Institute for Public Affairs of Montreal |
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"We are not satisfied!" Darfur:The Montreal Conference |
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Beryl P. Wajsman | 16 August 2007 |
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To see the videos of the conference please click on the links below. Photos and a full report will be posted shortly~BPW http://www.iapm.ca/media/darfur1.wmv Part 1 of the conference http://www.iapm.ca/media/darfur2.wmv Part 2http://www.iapm.ca/media/darfur3.wmv Part 3 http://www.iapm.ca/media/nconcert.wmv Nazanin's concert “Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere. Whatever affects one directly, affects all indirectly. That speech, so well remembered for that heart-wrenching phrase, contained other words that speak to us today from the mists of a time not so long ago as we confront the tragedy of As we reflect on the horrors of The United Nations, despite the recent decision authorizing the sending of troops, and most of the western world have reacted with impotence. The UN decision does not provide for allowing the troops to shoot, and the UN itself has not formed an alliance of contributing states. NATO countries, with some 800,000 troops in reserve, have yet to make any commitments. To We should cringe at these hyphenated appellations. We should rage against these mindsets praying at the altars of multi-lateralism and moral relativism that allow fascist despots to flourish. We should reject, once and for all, these Gods that failed. For soon human vocabulary itself will be insufficient to describe the terrors that can befall us all. For almost four years the Arab dominated Government of Sudan has been engaged in a policy of ethnic cleansing of the African-Sudanese population of the western The Sudanese government, and their homicidal Janjaweed cohorts, have emptied hundreds of towns and villages of their inhabitants and forced them to flee as refugees to Let us make no mistake about what is happening in As an industrialized people Canadians benefit from the resources and labour of the underdeveloped world. The least we owe is to come to the relief of its poor and oppressed and help them to live free. We must shed our smug self-centred attitude that social justice stops at our borders. For the sake of the character of this Northern Dominion, we must be involved in mankind’s transcendent struggles for redemptive change. The litmus test of our civilization is not how we treat those who are many, or agreeable, or privileged, or quiescent; but rather how we treat those who are few, and different, and alienated, and stubborn. We are still failing that test. Frivolous squabblings that are nothing more than promotions of petty self-interests overwhelm what King called the “fierce urgency of now” — the fierce urgency to bring to an end the spectacular and frequent failures of man. For in the dead of night we will forever be haunted by those failures as the thin, humid rivulets of sweat crawl over us like vermin. Haunted by the mounds of ashes that once were 1.5 million smiling Jewish children playing in the streets of “civilized” For all our demonstrations and petitions, we have been ambivalent and apathetic toward the insolence and inaction of authority. We have perpetuated sins of silence with voices too often mute when confronted with the evils that men do. Wrapping ourselves in cloaks of charity will not absolve us of our complicity in impotent acquiescence to the daily torrent of state-sponsored deceptions and institutional betrayals. We seem to react only when it costs us nothing in terms of our personal bottom lines. We readily accept whatever manipulated images and opinions flood us from television and magazines as reality. We eagerly digest political sound bites as quickly as any fast food. Our surrender has demonstrated nothing less than an abandonment of the possibilities of our own capacities. We must constantly be on guard and heed King’s warning that “Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere. Whatever affects one directly, affects all indirectly. For over the bleached bones and jumbled residues of numerous civilizations are written the pathetic words ‘Too late.’ |