by
Genocide is neither linear nor
“inexorable.” It is, rather, predictable and preventable, so long as you
recognize the universal signs. And Iran, in its language and action,
has taken six of the eight steps on the path to genocide, according to
Dr. Gregory Stanton, the world’s foremost expert on the matter.
Stanton, the founder and director of Genocide
Watch, the world’s first organization to deal
exclusively with this
issue, and the author of an historic two-page paper on the nature of
genocide, spoke at the Hebrew University medical school last week. He
called for an international campaign to abolish the recurring crime of
genocide and for the world to take action, as Canada has, to ostracize
Iran and curb its genocidal intent.
Talk of genocide, Stanton said — of removing a
cancer or crushing a cockroach — is never just talk. “One of the best
predictors of genocide is incitement to genocide,” he said, “and I
believe that is exactly what Iran is doing today.”
Encouraging genocide is a crime. The UN
Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of Genocide was signed in
1948 and fathered by Raphael Lemkin, a Jewish Polish lawyer who studied
the genocide of the Armenians and invented the term in 1943 – “genos”
meaning race or people and “cide” to kill. The Convention states that
incitement “with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national,
ethnical, racial or religious group” is illegal.
Late last week, on precisely those grounds,
Canada severed its ties with Iran. John Baird, the minister of foreign
affairs, announced that the Iranian regime “engages in racist
anti-Semitic rhetoric and incitement to genocide.”
He gave Iranian diplomats five days to leave the country.
Stanton and Dr. Elihu Richter, a professor
emeritus at the Hebrew University’s medical school and the founder of
the Jerusalem Center for Genocide Prevention, both hailed the decision.
Richter called it “mighty” and said that the
Canadian declaration “sets a powerful precedent for intervening to
prevent genocide and genocidal terror by going at the early predictive
causes and catalysts, rather than waiting for the body count.”
The two are seeking to drag Iran before the
International Court of Justice in The Hague, where state actors can
prosecute one another. Neither the Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs
nor the Prime Minister’s Office could confirm whether Israel had
encouraged Canada to file charges against Iran for incitement to
genocide.
The predictable pattern
Recognizing the early signs, spotlighting them
and prosecuting those encouraging the killings are some of the ways to
prevent a genocide. Ignoring them, dismissing them as diabolical
rhetoric or as a tactic meant to advance a different goal, is to enable
the perpetrators, Stanton said.
Often, genocide goes unrecognized. In the
opening slide of Stanton’s lecture three perplexed diplomats, clutching
attaché cases that label them as representing the EU, the US and the UN,
look around at a patch of desert, Darfur, that is stained with the
bodies of the dead. “Well…” says one; “Genocide, genocide…” says
another; “Difficult question…” says the third.
Over the years Stanton realized that all
genocides follow eight stages. They are, in this order: classification,
symbolization, dehumanization, organization, polarization, preparation,
extermination and denial.
Iran, he said, had classified and symbolized
Israel through exclusionary ideology and hate speech; dehumanized it –
“overcoming the normal human revulsion against murder” — by portraying
the potential victims as a “cancer” in need of eradication; organized
fanatical militias (the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps); polarized
the society by repressing dissent and arresting moderates; prepared for
the killing by denying a past genocide and by constructing weapons of
mass destruction; and, through global terrorism, even begun the seventh
of his eight stages: extermination.
In the past century alone there have been 55
genocides, leaving 70 million people dead, Stanton said. The Armenians,
the Jews and the Tutsi of Rwanda were the rare examples of one group’s
campaign to destroy another group in its entirety, he said; more often,
the case is that one group seeks to partially eradicate another– perhaps
the educated classes or those living in a certain geographic region.
For instance, in 1971, Pakistani forces killed somewhere between 300,000
and three million Bangladeshis. They did not seek to annihilate all
Hindus in what was then known as East Pakistan, but the crime, Stanton
said, must be considered a genocide.
The call to service
Stanton, a small-town Illinois native and the
son of a Presbyterian pastor, realized he had to devote his life to the
prevention of genocide in 1981, while sitting in the office of a Yale
psychiatrist.
A graduate of the Harvard Divinity School with
a PhD in cultural anthropology from the University of Chicago, he was
in his second year at Yale Law School, recently back from a year in
Cambodia, where he had worked for the Church World Service, bringing
relief to the victims of the Khmer Rouge. He and his wife had adopted a
daughter there and he should have been happy, he said, but instead he
had slipped into a deep depression. His wife insisted he see a
psychiatrist, who asked what was bothering him. He told of the mass
graves and the survivor testimonies and the little corpse in the
tattered Mickey Mouse t-shirt.
The doctor told him that if he weren’t
depressed there would be something wrong with him. The doctor added
that he, like many others who have studied depression, feel it is a form
of repressed anger. “Then he looked at me and said: ‘What are you angry
about?’” Stanton recalled.
Stanton’s response: the fact that the Khmer
Rouge had organized and perpetrated the killing of 1.7 million
Cambodians and still remained in power.
From that moment on the prevention of genocide
became his life’s work. He founded the Cambodia Genocide Project and
spent decades pushing for the indictment of those responsible. He helped
establish the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda and was
awarded the American Foreign Service Association’s W. Averell Harriman
Award for “intellectual courage and creative accomplishment.”
Nonetheless, in the late nineties, he was
fired from the State Department. His supervisor, frustrated with his
efforts to document what he called “the appalling cowardice” of the
Department in April 1994 — when it voted to withdraw all UNAMIR
peacekeepers in Rwanda in the face of a mounting genocide — wrote the
type of evaluation that she knew would eventually terminate his career.
“Greg apparently does not understand that the State Department is a
hierarchal organization,” he quoted, with obvious pleasure, during the
lecture.
Before leaving the State Department, he wrote the two-page paper that is at the heart of his presentation and work.
Since then, Stanton, a descendant of Elizabeth
Cady Stanton and Henry Brewster Stanton – a founder of the woman’s
liberation movement and an abolitionist – has founded the International
Campaign to End Genocide. It rests on two fundamental principles: that
genocide is “unlike a hurricane” and therefore predictable, and that the
phenomenon has become wretchedly common.
“It’s like slavery,” he said, “a giant elephant in the room that everyone is ignoring.”
Mitch Ginsburg
Source: http://www.timesofisrael.com/genocides-unlike-hurricanes-are-predictable-says-world-expert-and-iran-is-following-the-pattern/
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
1 comment:
The Palestinians are also guilty of at least the first five steps listed, classification, symbolization, dehumanization, organization and polarization and only lack the capability rather than the desire for the remaining steps.
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