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Purpose:
To have you look at current local political and social
realities, and to apply what you have learned to them
here and now.You
will be reading Local and National news articles and will be asked to
connect the dots from reading
to reading
to discover:
in their
district?
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Could the hate
crime violence happening in Eastern Baltimore County ever become
genocidal?
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What, if
anything, needs to be done at this point to keep that from from
happening...?
Directions:
READ
the 7 articles below.
FOLLOW
the
directions
as you go from article to article.
ANSWER
the 4
questions
that precede or follow the readings.
HAND THEM IN
(typed) by
the due date and mark the date handed in on your class folder. No length
requirement.
IMPORTANT NOTE:
This is a very
CHALLENGING assignment. You are being asked to
recognize the seeds of genocide that are locally
growing within
normal everyday realities: state politics, rallies, newspaper articles,
web sites and local crime reports.
I have tried many
times to make what you are going to read and struggle with below easier
to read and deal with.
I have now come to
the conclusion that I can't. The reality is, that when hate emerges in a
community it is not obvious
and easy to see.
It pops up, unexpectedly, here and there
(like 'Whack a Mole').
Only those who are sensitive to what
these incidents
mean (like
the 'canary in the mine')
are able to see that they could be the beginning stages of genocide.
Please use what
you have learned from the The Holocaust and Dangerous Memories
to help you see the threads of hate
that link the
following articles. It is complicated and confusing. In
the beginning, that's the way genocide is.
Ms. S
Article #1
DIRECTIONS:
Refer to: The Eight Stages of Genocide:
You will
be
evaluating what you read in articles #2-7
in
terms of these 8 stages.
The Eight Stages of Genocide
By Gregory H. Stanton
(Originally written in 1996 at the Department of State;
presented at the Yale University Center
for International and
Area Studies in 1998)
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Genocide is a
process that develops in eight stages that are
predictable but not inexorable. At
each stage, preventive measures can stop it.
The later stages must be preceded by the earlier
stages, though earlier stages continue to
operate throughout the process.
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The
eight stages
of
genocide
are: |
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1.
CLASSIFICATION: |
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All
cultures have categories to distinguish people
into "us and them" by ethnicity, race,
religion, or nationality: German and Jew, Hutu
and Tutsi. Bipolar societies that lack mixed
categories, such as Rwanda and Burundi, are the
most likely to have genocide.
The main preventive measure at this early stage
is to develop universalistic institutions that
transcend ethnic or racial divisions, that
actively promote tolerance and understanding,
and that promote classifications that transcend
the divisions. The Catholic church could have
played this role in Rwanda, had it not been
riven by the same ethnic cleavages as Rwandan
society. Promotion of a common language in
countries like Tanzania or Cote d'Ivoire has
also promoted transcendent national identity.
This search for common ground is vital to early
prevention of genocide. |
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2. SYMBOLIZATION:
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We
give names or other symbols to the
classifications. We name people "Jews" or
"Gypsies", or distinguish them by colors or
dress; and apply them to members of groups.
Classification and symbolization are universally
human and do not necessarily result in genocide
unless they lead to the next stage,
dehumanization. When combined with hatred,
symbols may be forced upon unwilling members of
pariah groups: the yellow star for Jews under
Nazi rule, the blue scarf for people from the
Eastern Zone in Khmer Rouge Cambodia.
To combat symbolization, hate symbols can be
legally forbidden (swastikas) as can hate
speech. Group marking like gang clothing or
tribal scarring can be outlawed, as well. The
problem is that legal limitations will fail if
unsupported by popular cultural enforcement.
Though Hutu and Tutsi were forbidden words in
Burundi until the 1980's, code-words replaced
them. If widely supported, however, denial of
symbolization can be powerful, as it was in
Bulgaria, when many non-Jews chose to wear the
yellow star, depriving it of its significance as
a Nazi symbol for Jews. According to legend in
Denmark, the Nazis did not introduce the yellow
star because they knew even the King would wear
it. |
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3. DEHUMANIZATION:
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One
group denies the humanity of the other group.
Members of it are equated with animals, vermin,
insects or diseases. Dehumanization overcomes
the normal human revulsion against murder.
At this stage, hate propaganda in print and
on hate radios is used to vilify the victim
group. In combating this dehumanization,
incitement to genocide should not be confused
with protected speech. Genocidal societies lack
constitutional protection for countervailing
speech, and should be treated differently than
in democracies. Hate radio stations should be
shut down, and hate propaganda banned. Hate
crimes and atrocities should be promptly
punished. |
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4. ORGANIZATION:
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Genocide is always organized, usually by the
state, though sometimes informally (Hindu mobs
led by local RSS militants) or by terrorist
groups. Special army units or militias are often
trained and armed. Plans are made for genocidal
killings.
To combat this stage, membership in these
militias should be outlawed. Their leaders
should be denied visas for foreign travel. The
U.N. should impose arms embargoes on governments
and citizens of countries involved in genocidal
massacres, and create commissions to investigate
violations, as was done in post-genocide Rwanda. |
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5. POLARIZATION:
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Extremists drive the groups apart. Hate
groups broadcast polarizing propaganda. Laws
may forbid intermarriage or social interaction.
Extremist terrorism targets moderates,
intimidating and silencing the center.
Prevention may mean security protection for
moderate leaders or assistance to human rights
groups. Assets of extremists may be seized, and
visas for international travel denied to them.
Coups d'¢etat by extremists should be opposed by
international sanctions. |
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6. PREPARATION: |
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Victims are identified and separated out because
of their ethnic or religious identity. Death
lists are drawn up. Members of victim groups are
forced to wear identifying symbols. They are
often segregated into ghettoes, forced into
concentration camps, or confined to a
famine-struck region and starved.
At this stage, a Genocide Alert must be called.
If the political will of the U.S., NATO, and the
U.N. Security Council can be mobilized, armed
international intervention should be prepared,
or heavy assistance to the victim group in
preparing for its self-defense. Otherwise, at
least humanitarian assistance should be
organized by the U.N. and private relief groups
for the inevitable tide of refugees.
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7. EXTERMINATION:
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Extermination begins, and quickly becomes the
mass killing legally called "genocide." It is
"extermination" to the killers because they do
not believe their victims to be fully human.
When it is sponsored by the state, the armed
forces often work with militias to do the
killing. Sometimes the genocide results in
revenge killings by groups against each other,
creating the downward whirlpool-like cycle of
bilateral genocide (as in Burundi).
At this stage, only rapid and overwhelming armed
intervention can stop genocide. Real safe areas
or refugee escape corridors should be
established with heavily armed international
protection. The U.N. needs a Standing High
Readiness Brigade or a permanent rapid reaction
force, to intervene quickly when the U.N.
Security Council calls it. For larger
interventions, a multilateral force authorized
by the U.N., led by NATO or a regional military
power, should intervene. If the U.N. will not
intervene directly, militarily powerful nations
should provide the airlift, equipment, and
financial means necessary for regional states to
intervene with U.N. authorization. It is time to
recognize that the law of humanitarian
intervention transcends the interests of
nation-states. |
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8. DENIAL:
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Denial is the eighth stage that always follows a
genocide. It is among the surest indicators of
further genocidal massacres. The perpetrators of
genocide dig up the mass graves, burn the
bodies, try to cover up the evidence and
intimidate the witnesses. They deny that they
committed any crimes, and often blame what
happened on the victims. They block
investigations of the crimes, and continue to
govern until driven from power by force, when
they flee into exile. There they remain with
impunity, like Pol Pot or Idi Amin, unless they
are captured and a tribunal is established to
try them.
The best response to denial is punishment by an
international tribunal or national courts. There
the evidence can be heard, and the perpetrators
punished. Tribunals like the Yugoslav, Rwanda,
or Sierra Leone Tribunals, an international
tribunal to try the Khmer Rouge in Cambodia, and
ultimately the International Criminal Court must
be created. They may not deter the worst
genocidal killers. But with the political will
to arrest and prosecute them, some mass
murderers may be brought to justice.
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© 1998 Gregory H. Stanton
Home
| Eight
Stages of Genocide | Documents
| Links
Genocide Watch
P.O. Box 809
Washington, D.C.
20044 USA
Ph. 703-448-0222 Fax
703-448-6665
info@genocidewatch
DIRECTIONS:
Read articles #2-#3-#4-#5. Follow
the threads that lead to the hate crimes.
Answer the following questions:
1.
Describe what you see.
2.
What Stage/Stages of Genocide do you see here?
3.
What needs to be done at
this point?
Article #2
East County Times
Serving Middle River, White Marsh and Perry Hall
January 13, 2005
by
Richard Berkow
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The 2005 General
Assembly (Annapolis- State Government) opened yesterday,
and will last 90 days. The East County Times
asked the elected officials in our readership's
districts the following question:
Which three
issues will serve as your priorities this session?
Del. Rick
Impallaria, 7th District - Push for a new Northeast
High School, whatever it takes. Second, fighting any
legislation that will put out the welcome mat for
illegal immigrants. Last, support our County's effort
to bring home funding for school renovations and
construction.
Del. Pat
McDonough, 7th District,
was on
vacation. However, the importance of a new northeast
high school, the enforcement of laws concerning illegal
immigrants, and improved medical malpractice tort reform
in Maryland is well known to his constituency. |
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Article #3
Washington Post
Thursday, March 25, 2004
Incident
Shoves Impallaria Into
Spotlight
By Tim Craig and Lori
Montgomery
Maryland State Delegate Richard K.
Impallaria (R) says that his
well-publicized confrontation last week with
several lobbyists
for
immigrants'
concerns was a boost for his political
career. Well, in his conservative, eastern
Baltimore County district,
at
least.
"They love us. They are telling us to keep
up the good work," Impallaria said,
adding that he has received dozens of
e-mails in the
past
week.
"The
biggest thing I hear is we have too many
politically correct lawmakers and not enough
politically
courageous
ones."
Impallaria and Del. Patrick L. McDonough
(R-Baltimore County) confronted four
lobbyists for immigrants' issues last week
after a House of
Delegates hearing on a bill to study the
fiscal impact of illegal immigration.
The delegates said the advocates referred to
them as "racists" during testimony on the
measure.
After following them into the hallway of the
Lowe House Office Building, Impallaria asked
a Hispanic advocate whether she was an
illegal immigrant.
The lobbyist Natali Fani
of Casa De Maryland, refused to answer.
Jamie Kendrick, executive director of
the Service Employees International Union
Maryland-D.C. state council, then came to
Fani's defense, and
McDonough shoved him. Kendrick
said McDonough attacked him. McDonough said
he was just defending himself from the union
leader.
An
Anne Arundel County District Court judge is
looking into the matter to determine whether a
criminal investigation should be launched. The
House
Ethics Committee could also launch
an investigation.
Impallaria is not worried. He said constituents
have showered him with praise since the
incident.
Impallaria and McDonough represent the 7th
Legislative District, which includes the
blue-collar communities of Middle River,
Joppa and
Perry Hall.
Those voters support attempts to
crack down on illegal immigration,
Impallaria said.
Several constituents started a legal defense
fund for the two delegates, who are leaders in
efforts to limit illegal immigration. Impallaria
quashed the
idea before any money was raised
because he said it violated campaign finance
laws that prohibit delegates and senators from
raising money while
the General Assembly is in session.
"We had to step in and tell them to stop,"
Impallaria said, adding that he will hold a news
conference this week to discuss the scuffle.
Although Impallaria relishes the attention,
McDonough is a bit nervous. "It scared me to
death," McDonough said after reading a newspaper
account
of
the incident.
"I'll
never punch another lobbyist again."
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Article #4
East County Times
Serving Middle River, White Marsh and Perry Hall
January 13,
2005
911
CRIME REPORT
Precinct 11:
Essex/Middle River
Destruction
of Property (race, religion, ethnicity): On. Jan. 7,
Ofc. Heins responded to the unit-block of Cloudy Cove Ct.
The victim
advised unknown
suspects had carved a swastika in the front lawn. The
occupants are not Jewish, but found it offensive.
Destruction
of Property (race, religion, ethnicity): On Jan. 5, a
woman was chased by a Ford Taurus with two white male
occupants,
one in a red
sweatshirt and the other in a white hoody with a baseball
cap, from I-695 near Belair Rd. to Rt. 702 and Mansfield
Rd. They
yelled racial
slurs and tossed an unknown object at the car, causing
damage to the driver's side rear quarter panel. The victim
was able to flag
down a passing
officer for assistance. The victim was able to provide a
tag number and investigation continues.
Article #5
NOTE:
The
following is an excerpt from a Baltimore hate group chat
room. The name of the group is not included
because
student use of such sites is against NDP
Policy.
Ms. S
__________________________________________________________________________________
Excerpted 1/20/05:
F:
We'll be
meeting every month from now on, and working on
Hillsboro's Six Month Goals, including flyering,
public access TV and public debates.
A:
Very
good . It takes money, time and dedication to do all
this but it's necessary. We've been passive for too
long and in all that time the third world
savages have
taken over our country and dispossessed our people
from almost any Town or City. If we don't save
ourselves ,our politicians will never do it.
W:
Sorry I
missed Saturday's meeting. I'm interested in what
exactly these Six Month Goals are. As a new member I
guess I'm pretty out of the loop
(being able
to make the meeting would have been helpful, I
know). A PM to clear things up, perhaps? Hope the
meeting went well. Our UC sounded
pretty
excited about it beforehand.
B:
The
meeting turned out well and I look forward to our
new projects we all discussed.
F:
Congrats. The 2 units in Washington are moving
forward with you. We just got back from the Western
Region Conference and everyone of us
were
impressed. Keep up the good work and let us know how
you are doing.
B:
I met
some of the Washington guys at the April leadership
conference. They were very motivated and had many
good ideas on expanding their unit.
I am sure
the Washington units will do very well. Keep up the
good work.
M:
Congrats. . It was good to see you guys there!
F:
State
Delegates Pat McDonough and Rick Impallaria will
have another Rally for America tomorrow (Saturday
11/20) from 2-4pm.
They will
speak out against illegal immigration. My better
half and I will be there.
Rosedale VFW Building
8777 Philadelphia Road
Rosedale MD 21237
Take I-695 to Exit for Philadelphia Road, north.
After crossing through 3rd traffic light (at
Rossville Boulevard), VFW hall is on the right.
B:
Let us
know how that went. Wish I was closer .... or owned
an airplane!
F:
:Just got back - it went well. McDonough is a
radio show host when he's not in the House of
Delegates, so he's a good speaker.
Impallaria was good also. The two of them
spoke about what they're trying to do in the
legislature to fight illegal immigration - opposing
in-state
tuition
rates for illegals, opposing drivers' licenses for
them, etc. Attendees were also handing out flyers
for a rally against gay marriage to take place
in January.
Pretty lukewarm stuff, yes, but these guys are among
the best delegates we have in Maryland.
Article #6
On airwaves and billboards, hate-group recruitment
goes mainstream White supremacists seek to move out
of shadows; Trend alarms rights groups
ST.
LOUIS - White supremacist groups around the
country are moving aggressively to recruit new
members by promoting their violent, racist
ideologies on billboards, in radio commercials and
in leaflets tossed on suburban driveways.
Watching with mounting alarm, civil rights monitors
say these tactics stake out a much bolder, more
public role for many hate groups, which are trying
to shed their image as shadowy extremists and claim
more mainstream support.
Watchdog groups fear increased violence from these
organizations as they grow. But perhaps an even
greater fear is that the new public relations
strategy will let neo-Nazis recast themselves as
just another voice on the political spectrum - even
when that voice might be advocating genocide.
"The
concern is that this will bring them new members and
money, and that they will get some real traction in
mainstream politics," said Mark Potok, who tracks
hate groups for the Southern Poverty Law Center.
The
National Alliance, which calls for ridding the land
of minorities, has led the drive to raise the
profile of white supremacists.
The
local chapter spent $1,500 on MetroLink ads here
last month, plastering nearly every commuter train
car in the city with a blue-and-white placard
declaring "The Future belongs to us!" and listing
the group's Web site and phone number. The same
chapter bought airtime on local talk radio last
fall, urging whites to unite and fight for the
survival of "white America."
"We
want to use mainstream advertising to say to the
public: 'We're not a shadowy group. This is what we
believe in, and we're proud of it,'" said chapter
leader Aaron Collins.
Other chapters of the National Alliance have posted
billboards in Utah, Nevada and Florida. The group
has also coordinated massive leaflet drops,
distributing 100,000 racist fliers in a single night
in states as far apart as New Jersey, Alabama and
Nebraska.
"If
we had the money to advertise during the Super Bowl,
we'd try that too," said Shaun Walker, the
organization's chief operating officer.
Civil rights monitors consider the National
Alliance, which was founded in the 1970s, one of the
nation's most virulent neo-Nazi organizations. Its
late founder, William Pierce, called for herding
Jews and "race mixers" into cattle cars and
abandoning them in old coal mines.
And
although the group's Web site says it "does not
advocate any illegal activity," National Alliance
members have been convicted of scattered acts of
violence over the last two decades, including armed
robberies, bombings and murders. The FBI's senior
counter-terrorism expert told Congress in 2002 that
the National Alliance represented a "terrorist
threat."
"They clearly have a track record of encouraging
members to take their vision of race war to the
streets," said Devin Burghart, who monitors hate
groups for the Center for New Community in Chicago.
Public outreach is not new for white supremacist
groups. The Knights of the Ku Klux Klan have been
picking up litter for Missouri's Adopt-a-Highway
program for years.
But
hate-group monitors say the latest recruitment
campaigns are much broader than any they've seen
before.
Neo-Nazi organizations are not only putting up
billboards, but they're also instructing members to
hide their tattoos and dress for rallies in
conservative suits to avoid being dismissed as
extremists.
Thomas Robb, the national director of the Knights of
the Ku Klux Klan, urges his members to serve on
community boards and in political parties so they
can push their white-power agenda from positions of
social respect.
Civil-rights advocates call this new emphasis on
legitimacy insidious, because it might lure people
into neo-Nazi circles before they fully understand
what they're being sold.
Some
of the National Alliance's ads and Web sites make it
look "like the focus is on mainstream conservative
issues," said Karen Aroesty, the Midwest director of
the Anti-Defamation League. The Las Vegas billboard,
for instance, urged: "Stop Immigration." The one in
Salt Lake City declared: "Securing the Future for
European Americans."
Although no one offers hard numbers, white
supremacists contend - and their sharpest critics
agree - that the recruitment strategy is working.
Many
of the promotions are short-lived; the MetroLink ads
were up a week before transit officials removed them
in response to a complaint. Such controversy,
however, generates media coverage that can be more
valuable than the ads themselves.
Media reports about the Salt Lake City billboard
drove 4,500 visitors to the National Alliance's
local Web site in one week - compared with average
traffic of 100 hits a month, Walker said.
"What evidence we've seen indicates that real-world
advertisement and promotion has far more impact on
recruitment than online work does," Burghart said.
"They reach a different demographic," he added. Many
middle-age recruits, he said, feel more comfortable
joining a group they've seen on TV or heard
advertised on the radio, rather than one that makes
its presence known mostly through racist rants in
Internet chat rooms.
The Los Angeles Times is a Tribune Publishing
newspaper.
Copyright © 2005,
The Baltimore Sun
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