Quiet Genocide

Quiet Genocide
Author: Etelle Higonnet
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 226
Release: 2017-09-08
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 1351495151

Quiet Genocide reviews the legal and historical case that genocide occurred in Guatemala in 1981-1983. It includes the full text of the genocide section of a United Nations sponsored Commission on Historical Clarification in Guatemala (CEH), brokered by the UN. In its final report, the CEH's rigorously reviewed abuses throughout the whole country. However, the memory of the Guatemalan dirty war, which predated the genocide and continued for over a decade of the heightened killing, has rapidly faded from international awareness. The book renders a historical picture of the 1948 Genocide Convention and its unique status in international law. It reminds readers of the difficulty of preventing and punishing genocide as illustrated by the ongoing tragedy of Darfur; anddiscusses the evolution of international and hybrid tribunals to prosecute genocide along with war crimes and crimes against humanity. Then, it sketches a brief history of Guatemala with a focus on genocide It explores how internal and global politics were an expression of structural violence, designed to ensure cheap, abundant, and quiescent Indian labor for coffee planters.a The volume provides the commission's general considerations, legal definitions, methodology, period of analysis, and victim groups, and finds that genocide had been perpetrated against five indigenous Guatemalan groups. By translating the genocide argument of the CEH into English and framing it in a lively, accessible way, this volume recovers the past, sets the record straight, and promotes accountability. This exploratory effort provides insight into the world of transitional justice and truth commissions, and valuable insights about how to engage with the question of genocide in the future. These findings shed light on a crucial and dark chapter of trans-American Cold War history, and will thus be of interest not only to scholars focused on Guatemala, but also on Central America and even more broadly, on the Cold War.

The Quiet Genocide

The Quiet Genocide
Author: Julia Florence Dadekian Boyajian
Publisher:
Total Pages: 44
Release: 2015
Genre: Armenian Genocide survivors
ISBN:

A Quiet Genocide

A Quiet Genocide
Author: Glenn Bryant
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 2018
Genre: Children
ISBN: 9789492371836

Germany, 1954. Jozef grows up in a happy household - so it seems. But his father Gerhard still harbours disturbing National Socialism ideals, while mother Catharina is quietly broken. She cannot feign happiness for much longer and rediscovers love elsewhere. Jozef is uncertain and alone. Who is he? Are Gerhard and Catharina his real parents? A dark mystery gradually unfolds, revealing an inescapable truth the entire nation is afraid to confront. But Jozef is determined to find out about the past and a horror is finally unmasked which continues to question our idea of what, in the last hour, makes each of us human. A terrifying and heartbreaking story.

A Quiet Genocide

A Quiet Genocide
Author: Bryant Glenn
Publisher:
Total Pages: 192
Release: 2018-06-30
Genre:
ISBN: 9789492371829

Germany, 1954. Jozef is growing up, happy - so it seems. But father Gerhard still harbors disturbing National Socialism ideals, while mother Catharina is quietly broken. She cannot feign happiness for much longer. Jozef is uncertain and alone. A dark mystery gradually unfolds, revealing an inescapable truth an entire nation is afraid to confront.

The Quiet Game

The Quiet Game
Author: Alexis Gee
Publisher:
Total Pages: 24
Release: 2010-02-01
Genre:
ISBN: 9780615349671

A child's Holocaust story told from the point of a child. Simple, but powerful, this little book packs an emotional punch for both children and adults. Elie Wiesel told the author: "I believe one who hears a survivor becomes a witness. It is clear to me that you understand the importance of those words."

The Quiet Revolutionaries

The Quiet Revolutionaries
Author: Frank M. Afflitto
Publisher: University of Texas Press
Total Pages: 219
Release: 2007-09-01
Genre: History
ISBN: 029271677X

The last three decades of the twentieth century brought relentless waves of death squads, political kidnappings, and other traumas to the people of Guatemala. Many people fled the country to escape the violence. Yet, at the same moment, a popular movement for justice brought together unlikely bands of behind-the-scenes heroes, blurring ethnic, geographic, and even class lines. The Quiet Revolutionaries is drawn from interviews conducted by Frank Afflitto in the early 1990s with more than eighty survivors of the state-sanctioned violence. Gathered under frequently life-threatening circumstances, the observations and recollections of these inspiring men and women form a unique perspective on collective efforts to produce change in politics, law, and public consciousness. Examined from a variety of perspectives, from sociological to historical, their stories form a rich ethnography. While it is still too soon to tell whether stable, long-term democracy will prevail in Guatemala, the successes of these fascinating individuals provide a unique understanding of revolutionary resistance.

Origins of the Kurdish Genocide

Origins of the Kurdish Genocide
Author: Ibrahim Sadiq
Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
Total Pages: 247
Release: 2021-05-05
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 1793636834

The author argues that a part of the history of nation building in Iraq through addressing its political characters, different communities, agreements and pan Arab ideology, including the Baath ideology and its attempts to seize power through nondemocratic methods. It is an attempt to approach the essence of the exclusion mentality of the ruling elite in order to understand the process of genocide against the Kurdish people, including all existing religious minorities. This essence of the process has been approached in the framework of the civilizing and de-civilizing process as a main theory of the German sociologist, Norbert Elias. Thus, this book may be considered as one of the comprehensive books to present a study of state-building in Iraq, along with identifying some of the political figures that had an essential impact on the construction. On the other hand, it is a comprehensive study of the genocide, in the sense of searching for the causes and roots of the genocide. The Anfal campaigns took place in 1988, but the process started as far back as the end of the sixties and the beginning of the seventies of the last century.

How Holocausts Happen

How Holocausts Happen
Author: Douglas Porpora
Publisher: Temple University Press
Total Pages: 236
Release: 2010-04-30
Genre: History
ISBN: 1439904537

A powerful indictment of U.S. intervention in Central America.

Grace after Genocide

Grace after Genocide
Author: Carol A. Mortland
Publisher: Berghahn Books
Total Pages: 300
Release: 2017-05-01
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 1785334719

Grace after Genocide is the first comprehensive ethnography of Cambodian refugees, charting their struggle to transition from life in agrarian Cambodia to survival in post-industrial America, while maintaining their identities as Cambodians. The ethnography contrasts the lives of refugees who arrived in America after 1975, with their focus on Khmer traditions, values, and relations, with those of their children who, as descendants of the Khmer Rouge catastrophe, have struggled to become Americans in a society that defines them as different. The ethnography explores America’s mid-twentieth-century involvement in Southeast Asia and its enormous consequences on multiple generations of Khmer refugees.