--- On Wed, 2/29/12, RDIABO <rdi...@rogers.com> wrote:

From: RDIABO <rdi...@rogers.com>
Subject: Fw: Rawiri Taonui: Holocaust or not,  Indigenous have suffered
To: undisclosed-recipi...@yahoo.com
Received: Wednesday, February 29, 2012, 8:01 PM





FYI


 

From: First Peoples Human Rights 
Coalition 
Sent: Tuesday, February 28, 2012 8:22 AM
To: i...@firstpeoplesrights.org 
Subject: Rawiri Taonui: Holocaust or not, Indigenous have 
suffered
 

>From the article below: 
"In 1993, the former British colonies of Canada, 
Australia, New Zealand and the United States (Canzus) opposed the draft 
Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP) which included 
prohibitions against "ethnocide" and "cultural genocide". 












 
_____________________________
nzherald.co.nz
 
 


Rawiri 
Taonui: Holocaust or not, 
Indigenous 
have sufferedBy Rawiri Taonui 

5:30 
AM Tuesday Feb 28, 2012 

  





 
  








 
  
  





 
  
  EXPAND



The 
term Holocaust was first used generally after the 1978 mini-series of the same 
name starring Meryl Streep. Photo / Supplied
Semantic 
arguments are a sideshow when the subject is the destruction of peoples, writes 
Rawiri Taonui, adjunct professor of indigenous studies at AUT.
Jewish 
Council president Stephen Goodman's criticism of Keri Opai's view that Maori 
colonial experiences compare to a holocaust is simplistic.
He 
labelled the claim an ignorant attempt to elevate Maori grievances that 
trivialises and diminishes the genocide of European Jews.
However, 
several scholars have taken issue with Jewish claims to exclusive use of the 
term holocaust. For instance, it excludes millions of other victims of the Nazi 
extermination including socialists, homosexuals, the disabled, Romani 
(Gypsies), 
Slavs, Poles and Soviet prisoners of war (2.8 million Russian POWs died in one 
eight-month period).
Used 
for four centuries in Europe to describe various massacres, others argue the 
Armenians have the first claim to its formal use. The Ottoman Empire caused one 
million Armenian deaths during World War I. Winston Churchill termed that a 
holocaust. In 1922 a now eminent poem titled The Holocaust was composed, and in 
the following year a book The Syrma Holocaust appeared.  After World War 
II, holocaust was used to describe the bombings of Dresden and Hiroshima, the 
1930s Stalin-induced Ukrainian Great Famine and Japan's suppression of Korea 
and 
Manchuria.
From 
the 1950s onwards, holocaust was increasingly used to refer to the Nazi 
genocide, often as a translation of the Jewish descriptor shoah (catastrophe) 
or 
the Yiddish term churben (destruction). Nora Levin's book The Holocaust: The 
Destruction of European Jewry appeared in 1968.
The 
unqualified formal use of "Holocaust with a capital H" as the terror of the 
Jews 
did not come about until after the 1978 TV mini-series of the same name 
starring 
Meryl Streep. A majority of the world's named Holocaust centres date from 
then.
Holocaust 
with a small "h" continues to be used to describe events such as African 
slavery, Khmer Rouge Cambodia, the Rwanda slaughter and indigenous colonial 
histories.
While 
I believe Holocaust defines the Jewish experience - the horrific pinnacle of 
industrial-scale human extermination - I also understand why indigenous peoples 
use the term, not just to define their experience, but more importantly to 
highlight the denial of their experience.
Writers 
such as David Stannard and Ward Churchill, who attest the colonisation of the 
Americas was a holocaust, argue that condemnations like Mr Goodman's actually 
reinforce the denial of horrors perpetrated upon indigenous populations.
That 
denial has a history. Polish Jew Raphael Lemkin coined the term "genocide" in 
1943 providing a broad based definition including physical, political, social, 
biological and cultural genocide. The latter was applicable to indigenous 
contexts, Lemkin arguing genocide could be immediate or cumulative over 
time.
Historian 
David Cesarani went further. He said over the longer term the oppression of 
colonised peoples can be more costly than the Holocaust.
Lemkin 
subsequently drafted a UN Convention on Genocide in 1946. The Soviet Union 
opposed his definitions because of its record of political suppression. The 
United States, France and Britain did so as well because of their colonial 
records.
When 
the UN Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide 
(UNCPPCG) was adopted two years later, the reference to cultural genocide had 
been effectively expunged. Administered under the Rome Statute (1998) and 
International Criminal Court (2002), Article 2 defines genocide as any acts 
intended to destroy a national, ethnic, racial or religious group such as 
killing, causing serious bodily or mental harm, inflicting particular living 
conditions, preventing birth and forcibly removing children.
With 
an emphasis squarely on state "intent", the outcome has been that Western 
European countries have been able to prosecute leaders from weaker developing 
and Eastern Europe countries, while exonerating themselves for any colonial 
transgressions on the basis that they were the inadvertent consequences of 
"civilising" projects.
In 
1993, the former British colonies of Canada, Australia, New Zealand and the 
United States (Canzus) opposed the draft Declaration on the Rights of 
Indigenous 
Peoples (UNDRIP) which included prohibitions against "ethnocide" and "cultural 
genocide". As a result the terms "cultural destruction" and "forced 
assimilation" were moved into a separate section, and ethnocide and cultural 
genocide replaced by genocide, which by default referral to the 1948 Convention 
and Rome Statute, again protected Western countries with colonial baggage.
UNDRIP 
was passed at the UN General Assembly in 2007 - 143 countries voted in support, 
only the Canzus four voted against.
In 
the search for due recognition, writers and academics continue to use the terms 
cultural genocide and holocaust to describe colonisation in the Pacific, 
Americas, Tibet, East Turkmenistan and other places.
When 
Tariana Turia made her holocaust reference in 2000, Judy Sedley from the 
Wellington Jewish Community Centre said that might be appropriate if Maori used 
the term with a small "h".
Posterity 
might determine that the Jewish Holocaust belongs alongside an Armenian and 
other holocausts and "Colonial Genocide" might describe many indigenous 
experiences.
In 
a debate about honouring by acknowledgement the inestimable numbers of humans 
over many generations who suffered in this way, those who condemn indigenous 
peoples lack the humanity and grace of Lemkin. Suffering is never a 
competition.
© Copyright 2012, APN Holdings 
NZ LimitedBy Rawiri Taonui







  
  





  

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