Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Kristof: Global Efforts Needed To End 'Mass Atrocities'

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Kristof: Global Efforts Needed To End 'Mass Atrocities'

    KRISTOF: GLOBAL EFFORTS NEEDED TO END 'MASS ATROCITIES'

    Chron.com
    Feb 4 2015

    Nicholas Kristof notes importance of remembering lives lost in genocide
    but determines that the events paralyze the world into tolerance.

    By Nicholas Kristof

    One of the great heroes of the 20th century was Auschwitz prisoner No.

    4859, who volunteered to be there.

    Witold Pilecki, an officer in the Polish resistance to the Nazi regime,
    deliberately let himself be captured by the Germans in 1940 so that
    he could gather information about Hitler's concentration camps.

    Inside Auschwitz, he set up resistance cells - even as he almost died
    of starvation, torture and disease.

    Then Pilecki helped build a radio transmitter, and, in 1942,
    he broadcast to the outside world accounts of atrocities inside
    Auschwitz - as the Nazis frantically searched the camp looking for
    the transmitter. He worked to expose the Nazi gas chambers, brutal
    sexual experiments and savage camp punishments, in hopes that the
    world would act.

    Finally, in April 1943, he escaped from Auschwitz, bullets flying
    after him, and wrote an eyewitness report laying out the horror of
    the extermination camps. He then campaigned unsuccessfully for an
    attack on Auschwitz.

    Eventually, he was brutally tortured and executed - not by the Nazis,
    but after the war, in 1947, by the Communists. They then suppressed
    the story of Pilecki's heroism for decades (a book about his work,
    "The Auschwitz Volunteer," was published in 2012).

    I was thinking of Pilecki last week on the 70th anniversary of the
    liberation of the Auschwitz-Birkenau death camps. I had relatives
    killed in Auschwitz (they were Poles spying on the Nazis for the
    resistance), and these camps are emblems of the Holocaust and symbols
    of the human capacity for evil.

    In the coming months, the world will also commemorate the 100th
    anniversary of the start of the Armenian genocide - which, despite the
    outrage of Turkish officials at the time, was, of course, a genocide.

    There, too, I feel a connection because my ancestors were Armenian.

    Then, in the summer, we'll observe the 70th anniversary of the end of
    World War II - an occasion for recalling Japanese atrocities in China,
    Korea, the Philippines and elsewhere. All this is likely to fuel
    more debates focused on the past. Should we honor Armenian genocide
    victims with a special day? Should Japan apologize for enslaving
    "comfort women"?

    But, to me, the lesson of history is that the best way to honor
    past victims of atrocities is to stand up to slaughter today. The
    most respectful way to honor Jewish, Armenian or Rwandan victims of
    genocide is not with a ceremony or a day, but with efforts to reduce
    mass atrocities currently underway.

    The U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington is a shining example
    of that approach, channeling outrage at past horrors to mitigate
    today's - from Syria to Central African Republic. But, in general, the
    world is typically less galvanized by mass atrocities than paralyzed
    by them.

    Even during the Holocaust, despite the heroism of Pilecki and others
    like Jan Karski, who tried desperately to shake sense into world
    leaders, no one was very interested in industrial slaughter. Over
    and over since then, world leaders have excelled at giving eloquent
    "never again" speeches but rarely offered much beyond lip service.

    This year, I'm afraid something similar will happen. We'll hear
    flowery rhetoric about Auschwitz, Armenia and World War II, and then
    we'll go on shrugging at crimes against humanity in Syria, Central
    African Republic, Sudan and South Sudan, Myanmar and elsewhere.

    Darfur symbolizes our fickleness. It has disappeared from headlines,
    and Sudan makes it almost impossible for journalists to get there,
    but Human Rights Watch reported that the human rights situation in
    Sudan actually deteriorated in 2014.

    Indeed, the Sudanese regime is now engaging in mass atrocities not
    only in Darfur but also in the Nuba Mountains and Blue Nile regions.

    Sudan bombed an aid hospital in January in the Nuba Mountains, and
    the Belgian branch of Doctors Without Borders has just announced the
    closure of operations in Sudan because of government obstructionism.

    A decade ago, one of the most outspoken politicians on Darfur - harshly
    scolding President George W. Bush for not doing more - was an Illinois
    senator, Barack Obama. Today, as president of the United States,
    he is quiet. The United Nations force in Darfur has been impotent.

    Granted, humanitarian crises rarely offer good policy choices, but
    there's no need to embrace the worse option, which is paralysis. We've
    seen in Kosovo, Sierra Leone, Kurdistan and, lately, Yazidi areas
    of Iraq and eastern Congo that outside efforts sometimes can make
    a difference.

    So, sure, let's commemorate the liberation of Auschwitz, the horror
    of the Holocaust and the brutality of the Armenian genocide by trying
    to mitigate mass atrocities today. The basic lesson of these episodes
    is not just that humans are capable of astonishing evil, or that some
    individuals like Witold Pilecki respond with mesmerizing heroism -
    but that, sadly, it's just too easy to acquiesce.

    Kristof is a New York Times columnist.

    http://www.chron.com/opinion/outlook/article/Kristof-6060090.php



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X