“MARCH 21, PAST AND PRESENT, LESSONS TO BE LEARNED” by, SUSAN SACIRBEY
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On March 21, 1960, South African police opened fire on a peaceful demonstration in Sharpeville. Sixty-nine deaths of those protesting apartheid’s “pass laws” resulted. This seminal moment for justice was the impetus in 1966 for the UN General Assembly to proclaim March 21 “International Day for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination.” The United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, Navi Pillay, speaks of the great significance of this day. The focus this year will be on people of African descent. Although there has been some positive steps from dedicated individuals, there continues to be widespread racism in many areas around the World. The human slave trade created a great imbalance in employment, education, political and social opportunity. Racism breeds stereotypes, whether based on skin color, ethnicity, religion, gender preference, or social custom. Recognition is the first step in the goal of eradicating racism. When we can cherish the unique contributions and innovations of each member of humankind and embrace them with empowerment, dignity, and equality, we will have accomplished our goal. In the words of Senator Robert Kennedy, spoken following the assassination of Martin Luther King: “When you teach a man to hate and to fear his brother, when you teach that he is a lesser man because of his color, or his beliefs or the policies that he pursues, when you teach that those who differ from you, threaten your freedom or your job or your home or your family, then you also learn to confront others not as fellow citizens, but as enemies. To be met not with co-operation but with conquest, to be subjugated, and to be mastered.” In concluding, I’d like to draw your attention to a book I just completed that moved me with its significance for this day: “The Bone Woman” by Clea Koff.” This is a graphic portrayal from a forensic expert for the UN International Criminal for Rwanda. Ms. Koff participated in subsequent missions for the UN International Criminal for the former Yugoslavia to unearth evidence of genocide in mass graves in Bosnia, Croatia, and Kosovo, as well as Rwanda. At mission end, it was her conclusion that these genocides were primarily the result of self-interest, be it economic, territorial, or governments holding onto power and their “establishment” versus religious, tribal or ethnic differences. Perhaps it will be the children who will teach us and be our leaders. Ms. Koff describes a chilling scene: “In 1997 gunmen burst into a school and told the students to divide themselves into groups of Hutu and Tutsi. The children refused saying, “There is no Hutu or Tutsi: we are all Rwandan here.” The gunmen shot most of these young heroes. Let us include these young heroes in today’s remembrance: March 21, 2011, The International Day for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination.” See Related Film Reports: Anti-Racism Day: March 21, 2011 diplomaticallyincorrect.org/films/movie/anti-racism-day-21-03-2011/25691 Killing & Conflict/South Sudan diplomaticallyincorrect.org/films/movie/killingconflictsouth-sudan/24745 Ivory Coast Killings/Genocide Coming diplomaticallyincorrect.org/films/movie/ivory-coast-killingsgenocide-coming/24289 News Blog by Tom Osborne: “The Whole World is Watching” diplomaticallyincorrect.org/films/blog_post/the-whole-world-is-watching-by-tom/18185 Holocaust Day/United Nations Observes diplomaticallyincorrect.org/films/movie/holocaust-dayunited-nations-observes/24540 www.diplomaticallyincorrect.org www.warcrimesjustice.com Facebook – “Diplomatically Incorrect” Facebook - “War Crimes Justice” Twitter – DiplomaticallyX