RAPHAEL LEMKIN, THE MAN WHO COINED 'GENOCIDE': A NEW DOCUMENTARY, WATCHERS OF THE SKY, TELLS HIS STORY
October 19, 2014
As a teenager, Lemkin paid close attention to the massacre of
the Armenian people in the Ottoman Empire in 1915. He came across
the story of Soghomon Tehlirian, who saw his whole family killed,
but survived. Tehlirian later killed one of the masterminds of the
massacre, Talaat Pasha, who was living freely. Tehlirian was arrested
and went on trial. "Lemkin read about this and at a young age he said
to himself, 'Why is the killing of an individual a greater crime than
the killing of millions?' "
The world has grown far too familiar with genocide; as mass killings
have claimed countless lives, the word has become ingrained into
our vocabularies.
But the term didn't exist until 1943, when Polish lawyer Raphael
Lemkin coined it -- pairing the Greek "genos," meaning race or family,
with the Latin "-cidere," for killing. Lemkin, who witnessed the
massacres of the early 20th century, spent his life campaigning to
make the world acknowledge and prosecute the crime.
A new documentary, Watchers of the Sky, tells his story. Once
he'd established the word, Lemkin worked persistently in the
then-newly-formed United Nations, hounding delegates to discuss his
new word and acknowledge the issue.
"This was a man who didn't speak English very well, he didn't represent
a country, he didn't represent an institution, he barely had a home,
he barely had food -- and yet he was there every day lobbying to
the delegates and the ambassadors to make this a crime," says Edet
Belzberg, director of the film.
Lemkin was born in Poland in 1900, and was instilled with a sense of
justice at a very young age. As a teenager, he paid close attention
to the massacre of the Armenian people in the Ottoman Empire in 1915.
He came across the story of Soghomon Tehlirian, who saw his whole
family killed, but survived. Tehlirian later killed one of the
masterminds of the massacre, Talaat Pasha, who was living freely.
Tehlirian was arrested and went on trial.
"Lemkin read about this and at a young age he said to himself, 'Why
is the killing of an individual a greater crime than the killing of
millions?' " Belzberg explains. "And that really set him on his path,
and he decided at that age that he was going to be the person who
would develop and create the law to stop this from happening again."
At first, Belzberg says, people saw him as a pest. They hoped he would
give up his preoccupation with mass killings. Then Lemkin -- who was
of Jewish descent -- lost 49 members of his family to the Holocaust,
and his determination grew even stronger.
Lemkin continued to fight genocide for his entire life. He died of
a heart attack at the age of 59, while on his way to yet another
meeting. Fewer than a dozen people attended his funeral.
Watchers of the Sky weaves Lemkin's story -- with quotes from his notes
and journals -- with stories of modern conflicts in Rwanda and Darfur,
Sudan. The documentary includes interviews with people who continue
the crusade against genocide, like Samantha Power, U.S. Ambassador
to the United Nations, and Luis Moreno Ocampo, the first Prosecutor
of the International Criminal Court.
Belzberg worked from 800 hours of footage and 5,000 stills to tell
a story that spans a century. "That was the biggest challenge,"
Belzberg says: "to interweave in a coherent and lyrical way that
people can be taken from one story to the next and not be fatigued,
but be enriched by it."
National Public Radio
http://www.horizonweekly.ca/news/details/50995
October 19, 2014
As a teenager, Lemkin paid close attention to the massacre of
the Armenian people in the Ottoman Empire in 1915. He came across
the story of Soghomon Tehlirian, who saw his whole family killed,
but survived. Tehlirian later killed one of the masterminds of the
massacre, Talaat Pasha, who was living freely. Tehlirian was arrested
and went on trial. "Lemkin read about this and at a young age he said
to himself, 'Why is the killing of an individual a greater crime than
the killing of millions?' "
The world has grown far too familiar with genocide; as mass killings
have claimed countless lives, the word has become ingrained into
our vocabularies.
But the term didn't exist until 1943, when Polish lawyer Raphael
Lemkin coined it -- pairing the Greek "genos," meaning race or family,
with the Latin "-cidere," for killing. Lemkin, who witnessed the
massacres of the early 20th century, spent his life campaigning to
make the world acknowledge and prosecute the crime.
A new documentary, Watchers of the Sky, tells his story. Once
he'd established the word, Lemkin worked persistently in the
then-newly-formed United Nations, hounding delegates to discuss his
new word and acknowledge the issue.
"This was a man who didn't speak English very well, he didn't represent
a country, he didn't represent an institution, he barely had a home,
he barely had food -- and yet he was there every day lobbying to
the delegates and the ambassadors to make this a crime," says Edet
Belzberg, director of the film.
Lemkin was born in Poland in 1900, and was instilled with a sense of
justice at a very young age. As a teenager, he paid close attention
to the massacre of the Armenian people in the Ottoman Empire in 1915.
He came across the story of Soghomon Tehlirian, who saw his whole
family killed, but survived. Tehlirian later killed one of the
masterminds of the massacre, Talaat Pasha, who was living freely.
Tehlirian was arrested and went on trial.
"Lemkin read about this and at a young age he said to himself, 'Why
is the killing of an individual a greater crime than the killing of
millions?' " Belzberg explains. "And that really set him on his path,
and he decided at that age that he was going to be the person who
would develop and create the law to stop this from happening again."
At first, Belzberg says, people saw him as a pest. They hoped he would
give up his preoccupation with mass killings. Then Lemkin -- who was
of Jewish descent -- lost 49 members of his family to the Holocaust,
and his determination grew even stronger.
Lemkin continued to fight genocide for his entire life. He died of
a heart attack at the age of 59, while on his way to yet another
meeting. Fewer than a dozen people attended his funeral.
Watchers of the Sky weaves Lemkin's story -- with quotes from his notes
and journals -- with stories of modern conflicts in Rwanda and Darfur,
Sudan. The documentary includes interviews with people who continue
the crusade against genocide, like Samantha Power, U.S. Ambassador
to the United Nations, and Luis Moreno Ocampo, the first Prosecutor
of the International Criminal Court.
Belzberg worked from 800 hours of footage and 5,000 stills to tell
a story that spans a century. "That was the biggest challenge,"
Belzberg says: "to interweave in a coherent and lyrical way that
people can be taken from one story to the next and not be fatigued,
but be enriched by it."
National Public Radio
http://www.horizonweekly.ca/news/details/50995