/article14914529/

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