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Naming The Worst Thing Imaginable

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  • Naming The Worst Thing Imaginable

    NAMING THE WORST THING IMAGINABLE

    Good Magazine, Israel
    Oct 17 2014

    by Jeremy Martin

    The word by which we call a thing has power. Kill one man, for
    example, and 12 jurors may call you a murderer. Kill a million,
    and your countrymen may call you a leader. Thanks to the tireless
    crusade of Raphael Lemkin, a Polish Holocaust refugee, the world at
    large has another word for these mass killings: genocide.

    Lemkin, who had been a public prosecutor in Warsaw before World War
    II, is the central subject of 2005 MacArthur Fellow Edet Belzberg's
    latest documentary Watchers of the Sky. Having studied linguistics
    in university, Lemkin first coined the term "genocide" in 1943 to
    describe the deliberate killing of a large group of people with
    the goal of total annihilation. Though the vile atrocities of the
    Holocaust inspired the word, the act itself predates modern history.

    Lemkin reasoned that humanity as a whole couldn't seem to fathom
    the systemic execution of 6 million Jews, or 1.5 million Armenians,
    or--as Rwandan genocide survivor Emmanuel Uwurukundo describes it
    in the film--the slaughter of 100,000 men, women, and children per
    day using only machetes. There needed to be some objective measure,
    some agreed-upon name, of such hatred and the crimes it inspired in
    order to effect legal prosecution.

    What Lemkin himself seemed to have trouble fathoming was the
    reluctance world leaders would have, despite his pleas, to applying
    this straightforward word to the obvious atrocities it described as
    they were occurring. Though he fled Poland in 1941 to escape the
    very thing he'd pledged himself to fight (but hadn't yet named,)
    Lemkin first became aware of such mass-scale horrors as a teenager
    studying what the Republic of Turkey to this day insists on calling
    "the events of 1915," a.k.a. the Armenian Genocide. During the last 15
    years of his life--time he spent, according to colleagues interviewed
    for the film, haunting first the Nuremberg Trials then the United
    Nations as a malnourished, sleep-deprived specter--Lemkin never ran
    out of hideous, tragic instances of genocide to call attention to,
    each a condemnation of political leaders who continued to allow such
    hatred. As the man himself said in an archival interview, "I became
    interested in genocide because it happened so many times."

    And it kept happening, Lemkin sadly realized, because the powers that
    be were reluctant to name, let alone condemn, genocide as it occurred
    due to a variety of Machiavellian concerns. Naming a genocide implies
    an obligation to take the complicated and often politically unpopular
    steps necessary to stop it. (See: The U.S. government's delay in
    recognizing the Rwandan Genocide in 1994.) Fully recognizing genocide
    as an inherent crime against humanity also impinges on sovereignty,
    some might argue, as it limits the state's power to govern its own
    citizens, which apparently includes the option to murder the masses
    at will.

    The threat of genocide, as Watchers so effectively reminds us, is
    ever-present and the wheels of progress turn so slowly as to appear as
    if they're not moving at all. As Lemkin--a man whose intimate knowledge
    of atrocity could not prevent it from devouring his family, a man who
    held millions in his heart but whose funeral was reportedly attended
    by less than a dozen people--wrote, "I was shamed by my helplessness."

    While these are some of the most disheartening words ever set to
    paper, Watchers also presents a counterpoint: a single notebook page
    of Lemkin's on which a two-word phrase has been repeatedly transcribed:
    "I believe."

    So if the frustrated attempts of Lemkin (and those that follow in
    his footsteps) to pose these simple arguments to people in positions
    of unfathomable power make you feel hopeless, take heart. You're in
    good company. If you can't stomach the footage of Bosnian citizens
    being gunned down or marched off to rape camps interposed with shots
    of General Ratko Mladic showing off on the ski slopes, realize that
    humans are not designed to accept such horrors. The important thing is
    that we do not deny they exist. If we stare at the abyss long enough,
    it will stare back. But we might also get a clearer picture of its
    outline, so we can spot it looming on the horizon.

    http://magazine.good.is/articles/watchers-of-the-sky-genocide

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