The
                                  Faces of Genocide: Don't Look Away 
                                  Excerpt
                                  from New Moon: The Magazine for Girls and
                                  Their Dreams 
                                  by
                                  Joanna Cave 
                                  
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                                After
                                the Holocaust, the world said, “We’ll
                                never let this happen again.” Yet genocide
                                has happened in Cambodia, Bosnia, and Rwanda
                                among other places. Genocide is when one group
                                carries out a mass killing of another group because
                                of their race, religion, ethnicity, or nationality.
                                Most often, our world pays little attention.
                                It’s a terrible and scary thing to even
                                think about, but we have to understand it so
                                we can try to stop it. I want to talk about what
                                happened in Rwanda in 1994, and what’s
                                happening in Darfur, Sudan today. Then, let’s
                                discuss taking action to improve our world. 
                              
 Rwanda, Africa 
                                  Rwanda is a central African country of mountain
                                  ranges and rolling grasslands. “When
                                  God wanders the world, at the end of the day,
                                  He comes to Rwanda to sleep because He considers
                                  this to be the most beautiful place on Earth” is
                                  a famous saying there. But starting in April
                                  1994, Rwanda’s beauty gave way to an
                                  ugly genocide that killed more than 800,000
                                  people in 100 days.            
                              Genocide
                                often happens because of power struggles between
                                  two ethnic groups. In Rwanda, two tribes, the
                                  Hutas and the Tutsis, struggled for power.
                                  On April 6, 1994, someone killed the president
                                  of Rwanda by shooting down his plane. The president’s
                                death acted like a signal to Hutu extremists. They began rounding up Tutsis
                                and killing them. Hutu militias raped thousands of women and girls. Many fled
                                Rwanda, but refugee camps in neighboring countries reported countless deaths
                                because of poor living conditions and malnutrition in the camps.        
                              When
                                the genocide began in Rwanda, Major-General
                                Romeo Dallaire, the United Nations commander
                                in charge of peace-keeping, told the U.N. that
                                he needed more help. But the U.N.refused. Dallaire
                                continued to try to stop the attacks on Tutsis,
                                but his efforts weren’t enough. Eventually,
                                Paul Kagame and the Rwandese Patriotic Front
                                fought the Hutu militias for three months and
                                took power of Rwanda in July of 1994. They ended
                                the genocide, but with almost no help from the
                                international community.            
                              Today,
                                  the Government of National Unity governs Rwanda.
                                  It includes representation from all ethnic
                                  groups and religions. Under the previous government,
                                  women in Rwanda couldn’t own land, have a bank account,
                                or work outside the home. Now Rwanda has the
                                highest percentage of women holding government
                                positions in the world! Women have taken an active
                                role in rebuilding their country in other ways
                                as well, finding homes for orphans, creating
                                support groups for widows, and entering the labor
                                force. 
                               Darfur, Sudan 
                                Genocide is in the news again because of conflict
                                  in the Darfur region of Sudan, in Africa. In
                                  September 2004, General Colin Powell told the
                                  U.N that the conflict happening in Darfur is
                                  genocide; Janjaweed, Arab Sudanese
                                  militia groups, are killing black Sudanese
                                  villagers. Yet the international community
                                  still hasn’t responded. Four-hundred
                                  thousand people have died, 2.5 million people
                                  are out of their homes, and 3.5 million people
                                  are starving. 
                              Help! 
  We need to take action to stop genocide. Girls
                                  can make a lasting impact by planning a fundraiser
                                  or awareness campaign in their schools or communities.
                                  Write to your local newspaper and get the media
                                  involved. As girls, we can make just as much
                                  difference in the world as adults. If we all
                                  took the initiative to help, think of the impact
                                  we’d make! 
                              Brace yourself 
                                One organization, www.savedarfur.org,
                                has started a bracelet awareness campaign called “Not
                                On My Watch”. All of the proceeds go to
                                SaveDarfur.org to raise awareness about genocide. 
                              Write to the White House 
                                You can write to George W. Bush and tell him
                                  to take action against the genocide in Darfur,
                                  Sudan.  
                              Here’s
                                  his address: 
                              President George W. Bush 
                                The White House 
                                1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW 
                                Washington, D.C, 20500 
                              
   
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