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This Day In Jewish History / Polish Lawyer Who Coined The Word 'Geno

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  • This Day In Jewish History / Polish Lawyer Who Coined The Word 'Geno

    THIS DAY IN JEWISH HISTORY / POLISH LAWYER WHO COINED THE WORD 'GENOCIDE' IS BORN

    Ha'aretz, Israel
    June 24 2014

    Raphael Lemkin almost single-handedly persuaded the newly created
    United Nations to approve the Genocide Convention.

    By David B. Green

    June 24, 1900, is the birthdate of Raphael Lemkin, the Polish-born
    Jewish lawyer who coined the word "genocide" and who, in 1951,
    almost single-handedly persuaded the newly created United Nations to
    approve the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime
    of Genocide.

    Raphael Lemkin was born in Bezwodne, Volkovysk, in the Russian Empire
    (today in Poland), to Joseph Lemkin and the former Bella Pomerantz.

    Joseph was a farmer and Bella a painter, philosopher and linguist. As
    a young child, Raphael was home-schooled by his mother, and although
    he also received a Jewish education, Lemkin was steeped in Polish
    and Russian culture as well.

    Lemkin, a polyglot, studied linguistics, philosophy and law at John
    Casimir, Heidelberg and Lwow (now Lviv) universities, and received his
    law degree from the latter at the end of the 1920s. From an early age,
    he had been fascinated by tales of human cruelty throughout history,
    and it was the Turkish massacres of Armenians in 1915 that provided
    much of the impetus for him to enter law school.

    >From 1929 to 1934, Lemkin served as a public prosecutor, first
    in Berezhany (in Galicia) and then in Warsaw, and also had his own
    private legal practice. He also helped to codify the Polish penal
    codes, as all the while he studied the ability of international law
    to act against crimes against ethnic and cultural collectives. In this
    regard, Lemkin came up with two new concepts: "barbarity," which is the
    term he used for the destruction of groups, and "vandalism," which is
    the word he proposed to refer to the destruction of cultural heritage.

    Lemkin participated, and was wounded, in the Polish army's defense of
    Warsaw against the German invasion in 1939. Then, having an ominous
    sense of the Nazis' murderous intentions, he fled the country,
    first to Sweden and eventually to the United States, following a
    lengthy journey via Vladivostok and Japan. Lemkin's parents, however,
    together with 47 other relations, perished in the Holocaust.

    With the help of Malcolm McDermott, a law professor at Duke University
    in North Carolina, Lemkin took up a position there in 1941, while
    traveling around the United States lecturing about the crimes being
    committed by Germany. He had acquired copies of the laws introduced
    in the lands occupied by the Germans, material that served as the
    basis for his groundbreaking 1944 book, "Axis Rule in Occupied
    Europe." It was there that Lemkin first used the term "genocide,"
    a neologism based on the Greek for "race" or "tribe," and the Latin
    suffix for "killing." He defined it as "the destruction of a nation
    or an ethnic group."

    For the rest of his life, Lemkin was obsessed with introducing
    into international law the prohibition of genocide, which Winston
    Churchill referred to in 1941 as "the crime without a name." He
    assisted the American prosecution in the 1946 Nazi war crimes trials
    in Nuremberg, succeeding in having the crime of genocide entered into
    the indictments, and devoted his final years to the goal of having
    the UN draft an anti-genocide convention.

    Lemkin, who never married, basically had no life outside his lobbying
    work at the United Nations, where he effectively took up residence.

    The convention that was adopted in 1948, and ratified three years
    later, did address the problem of genocide, but only in its physical
    sense, whereas Lemkin also pointed to the psychological and cultural
    aspects of the crime. Lemkin spoke out, for example, about what he
    saw as the Soviet pursuit of genocide against Ukrainians in the 1930s,
    as manifested in the destruction of what he described as that nation's
    culture, beliefs and "common ideas."

    Raphael Lemkin suffered a fatal heart attack on August 28, 1959. At
    his death, he left behind fragments of an autobiography, which
    were located, edited and published as a book last year by scholar
    Donna-Lee Frieze.

    http://www.haaretz.com/news/features/this-day-in-jewish-history/1.600728



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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