The Holocaust was a terrible event that can often be compared to the horrific practice of slavery. Both events dealt with lowering human beings to a status of dehumanization. Slavery and the Holocaust created social and racial hierarchies that destroyed human rights and races as a whole. The Holocaust can be compared and contrasted to the events of slavery in the ways of power, death toll, and inhumane treatment of innocent people.…
6 million exterminated. That number rolls off of our tongues as we sit and learn history in the 6th grade, or we write a paper on WW1. How about 800,000 murdered in 100 days, while Americans attempted to keep our troops of the conflict yet watched the bloody images daily on CNN. Genocide in our world is something that is impossible to justify or embrace, but we must attempt to understand it. It is only through this understanding will we be able to prevent or stop one of the most horrific acts man can do in the future. Genocide, in both the Holocaust and in the 1994 Rwandan genocide, is grounded in self-reification and the external reification of others. This then, when put into certain contexts, can manifest itself in a projection of hate through genocide. Although reification is the process which explains genocide, other social movements, such as extreme nativism in the Rwandan genocide and extreme modernism in the Holocaust, help perpetuate widespread genocide.…
Philosopher Paul Ricoeur posed the question, how “can one forgive someone who does not admit his guilt?”(Hatzfeld 195) Whether this admission of guilt is enough to be forgiven or not, the “sincere” taking of responsibility for one’s actions is an absolute minimum in striving for forgiveness. Ricoeur’s question becomes especially relevant when discussing the Rwandan Genocide of 1994, in which the Hutu perpetrators, who killed hundreds of thousands of Tutsi, are now seeking forgiveness for their actions. In Machete Season by Jean Hatzfeld, a close-knit gang of such Hutu genocide perpetrators was interviewed concerning their role in the genocide as well as their views concerning regret and forgiveness. While a majority of those interviewed admit their guilt in killing the Tutsis, their lack of remorse makes their apologies and actions largely unforgivable. This insincerity can be seen through their selfish concerns and motives, emphasis on receiving forgiveness from God rather than those victimized, and vision of a return to a completely unaffected future.…
To most people around the world the fact that the conflict in the Darfur region of the Sudan is genocide. A genocide similar to the holocaust of the Jews during WWII. Both the holocaust and the Darfur genocide have many similarities and differences. The holocaust was to exterminate all Jewish people. In Darfur the conflict is not against two different religions but instead against two different races. Like the holocaust many innocent civilians have lost their lives in both genocides. There many similarities and differences between both the Darfur genocide and the holocaust.…
were killed during the Holocaust and Armenian Genocide in the Ottoman Empire. That is more than half the number of people that died in World War I. The book Maus by Art Spigelman tells the story of a man who was a victim of and lived through the Holocaust. The Holocaust and Amenian Genocide are indistinguishable because of not only the amount of people that died but also for three more main reasons. These reasons are the gruesome leaders of both genocides, the merciless dehumanization that was forced upon the Armenians, Jews, and Lebanese, and the unreasonable murder tactics. ! First of all, there were many people that were part of the extermination of…
Hymowritz, Sarah and Amela Parker. “Post Genocide Rwanda” 28 November 2011. American University Washington College Of Law Center 28 November 2011 www.wcl.american.edu/humrights/center.…
April 6, 1994, not even more than twenty years ago, was the beginning of a genocide that changed our world forever. The Hutus planned and achieved a massacre to try wipe out the Tutsi and the moderate Hutu population in the African country of Rwanda. As the slaughter continued the rest of the world stood by and silently watched. This lasted one hundred days and killed nearly eight-hundred-thousand Tutsis and moderate Hutus. A few reasons that led up to the Rwandan Genocide, was the colonization of Belgium to Rwanda, culture bias, and the inaction of the United States, United Nations, and the world.…
Within this paper, the case study chosen is the Rwanda genocide that occurred in 1994, which had ended thousands of lives. This type of crime can be argued that it consists of all three main state crimes being Law violation, Deviance and Social injury. This is due to the fact that this state crime that was committed in 1994, consisted of an ‘ethnic cleansing’ of the Rwandan Tutsis. This violence had occurred between April to June in 1994. This Genocide had been spread all over Rwanda due hate speeches being spread across the country through the radio. One radio station in particular, named Radio Television Libre des Mille Collines (RTLMC), used street language and hate speeches towards the Tutsi people. This radio station (RTLM) was established and mostly financed by Hutu extremists, who were mostly from northern Rwanda.…
In conclusion, it is clear that there are many contributing factors that acted as a catalyst to the Rwandan genocide. During a time where political instability was the only type of political structure, it is apparent that the rise of anti-political groups, propaganda meant to influence civilians towards taking a side, and colonial oppression causing a polarizing between the Hutus and Tutsis, all played a large role in the start of the genocide. Despite this, it is apparent that there was not one cause, but instead a melting pot of different issues that spilled over into greater…
Genocide is a human choice. It is the deliberate killing of a large group of people, especially those of a particular ethnic group or nation. Genocide is the result of hate, prejudices, hate language and the individuals or society’s choice to do nothing. After the devastating horrors of the Holocaust were exposed, the slogan of the time by the United Nations became “never again” (document B).The knowledge of the atrocities done to the Jewish people outraged members and produced this well intended ideal. The UN General Assembly of the time define genocide as “acts committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national ethnic, racial or religious group.” But the history of the twentieth…
Genocide is terribly crime against humanity that leaves immeasurable devastation in its wake. Stopping genocide and protecting human life should have much more importance than arbitrary laws of sovereignty. This essay will argue for intervention for cases that are deemed acts of genocide by the collective international community led by Western developed nations. Cases such as the Holocaust, and the Rwandan Genocide will be discussed to emphasize the impact genocide has on the world explaining how if intervention was taken the loss of life could have been prevented and future conflict avoided. Another argument in this essay will discuss why sovereignty is an earned right for a nation and should have certain conditions if expected to be respected. The bulk of this paper will then turn to the history of African conflict exploring it’s relation with Western colonization and Multi-National Corporations. Finally, I will give my opinion on just why Western nations have a responsibility and duty to protect people from acts of genocide.…
Genocide is a word that should not exist. Unfortunately, it does and we’ve had to experience it in different nations throughout the world more then once. Genocide refers to violent crimes committed against groups with the intention to destroy the existence of the group. The groups could be in whole or in part, a religious, racial, ethnical, or national group. The Holocaust and the Rwanda are two instances of genocide that have occurred with many similarities and differences.…
Rwanda is a small land-locked nation, about 26,338 square kilometres in size, bordered by Burundi, Democratic Republic of Congo, Uganda and Tanzania. Though mainly flat, the country has a large mountain range on its northwest coast – the Virunga Mountains – that are home to the famous Rwandan Mountain Gorillas. In 1994, this seemingly insignificant country put itself on the world map, but for all the wrong reasons.…
We all continue to remember the genocides, of Cambodia and the Holocaust and all of their horrors. They each killed millions of people, but if you dig into the genocides even more you will see distinct similarities and distinct differences. Although both the Holocaust and the Cambodian Genocide both were caused by powerful leaders seizing power and they both have similar ways of killing large amount of people, they differ in the effects of the genocide such as the minority race in Holocaust getting new land (Israel) and no land was given in the Cambodian Genocide.…
From 1915 to 1994, the Rwanda, Holocaust and the Armenian genocide had many similarities and differences. The three incidences were helped in different degrees by other countries. Rwanda had the least help and the Holocaust had the most with Armenia in between. All three incidents did result in continuing tensions between the groups.…