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Genocide Memorial Day: 27 th January Discussion Point: Why is 27 th January significant? (answer will follow later) Genocid e is the deliberate extermination of a racial, religious or e thnic group’ (Chambers Dictionary) Workpack and resources can be found at http://www.activehistory.co.uk/ hmd

Genocide Memorial Day: 27 th January Discussion Point: Why is 27 th January significant? (answer will follow later) Discussion Point: Why is 27 th January

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Page 1: Genocide Memorial Day: 27 th January Discussion Point: Why is 27 th January significant? (answer will follow later) Discussion Point: Why is 27 th January

Genocide

Memorial Day: 27th January

Discussion Point: Why is 27th January significant?

(answer will follow later)

Discussion Point: Why is 27th January significant?

(answer will follow later)

‘Genocide is the deliberate

extermination of a racial,

religious or ethnic group’

(Chambers Dictionary)

Workpack and resources can be found at http://www.activehistory.co.uk/hmd

Page 2: Genocide Memorial Day: 27 th January Discussion Point: Why is 27 th January significant? (answer will follow later) Discussion Point: Why is 27 th January

What is it? Why is it important?• Genocide is mass murder deliberately planned and carried

out by individuals brought up to see their nationality, their race or their religion as being somehow “superior” to that of other people.

• Casual prejudice, racism, grievance, intolerance, aggression, injustice and oppression all start small.

• We need to spot and stop them in our own minds, families and communities before they grow and get out of control.

• To do that, the way genocide becomes possible has to be understood. This means looking at the long history of genocide, as well as its symptoms in the present.

• Understanding these will help to avert future horrors.

Page 3: Genocide Memorial Day: 27 th January Discussion Point: Why is 27 th January significant? (answer will follow later) Discussion Point: Why is 27 th January

UN Definition

• Article 2 of the United Nations Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide defines it as:

• Any of the following acts committed with intent to destroy, in whole or part, a national, ethnic, racial, or religious group, such as: killing members of the group; causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group; deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or part; imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group; [or] forcibly transferring children of the group to another group.

Sierra Leone, 1990s: disabled people are more expensive to maintain then dead

ones, so more damaging to the “enemy”

Page 4: Genocide Memorial Day: 27 th January Discussion Point: Why is 27 th January significant? (answer will follow later) Discussion Point: Why is 27 th January

Example: the Holocaust

• The Holocaust is the most infamous example of a Genocide: the deliberate attempt by the Nazis to exterminate the Jewish people.

• The Nazis also attempted to exterminate other groups such as Gypsies; Homosexuals; the Disabled and other religious and ethnic minorities.

Page 5: Genocide Memorial Day: 27 th January Discussion Point: Why is 27 th January significant? (answer will follow later) Discussion Point: Why is 27 th January

What is Holocaust Memorial Day?• Holocaust Memorial Day (HMD) was designated

by the United Nations General Assembly in 2005 to commemorate the end of the Holocaust which resulted in the annihilation of 6 million European Jews and millions of others by the Nazi regime.

• January 27 is the date, in 1945, when the largest Nazi death camp in Auschwitz (Poland) was liberated by Soviet troops.

• HMD is now used as an opportunity to promote tolerance and understanding between races, nationalities, religions and ethnic groups.

Page 6: Genocide Memorial Day: 27 th January Discussion Point: Why is 27 th January significant? (answer will follow later) Discussion Point: Why is 27 th January

How will we study it?• Session 1. What events in the world, your country

and your family deserve to be “remembered”?• Session 2. What would be your design for a

“Holocaust Memorial”?• Session 3/4. Personal Display Piece: Your own

design for a memorial / evaluation of an existing one / research on a particular genocide

• Session 5. Work is placed on display for the school to view and discuss

Workpack and resources can be found at http://www.activehistory.co.uk/hmd