Encountering Genocide: Personal Accounts from Victims, Perpetrators, and WitnessesCutting-edge in its scope and approach, this unique volume offers first-person accounts of modern genocides to enable readers to more fully examine genocidal experiences and better understand the horror of such events. From the atrocities of the Holocaust to the ongoing horrors in Darfur, genocide has been a gruesome and all-too-prominent fixture of modern history. There is no better way to examine and understand these events than through the accounts of those involved. This unique collection of primary sources features 50 documents, some of which have never before been made public. These firsthand accounts—diary entries, memoirs, oral testimony, original interviews, and more—illuminate 10 genocides of the 20th and 21st centuries as they were experienced by victims, perpetrators, and bystanders. The book begins with the Herero Genocide (1904–1907) and ends with a consideration of the atrocities in Darfur. Each of the 50 documents features a brief introduction that provides basic and essential information such as who created it as well as when, where, and why. The work concludes with an analysis comprised of scholarly commentary, additional contextual information, and a list of questions that will serve as a springboard for student discussion of history and of the nature of survival in the face of evil.
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It seemed as though everyone left alive in the entire Herero nation fled into the desert, en route to British Bechuanaland (modern-day Botswana). The German forces were paid well to pursue the Hereros into this forbidding environment.
The prisoners were all alive and unwounded, but half starved. Having piled up the branches, lamp oil was sprinkled on the heap and it was set on fire. The prisoners were burnt to a cinder. I saw this personally.
Natives who were placed in gaol at that time never came out alive. Many died of sheer starvation and brutal treatment. . . . The Hereros were far more humane in the field than the Germans. They were once a fine race.
He notes that the prisoners “were all alive and unwounded, but half starved.” This human bonfire was then set ablaze, and, as Fraser testifies, the prisoners “were burnt to a cinder.” He adds, “I saw this personally,” and, “The officers ...
I fell ill and wanted to go back, but I was told that as long as the Armenians in my charge were alive I would be sent from one place to the other. However I managed to include my batch with the deported Armenians that had come from ...
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1 | |
19 | |
3 THE HOLOCAUST | 67 |
4 THE CAMBODIAN GENOCIDE | 119 |
5 THE GUATEMALAN GENOCIDE | 149 |
6 THE EAST TIMOR GENOCIDE | 169 |
7 THE KURDISTAN GENOCIDE | 189 |
8 THE RWANDAN GENOCIDE | 199 |
9 THE BOSNIAN GENOCIDE | 241 |
10 THE DARFUR GENOCIDE | 281 |
Bibliography | 291 |
Index | 297 |
About the Author | 305 |
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Encountering Genocide: Personal Accounts from Victims, Perpetrators, and ... Paul R. Bartrop Pregled nije dostupan - 2014 |