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Jewish Bulletin
of Northern CaliforniaMay 25, 2001
Dissidents
address genocide, prevention in S.F. panel
By Joshua
Brandt
"Most of you
don't know what freedom is," said former Chinese labor-camp prisoner Harry
Wu, a South Bay resident who moved to the United States in 1985. "You can
give lip service to what it means...and say that it is priceless. But perhaps
if you lost that freedom for a couple of years, you would really begin to
appreciate how priceless it actually is."
Wu, imprisoned
at 21 and freed at 42, was among a veritable who's who of dissidents that
participated in a panel last week titled "Confronting Genocide in Today's
World." The others were Jose Ramos Horta, the minister of foreign affairs
for the embattled provisional government of East Timor; Dith Pran, a native
of Cambodia profiled in "The Killing Fields"; and Fentul Rinpoche, a Tibetan
Buddhist lama and director of the Tibetan Association of Northern California's
Center for Tibetan Culture.
More than 500
people attended the event, which was the final program in the six-week "Silent
Voices Speak" exhibit and series at the Herbst International Exhibition Hall
in San Francisco's Presidio.
Wu compared
the circumstances surrounding his confinement to the plight of European Jews
during the Nazi regime, saying that his family was discriminated against
because they were members of the land-owning bourgeoisie, which was automatically
suspect in communist China during the 1950s and '60s.
Wuwho
was imprisoned again in 1995 and then released because of his status as a
U.S. citizenalso spoke out against the Chinese government and was branded
a "radical revolutionary."
"The communist
government used thought reformnot gas chambers," said Wu. "One target
was the death of the individual and the other target was the death of the
spirit. Starvation was our constant companion, from dawn to dusk, and we
often ate anything we could, including rats and snakes."
Several speakers
noted that oppressive regimes routinely seem to scapegoat minority groups.
One of the most controversial moments of the evening occurred when "Silent
Voices Speak" organizer Lani Silver addressed peace issues in the Mideast,
as a handful of pro-Palestinian demonstrators congregated outside the exhibit,
decrying the absence of Palestinians from the panel.
Delivering
a plea for understanding, Silver read from a text prepared by the "Silent
Voices Speak" committee.
"We must acknowledge
that Palestinians are now fighting their war of independence, and we don't
like to hear that," Silver said to the hushed audience.
"Their basic
rights are compromised every day. In addition, the Palestinian citizens of
Israel, which constitute almost 20 percent of the total population, have
endured systematic discrimination, and that must end. But we must also recognize
the profound sense of fear and unease within Israel, that Israelis must fear
for their lives merely because they are Israelis. This state of affairs cannot
endure."
Discussing
the situation in East Timor, Horta also drew World War II analogies in his
condemnation of Indonesian brutality, which has been particularly rampant
since East Timor declared independence in 1999.
"The annihilation
of East Timor was planned outeverywhere you looked there were scenes
of mass destruction. The capital of East Timor looked like the old black-and-white
photos of Hiroshima and Dresden," said Horta, adding that the minority East
Timorese population was subjected to a systematic campaign of rape and torture
by the Indonesians.
Horta expressed
hope that the days of monolithic powers were over, calling the advent of
the electronic media a boon for democracy and a huge step forward for individual
rights.
Pran also painted
a bleak picture of life in his native country. Now a photojournalist for
the New York Times, he recalled the communist Khmer Rouge's reign of terror
against the Cambodian people 30 years ago.
"The situation
was much worse than depicted in the movie," said Pran. "People were left
to die in the middle of operations, with IV's ripped out of their arms. Monks
were forced at gunpoint to abandon monasteries.
"I lost a father,
three brothers, and a sister, and I couldn't show emotion for their loss,
because when you showed emotion, they'd come for you," said Pran, who compared
the situation to that of the Holocaust.
Commenting
on the residual effects of the war, Pran noted that all the active land mines
buried in Cambodian soil have given the country the ignominious distinction
of having the greatest number of amputees in the world. After Ventul Rinpoche
commented on the current state of affairs between China and Tibet, Wu closed
out the evening with a call to action.
In response
to a question of why he continued to wage war against the Chinese labor camps,
Wu said the answer was simple. "When you've been to hell, you never forget
it, and you put all of your strength into destroying it."
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