Entries by Susan (150)

Monday
Dec032012

Bones Don't Lie: Part 1

For me, it is incredibly hard to fathom the violence that people endure in genocides and other crimes against humanity. But perhaps even more than that, I can’t even possibly understand how they must feel when the people they love are just gone. 

Disappeared.

And the ones left behind have nothing physical of those loved ones left.

This video addresses that. Please watch it.  You might even want to vote for it, if the voting is still open.


Bones Don't Lie and Don't Forget | Kim Munsamy from Focus Forward Films on Vimeo.

 

Here’s what the director, Kim Munsamy, writes about the film:

After 2 decades the Forensic Anthropology Foundation of Guatemala (FAFG) remains dedicated to the work of listening to bones that "don't lie and don't forget", telling their stories in tribunal spaces, to their families who have waited decades to lay to rest their loved ones and to a country in which the past is always present. The afterlife of the conflict demands that the living communicate with those who have passed away in order to pursue justice and re-member a complex and fragmented history. FAFG's work demands us to not only revisit history, but to interrogate it, to reopen chapters perhaps deemed closed or "resolved", and to name, one by one, the thousands who were detained and disappeared during the internal armed conflict in Guatemala.

If you're not familar with what happened in Guatemala in the 1980s here is more information from the Holocaust Museum Houston website:

They write:

"Civil war existed in Guatemala since the early 1960s due to inequalities existing in the economic and political life. In the 1970s, the Maya began participating in protests against the repressive government, demanding greater equality and inclusion of the Mayan language and culture. In 1980, the Guatemalan army instituted “Operation Sophia,” which aimed at ending insurgent guerrilla warfare by destroying the civilian base in which they hid. This program specifically targeted the Mayan population, who were believed to be supporting the guerilla movement. 

Over the next three years, the army destroyed 626 villages, killed or “disappeared” more than 200,000 people and displaced an additional 1.5 million, while more than 150,000 were driven to seek refuge in Mexico. Forced disappearance policies included secretly arresting or abducting people, who were often killed and buried in unmarked graves. In addition, the government instituted a scorched earth policy, destroying and burning buildings and crops, slaughtering livestock, fouling water supplies and violating sacred places and cultural symbols. Many of these actions were undertaken by the army, specifically through special units known as the Kaibiles, in addition to private death squads, who often acted on the advice of the army. The U.S. government often supported the repressive regimes as a part of its anti-Communist policies during the Cold War. The violence faced by the Mayan people peaked between 1978 and 1986. Catholic priests and nuns also often faced violence as they supported the rights of the Mayan people”.

And finally, after thirty years, this past January Guatemalan General Efrain Rios Montt was indicted for genocide and crimes against humanity.  The trial continues, as far as I can tell.

 

Wednesday
Nov282012

Meet Alana, OMB's Virginia State Coordinator

Guest blog by Leigh Durham:

"We’re always excited to check in with our State Coordinators and hear the ways in which their communities are coming together to join the One Million Bones project. Often, coordinators are lucky to have the love and support of family and friends and also get the chance to reconnect on a new level with people and places they’ve known for years.

Recently, Virginia State Coordinator, Alana Simpson, had a unique opportunity to revisit the past and walk the halls of her former high school, but this time as a special guest! Alana was invited to Western Albemarle High School by Laura Chatterson to present to her crafts students in grades 9-12. It was definitely a long, but rewarding day, with six 40-minute presentations to about 150 students. During these presentations, Alana asked students to define “genocide” in their own terms, screened both the Albuquerque and New Orleans preview installation clips, discussed current conflicts, and asked the students to imagine what many kids their age have been through in those regions. Alana was thrilled with the response she received from the students. She shared with us at One Million Bones that “the day could not have gone better, and quite frankly it exceeded my expectations!” She received 33 student intern applications and over 80 e-mail sign-ups for updates on the project! Several of the students started brainstorming on the spot and plan to start a club, hold bake sales to raise money for supplies and get the rest of the school involved with a bonfire and spring fair.

If you live in the Virginia area, Alana would love to hear from you! She's got a lot of exciting things in the works for the Spring, including a collaborative, ongoing installation at the Virginia Holocaust Museum in Richmond.

All this in Virginia as we inch closer to our big event on the National Mall. Imagine what we're building around the country!

 

 

Monday
Nov262012

Before and after Thanksgiving...

Hello and welcome back from your holiday.

In my last blog before the break, I asked you to rejoice in your time with family and friends and appreciate how very fortunate we all are.  And then I asked you to be ready to get back to work today.

And here's why:

Dear Friends,

As you are reading this, mass violence continues unabated in Syria, with over 30,000 killed since March 2011 and atrocity crimes committed by both sides in an ever-deteriorating civil war. Just yesterday, ten children were killed while playing outdoors, following a government air raid in a rebel-held village near Damascus. In the eastern region of the Democratic Republic of Congo, armed rebels notorious for murder, rape and the recruitment of child soldiers, seized the city of Goma and the neighboring villages of Sake and Minova, threatening further violence, mass displacement and potential destabilization of the entire region. In Burma/Myanmar, widespread ethnic clashes in Rakhine State, spurred by decades of marginalization and discrimination of the Rohingya minority, has destroyed more than one thousand homes and forced tens of thousands to flee.
 
The brutality doesn’t stop there; populations around the world remain at risk. Despite committing to protect populations from genocide, war crimes, crimes against humanity and ethnic cleansing with the unanimous endorsement of the Responsibility to Protect (RtoP, R2P) norm in 2005, world leaders have failed to keep their promise.
 
What can you do? How can we ensure governments uphold their commitment to prevent and stop this terrifying cruelty?
 
It is up to individuals like you, as well as non-governmental organizations, academics, and the media, to join together and call on world leaders to act. A rich, active, and growing network of civil society can strengthen states’ resolve to save lives by advocating for rapid responses to dire situations and long-term measures to stave off conflicts in the future. Make a donation today in support of our work to make sure that the international community takes the necessary action to end this mass violence.
 
The International Coalition for the Responsibility to Protect (ICRtoP) is dedicated to building this global community of committed and engaged civil society. Uphold your own responsibility to protect by supporting the ICRtoP and amplifying the voice of civil society around the world. With your help, we can make “never again” a reality.

 

I received the email above from the International Coalition for the Responsibility to Protect this afternoon. Support them, support One Million Bones, support CARE or the Enough Project, United to End Genocide, Women to Women International or any of the many, many amazing groups working to end this kind of violence. The organization you choose is much less important to us than that you choose one.  Do something; it is the only way we will ever make this horror stop.

 

Wednesday
Nov212012

Giving thanks...

All of us at One Million Bones want to thank you for your generosity, support, commitment and passion. We are grateful everyday for how much you do in this struggle we have for a more peaceful and just world.

As we prepare to spend a few days with family and friends, we think about how fortunate we are and then we think about people who are struggling. Our hearts go out to our brothers and sisters around the world, in Congo; in Somalia; in Burma and Sudan and Darfur; in Gaza; in Syria; in all the many places where fear and violence rule, and we know that while we have a difficult road before us, it is the right road to be on.

Take time to revel in your good fortune, and then join us again re-energized for the work.

All the best wishes from the OMB family.

Monday
Nov192012

President Obama in Burma

Just a quick follow-up blog from Friday's post.

Check out this blog from The New Yorker....

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