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Genocioe against Inoigenous Feoples
Docto Mo,/ot,-Lc.t
It is sao that few of us are surpriseo when we hear of genocioes committeo against
inoigenous peoples. We may be outrageo or sickeneo, but, if we have any knowl-
eoge of the grim history of contacts between inoigenous peoples ano other soci-
eties, we are unlikely to be surpriseo. The reason is that the oening characteristic
of inoigenous peoples is not simply, as is often supposeo, that they were there
,wherever they are, rst. Such a oenition works well enough in the Americas or
Australia, but is unsatisfactory in Africa ano Eurasia. There, populations have eo-
oieo backwaro ano forwaro over given territories for centuries, so that their orig-
inal inhabitants are not clearly oeneo ano often are in polemical oispute. The
oening characteristic of inoigenous peoples is not therefore priority on the lano
but rather that they have been conquereo by invaoers who are racially, ethnically,
or culturally oierent from themselves. Accoroingly, inoigenous peoples are those
who are suboroinateo ano marginalizeo by alien powers that rule over them. It
follows that they are relatively powerless, ano so they become prime targets for geno-
cioe ,see Maybury-Lewis :qq:8,.
Genocioe committeo against inoigenous populations was a particularly nasty
aspect of the European seizure of empires from the fteenth to the nineteenth cen-
turies, but it was neither inventeo nor practiceo solely by European imperialists.
Genocioe is in fact a new name, inventeo in :q by Raphael Lemkin ,Richaro
:qq.:6,, for a very olo outrage, namely the massacre or attempteo massacre of an
entire people. Such annihilations took place in antiquity, such as when the Romans
oestroyeo Carthage ano soweo its elos with salt. They were later carrieo on by
conquering peoples such as the Huns ano the Mongols ano countless others. Eu-
ropean imperialism ano the massacres of inoigenous peoples to which it gave rise
aooeo a bloooy chapter to the history of genocioe, which began much earlier ano
is unfortunately not yet nisheo.
European imperialism, like other imperialisms, lent itself to genocioe because
both oepenoeo on a wioe oisparity of power, between imperialists ano those they
conquereo, as between genocioal muroerers ano those they massacre. European
military superiority was evioent from the very beginning of the European expan-
sion. Even at the eno of the Mioole Ages, when the Spanish invaoeo the Ameri-
cas, it soon became clear that their rearms, their ne steel weapons, their armor
particularly when worn by mounteo knights, who were the tanks of meoieval
warfareenableo them to oefeat much larger numbers of Inoians, even when the
latter fought, as they often oio, with great courage. The Spanish coulo therefore
establish themselves as the absolute overloros of the oefeateo populations ano, if
they were so inclineo, coulo institute local reigns of terror involving torture, killings,
ano mass muroer. It was the Spanish reign of terror in the Caribbean, the bar-
barities inicteo on the Inoians, ano the systematic annihilation of the inoigenous
populations of many of the larger islanos that leo Bartolom oe las Casas to pub-
lish his searing oenunciation entitleo Btcctmo Rcloctor oc lo Dcttocctor oc lo Iroto
;Tlc Dccotottor of tlc Irotc: A Bttcf Accoort) in :..
It was Las Casas writings that gave birth to the lc,croo rcgto, or black legeno, of
Spanish cruelty in the Inoies. However, my point here is to stress the futility of a
oebate over whether the Spanish conquistaoors were or were not more cruel than
other imperialists, but rather to emphasize that barbarous cruelties, sometimes in-
volving genocioe, were committeo at one time or another by all the imperial pow-
ers against their subject populations. The conquereo peoples suereo such ora-
matic oeclines in population ouring the centuries of European rule that Herman
Merivale, in his well-known book Lcctotc or Colortottor oro Colortc, quoteo Dar-
win as saying, Wherever the European has troo, oeath seems to pursue the ab-
original ,Merivale :86:::,. It is oicult to calculate the extent of this oepopu-
lation. The best estimates inoicate that there was oeath on a colossal scale among
the inoigenous populations conquereo by Europeans. Booley ,:q8.:q., estimates
that, from the time of their rst contacts with Europeans to the naoir of their pop-
ulation in the late nineteenth ano early twentieth centuries, inoigenous populations
at the margins worlowioe were reouceo by some thirty million ,a conservative gure,
or, more likely, by about fty million. In other woros, inoigenous populations were
reouceo to about one-fth of their precontact numbers.
Of course this mortality was not causeo solely by genocioe, but rather by a com-
bination of causes, of which genocioe was only one. Diseases introouceo by Euro-
peans were the major killers. Colonists may not always have intenoeo to spreao ois-
eases among the natives of the lanos they invaoeo, but they were certainly aware of
their ecacy in eliminating inconvenient populations, so they factoreo them into
their plans for the future ano occasionally spreao infections oeliberately. Meanwhile
they introouceo regimes of forceo labor that resulteo in oebilitation ano oeath
among their workers. Iurthermore, the oisruption of native communities, through
seizure of their lanos ano coercion of their inhabitants, when combineo with the
eects of European oiseases, frequently proouceo social oisorganization ano famine.
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A oiscussion of genocioe as practiceo against inoigenous peoples shoulo not
therefore focus solely or even principally on oeliberate attempts to massacre entire
societies. Often the wioespreao oying resulteo not so much from oeliberate killing
but from the fatal circumstances imposeo by the imperialists on the conquereo.
Where oeliberate extermination was the cause, it is useful to refer to Charnys ois-
tinction between gcroctoc ano gcroctool mooctc ,:qq:6,. Inoigenous peoples have
often been the victims of genocioal massacres, where the slaughter is on a smaller
scale ano results from a general attituoe towaro inoigenous peoples rather than nec-
essarily being part of a campaign for total elimination of the victim population.
On the other hano, campaigns of extermination are characteristic of those phases
of colonization in which the invaoers have oecioeo on a course of ethnic cleans-
ing to rio a territory of its inoigenous inhabitants ano appropriate it for themselves.
In the heyoay of colonialism such exterminations were often justieo in the name
of progress. The inoigenous populations were stigmatizeo as savages who ought
to make way for civilization. In his book Tlc 1trrtrg of tlc 1ct, for example,
Theooore Roosevelt justieo the treatment meteo out to the Inoians of the Uniteo
States in the following terms: The settler ano pioneer have at bottom hao justice
on their sioe, this great continent coulo not have been kept as nothing but a game
preserve for squalio savages ,Roosevelt :88q:qo,. General Roca, the minister for
war in Argentina at the eno of the nineteenth century, put it even more bluntly
when he stateo the case for clearing the pampas of their Inoian inhabitants. Speak-
ing to his fellow countrymen he argueo that our self-respect as a virile people
obliges us to put oown as soon as possible, by reason or by force, this hanoful of
savages who oestroy our wealth ano prevent us from oenitively occupying, in the
name of law, progress ano our own security, the richest ano most fertile lanos of
the Republic ,Serres Guiraloes :qq:8,.
1
Roca then proceeoeo to leao a cam-
paign, known in Argentine history as the Conquest of the Desert, whose express
purpose was to clear the pampas of Inoians. The Inoians were not entirely exter-
minateo physically, but they were eraoicateo socially, ceasing to exist as separate
ano ioentiable peoples.
A similar campaign to exterminate an inoigenous population was carrieo out in
Tasmania ouring the nineteenth century. The settlers tireo of acts of resistance
committeo by the native Tasmanians ano therefore organizeo a orive in which a
line of armeo men beat across the islano, as they woulo oo if they were ushing
game, only this time the quarry was the remaining Tasmanians. The ocial ob-
jective of this orive was to capture the Tasmanians ano bring them to civiliza-
tion, but, as Davies reporteo in Tlc Lot of tlc Tomortor, the real motive in the
hearts of most of the participants was nothing more than the oestruction of ver-
min, backeo by the fear not only of what the native might oo to their persons, but
also the menace he presenteo to their crops ano their ocks. . . . The aborigines were
killeo ano maimeo ano left to oie in the bush ,:q::.,. The line oio not, in fact,
exterminate the Tasmanians, but it harrieo ano oecimateo them so severely that it
hasteneo their eventual extinction.
2
orxocinr \o\ixs+ ixniorxots rrorrrs
A similar line operation hao been put into eect earlier in Australia, when Gen-
eral Macquarie organizeo colonists, soloiers, ano constables to orive the aborigines
of New South Wales beyono the Blue Mountains ,ibio.::::,, but such organizeo
campaigns increasingly became exceptions in a lano where aborigines coulo be
hunteo ano shot at will ,see Eloer :qq8,. In fact the killing by imperialists of the
subject peoples over whom they ruleo was generally inspireo by a mixture of mo-
tives. It was sometimes oone to oisplace the natives ano seize their lanos, but it was
often perpetrateo against lanoless natives who poseo little threat. It was simply the
oirect outcome of a culture of prejuoice among rulers who consioereo their na-
tive subjects less than human ano who possesseo the power to casually brutalize
ano kill them.
Alternatively, such killings were carrieo out as a means of terrorizing people into
performing forceo labor. The most notorious examples of this were the horrors
inicteo on the unfortunate people forceo to gather rubber by saoistic overseers in
Feru ano the Congo. The rubber boom in South America at the eno of the nine-
teenth century leo unscrupulous entrepreneurs to seize whole communities of in-
oigenous peoples ano force some of them to gather rubber while holoing the rest
hostage to ensure that the tappers oio not run away. The ghastly tortures that the
overseers inicteo on the Inoians, sparing neither men, women, nor little chiloren,
make sickening reaoing ,see Haroenburg :q:., Taussig :q86, ano leao one to won-
oer why those with the power so mistreateo ,ano therefore reouceo the proouctiv-
ity of , the people they hao enslaveo. Similar questions were askeo by those who
reporteo from what Joseph Conrao calleo the heart of oarkness in the Congo.
Here again it was rubber ano, to a lesser extent, ivory that was to be gathereo in a
vast territory run at the beginning of the twentieth century as a private ef by King
Leopolo II of Belgium. Here the tortures ano massacres were as revolting as those
in Feru ano inicteo on a larger scale. To cite a single example from the hunoreos
oocumenteo by those who were oisgusteo by these goings on, soloiers employeo in
the Congo stateo in sworn aoavits that it was oecioeo to make an example of sev-
eral villages that hao fallen short of their assigneo rubber quotas. The villages were
therefore surrounoeo, every man, woman ano chilo butchereo without mercy,
their remains mutilateo in the most enoish manner, ano the villages then burnt
,Morel :qo::.q,.
The unbelievable barbarities visiteo on the rubber gatherers of two continents
by overseers of oierent nationalities ano backgrounos calls for some kino of ex-
planation. What oio these places have in common that proouceo such terrible re-
sults? They were both run as commercial enterprises locateo at the eoges of the so-
calleo civilizeo worlo, ano in them greeo appears to have been the overrioing
consioeration. The Arana brothers in Feru ano King Leopolos overseers in the
Congo wanteo to extract every last ounce of prot from their operations, even if
that meant killing their workforce. They seem to have thought there was a limit-
less supply of native labor to be captureo ano exploiteo. Meanwhile the rhetoric
of the rulers laio great stress on the fact that they were oealing with savages
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either savages to be tameo or savages to be civilizeo.
3
Either way they felt the ne-
cessity to be ruthless, ano they were too far from the societies from which they came
to feel any constraints. At the same time, precisely because they were operating at
the margins of their worlo, exploiting inoigenous peoples for the prot of alien
rulers, the overseers were oetermineo to oemonstrate their overwhelming power,
so that there coulo be no thought of resistance on the part of those whom they
treateo so cruelly. The most revolting aspect of these terrible regimes was the ab-
solute corruption that accompanieo the establishment of absolute power, to the ex-
tent that, when the overseers tireo of routine oggings, burnings, ano maim-
ings, they amuseo themselves by inventing new ways in which to torture ano kill
the people they controlleo.
It is oicult to tell whether the peoples of the Futumayo region or the consio-
erably larger populations in the Congo woulo have been exterminateo if these sys-
tems of exploitation hao been alloweo to run their course. Iortunately the horrors
taking place were publicizeo ano eventually mooerateo. Nevertheless the oepopu-
lation in both regions was oevastatingly genocioal. Estimates of the oeath toll are
more reliable for the Congo, where Roger Casement calculateo that the popula-
tion hao been reouceo by 6o percent ,ibio.:.,.
In terms of sheer numbers, the Congo genocioe takes secono place only to the
loss of African life occasioneo by the slave traoe. Historians have calculateo that
fteen to twenty million Africans were heroeo overseas as slaves ano an equal num-
ber were killeo in the whole process of slaving, giving a total of up to forty million
who were either killeo or removeo forever from their homes ,Hatch :qqq::,. Yet
the intensity of the killing in the Congo was greater. The slave traoe, after all, lasteo
for centuries, as compareo with a few oecaoes for the Congo genocioe. During the
slave traoe, in King Leopolos Congo ano in the Feruvian rubber-gathering regime,
genocioe was quite simply a business expense, the human cost of capturing ano co-
ercing unwilling laborers to proouce for the international export traoe. In fact the
connection between the brutalizing of Inoians in the remote forests of the Amer-
icas ano the export traoe hao been clearly oemonstrateo earlier by the Fortuguese
in sixteenth-century Brazil. The Fortuguese were expert slavers who not only oe-
populateo the banks of the Amazon ano its major tributaries but also soon became
masters of the art of penetrating oeep into the rain forests ano attacking Inoian
villages that hao thought themselves protecteo by their remoteness. This prowess
oio not, however, enable them to bring in sucient slave labor for the Brazilian
colony, with the result that Brazil early became a major importer of African slaves
to work the plantations upon which the economy of the colony oepenoeo.
Imperialist genocioe against inoigenous peoples was thus of two kinos. It was
practiceo in oroer to clear lanos that invaoing settlers wisheo to occupy. It was also
practiceo as part of a strategy to seize ano coerce labor that the settlers coulo not
or woulo not obtain by less orastic means. It was often inspireo furthermore by
the rulers oetermination to show who was master ano who was, if not slave, then
at least obeoient subject, ano it was often put into eect as oeliberate policy where
orxocinr \o\ixs+ ixniorxots rrorrrs ,
the masters felt that their subjects hao to be taught a lesson. Acts of resistance or
rebellion were often punisheo by genocioal killings.
A classic example of this, out of the scores that might be citeo, was the Ger-
man extermination of the Herero in Southwest Africa ,see Drechsler :q8o, Briog-
man :q8:,. The German aoministration of their Southwest African colony oecioeo
that German settlers shoulo pasture their cattle on the best grazing lanos in what
was by ano large an ario region. This meant that they woulo take over the lanos
where the Herero hao traoitionally grazeo their cattle. Since there were no alter-
native grazing lanos, the Herero woulo thus be oepriveo of their cattle ano left
without other means of subsistence than to work for the German settlers. The Ger-
man aoministration argueo that it was in the interests of higher oevelopment ano
virtually a part of natural law that inoigenous peoples become a class of workers
in the service of the whites. The Herero oio not see it that way, however, ano when
they were evicteo from their grazing lanos they fought back. The Germans there-
fore mounteo a punitive expeoition in :qo that massacreo thousanos of Herero
ano orove the rest into the waterless oesert. General von Trotha then establisheo
a line to ensure that no Herero coulo re-emerge from the oesert, where they were
starving to oeath. He insisteo that they shoulo all leave German territory on pain
of being shot. The result was the virtual extermination of the Herero, who were
reouceo to a few thousano lanoless fugitives.
Genocioes against inoigenous peoples were not, however, solely a function of
colonial policies. Genocioal massacres continueo to be committeo in the years of
oecolonization ano beyono, only their rationale was oierent. Such massacres are
now less frequently committeo in the search for prot, though they still occur. The
notorious treatment of the Ogoni in Nigeria is a case in point.
4
Oil has been ex-
tracteo in large quantities from Ogoni lanos since :q8, but few of the proceeos
have founo their way to the Ogoni themselves. Insteao the Ogoni have seen their
lano turneo into one vast environmental oisaster by oil spillage, oil aring, ano other
sioe eects of oil orilling. The health of the Ogoni has suereo ano continues to
oo so, while their subsistence activities have been spoileo, their society oisrupteo,
ano their population reouceo by illness ano oestitution. This is a classic case of an
inoigenous society being forceo to suer in the name of oevelopment.
The oevelopment rationale is in fact the mooern version of the oloer justica-
tions for mistreating inoigenous peoples. In previous centuries, imperialists insisteo
that they were ooing the peoples they conquereo a favor by bringing them into the
civilizeo worlo. That was, for example, the thinking of the German aoministra-
tion in Southwest Africa when they orove the Herero into revolt ano then exter-
minateo them. Nowaoays inoigenous peoples frequently no themselves threat-
eneo by a particular aspect of mooern civilization, namely oevelopment. It is
all too often argueo by governments ano oevelopmental planners that inoigenous
peoples must not be alloweo to stano in the way of oevelopment. In fact, being
accuseo of stanoing in the way of oevelopment these oays is to stano accuseo of
something between a sin ano a crime. So, all too often, projects or programs are
8 xonrnxi+v
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put into eect, even though they have serious negative consequences for inoigenous
peoples, because inoigenous peoples must not be alloweo to stano in the way of
oevelopment. These are imsy justications. It is possible to oesign oevelopment
programs that benet inoigenous peoples as well as their noninoigenous neighbors.
Such programs are rarely implementeo, however, because they are more expensive
ano proouce less prot for noninoigenous entrepreneurs or sectors of the popula-
tion. Insteao, noxious oil-orilling is carrieo out, as among the Ogoni, when there
are other oil companies reaoy ano willing to orill more carefully ano with benet
to the local people. Dams are built that ooo inoigenous lanos. Timber compa-
nies are permitteo or actually inviteo to cut oown the forests in which inoigenous
people live. Such oevelopment activities oestroy the livelihooos of inoigenous peo-
ples, oisrupt their societies, unoermine their health, ano leave whole populations
in suicioal oespair.
Loss of life promoteo by callous oevelopmentalism is a slow ano insioious form
of genocioe against inoigenous peoples. A more oirect form in our present era is
the massacre of inoigenous peoples for reasons of state. Such genocioes were com-
mon in the USSR, where they were inicteo both on noninoigenous ano inoige-
nous peoples. In the oays when the country was ruleo oespotically by Stalin, all its
constituent peoples coulo, in whole or in part, be uprooteo, relocateo, or scattereo
in remote regions, often with the utmost brutality. Such measures were all too of-
ten put into eect, especially in ano arouno the perioo of Worlo War II, so that few
peoples of the Soviet Union escapeo the oeportations ano massacres that were part
of the political culture of the nation ,see Deker ano Lebeo :q8,. Such genocioes
were part of a schizophrenic policy that pretenoeo to guarantee ano encourage
peoples to cultivate their oistinctive ethnicities while simultaneously striving to make
sure that local ethnic sentiments were weakeneo if not oestroyeo. Soviet genocioes
were thus a paraooxical result of the Soviet nationalities policy.
In other parts of the worlo, genocioal massacres have resulteo from a states
making war on the peoples at its margins. Ior example, where northeastern Inoia
now meets Burma, the Nagas askeo to form their own inoepenoent state when the
British withorew ano Inoia became an inoepenoent nation in :q. They signeo
an agreement with Inoia, unoer the terms of which the Nagas woulo have local
autonomy unoer Inoian trusteeship for ten years ano then be alloweo to vote on
whether they woulo remain in Inoia or not. The Nagas voteo overwhelmingly for
inoepenoence in :q:, but Inoia oio not acceoe to their wish. Insteao Inoia invaoeo
Nagalano in :q ano has been ghting against secessionist Naga guerrillas ever
since. By some estimates Inoia has .oo,ooo troops in the Naga area, in oroer to pre-
vent some two-ano-a-half million Nagas from joining with another half-million
over the boroer in Burma to form their own state. Meanwhile the bulk of the Naga
population becomes increasingly embittereo by Inoian repression ano human rights
abuses. It woulo have been relatively easy for Inoia to grant Naga inoepenoence
in the :qos, but in the :qqos there are separatist movements in other parts of In-
oia, such as Kashmir or the Funjab, where militant Sikhs are oemanoing their own
orxocinr \o\ixs+ ixniorxots rrorrrs
state. Granting Naga inoepenoence now is therefore opposeo by those Inoians who
think it woulo establish a oangerous preceoent, leaoing to further secessions from
the Inoian state ,see Iurer-Haimenoorf :q8., Singh :q8:,.
Similar consioerations lie behino the warfare wageo by the government of
Burma against the non-Burmese peoples at its boroers. Like the Nagas of Inoia,
these boroer peoplesthe Shan, the Karen, the Kachin, the Mon, the Karenni,
the Arakanese, ano othersagreeo to join the Burmese feoeration after the eno
of British rule in :q8. They oio so on conoition that their local autonomy woulo
be respecteo ano that they woulo have the right to withoraw from the feoeration
after ten years if they so wisheo. The Burmese refuseo, however, to permit any of
the boroer peoples to exercise that option ano have wageo war on those that showeo
any inclination to oo so. The Burmese army has treateo the boroer peoples in rebel
areas with great brutality, imposing regimes of forceo labor, beatings, torture, ano
sexual abuse as they seek to break the will to resist of those whom they consioer
uncivilizeo tribal peoples ,see Mirante :q8,.
This phenomenon of a states making war on those of its own peoples it con-
sioers marginal is by no means restricteo to southern or southeastern Asia. Recent
examples coulo be citeo from the Suoan in Africa ano from Guatemala in the
Americas. The Anglo-Egyptian conoominium that ruleo the Suoan from :8qq to
:q aoministereo the north as an Arab Islamic region quite oistinct from the south,
which was African ano much inuenceo by Christian missionaries. There was some
talk of these regions being granteo inoepenoence as separate states, but eventu-
ally the Suoan receiveo its inoepenoence as a single country, governeo from the
northern capital of Khartoum. The south urgeo that the country be organizeo as
a feoeration, granting consioerable autonomy to its regions in oroer to allow their
oierent cultural traoitions to ourish. The Islamic government of the state re-
fuseo, ano the result was a protracteo civil war that was brought to a temporary
close by the Aoois Ababa agreement of :q., which granteo the south the auton-
omy it hao always sought. The agreement was greeteo with great hope that it woulo
usher in an era of Arab-African cooperation that coulo serve as a mooel for all of
Africa, but it was soon unoermineo by the national government in the north, which
imposeo Islamic law as the law of the lano ano provokeo non-Muslim regions into
armeo resistance once again ,see Deng :qq,. The oevastation ano famine causeo
by the war has taken a particularly heavy toll on the south, where it is estimateo
that more than a quarter of a million people oieo of starvation in :q88 alone
,ibio.::,.
In Guatemala an equally long-running civil war was fought from the :q6os un-
til it was brought to a hesitant close by the peace accoros of :qq6. Schirmer ,:qq8,
oescribes the militarization of the Guatemalan state ouring this process. She cites
army ocers who aomitteo that the militarys brutally repressive counterinsurgency
tactics in the :qos serveo to swell the ranks of the guerrillas. The army therefore
changeo its strategy. It useo the utmost brutality in certain areas whose Inoian in-
habitants were markeo for total extermination. In other areas it useo torture ano
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selective killings to force the Inoians to ght on the government sioe, or at least to
ght against those whom the government hao targeteo as its enemies. In yet other
areas it oereo paternalistic protection ano assistance to communities it sought to
win over, so that the overall strategy was calleo one of beans ano bullets. This strat-
egy succeeoeo in turning the civil war into a stalemate, with the inoigenous masses
in the countrysioe being forceo to absorb terrible punishment. Meanwhile the army
succeeoeo in institutionalizing itself ano its methoos as central to the supposeoly
oemocratic state that hao succeeoeo the openly authoritarian military regimes of
previous oecaoes.
In Nagalano, Burma, ano the Suoan, national governments have wageo war
against marginalizeo inoigenous peoples because they refuseo to grant them auton-
omy ano woulo not allow them to seceoe. In Guatemala the national government
ano its army represent the elites who have presioeo for a long time over an unjust ano
repressive social system that oiscriminateo against the countrys inoigenous masses.
These forces were quite willing to torture ano massacre the Inoians in oroer to pro-
tect the status quo ano to waro o such changes as woulo unoermine their traoitional
oominance.
It shoulo by now be clear how such conicts oegenerate all too easily into geno-
cioe. It is because genocioe everywhere oepenos on the perpetrators oehumanizing
their intenoeo victims, establishing them as raoically alien creatures who oeserve to
be eliminateo, ano having the power to kill them. These conoitions normally apply
to inoigenous peoples who are marginalizeo ano treateo as aliens, even in their own
countries, ano are invariably in a position of political weakness. Moreover, inoige-
nous peoples have in the recent past, ano in some places right up to the present oay,
been consioereo savages who hao to be annihilateo physically or socially. In re-
cent years inoigenous peoples have been threateneo in the name of oevelopment or
for reasons of state.
It is particularly oangerous for them when these two threats come together, as
happens when there are valuable resources in inoigenous territory that the state
wishes to seize in the name of oevelopment, ano when inoigenous wishes to se-
ceoe from the state ,often precisely because the state is trying to take over inoige-
nous resources, are helo to constitute a threat to the state.
It is the ioea of the threateneo state that is particularly insioious ano especially
likely to leao to genocioe.
5
The Enlightenment ioea of the state that has oominateo
Western thinking until recently stresseo the rationality of the mooern state, which
woulo treat its citizens equally ano guarantee their liberty by protecting their rights.
It was thus concerneo with the rights of inoiviouals rather than with the rights of
groups such as ethnic minorities or inoigenous peoples. It was supposeo insteao that
ethnicity woulo evaporate in the mooern state as a result of mooernization itself.
The grim history of the twentieth century ano the ethnic conicts ano persecutions
that have playeo such a prominent part in it have shown, however, that ethnicity ano
ethnic nationalism have not oisappeareo, nor are they about to. It follows that ac-
tual mooern states have not turneo out the way they were supposeo to, meanwhile,
orxocinr \o\ixs+ ixniorxots rrorrrs .
in an era of unpreceoenteo globalization, the nature ano function of the nation-
state is being rethought, ano a major aspect of this rethinking has to oo with the
continuing place of ethnicity ano ethnic minorities in the states of the future.
It is no longer consioereo necessary or even possible that each state shoulo cor-
respono to a single nation, possessing a mainstream culture in which all its citizens
,incluoing those who are consioereo minorities, must participate. On the contrary,
states are increasingly expecteo to be pluralistic, permitting localizeo minorities
ano inoigenous peoples to retain their cultures ano to enjoy a certain autonomy
within the system. Those states that make war on marginalizeo minorities are thus
states in which pluralism has either faileo or has not been given a chance. Successful
multiethnic states are, on the other hano, the best guarantee of peace ano the best
oefense against genocioe.
NOTES
:. My translation from the Spanish.
.. It has been generally accepteo for some time that Truganini, who oieo in :86, was
the last Tasmanian, but there are still a few people alive tooay who claim to be oescenoants
of the original Tasmanians.
. It is astonishing to reao the justications oereo by the overseers in the Congo, start-
ing with King Leopolo himself, who stresseo their philanthropic concern for the savages
whom they were in the process of civilizing.
. I rely here on the book by Ken Saro-Wiwa, the oistinguisheo Ogoni writer who was
hangeo by the Nigerian government because of his aroent oefense of Ogoni rights.
. This oiscussion of the state is set out more fully in Maybury-Lewis :qq, ch. .
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Chicago: University of Chicago Fress.
orxocinr \o\ixs+ ixniorxots rrorrrs
s rnors
there are approximately o million to 6o million inoigenous people resioing in
some of the worlos :q nation-states. In the majority of cases inoigenous peo-
ples are numerical minorities, ano they oo not control the governments of the states
in which they live.
Inoigenous peoples generally possess ethnic, religious, or linguistic characteris-
tics oierent from those of the oominant groups in the societies where they exist.
They teno to have a sense of cultural ioentity or social solioarity that many mem-
bers attempt to maintain. Tooay there is a worlowioe inoigenous movement in
which members of inoigenous communities ano groups are seeking to promote
their social, cultural, economic, political, ano religious rights.
The pace of oestruction of inoigenous peoples rose substantially in the twenti-
eth century, in spite of the fact that international oeclarations were orawn up ano
statements of inoigenous rights createo to try to counteract physical ano cultural
oestruction ano oiscrimination. It is estimateo that in Brazil alone, between :qoo
ano :q, more than eighty Inoian groups that were contacteo enoeo up oestroyeo
as a result of oisease, oeculturation, ano physical oestruction ,Davis :q:,. The
situation was especially oevastating for those groups situateo near natural resources
that coulo be extracteo from the lano ,rubber ano nut collection, for example, or
mineral exploitation,. Overall, the number of inoigenous people in Brazil oeclineo
from more than a million to .oo,ooo, a orop of 8o percent ,ibio.:,.
Inoigenous peoples are often blameo for their own oestruction. They are some-
times saio not to be utilizing lano proouctively or are argueo to be responsible for
its oegraoation, as seen, for example, in the case of rain forest oepletion resulting
from shifting cultivation. All too often, those in power characterize them negatively:
briganos, nomaos, vagabonos, vermin, poachers, orunkaros, aliens, thieves, oissi-
oents, inferiors, ano unproouctive people. The use of these terms increases when
the state, business companies, or inoiviouals move into new areas where inoigenous
groups are living ano using the resources, as occurreo when Europeans entereo
Australia ano North America.
It is apparent that there are numerous terms useo by inoigenous peoples ano
those who work with them to illustrate what these groups are oealing with. On the
one hano, there is physical genocioe, the oestruction of inoigenous peoples them-
selves, on the other there is cultural genocioe, or ethnocioe, the oestruction of a
groups culture ,Kuper :q8::o:, Falmer :qq.::6,.
The term gcroctoc has been the focus of great oebate over the past several oecaoes
,Kuper :q8:, :q8, :q8, Charny :q8, :q8, Iein :q8, :qqo, Chalk :q8q, Chalk
ano Jonassohn :qqo, Totten ano Farsons :qq:,. If humanity is to oevelop souno
conventions ano genocioe warning systems in oroer to stave o genocioe, then we
,inoigenous peoples, scholars, activists, eoucators, members of nongovernment or-
ganizations, ano government ocials, among others, neeo to come to a general un-
oerstanoing of what ooes ano ooes not constitute genocioe. It is also necessary to
unoerstano the preconoitions that leao up to ano culminate in genocioe ,Charny
:q8, :qq:, Kuper :q8, :qq.,.
coxrnox+ixo orxocinr or ixniorxots rrorrrs ,
Too often an incioence of massacre or some other serious human rights infrac-
tion is incorrectly referreo to or oeemeo to be genocioe by survivors, victim groups,
the meoia, activists, or scholars. As horrible as these infractions are, if they oo not
meet certain criteria they cannot legitimately be calleo genocioe. This misuse of
the term ooes not assist in either fully unoerstanoing or combating actual geno-
cioes. A key problem herein, ano one that complicates the eort to be more exact,
is the fact that scholars are still in the process of trying to oevelop a theoretically
souno ano, at the same time, practical oenition of genocioe.
In light of the signicance of this issue, we will begin with a synopsis of oeni-
tions of gcroctoc, gcroctool mooctc, ctlroctoc, ano various typologies of gcroctoc that
have been oevelopeo. Next, we will highlight past ano present cases that generally
have been acknowleogeo by spokespersons of inoigenous groups, scholars, ano
members of human rights organizations. We will concluoe with an examination
of eorts by scholars, activists, ano others working to intervene in or prevent the
genocioe of inoigenous peoples.
GENOCIDE: DEIINITIONAL ISSUES
Some have argueo that if humanity truly hopes to oevelop an ecacious methoo
for preventing genocioal crimes, what is neeoeo, at the very least, is a consensus as
to what genocioe is. As we will show, that has been ano continues to be a oaunting
task.
Ever since Raphael Lemkin coineo the term gcroctoc in :q, scholars, activists,
government ocials, ano representatives of intergovernmental organizations like
the Uniteo Nations have been wrestling with the term in an eort to try to oevelop
a oenition that is not so inclusive that it is meaningless but not so exclusive that it
oenies protection to certain groups of people ,Iein :q8, :qqo, Walliman ano
Dobkowski :q8, Charny :q88, Chalk :q8q, Chalk ano Jonassohn :qqo,. Consen-
sus has been extremely oicult to come by. Various scholars have recast the oe-
nition of gcroctoc in an attempt to make it more workable, manageable, specic, or,
as Chalk ano Jonassohn ,:qqo::, put it, analytically rigorous.
Various other terms have been coineo in an eort to oierentiate between the
intent, scope, ano type of crime against humanity that has been committeo. Among
these terms are ctlroctoc ,Kuper :q8:::, Whitaker :q8::, Falmer :qq.::,, col-
totol gcroctoc ,Daorian :q:.o::., Kuper :q8:::, o:, , Whitaker :q8::,
Charny :qq:::.,, clccttcc gcroctoc ,Kuper :q8::,, gcroctool ptocc ,Kuper
:q88::6,, ano gcroctool mooctc ,Kuper :q8:::o, ., 6o, Chalk ano Jonassohn
:qqo:.6, Charny :qq::.o,. The use of the various concepts is important because,
as Kuper ,:q8::o, notes, oierent types of genocioe imply oierent strategies for
prevention ano protective action.
Raphael Lemkin ,:q,, who wageo a one-man crusaoe for establishment of
an international convention against the perpetration of genocioe, formeo the term
8 xonrnxi+v
s rnors
gcroctoc by combining the Greek gcro ,race, tribe, ano the Latin ctoc ,killing,. As
he stateo,
Generally speaking, genocioe ooes not necessarily mean the immeoiate oestruction
of a nation, except when accomplisheo by mass killings of all members of a nation.
It is intenoeo rather to signify a cooroinateo plan of oierent actions aiming at the
oestruction of essential founoations of the life of national groups with the aim of
annihilating the groups themselves. The objectives of such a plan woulo be the ois-
integration of the political ano social institutions of culture, language, national feel-
ings, religion, economic existence of national groups ano the oestruction of the per-
sonal security, liberty, health, oignity, ano even the lives of the inoiviouals belonging
to such groups. Genocioe is oirecteo against the national group as an entity, ano the
actions involveo are oirecteo at inoiviouals, not in their inoivioual capacity, but as
members of the national groups. . . . Genocioe has two phases: one, oestruction of the
national pattern of the oppresseo group, the other, the imposition of the national pat-
tern of the oppressor. ,Lemkin :q:q,
It is apparent from this oenition that Lemkin consioereo both physical ano cul-
tural genocioeor ethnocioeto be part of the general concept of genocioe. Ba-
sically, the term ctlroctoc refers to the oestruction of a culture without the killing of
its bearers. The genocioe/ethnocioe issue has engenoereo consioerable oiscussion
ano heateo oebate ,Chalk ano Jonassohn :qqo, Falmer :qq.,. Succinctly stateo,
those who have argueo against the inclusion of ethnocioe unoer the rubric of geno-
cioe suggest that there is a qualitative oierence between those situations in which
people are slain outright ano those in which certain aspects of a peoples culture
are oestroyeo.
Iollowing Worlo War II ano the annihilation by the Nazis ano their collabo-
rators of approximately six million Jews ano ve million other people, such as
Gypsies, the physically ano mentally hanoicappeo, Foles ano other Slavic peo-
ples, the Uniteo Nations aoopteo a resolution on December q, :q6, calling for
international cooperation on the prevention of ano punishment for genocioe. It
was this terrible slaughter ano the methoos of oestruction useo by the Nazi
regime that provokeo the Uniteo Nations formally to recognize genocioe as a
crime in international law.
Irom the outset, however, the oevelopment of the U.N. Genocioe Convention
was enmesheo in controversy. As Kuper ,:q8::o, has noteo, nations with vastly
oierent philosophies, cultures, ano historical experiences ano sensitivities to hu-
man suering presenteo varying interpretations as to what constituteo genocioe,
ano as a consequence they argueo in favor of a oenition ano woroing in the con-
vention that t their own perspectives. The arguments ano counterarguments re-
sulteo in what can best be oescribeo as a compromise oenition, one that signi-
cantly playeo oown ethnocioe as a component ,Kuper :q8::.,. At the same time,
it broaoeneo the oenition by aooing a new category of victim: political ano other
groups ,Chalk ano Jonassohn :qqo::o,.
coxrnox+ixo orxocinr or ixniorxots rrorrrs
However, the Soviet Union, Folano, ano other nations argueo against the inclusion
of political groups, claiming that such a step woulo not conform with the scientic
oenition of genocioe ano woulo, in practice, oistort the perspective in which the crime
shoulo be vieweo ano impair the ecacy of the Convention ,Kuper :q8::.,. The
upshot was that political ano social groups were excluoeo from the convention. The
sagacity of excluoing such groups has been questioneo, if not outright criticizeo, by
numerous scholars ,Kuper :q8:, :q8, Whitaker :q8, Charny :q8, :qq:, Chalk ano
Jonassohn :qqo, Totten :qq:,. Others believe that the exclusion of political groups from
the convention was a souno move. LeBlanc ,:q88:.q.q,, for example, supports the
exclusion of political groups because of what he sees as the oiculty inherent in se-
lecting criteria for oetermining what constitutes a political group ano their instability
over time, other reasons he cites are the right of the state to protect itself ano the po-
tential misuse of the label genocioe by antagonists in conict situations.
On December q, :q8, the Convention on Genocioe was approveo by the Gen-
eral Assembly of the Uniteo Nations. The convention oenes genocioe as follows:
In the present Convention, genocioe means any of the following acts committeo with
the intent to oestroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group,
as such:
a. Killing members of the group,
b. Causing serious booily or mental harm to members of the group,
c. Deliberately inicting on the group conoitions of life calculateo to bring about its
physical oestruction in whole or in part,
o. Imposing measures intenoeo to prevent births within the group,
e. Iorcibly transferring chiloren of the group to another group.
It is important to note, as Kuper ,:q8::o, ooes, that the Genocioe Convention
oraws no oistinction between types of genocioe, since it seeks to oene the elements
that they share in common. The convention oierentiates only the means ,ibio.::,.
As Chalk ano Jonassohn ,:qqo:::, stress, the U.N. oenition of genocioe commin-
gles physical oestruction with causing mental harm to members of a group. Once
again, this raises the issue of whether ethnocioe shoulo be subsumeo unoer the
larger oenition of genocioe.
Cultural genocioe ano ethnocioe are basically synonymous ano refer to the oe-
struction of a groups culture. As Whitaker ,:q8::, notes, cultural genocioe con-
stitutes |a|ny oeliberate act committeo with intent to oestroy the language, reli-
gion or culture of a national, racial or religious group on grounos of national or
racial origin or religious belief such as: :. Frohibiting the use of the language of
the group in oaily intercourse or in schools, or the printing ano circulation of pub-
lications in the language of the group, .. Destroying or preventing the use of li-
braries, museums, schools, historical monuments, places of worship. Accoroing
to Whitaker ,ibio.::,, at least one member of the Ao Hoc Committee preparing
the Uniteo Nations Genocioe Convention inoicateo that exclusion of the term
coltotol gcroctoc from the nal text left minorities unprotecteo.
o xonrnxi+v
s rnors
Some members proposeo at the :q8 meetings of the Sub-Commission on the
Frevention of Discrimination ano Frotection of Minorities that the oenition of
genocioe be broaoeneo to incluoe ethnocioe, but it was opposeo by some members
who felt that this might result in political interference in the oomestic aairs of states
,ibio.: :6,. It was also suggesteo that the protection of minorities culture shoulo
be the responsibility of other international booies besioes the Uniteo Nations
meaning, presumably, organizations such as the Uniteo Nations Eoucational, Sci-
entic, ano Cultural Organization ,UNESCO,, the International Labour Organi-
zation ,ILO,, ano the Uniteo Nations Inoustrial ano Scientic Organization. Such
a strategy, though, as was noteo, might not be very eective, given the lack of en-
forcement capabilities ano the stang limitations of these institutions.
TYFOLOGIES OI GENOCIDE
A number of typologies of genocioe have been presenteo, some of which incluoe
actions involving inoigenous peoples specically. Daorian ,:q,, for example, ioen-
tieo ve types of genocioe: ,a, cultural genocioe, in which assimilation is the per-
petrators aim, ,b, latent genocioe, the result of activities with unintenoeo conse-
quences ,for example, the spreao of oiseases ouring an invasion,, ,c, retributive
genocioe, that oesigneo to punish a segment of a minority that challenges a oom-
inant group, ,o, utilitarian genocioe, the using of mass killing to obtain control of
economic resources, ano ,e, optimal genocioe, which is characterizeo by the slaugh-
ter of a group to achieve its obliteration.
Chalk ano Jonassohn ,:qqo::.:, ioentieo four types of genocioe: that oesigneo
,a, to eliminate a potential or future threat, ,b, to acquire economic wealth, ,c, to cre-
ate terror, ano ,o, to implement a belief, theory, or ioeology. As they point out, geno-
cioe associateo with the expansion of economic wealth was closely associateo with
colonial expansion into Asia, Africa, ano the Americas ,Chalk ano Jonassohn
:qqo:6,. As will be oiscusseo below, oestruction of inoigenous groups ano their so-
cieties has continueo ano even increaseo ouring the twentieth century, oue in part
to rapioly expanoing business activities ano both large-scale ano small-scale oevel-
opment projects ,Burger :q8, Geoicks :qq, Wilmer :qq, Hitchcock :qq, :qq,.
The process of contact between immigrant ano inoigenous groups all too often
hao tragic consequences. Some groups receiveo especially harsh treatment in the
context of colonial expansion, notably hunter-gatherers ,Kuper :q8:::, Goroon
:qq., Hitchcock ano Tweot :qq,. One of the cases citeo most frequently is that of
Tasmania ,Turnbull :q8, Morris :q., Jonassohn ano Chalk :q8::o, .o..,
Barta :q8, Tatz :qq::qq8,. The white resioents of Tasmania planneo ano exe-
cuteo what they felt was a Iinal Solution to the Aboriginal problem ,Morris
:q.:6:,. As Synot ,:qq::, notes, The most graphic image in Tasmanian history
remains that of a continuous line of armeo invaoers marching through the bush,
oriving tribes of Aboriginals before them into Ioresters Feninsula where they were
exterminateo. In fact, however, the Black Line, or coroon of military person-
coxrnox+ixo orxocinr or ixniorxots rrorrrs .
nel ano volunteers that was mounteo in the late :8.os, resulteo in the capture of
only two aboriginals, one of whom was a small boy ano the other of whom escapeo
shortly afterwaro ,Morris :q.:666, Tatz :qq::q,. As colonial forces oiscovereo,
it was not easy to eliminate hunter-gatherers, since they tenoeo to stay in remote
areas, were often wioely oisperseo across the lanoscape, ano were eminently fa-
miliar with their surrounoings.
The number of inoigenous people in Tasmania oio oecline precipitously, from
an estimateo ve thousano at the time of rst contact with Europeans in :6. to
some three hunoreo in :8o ,Diamono :qq:,. Some of them oieo from oisease,
but substantial numbers oieo at the hanos of colonists who shot them on sight, poi-
soneo them, caught them in steel traps ano then killeo them with sworos, ano
oasheo out the brains of their chiloren ,Turnbull :q8:q.,. Aboriginal women
were rapeo, men were emasculateo, ano chiloren were captureo ano forceo into
slavery. Many of those who manageo to survive the mistreatment, oisease, ano star-
vation were rounoeo up in the early :8os ano forcibly relocateo to Ilinoers Islano,
where the majority of them oieo. With the oeath in :86 of Truganini, an eloerly
full-bloooeo Aboriginal woman who liveo her last oays in Hobart, the last of Tas-
manias aboriginals was gone. As the local newspaper, the Mctcot, noteo, Ior the
rst time in human history, oies out the last of a race, a race . . . which never knew
the meaning of suering, wretcheoness, ano contempt until the English, with their
soloiers, bibles, ano rum-puncheons, came ano oispossesseo them of their heritage
,Mctcot,, quoteo in Morris :q.:o,.
Truganinis mother hao been stabbeo to oeath by a European, her sister was
rapeo by sealers, ano her husbanos hanos were cut o, she herself liveo her nal
oays fearing that her booy woulo be oissecteo by scientists ,Turnbull :q8:.6,
Morris :q.:6qo,. Her last woros were, Dont let them cut me up, ano she
beggeo the ooctor who was attenoing her to ensure that she was burieo behino
the mountains. After her oeath, her booy was sent to the Tasmanian Museum,
where it remaineo in a box in the basement ,Turnbull :q8:.6, Morris :q.:o,.
The oescenoants of Tasmanian Aboriginals ano the people who colonizeo the is-
lano have presseo the government to treat the remains of Tasmanias inoigenous
peoples with greater respect, but the government continues to maintain that they
oo not oeserve special treatment. Tasmanian Aboriginal spokespersons argue that
they themselves were in fact subjecteo to special treatment, treatment that was
genocioal both in intent ano practice.
There have been ongoing oebates over the issue of genocioe among inoige-
nous peoples. The situation is perhaps best illustrateo in the case of the Ache of
eastern Faraguay, who were oescribeo in the :qos as the victims of genocioal poli-
cies ,Munzel :q, :q, Lewis :q, Arens :q6, :q8, Smith ano Melia :qq,. In
the :8os the Ache were still hunter-gatherers who moveo about the lanoscape in
small groups. By the :qos ano :qos some of the Ache groups were harasseo ano
attackeo by Faraguayan colonists ,Hill ano Hurtaoo :qq:q,. The :q6os saw paci-
cation eorts carrieo out, ano some of the Ache were moveo onto reservations.
: xonrnxi+v
s rnors
Eorts were maoe in the early :qos to bring aooitional Ache to the reservations.
Munzel ,:q, :q,, Lewis ,:q,, ano Arens ,:q6, :q8, maintain that armeo par-
ties were sent out to bring people to the reservations ano that violence was very
much a part of what were oescribeo as manhunts. Accoroing to these reports,
men were muroereo ano women ano chiloren enslaveo ouring the course of those
operations, which reporteoly were mounteo from reservations that serveo essen-
tially as staging grounos for hunts of wilo Ache. Munzel ,:q:., noteo that Ache
slavery was not only wioespreao but that it was also tolerateo ocially, with prices
for Ache Inoians on the open market uctuating between $:.: ano $.oo apiece
ouring the perioo up to :q.. Ache ano other Inoians were consioereo inconve-
nient, especially after roaos were built into the forests ano lano values increaseo
,Arens :q6, Staub :q8q:8,.
There were oisagreements over whether genocioe hao actually occurreo among
the Ache, not only on the part of the government of Faraguay ano ranchers living
in Ache areas but also between two aovocacy organizations promoting the rights
of inoigenous peoples: Cultural Survival, baseo in Cambrioge, Massachusetts, ano
Survival International, baseo in Lonoon ,see Maybury-Lewis ano Howe :q8o, Sur-
vival International :qq,. There is no question, however, that the Ache suereo at
the hanos of others, members of Ache groups were muroereo, women were rapeo,
Ache chiloren were kionappeo ano sometimes solo, ano whole communities were
moveo onto reservations. The question is, to what extent were those actions car-
rieo out or conooneo by the Faraguayan state, ano was there the intent by the per-
petrators to exterminate, in whole or part, the Ache?
Although there were reports that some of the killings ano kionappings of Ache
were the work of the Faraguayan military ,Munzel :q, :q, Arens :q6,, oth-
ers claimeo that the state was not involveo ano that there was no evioence of geno-
cioe ,Maybury-Lewis ano Howe :q8o,. Hill ano Hurtaoo ,:qq::686q, pointeo
out that most of the killings of Ache occurreo in the context of peasants at-
tempting to take over Ache lano or to carry out retaliatory actions for livestock or
crop theft. They also argueo that tr ro coc were armeo parties sent out, nor was
there any violence or physical coercion involveo in the eorts to get the Ache to
move to reservations ,Hill ano Hurtaoo :qq::, emphasis in original,. The gov-
ernment of Faraguay rejecteo the charge of genocioe that was leveleo against it
at the Uniteo Nations in March :q, saying that there was no intention to oestroy
the Ache as a group ,Lewis :q:6.6,. The Faraguayan minister of oefense, for
example, saio, Although there are victims ano victimizer, there is not the thiro el-
ement necessary to establish the crime of genocioethat is intent ,quoteo in
Kuper :q8::.,. Hill ano Hurtaoo ,:qq::68, concluoeo, The Ache contact situ-
ation also resulteo in extremely high mortality, but this was oue to carelessness ano
incompetence rather than intention, ano the contact history is not particularly
oierent from any of hunoreos that have taken place in the Amazon over the past
two centuries. Clearly, the question of intent is a major issue when it comes to
oealing with genocioe.
coxrnox+ixo orxocinr or ixniorxots rrorrrs
The Ache case unoerscores the importance of careful oocumentation of cases ano
the juoicious use of the charge of genocioe. Although emotional appeals for better
treatment of inoigenous peoples are unooubteoly important, they shoulo be backeo
up with carefully oetaileo elo research, eyewitness testimonies, ano analyses of a
wioe variety of oata if they are to be creoible ano serve the interests of the people
aecteo ,Totten :qq:, Hill ano Hurtaoo :qq:68o, Hitchcock ano Tweot :qq,.
With regaro to the oecimation of native peoples in the new continents ano states
settleo by Europeans, Iein ,:qqo:q, argues that oemographic stuoies seloom ois-
entangle the relative importance ano interaction of the causes of oecline in the num-
ber of native peoples, a point also maoe by Hill ano Hurtaoo ,:qq::686q, 68o,.
As Iein ,:qqo:q, further notes, there are several causes of such oecline, incluoing ,a,
oiseases importeo by settlers to which the local population lack immunity, ,b, lano
usurpation ano oestruction of the inoigenous economy, ,c, oeculturation ano oe-
moralization of inoigenous group, ano alcoholism, ,o, wars, ano ,e, slaughter by the
colonists. Tooay, as Iein points out, we are apt to label the secono ano thiro causes
as ethnocioe ano the fth as genocioe ,ibio.:q,. Iein herself uses what she oescribes
as a sociological oenition of genocioe: Genocioe is sustaineo purposeful action
by a perpetrator to physically oestroy a collectivity oirectly or inoirectly, through in-
teroiction of the biological ano social reproouction of group members, sustaineo re-
garoless of the surrenoer or lack of threat oereo by the victim ,ibio.:.,. One of
the aovantages of this oenition is that it incluoes the sustaineo oestruction of non-
violent political groups ano social classes, something that few others oo.
Iein oevelopeo a typology of genocioe maoe up of the following four categories:
,a, oevelopmental genocioe, in which the perpetrator intentionally or uninten-
tionally harms the victims as a result of colonization or economic exploitation, ,b,
oespotic genocioe, in which the perpetrators aim is to rio his oomain of any op-
position ,actual, potential, or imagineo, to his rule, ,c, retributive genocioe, in which
the perpetrator responos to a challenge to the structure of oomination when two
peoples, nations, ethnic groups, tribes, or religious collectives are lockeo into an
ethnically stratieo oroer in a plural society, ano ,o, ioeological genocioe, whose
causes are the hegemonic myths ioentifying the victims as outsioe the sanctioneo
universe of obligation or myths baseo on religion |that| excluoe the victim from
the sanctieo universe of salvation ano obligation ,Iein :q8:::, :8,. In the case
of oevelopmental genocioes, Iein aooresses both intentional ano unintentional con-
sequences. This oiers from the Uniteo Nations Convention, which aooresses only
intentional consequences.
It is important to note that the forms of genocioe seen among inoigenous peo-
ples are oiverse ano spring from oierent roots. Smith ,:q8, sees genocioe as a
proouct of war ano oevelopment. He also notes ,ibio. ., that the Inoians of Feru,
Faraguay, ano Brazil were oestroyeo out of colo calculation of gain, ano, in some
cases, saoistic pleasure rather than as the result of a political or economic crisis.
Inoigenous peoples are often seen as oierent from the people in power in society
or, in some cases, as competitors.
xonrnxi+v
s rnors
Kuper ,:q8:::, is emphatic that a major cause of the oestruction of inoige-
nous peoples has been colonization, especially in the conquest ano pacication
of inoigenous groups. He ooes remino us, however, that |s|ome of the annihila-
tions of inoigenous peoples arose not so much by oeliberate act, but in the course
of what may be oescribeo as a genocioal process: massacres, appropriation of lano,
introouction of oiseases, ano arouous conoitions of labor ,Kuper :q88::6,. He
oraws a oistinction ,:q8::o, between what he calls oomestic genocioes, those
arising from internal oivisions within a society, ano those genocioes that occur in
the context of international warfare.
Domestic genocioes can be suboivioeo on the basis of the nature of the victim
group ano the social contexts in which they are perpetrateo ,Kuper ibio.::o,. Do-
mestic genocioes, he says ,ibio.::o,, incluoe the following: ,a, those against in-
oigenous peoples, ,b, those against what he terms hostage groups, vulnerable mi-
norities who serve as hostages to the fortunes of the oominant groups in the state,
,c, those against groups in a two-tiereo state structure following the eno of colo-
nialism, ano ,o, those committeo against ethnic, racial, or religious groups seeking
power, autonomy or greater equality. The latter type of genocioe, accoroing to Ku-
per ,ibio.::6,, woulo incluoe the victimization of Guatemalas Inoians, who
constitute more than half of the countrys population.
Cases of genocioe in the context of international warfare incluoe those that
occurreo when the Chinese invaoeo Tibet ano the occupation by Inoonesia of East
Timor. Kuper ,ibio.::, also cites the atomic bombings of Hiroshima ano Nagasaki
in :q ano the wioespreao oestruction causeo by the Uniteo States in Vietnam,
Laos, ano Cambooia ouring the Vietnam War as examples of genocioe. Some
scholars oisagreeo aoamantly with Kuper that either the atomic bombings or the
Vietnam War constituteo genocioe, since there was arguably no intent on the part
of the Uniteo States to oestroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or
religious group, as such. In light of the fact that political mass muroer is not in-
cluoeo in the Uniteo Nations Convention on Genocioe, Kuper ,ibio.:.6, argueo for
the reinstatement of political mass muroer, in part because that form of mass mur-
oer takes substantial numbers of lives ano because in some cases political mass mur-
oers teno to be tieo in with ethnic ano religious massacres, the Holocaust being a
classic example. Another example of a political mass muroer that was brought
about by policies that leo to starvation is the Soviet treatment of the peoples of
the Ukraine ,Mace :qq,.
Minority groups that are in areas where there is competition for resources fre-
quently face the threat of intimioation, oppression, ano oestruction, especially if
they actively oppose the eorts of outsioe agencies ano inoiviouals ,Gurr :qq, .ooo,
Hitchcock :qq,. Kuper ,:q8:::, sees contemporary small-scale inoigenous soci-
eties as the so-calleo victims of progress, victims, that is, of preoatory economic oe-
velopment ,see also Booley :qqq,. Smith ,:q8:.., oistinguisheo three types of
genocioe, one of which, utilitarian genocioe, was characterizeo by inoigenous peo-
ples being subjecteo to genocioal attacks in the name of progress ano oevelop-
coxrnox+ixo orxocinr or ixniorxots rrorrrs
ment. Not only were the natural resources of inoigenous groups exploiteo, but so,
too, were their human resources, with their labor being utilizeo in the quest for eco-
nomic prots ,International Labour Oce :q,. Mistreatment of minorities is a
wioespreao part of genocioal actions ,Kuper :q8:, :q8, Chalk ano Jonassohn :qqo,.
ETHNOCIDE, GENOCIDE OR VARIATIONS
THEREOI AGAINST INDIGENOUS FEOFLES
Literally scores of inoigenous peoples have been ano continue to be the victims of
ethnocioe, genocioe, or some variation thereof. A oetaileo oiscussion of each of
these cases is beyono the scope of this essay, but a table has been generateo show-
ing twentieth-century cases of genocioe of inoigenous peoples ,Table .:,.The table
contains cases orawn from a variety of sources, incluoing the Utgcrt Acttor Bollcttr
,UABs, of Survival International, reports ano publications by the International
Work Group for Inoigenous Affairs, Cultural Survival, the Minority Rights Group,
Human Rights Watch, Amnesty International, Anti-Slavery International, ano
African Rights, as well as from overviews of the situations of inoigenous groups
,Burger :q8, :qqo, Miller :qq, Wilmer :qq, Maybury-Lewis :qq, Booley :qqq,.
Key citations have been provioeo below for reaoers who want to pursue the stuoy
of this issue in more oepth.
The cases of twentieth-century genocioe citeo here represent a number of per-
spectives helo by researchers regaroing the fate of the various victim groups. As
one will see upon reaoing the various essays ano reports citeo, while one scholar
may view a particular situation as ethnocioe, another may view it as part of a geno-
cioal process, ano yet another may perceive it as outright genocioe. The latter sit-
uation makes it abunoantly clear as to why certain scholars are working arouously
on the oevelopment of new ano more exact oefinitions ano typologies of genocioe.
Until there is at least a general agreement as to what shoulo ano shoulo not con-
stitute genocioe, there will continue to be a certain oegree of murkiness in the fielo.
In light of the ongoing oebate ano work vis-a-vis oefinitions, we have maoe the
conscious choice not to categorize each trageoy specifically as either a case of eth-
nocioe, genocioe, or genocioal massacre because such oecisions coulo be vieweo
as somewhat arbitrary. As these cases oemonstrate, the genocioe of inoigenous peo-
ples is a wioespreao phenomenon, occurring on every continent ano in a variety
of social, political, economic, ano environmental contexts.
In virtually every case, genocioe is a calculateo ano generally premeoitateo set
of actions oesigneo to achieve certain goals, such as the removal of competitors or
the silencing of opponents. Inoigenous peoples can also be harmeo through the
oestruction of their resource base, as occurreo, for example, on the Great Flains
of North America with the near-extermination of the buffalo ano in the equato-
rial zones of South America, Africa, ano Asia with the purposeful oestruction of
tropical forests.
xonrnxi+v
s rnors
+\nrr .: Genocides of Indigenous Peoples in the Twentieth Century
Gtoop ^omc Coortt, Dotc;)
Afttco
Bubi Equatorial Guinea 196979
Dinka, Nuer Sudan 199293
Herero Namibia 19047
Hutu Burundi 1972, 1988
Isaak Somalia 198889
Karimojong Uganda 197986
Nuba Sudan 199192
San Angola, Namibia 198090
Tuareg Mali, Niger 198890
Tutsi Rwanda 1994
Tyua Zimbabwe 198283
Ato oro tlc Poctftc
Armenians Turkey 191518
Atta Philippines 1987
Auyu West Papua, Indonesia 1989
Cham Kampuchea (Cambodia) 197579
Dani Papua New Guinea 1988
Hmong Laos 197986
Kurds Iraq 1988, 1991
Nasioi Bougainville, Papua N.G. 199091
Tamil Sri Lanka 198386
Tribals Chittagong Hills, Bangladesh 1979present
Lottr Amcttco oro tlc Cott//cor
Ache Paraguay 196676
Arara Brazil 1992
Cuiva Colombia 196771
Mapuche Chile 1986
Maya Indians Guatemala 196494
Miskito Nicaragua 198186
Nambiquara Brazil 198687
Nunak Colombia 1991
Paez Colombia 1991
Pai Tavytere Paraguay 199091
Ticuna Brazil 1988
Yanomami Brazil 198889, 1993
^ottl Amcttco
Indians United States, Canada 1500s1900s
TYPES OF GENOCIDE INVOLVING INDIGENOUS PEOPLES
Ior purposes of this chapter, we will oistinguish several types of genocioe involv-
ing inoigenous peoples. The first of these is genocioe in the context of a struggle
between a state ano an inoigenous group or collectivity of several collaborating
groups that are resisting the actions of the state. Neitschmann ,:qq, has analyzeo
the conflicts that occur between states ano what he terms nations, those people
who perceive themselves as a single entity ano who share common ancestry, cus-
toms, ioeology, language, ano territory. Iew, if any, nations have willingly given up
their lano ano resources, ano some have sought actively to assert their autonomy
sometimes violently, as seen in the cases of the Kuros of Iraq ,Saeeopour :qq.,
Mioole East Watch ano Fhysicians for Human Rights :qq,, the Maya of the west-
ern Highlanos of Guatemala ,Burger :q8: 68, Inoepenoent Commission on
International Humanitarian Issues :q8:88, Montejo :q8, Carmack :q88,
Manz :q88, Amnesty International :qq.::::, .o.., , Stoll :qq, Ialla :qq,,
ano the Chittagong Hill Tribes of Banglaoesh ,Chowohury :q8q, Jahan :qq,. Gurr
,:qq:::, has noteo that of all the minority group types that he ioentifieo, inoige-
nous peoples experienceo the greatest proportional increase in the magnituoe of
conflicts between the :qos ano the :q8os.
Often oefineo by governments as insurgents, separatists, or terrorists, resisting
nations teno to consioer themselves freeoom fighters or people seeking self-oeter-
mination. Many of these groups are outnumbereo ano outgunneo by the state, so
they resort to guerrilla tactics or civil oisobeoience. The peoples of West Fapua ano
other areas claimeo by Inoonesia have been massacreo ano subjecteo to severe
abuse at the hanos of the Inoonesian military ,Hynoman :qq, Cribb :qq, Dunn
:qq,. The Isaaks of northern Somalia were treateo brutally by Somali government
forces, who not only bombeo ano shot them but also poisoneo their wells ano uti-
lizeo a scorcheo-earth policy to oestroy their resource base ,Africa Watch :qqo,
Hitchcock ano Tweot :qq,. Similar kinos of tactics were useo by the Germans
against the Hereros in Namibia between :qo ano :qo ,Briogman :q8:, Briogman
ano Worley :qq, ano against the Nuba, Nuer, Dinka, ano other ethnic groups in
southern Suoan by the Suoanese government in recent years ,African Rights :qqa,
Deng :qq, Hutchinson :qq6, Human Rights Watch/Africa :qq,. The Chechens
ano members of other ethnic groups ,such as the Karachai, Kalmyks, ano Ingushi,
were summarily rounoeo up ano oeporteo en masse by the Soviet state to exile
camps in central Asia, where they faceo inhumane conoitions ,Gurr :qq::qo,
Legters :qq,. In the recent past, the Chechens have been subjecteo to artillery
bombaroments, bombings, ano infantry operations by the Russian army. In all of
these cases, the vast majority of people affecteo were noncombatants.
Over the past thirty years, tens of thousanos of Quiche Maya ano other
Guatemalan Inoians were killeo, their villages oestroyeo, ano their crops burneo by
the Guatemalan military, with the tacit ano sometimes active support of the Uniteo
States government ,Carmack :q88, Stoll :qq, Ialla :qq,. The Guatemalan elite was
8 xonrnxi+v
s rnors
not prepareo to allow Inoians to participate in the workings of the government or in
local-level oecision making. By the late :qos some of the Inoians hao joineo guerrilla
groups that hao as their aims the expansion of political participation ano the im-
provement of the lives of peasants. The Guatemalan government responoeo to the
organizational efforts of inoigenous peoples ano others with repressive tactics. Death
squaos kionappeo ano muroereo political leaoers. Counterinsurgency operations were
launcheo in the mio-:qos, ano by the late :qos ano early :q8os the government was
engageo in a full-scale frontal assault against inoigenous peoples ano peasants in
Guatemala.
Inoians joineo the guerrilla movements not so much because they agreeo with
their ioeology but because they saw such movements as being among the few means
available for protecting themselves against the acts of terror perpetrateo by the gov-
ernment forces ,Carmack :q88,. As Stoll ,:qq:xi, notes, most of the Maya were
rebels against their will, ano they were coerceo by the guerrillas as well as the army.
In Iebruary :qq6, anthropologists from the Guatemalan Iorensic Anthropology
Team, human rights workers, ano local people excavateo a mass grave at Agua Iria,
a village in the state of Quiche. This grave is but one of literally oozens of clan-
oestine cemeteries that contain the victims of brutal military operations against In-
oian peasants who were suspecteo of provioing support for rebels opposeo to the
government of General Efrain Rios Montt, who ran Guatemala in :q8.8. The
mass muroers were part of a general campaign on the part of the government to
terrorize the populace.
At the height of the Guatemalan civil war, there were as many as forty-five to
fifty thousano Quiche Maya refugees living in camps in Mexico. Even there, peo-
ple were not completely safe. There is evioence of assassins going into the refugee
camps in Mexico ano killing suspecteo guerrilla leaoers ,Victor Montejo, personal
communication,. Mayan peasants argueo that they were living between two fires
ano that they wanteo simply to be treateo with respect by the government ano those
with whom they liveo in rural Guatemala.
The secono type of genocioe that we will oeal with here is retributive genocioe,
those actions taken by states or other entities in retribution for their behavior. A
classic statement recommenoing retributive genocioe came from a member of
Chase Manhattan Banks Emerging Markets Group, Rioroan Roett, who, in Jan-
uary :qq, maoe the following comment about the Zapatista uprising in southern
Mexico: While Chiapas, in our opinion, ooes not pose a funoamental threat to
Mexican political stability, it is perceiveo to be so by many in the investment com-
munity. The government will neeo to eliminate the Zapatistas to oemonstrate their
effective control of the national territory ano of security policy ,quoteo in the
1oltrgtor Pot, Iebruary :, :qq,. Amnesty International ano other human rights
organizations reporteo on human rights violations by the Mexican army in its ef-
forts to quell the Zapatista uprising in :qqq. Not only were members of the
Zapatista Army of National Liberation ,EZLN, killeo, but so, too, were noncom-
batants ,Collier ano Quaratiello :qqq,. Although the Zapatistas were not wipeo out,
coxrnox+ixo orxocinr or ixniorxots rrorrrs
other inoigenous associations ano groups have not been so fortunate, as can be seen
in the cases of the Chittagong Hill Tracts of Banglaoesh, in Inoonesia, ano in
Burma. It is important to note that of the :.o-plus wars that were going on in :qq,
8o percent of them involveo Iourth Worlo nations resisting state military forces
,Neitschmann :qq:.,.
Accoroing to representatives of inoigenous groups speaking at international fo-
rums on inoigenous peoples ano human rights, people oefineo as inoigenous have
experienceo mass killings, arbitrary executions, torture, mental ano physical mis-
treatment, arrests ano oetentions without trial, forceo sterilization, involuntary re-
location, oestruction of their subsistence base, ano the removal of chiloren from
their families ,Ismaelillo ano Wright :q8., Veber et al. :qq, Wilmer :qq, Churchill
:qq,. Some of these actions have been oescribeo as genocioal, others as pregeno-
cioal or as situations that potentially coulo leao to genocioe if alloweo to continue
without any attempts at intervention or alleviation.
Cases claiming genocioe of inoigenous peoples have been brought before the
Uniteo Nations, but generally they have brought little result, in part because gov-
ernment representatives claimeo that there hao been no intent to oestroy inoige-
nous peoples as such, ano that the groups were never eliminateo as an ethnic or
cultural group ,Kuper :q8::.:,. Governments ano other agencies usually state
that the oeaths of inoigenous people were an unintenoeo consequence of cer-
tain actions, such as colonizing remote areas, ano that there were no planneo ef-
forts to oestroy people on the basis of who they were. Inoigenous groups in nu-
merous countries, incluoing Guatemala ano Banglaoesh, have stresseo that
violations of the right to life in many countries has hao a oistinctly ethnic or cul-
turally targeteo character, no matter what government officials claim.
Military repression of inoigenous peoples that resist state-builoing efforts is not
the only context in which conflict-relateo genocioe occurs. Some states have con-
scripteo members of inoigenous groups into their armeo forces, sometimes at gun-
point. The Uniteo States orew upon the services of the Montagnaros of Vietnam,
while the South African Defense Iorce orafteo members of !Kung, Khwe, ano
Vasakela San groups in the war against the South West Africa Feoples Organiza-
tion ,SWAFO, in Angola ano Namibia in the :qos ano :q8os. Inoeeo, the San of
southern Africa have been oescribeo as the most militarizeo ethnic group in the
worlo ,Goroon :qq.:.,. Although the San have been treateo poorly throughout
their history ,see ibio., Hitchcock :qq6,, they oio sometimes engage in violent ac-
tions against other people. The point here is that inoigenous peoples have been ano
are on both sioes of the genocioe equation. Simply because one is inoigenous ooes
not mean that she or he is incapable of genocioal behavior.
An assumption is sometimes maoe that hunter-gatherers tenoeo not to engage
in genocioe. Chalk ano Jonassohn ,:qqo:6,, for example, state, It seems unlikely
that early man engageo in genocioe ouring the hunting ano gathering stage. One
of the reasons for this position is that it is assumeo that hunter-gatherers teno to be
peace-loving peoples ano that they preferreo to have amicable relations with their
,o xonrnxi+v
s rnors
neighbors rather than engaging in intergroup conflict. Inoeeo, there is mounting ev-
ioence that inoicates that inoigenous warfare increaseo significantly as a result of
European expansionism ,Ierguson ano Whiteheao :qq.,. Juoging from the archae-
ological recoro, intergroup conflicts were much more common among state systems
ano settleo agriculturalists than was the case among foragers. This shoulo not be
taken to mean, however, that genocioe was primarily a proouct of seoentism, agri-
culture, ano the rise of the state. Certainly early foragers hao the skills, technology,
ano presumably the oesire to eliminate other people in competitive situations.
Another context in which genocioes ano massive human rights violations against
inoigenous peoples occur is where efforts are maoe to promote social ano economic
oevelopment, often characterizeo as being in the national interest. Sometimes
calleo oevelopmental genocioes, these kinos of actions occur when states, agencies,
companies, or transnational corporations oppress local peoples ouring the course
of implementing various kinos of oevelopment projects.
All too frequently, local people have been killeo or forceo out of oevelopment proj-
ect areas, often with little or no compensation either in the form of alternative lano
or cash for lost assets ,see Table ..,. The problem has become so wioespreao, in fact,
that a new category of oisplaceo persons has been proposeo: oevelopment refugees
,Horowitz :q8q, :qq:, Scuooer :qqo,. River basin oevelopment projects, among other
kinos of large-scale efforts, have sometimes employeo violent means to ensure com-
pliance on the part of local people. Dam projects such as those along the Narmaoa
River in Inoia, the Rio Negro in Guatemala, ano the Manantali Dam on the Sene-
gal River in west Africa witnesseo repressive tactics by the companies or agencies in-
volveo, incluoing the muroer of political activists, oisappearances, the shooting of
oemonstrators, arbitrary arrest, ano the torture of oetainees ,Koening ano Horowitz
:qq., Human Rights Watch :qq.::., Scully :qq6, Colajacomo :qqq,.
There are a number of cases where transnational corporations ,TNCs, have
allegeoly been involveo in serious human rights violations against inoigenous peo-
ples. These cases range from the actions of mining companies such as Ireeport
Inoonesia, Inc., ,III, in Irian Jaya ,West Fapua, to oil companies such as Texaco
ano Maxus in Ecuaoor ,see Table ..,. Some companies, such as Royal Dutch/Shell
in Nigeria, have been accuseo of being in complicity with governments that are
oppressing their own citizens ,Human Rights Watch/Africa :qq, Kretzman :qq,.
Companies have been citeo as being guilty of a series of human rights crimes, in-
cluoing assassinations, oisappearances, raios ano the burning of villages, oetentions
without trial, torture, purposeful oumping of toxic substances, ano intimioation of
opponents ,Human Rights Watch ano Natural Resources Defense Council :qq.,
Geoicks :qq, Wilmer :qq, Hynoman :qq, Kane :qq, Sachs :qq, Hitchcock
:qq,. Justifications by company executives for their actions range from their right
to protect their assets ano the security of their employees to making profits, some
of which go to the countries where they operate.
In spite of the fact that human rights concern has become wioespreao, inoige-
nous peoples have continueo to suffer severe abuse. Recent evioence suggests that
coxrnox+ixo orxocinr or ixniorxots rrorrrs ,.
+\nrr .. Development Projects of Multinational
Corporations (MNCs) That Have Injured Indigenous Peoples
Well-being and That Have Been Cited as Genocidal or Ethnocidal
Ptocct oro Compor, Coortt, Effcct
Ecuador Oil Developments Ecuador Waorani and other Indians
(Texaco, Maxus Oil Co., forced off land, massive
and Conoco, etc.) environmental problems
with oil spills, poisoning
of water, loss of biodiversity
Freeport-MacMoRan West Papua Amungme and other
Copper and Gold Mining (Irian Jaya) West Papuans dispossessed,
crackdowns on local people,
ecological destruction,
intimidation
Unocal Burma Alleged complicity in slavery,
forced relocation, torture,
murder, and disappearances
in the area of a Unocal
pipeline
Shell Oil Nigeria Development of oil
production and rening
facilities in the Ogoni region
of Nigeria led to habitat
destruction, pressure on the
Ogoni people by the
Nigerian state
Tanzania Wheat Tanzania Barabaig agropastoralists
Project (CIDA) removed from their lands,
harrassed and jailed, denied
access to winter grazing
Logging Companies Malaysia Deforestation, dispossession
(e.g., Mitsubishi) and oppression of resident
Penan and other groups
Western Desert Uranium Australia Aboriginals forced out of
Mining (e.g., Rio Tito Zinc) traditional areas, land and
sacred sites affected, some
problems with mining
residues
xo+r: Ior aooitional case material, see Human Rights Watch ano Natural Resources Defense
Council ,:qq.,, Johnston ,:qq, :qq,, Geoicks ,:qq,, Sachs ,:qq,, Hitchcock ,:qq, :qq,, see also the
Molttrottorol Morttot.
the situations they face are actually getting worse in a number of areas, particu-
larly as economic oevelopment reaches into the worlos remoter regions ,Durning
:qq., Hitchcock :qq, :qq, .ooo, Booley :qqq,.
It is important to note that one of the oefenses offereo by both government ano
company officials to charges of genocioe is that the killing of inoigenous people
cannot be oefineo as genocioe if it is oone for economic reasons ,Kuper :q8::,.
As one African inoigenous leaoer put it at a March :qq6 meeting of the Uniteo Na-
tions Human Rights Commission, We are killeo out of greeo. The poor treat-
ment of inoigenous peoples ano the loss of their lano has hao a series of negative
effects, incluoing reouction of their subsistence base, nutritional oeprivation, ano
heighteneo social tensions, some of which are manifesteo in higher rates of suicioe,
as was the case, for example, with the Guarani Kaiowa of Brazil in the late :q8os
ano :qqos.
Yet another context in which genocioes occur is one that is not normally rec-
ognizeo in the human rights ano environmental justice communities, conservation-
relateo violations. In many parts of the worlo, national parks, game reserves, ano
other kinos of protection areas have been establisheo, often at significant cost to
local communities, many of which have been oispossesseo as a result. Iorceo relo-
cation out of conservation areas has all too often exacerbateo problems of poverty,
environmental oegraoation, ano social conflict. In the course of state efforts to pro-
mote conservation, legal restrictions have been placeo on hunting ano fishing
through national legislation. Such legislation not only reouces the access of in-
oigenous peoples to natural resources, it also results in inoiviouals ano sometimes
whole communities being arresteo, jaileo, ano, in some cases, killeo, as has been
the case in Africa ano Inoonesia ,Feluso :qq, Hitchcock :qq,. Anthropologists
have oocumenteo these situations ano have attempteo to pressure governments, in-
ternational agencies, ano environmental organizations to pay more attention to the
rights of people exposeo to what in effect is coercive conservation.
Genocioal actions also sometimes occur in situations in which there is purposeful
environmental oestruction. That can be seen, for instance, in cases where herbicioes
such as Agent Orange were useo to clear forests so that counterinsurgency actions
coulo proceeo, as was the case in Vietnam. The so-calleo orug war, orchestrateo in
part by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency ,DEA, in countries such as Bolivia,
Colombia, ano Feru, has hao more than its share of human rights violations, some
of them arising from raios on local communities ano the use of chemicals to oestroy
coca ano marijuana crops. Ecocioe, the oestruction of ecosystems by states, agencies,
or corporate entities, is a problem facing substantial numbers of inoigenous ano other
peoples in many parts of the worlo ,Grinoe ano Johansen :qq,.
Activists opposeo to the oegraoation of the ecosystems have hao to conteno with
efforts by transnational corporations ano states to silence them, sometimes violently
,Human Rights Watch :qq., Human Rights Watch ano Natural Resources Defense
Council :qq., Johnston :qq, Sachs :qq::q.,. The :q88 killing of Chico Menoez,
the Brazilian rubber tapper who spoke out forcefully against the oestruction of the
coxrnox+ixo orxocinr or ixniorxots rrorrrs ,
tropical rain forests, ano the execution by the Nigerian state of Ken Saro-Wiwa,
the heao of the Movement for the Survival of the Ogoni Feople ,MOSOF,, on No-
vember :o, :qq, unoerscoreo the oangers faceo by environmental activists ano the
lengths to which their opponents are willing to go.
Anthropologists, too, have been killeo for their efforts in behalf of social jus-
tice, as occurreo in the case of antiapartheio activist Davio Webster in South Africa.
There have also been cases in which anthropologists who serveo as whistle blow-
ers about projects that were ooing harm to inoigenous peoples ano others lost their
jobs or were investigateo by agencies ranging from the Ieoeral Bureau of Investi-
gation to the Internal Revenue Service. Aovocacy in behalf of inoigenous peoples
by anthropologists has leo to the establishment of human rights organizations
aimeo at promoting the well-being of inoigenous groups, examples being the In-
ternational Work Group for Inoigenous Affairs, founoeo in Denmark in :q68 by
Helge Kleivan ano others, ano Cultural Survival, Inc., founoeo by Davio ano Fia
Maybury-Lewis ano their colleagues in Boston, Massachusetts, in :q.. Anthro-
pologists have also collaborateo with inoigenous nongovernment organizations in
their efforts to promote their rights, as can be seen in the cases of Iirst Feople of
the Kalahari ,IFK,, a San aovocacy organization baseo in Ghanzi, Botswana, ano
the Working Group of Inoigenous Minorities in Southern Africa ,WIMSA,, a re-
gional San aovocacy ano networking organization.
COPING WITH GENOCIDES AGAINST INDIGENOUS PEOPLES
Efforts have been maoe at the international ano the national levels to bring inoige-
nous genocioe cases to the attention of both the meoia ano human rights ano in-
tergovernmental organizations, incluoing the Uniteo Nations. In the :qos, the
Uniteo Nations was officially informeo of the situations in Faraguay with the Ache
ano various inoigenous groups in Brazil ,Kuper :q8:::,. Officials from both
Faraguay ano Brazil vehemently oenieo that their governments were responsible for
genocioe. Such was the case in :q6q, when the Brazilian representative to the Uniteo
Nations saio that although Inoians in Brazil hao been eliminateo, it was oone for
exclusively economic reasons, the perpetrators having acteo solely to take posses-
sion of the lanos of their victims ,Uniteo Nations Human Rights Communication
no. 8, September .q, :q6q, quoteo in Kuper :q8:::,. In other woros, the killings
of Brazilian Inoians were not genocioe because the purpose of the actions was eco-
nomic. Economically motivateo oestruction of inoigenous peoples has been ano is
a serious problem in Brazil ,Davis :q, Ramos ano Taylor :qq, Bay :q8, Ameri-
can Anthropological Association :qq:, Amnesty International :qq., Colby ano Den-
nett :qq,. Although wioe-ranging efforts have been maoe to promote the rights of
Brazilian Inoians by inoigenous communities, aovocacy organizations, ano human
rights groups, their socioeconomic status continues to oecline in many areas.
In August :qq there was an international outcry over the killings of Yanomami
,Yanomamo, Inoians by golo miners on the Venezuela-Brazil boroer ,Chagnon
, xonrnxi+v
s rnors
:qqac, Albert :qq, Ramos :qq,. When it was learneo that the number of peo-
ple shot ano oismembereo was only sixteen, international interest in the case
waneo. Subsequently, when charges were traoeo about possible complicity on the
part of social scientists ano missionaries in the processes that leo up to the mas-
sacre, public interest was piqueo again, but it subsioeo after the governments of
Brazil ano Venezuela argueo that the situation was not as bao as hao been claimeo.
The governments of countries in which inoigenous peoples face severe human
rights problems routinely oeny that the situation is as bao as is portrayeo in the me-
oia, by aovocacy groups, or by the oral testimonies of inoiviouals claiming viola-
tion of human rights. The same is true of those private companies in areas where
inoigenous peoples are being affecteo by oevelopment ano environmental change.
It shoulo be emphasizeo that there are frequently serious conflicts of interest be-
tween states ano private companies operating insioe their boroers. In the :q8os ano
early :qqos, the Uniteo Nations Economic ano Social Council Commission on
Transnational Corporations orew up a Cooe of Conouct for transnational corpo-
rations, but as of early :qqq the cooe hao yet to be implementeo.
There has been markeo opposition to inoigenous peoples efforts to re-estab-
lish their lano ano resource rights, not only from states but also from private com-
panies seeking access to minerals ano other resources. Tooay, some of the greatest
problems faceo by inoigenous groups in terms of lano ano resource rights oerive
from transnational corporations, private companies, ano inoiviouals who are pres-
suring governments to reouce their efforts in behalf of inoigenous lano rights, as
can be seen, for example, in Australia, Brazil, ano Mexico.
Efforts are being maoe by intergovernmental organizations, inoigenous associ-
ations, oevelopment ano human rightsorienteo nongovernmental organizations,
ano interesteo inoiviouals to oraw up guioelines for oevelopment ano conservation
project implementation that protect both local people ano their ecosystems. The
problem with many of these guioelines, however, is that they rarely, if ever, are en-
forceo. Although oetaileo international stanoaros have been establisheo for han-
oling the resettlement of people affecteo by large-scale infrastructure projects ,see,
for example, Worlo Bank :qq:,, there are few cases in which all or even most of
the steps have been followeo. The result has been that a majority of the people who
have been forcibly relocateo, numbering in the tens of millions, have enoeo up
much worse off after relocation ,Scully :qq6, Scuooer :qqa, :qqb, Worlo Com-
mission on Dams .ooo,.
There have been few cases where companies or oevelopment agencies have been
requireo to change their tactics or to follow international stanoaros. As yet there
are no internationally accepteo principles by which companies, oevelopment in-
stitutions, or conservation organizations must operate. The consequence is that
inoigenous groups face major problems.
In response, inoigenous groups have begun to organize among themselves in
an effort to oppose genocioal practices ano promote human rights ,Durning :qq.,
Wilmer :qq, Hitchcock ano Biesele .ooo,. How successful these efforts will be very
coxrnox+ixo orxocinr or ixniorxots rrorrrs ,
much oepenos on whether private companies, intergovernmental organizations,
states, ano nongovernment organizations are willing to ,a, come up with strict in-
ternationally recognizeo human rights ano environmental stanoaros, ,b, monitor
oevelopment ano conservation activities as they are implementeo, ano ,c, enforce
those stanoaros.
Lawsuits have been fileo by inoigenous groups ano their supporters against
multinational corporations. In :qq, a group of lawyers in New York fileo a $: bil-
lion lawsuit against Texaco on behalf of the Huaorani Inoians of Ecuaoor. In :qq6
lawyers representing citizens of Burma fileo a lawsuit in a U.S. feoeral court that
allegeo complicity on the part of the oil company Unocal in human rights abuses
in an area of Burma where a natural gas pipeline was being built. The charges in-
cluoeo complicity in enslavement of people, forceo relocation, torture, muroer, ano
intimioation of opponents of the pipeline ,Strioer :qq, Bray :qqq,. These lawsuits
coulo set a legal preceoent whereby environmental ano human rights violations
can be prosecuteo unoer international law in the Uniteo States. What this woulo
mean, in effect, is that private companies coulo be helo to the same stanoaros as
governments. It may be necessary, in our opinion, to charge the chief executive
officers ,CEOs, of some of the worlos major corporations with crimes against hu-
manity ano try them in a ouly constituteo ano inoepenoent international court.
Fublicizing the names of companies involveo in human rights violations is help-
ful, ano efforts are ongoing along those lines, with the assistance of a number of
nongovernment organizations, some of which publicize the actions of multina-
tionals on the worlowioe web ano in other forums. Nongovernment organizations
ano stockholoer groups have calleo for the organization of boycotts ano the im-
position of sanctions on those companies involveo in systematic human rights vi-
olations. It is only when company profits ano stock values begin to oecrease that
efforts will be maoe to curb the kinos of systematic mistreatment of inoigenous
peoples that are so commonplace in many parts of the worlo tooay.
GENOCIDE EARLY WARNING SYSTEMS
Over the past oecaoe or so, numerous scholars have begun working on what are com-
monly referreo to as genocioe early warning systems ,GEWS, ,Charny :q8, :qq:,
:qqq:.6:, Kuper :q8:.:8.8, :qq:, Whitaker :q8::, Totten ano Farsons
:qq:,. These are systems that ioentify criteria for oetecting conoitions that increase
the possibility of genocioe. Their goal is to bring worlo attention to a potentially geno-
cioal situation so that an objective outsioe agency can intervene. Such a system woulo
be useful in many ways, but for inoigenous groups it woulo be especially important,
given that many of them are exposeo to genocioal actions with little or no outsioe
monitoring ano limiteo channels of communication to the outsioe worlo.
Totten ,:qq:, has suggesteo that a key component of any early warning system
shoulo be the collection ano analysis of eyewitness accounts of events that might
be leaoing up to a genocioe, or of particular genocioal acts themselves. As Totten
, xonrnxi+v
s rnors
,ibio.: lvii, pointeo out, Time ano again throughout this |the twentieth| century,
some of the first warnings that a genocioal act was taking place were the appear-
ance of first-person accounts by members of the victim group who either manageo
to escape or smuggle out reports, ano/or accounts by other witnesses ,e.g., jour-
nalists, consular officials, relief workers,. Besioes eyewitness accounts, there are
other inoications of potential genocioes, incluoing increaseo rates of beatings,
killings, kionappings, ano oisappearances, ano heighteneo refugee flows.
The threats facing inoigenous peoples incluoe the lack of efforts on the part of
states ano regional governments that contribute to the insecurity of inoigenous peo-
ples, these woulo incluoe incomplete oemarcation of reserve areas, failure to pros-
ecute inoiviouals or companies that enter reserves that have been legally gazetteo,
ano allowing inoiviouals or groups that have committeo human rights violations
against inoigenous people to get away with their crimes. Freconoitions for geno-
cioe incluoe rising numbers of arrests, extrajuoicial executions, oisappearances,
ano heateo rhetoric in the meoia, all of which were seen, for example, in the cases
of Burunoi ano, more recently, Rwanoa ,African Rights :qqb, Neier :qq8,. Com-
ing up with oetaileo assessments of the factors that result in genocioes is crucial if
these crimes are to be preoicteo.
We, along with Whitaker ,:q8:,, support the establishment of an interna-
tional booy to oeal with genocioe. Such a booy coulo have a section that analyzes
oata on potential genocioes ano be empowereo with the authority to bring any ur-
gent situations to the attention of the secretary-general of the Uniteo Nations ano
other appropriate institutions.
In October :qq., the Uniteo Nations Security Council agreeo, albeit somewhat
reluctantly, to unoertake a formal investigation into the allegations concerning oeath
camps, ethnic cleansing, ano mass rape in Bosnia. The panel, known as the Com-
mission of Experts, was aimeo in part at preparing the way for a war crimes tribu-
nal. The War Crimes Tribunal was establisheo in :qq, the first time such a tribunal
hao been set up since the trials helo in Nuremberg ano Japan following Worlo War
II. There has been a certain amount of reluctance on the part of the Uniteo
Nations leaoership to pursue high-level inoiviouals as war criminals, but the tribunal
is now issuing inoictments. Inoictments have also now been issueo by the Interna-
tional Tribunal for Rwanoa ,ICTR,. We hope that both of these tribunals will follow
through on prosecution of those responsible for genocioe ano war crimes.
Anthropologists ano archaeologists can play significant roles in preoicting, ooc-
umenting, ano investigating pregenocioal ano genocioal situations. Anthropologists
sometimes fino themselves in situations where they witness violence ano poor treat-
ment of people ,Norostrom ano Robben :qq,. Some of them have recoroeo their
observations carefully ano maoe them available to human rights organizations ano
to the meoia. Others have shareo information on government plans that might af-
fect local people, ano some have assisteo in organizing resistance efforts. Careful
oocumentation of allegeoly genocioal actions with the use of archaeological ano
forensic techniques has been oone in Argentina, Chile, Guatemala, El Salvaoor,
coxrnox+ixo orxocinr or ixniorxots rrorrrs ,,
the Fhilippines, Ethiopia, Iraq, the former Yugoslavia, Haiti, Rwanoa, ano, recently,
Zimbabwe ,Geiger ano Cook-Deegan :qq, Mioole East Watch ano Fhysicians for
Human Rights :qq, Hagluno ano Sorg :qq, Stover ano Feress :qq8,. The infor-
mation obtaineo ouring the course of these activities can ano will serve as part of
the evioence for pursuit of human rights cases by courts ano the International War
Crimes Tribunals ,for example, those for the former Yugoslavia ano for Rwanoa,.
The American Association for the Aovancement of Science ,AAAS,, Fhysicians for
Human Rights ,FHR,, Human Rights Watch, the Minnesota Lawyers Interna-
tional Human Rights Committee, ano regional teams of forensic anthropologists,
lawyers, ano meoical personnel collaborate in carrying out investigations, con-
oucting workshops, ano ooing training exercises for people involveo in the exami-
nation of instances of suspicious oeaths.
GENOCIDE, ANTHROPOLOGY, AND EDUCATION
It is of the utmost necessity for university ano seconoary school curricula not to
focus solely on genocioal acts themselves but also on the preconoitions of genocioe,
as well as methoos of intervention ano prevention, incluoing the role of inoiviou-
als acting alone ano in concert with others. A primary purpose of holoing up clear
examples of the abuse of human rights is to encourage people to look seriously at
events ano oeeos in their own lives ano the worlo about them that may increase the
likelihooo of bigotry ano the possibility for violence.
The most effective peoagogy on genocioe helps stuoents think about issues such
as the use ano abuse of power, the implications of a society that violates civil ano
human rights, ano the role ano responsibilities of inoiviouals, groups, ano nations
when confronting human rights violations ano genocioal acts. Examining these is-
sues can broaoen stuoents unoerstanoing of key concepts ano concerns, such as
racism, prejuoice, oiscrimination, blino obeoience, loyalty, conflict, conflict reso-
lution, oecision making, justice, prevention, intervention, ano survival, all of which
can be useful when consioering what constitutes responsible citizenship. If that is
not oone, the stuoy is little more than an acaoemic exercise.
If stuoents at all levels of schooling across the globe are going to be reacheo
effectively, then something moremuch morethan traoitional curricula ano
instructional efforts are neeoeo. An all-out, well-cooroinateo eoucational ano
outreach effort is requireo, one that involves those groups working on the behalf
of victims of genocioe as well as those groups working on various genocioal ano
human rights issues, in conjunction with peoagogical experts. Working together,
those three groups, we believe, coulo not only proouce outstanoing curricular
materials but coulo also reach stuoents in a way that has not been attempteo
thus far.
The protection of inoiviouals ano groups who are oifferent is very much a con-
temporary issue, ano stuoents shoulo be presenteo with opportunities ,if they so
oesire, to move from stuoying ano thinking to becoming actively involveo in inter-
,8 xonrnxi+v
s rnors
vention ano prevention work. The efforts of Amnesty International, the interna-
tional human rights organization that was the recipient of the Nobel Frize for Feace
in :q, to involve stuoents in human rights work is both aomirable ano something
that coulo be emulateo by other organizations working to protect inoigenous peo-
ples ano other victims of oiscrimination ano genocioal acts. The strength of such
programs is that they provioe stuoents with an outstanoing reason for stuoying hu-
man rights issues. It helps them appreciate the fact that human rights are not givens
but something that must be protecteo. Likewise, it informs them about why ano
how human rights infractions are committeo across the globe, ano how inoiviou-
als can work together to ameliorate these situations.
International Alert Against Genocioe ano Mass Killing ,which has its heao-
quarters in Lonoon, was establisheo as a response to the realization that groups
were not being protecteo against genocioe ano that there seemeo to be an in-
creasing incioence of the crime. It seeks to promote awareness ano a commitment
to preventive action through teaching ano research ano by sounoing international
alerts on threatening crises in inter-group relations ,Leo Kuper, personal com-
munication, August :o, :qqo,. Fut another way, it is the action component com-
plementing the eoucational work ,Kuper, personal communication, May .q, :qq:,.
This organization makes representations in the conventional channels ,such as aio
agencies, governments, ano international organizations,, but it also tries to explore
new channels for effective action.
History oemonstrates that encounters between inoigenous peoples or ethnic mi-
norities ano other groups, states, ano oevelopment agencies often culminate in in-
oigenous peoples or minorities being strippeo of their culture, physically oecimateo,
or both. In light of that, the following comment by Irving Horowitz is worthy of
consioerable thought: Genocioe is always a conscious choice ano policy. It is never
just an accioent of history or a necessity imposeo by unseen economic growth re-
quirements. Genocioe is always ano everywhere an essentially political oecision
,Horowitz :q8o:8,. To some extent, the lack of awareness by the average person
about the conoitions of inoigenous peoples is reminiscent of many of the conclu-
sions reacheo by Michael Harrington ,:q6, in his book Tlc Otlct Amcttco, which
helpeo to bring the issue of poverty in the Uniteo States to the forefront of many
peoples minos. In his opening chapter, Harrington puts forth his main theme when
he states: The millions who are poor in the Uniteo States teno to become in-
creasingly invisible. Here is a great mass of people, yet it takes an effort of the in-
tellect ano will even to see them ,ibio.::o,. Like the poor that make up the other
America, the inoigenous peoples of the worlo tooay are generally invisible, iso-
lateo, off the beaten track, powerless, ano slipping out of our very experience
ano consciousness ,ibio.::::,.
Anthropologists have workeo extensively on marginalizeo groups ano segments
of society. They have examineo poverty ano unoeroevelopment, the causes ano
consequences of conflict, warfare, ano genocioe, ano policies of separate oevel-
opment ano oifferential treatment of groups on the basis of ethnicity, class, or back-
coxrnox+ixo orxocinr or ixniorxots rrorrrs ,
grouno, they also have firsthano information on what happens to groups ano in-
oiviouals unoer stress. This material can be orawn upon in the oevelopment of uni-
versity ano seconoary school curricula ano case stuoies for workshops ano train-
ing sessions relating to human rights, social justice, ano equity. It can also be useo
in courses ano programs on conflict resolution ano conflict management. Having
a better unoerstanoing of the roots of prejuoice, oiscrimination, ethnic ioentity for-
mation ano manipulation, nationalism, ano genocioe will go a long way towaro
helping alleviate the conoitions that bring about human rights violations ano oe-
struction of inoiviouals, groups, ano cultures.
CONCLUSIONS
When we reao the lists of peoples that have been ano are being oestroyeo, it is
easy to forget that behino the names of these inoigenous groups are unprotecteo
mothers, fathers, chiloren, granoparentsinoeeo, entire families. Awareness of this
victimization ano injustice forces us to make choices. Some of us choose to ignore
ano avoio the information, others strive to learn more, ano still others search for
ways to intervene or to prevent these events ano oeeos from happening. In this chap-
ter we have attempteo to analyze some of the major issues surrounoing genocioe
ano ethnocioe as they affect inoigenous peoples. We have stresseo the neeo for geno-
cioe preoiction ano prevention efforts, as well as the neeo to intervene in situa-
tions where genocioe might occur. We believe strongly that more work is neeoeo
on oefining genocioe. The fact that governments ano other agencies have oenieo
engaging in genocioe while at the same time carrying out serious human rights vi-
olations unoerscores the neeo for mooifications to the oefinition of genocioe in
the Genocioe Convention.
Iein ,:qqo:8., has aooresseo the crucial neeo for oelineating clear policies for
the protection ano enhancement of the well-being of inoigenous peoples:
It seems wise . . . to me to have clear conceptual standards, discriminating specic poli-
cies and ways of monitoring the operation of state and settlerslaws, administra-
tion, equal justice, land settlement, health and educational servicesso that we can
assess both intentions and eects on indigenous peoples, rather than to label all pop-
ulation decline as a result of genocide and assume the inevitability of decimation of
indigenous peoples. (Fein ibid.)
There is a clear neeo to oocument cases carefully ano to come up with quantita-
tive as well as qualitative analyses of the effects on inoigenous peoples of actions
by states, agencies, corporations, ano other entities.
It woulo be useful, as Iein ,ibio., notes, to oraw up a convention on ethnocioe
ano lay out in very specific terms what the various obligations are of states in pro-
tecting the rights of inoigenous peoples. Such a convention woulo be important
because there are problems with the current Genocioe Convention ano with the
Uniteo Nations role in preventing genocioes.
8o xonrnxi+v
s rnors
Many of these problems lie in the convention itself. Iirst, the oefinition itself is
lacking in clarity. Secono, the convention concentrates primarily on punishment
rather than prevention. Thiro, the lack of enforcement has meant that the Geno-
cioe Convention can be ignoreo by states ano inoiviouals without fear of retribu-
tion. Many states are reluctant to pursue genocioe cases because they take the po-
sition that these situations are internal matters, taking strong action might be
vieweo as oenying self-oetermination ano states rights. However, as Whitaker
,:q8:, notes, genocioe shoulo be maoe a matter of universal jurisoiction. Only
in that way will governments be helo accountable for their actions.
Among the most important efforts to achieve the protection of the rights of in-
oigenous peoples are those of various inoigenous groups themselves. Inoigenous
groups tooay are organizing to survive, as one San put it. Their actions are im-
portant for a number of key reasons. Iirst of all, the efforts are a classic case of self-
oetermination. The groups know what they neeo ano oesire, ano they are working
towaro those goals, some on an inoivioual basis ano some collectively. Secono, these
actions, while not always successful, serve to provioe important experience for in-
oigenous groups, ano they may serve to increase their knowleoge ano potential ef-
fectiveness. Thiro, they often serve to enhance the organizational capacity of the
groups because they often require them to try various oecision-making, participation,
ano leaoership strategies. Iourth, the efforts, if successful even marginally, provioe in-
oiviouals ano groups with much-neeoeo self-confioence in the face of aoversity.
Although most of these groups eventually come face to face with forces that
are beyono their control, they are better equippeo to cope with them for having
attempteo to mobilize themselves. The fact that they are forming coalitions ano
communicating more effectively through the electronic meoia ano other means is
inoicative of their oesire to establish broao-baseo networks ano information ois-
semination mechanisms.
That saio, one still neeos to be circumspect in regaro to what has been ano still
neeos to be accomplisheo. Ior example, while it is certainly true that inoigenous
groups are making steaoy progress, it is also a fact that there are inoivioual gov-
ernments, big businesses, certain church organizations, ano others that are ooing
everything in their power to circumvent the efforts ano progress being maoe by
inoigenous groups within their realm of power or interest. What neeos to be oone
by inoigenous groups ano noninoigenous organizations that support them is to form
strong networks ano coalitions that will work towaro the same goals in the most ef-
ficacious manner. It can be hopeo that such efforts will prevent factions from be-
ing formeo ano will leao to a more cohesive ano stronger movement for the pro-
tection of all inoigenous peoples.
Encouraging representatives of governments ano inoigenous peoples to reach
agreement on international stanoaros for protecting inoigenous peoples is an on-
going task of the Working Group on Inoigenous Fopulations of the Uniteo Na-
tions, which is maoe up of representatives of inoigenous peoples ano groups that
work with them ,International Work Group for Inoigenous Affairs :qqq,. Although
coxrnox+ixo orxocinr or ixniorxots rrorrrs 8.
broao agreement has been reacheo on many issues, there still exist many areas of
oispute. Some of the most serious of these conflicts relate to protection of the lano
ano resource rights of inoigenous peoples, the recognition of collective rights, ano
the right to self-oetermination.
There are literally oozens of organizations ano associations working on inoige-
nous rights issues. A major strength of these organizations is that they serve as ao-
vocates for those people who often fino themselves voiceless or powerless against
governments or business interests that encroach upon their lano, threaten their way
of life, or enoanger their lives ,Burger :q8, Durning :qq., Maybury-Lewis :qq,
Hitchcock :qq,. These organizations also assist those inoigenous groups that are
active on their own behalf in reaching a larger constituency or power base. In oo-
ing so they conouct research into the neeos of ano problems faceo by inoigenous
peoples, serve as aovocates for the groups in international ano national meetings
ano governmental ano nongovernmental forums, ano eoucate the general public
about the situation of inoigenous peoples. In recent years, greater efforts have been
maoe by these aovocacy groups to get involveo in human rights investigations ano
promotion of health, nutrition, ano oevelopment activities that enhance the well-
being of inoigenous groups. All of these efforts will go a long way towaro reouc-
ing the problems facing inoigenous peoples.
Whitaker ,:q8:., asserts that research on the causes ano prevention of geno-
cioe coulo help form one part of a wioe eoucational program throughout the
worlo against such aberrations |that is, genocioe|, starting at an early age in
schools. To fail to eoucate stuoents ano the public at large about genocioe, in-
cluoing the fate of inoigenous peoples across the globe who have to face this crime,
has, we believe, profouno ramifications. To ignore genocioe is to oistort history.
To talk about the conquest of the New Worlo, colonialism in the Americas, or the
confrontation between inoigenous peoples ano technological aovancement to-
oay without oiscussing genocioe is to present a false or sanitizeo picture of the way
changes have occurreo over time.
It is heartening to note that a growing number of communities are beginning
to incluoe the stuoy of genocioe in their curricula ,Totten ano Farsons :qq:, Charny
:qqq,. At present, twenty states in the Uniteo States recommeno the teaching of
the Holocaust ano genocioe. However, in spite of the surge in the stuoy of geno-
cioe ano the use of materials on genocioe in schools, the level of unoerstanoing of
the causes ano consequences of genocioe ano human rights violations on the part
of the public is limiteo at best.
The vast majority, if not all, of the curricula oevelopeo on genocioe for use in
schools oo not aooress the plight of most inoigenous peoples other than Native
Americans ano the Armenians in any systematic way. Even those stuoents who oo
stuoy some aspect of genocioe still cannot intelligently oiscuss what it is that con-
stitutes genocioe, the preconoitions ano consequences of any genocioe, or meth-
oos of intervention ano prevention: those kinos of issues are not unoerscoreo in
the curricula or the meoia. In aooition, to a large extent, most of the current cur-
8: xonrnxi+v
s rnors
ricula available on genocioe are not of a particularly high quality, although that sit-
uation is changing.
A particular area of concern among inoigenous peoples as it relates to genocioe
ano human rights violations is genoer-relateo violence. Representatives of womens
organizations, inoigenous associations, ano human rights groups have argueo that
rape ano sexual assault shoulo be consioereo crimes against humanity. Mass rape
was useo as a strategy to terrorize people in the former Yugoslavia ,Stiglmayer :qq,.
Aboriginal women were rapeo ano sexually abuseo by settlers in Tasmania ano Aus-
tralia ,Turnbull :q8,, as were Ache women in Faraguay ,Munzel :q, :q, Arens
:q6,, American Inoian women in the Uniteo States ,Dunbar Ortiz :q8, Jaimes
:qq., Churchill :qq,, ano Somali women, a number of whom were in refugee
camps, in the Horn of Africa ,Africa Watch :q8q,. The oeclaration of rape ano
sexual abuse as crimes against humanity will, in the opinion of inoigenous leaoers
ano others, result in greater efforts to oeter genoer-relateo violence both in wartime
ano peacetime.
If stuoents ano the public are to have greater knowleoge of the plight of in-
oigenous peoples, oeprivation of human rights, ano the causes ano consequences
of genocioe, scholars in such fielos as anthropology, history, sociology, political sci-
ence, law, ano genocioe stuoies are going to have to work with teachers ano school
aoministrators to convince them of the necessity for aooressing such concerns as
well as to assist them in oeveloping accurate content ano peoagogically souno cur-
ricula. Scholars, inoigenous groups ano their supporters, ano nongovernmental or-
ganizations neeo to assist eoucators in choosing cases that contribute significantly
to an unoerstanoing of the survival problems facing inoigenous peoples. An in-
oepth approach to well-oocumenteo cases encourages stuoents ano the public to
oevelop more careful oistinctions when making comparative generalizations, ano
it helps them to refrain from offering simple answers to complex human behavior.
Ior intervention ano prevention of genocioe ano ethnocioe against inoigenous
peoples to succeeo, better progress neeos to take place in increasing our level of
awareness, in encouraging the citizens of the worlo to care, ano in overcoming oe-
nial. Ior the most part, governments oo not acknowleoge or take responsibility for
their genocioal acts, past or present, ano most citizens woulo like to avoio oealing
with ugly events ano oeeos perpetrateo by their nation or others. Unfortunately,
oenial is reinforceo because the historical recoro oemonstrates that perpetrators
of ethnocioe or genocioe are seloom brought to trial. A case in point is the fact that
even the perpetrators of major twentieth-century genocioes have escapeo justice.
Investigations of cases of allegeo genocioe ano prosecution of the perpetrators
woulo help to ensure that others will be less likely to engage in such actions in the
future.
Resolving complex problems ano injustices requires multiple approaches. Schol-
ars neeo to continue grappling with the multituoe of criteria ano oistinctions that
help to oefine, unoerstano, ano prevent genocioe ano ethnocioe. Eoucators neeo
to learn about what has ano is happening to inoigenous peoples, ano they neeo to
coxrnox+ixo orxocinr or ixniorxots rrorrrs 8
oevelop strategies for bringing these lessons to their stuoents in oroer to give in-
tervention ano prevention a real chance in the future. Activists neeo to keep in-
volving others, expanoing their efforts, ano confronting those who violate the rights
ano freeooms of inoigenous peoples.
The international business community neeos to take further steps to oevelop a
cooe of business ethics that protects the rights of people in areas where businesses
are operating. Governments must live up to their obligation to protect inoigenous
peoples ano not compromise their rights unoer the weight of so-calleo progress, eco-
nomic growth, or nationalism. Iinally, all institutions, whether states, corporations,
nongovernment organizations, or inoigenous support groups, neeo to work together
to promote the rights not just of inoigenous peoples but also of all human beings.
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r\n+ +vo
Essentializing Dierence
Artltopologtt tr tlc Holocoot
Justifying Genocioe
Atclocolog, oro tlc Corttocttor of Dtctcrcc
Bctttro Atrolo
It is one of the terrible ironies of the systematic extermination of one people by
another that its justication is consioereo necessary. As Norman Cohn has argueo,
|H|owever narrow, materialistic, or oownright criminal their own motives may
be, such men cannot operate without an ioeology behino them. At least, when op-
erating collectively, they neeo an ioeology to legitimate their behavior, for without
it they woulo have to see themselves ano one another as what they really arecom-
mon thieves ano muroerers. Ano that apparently is something which even they can-
not bear ,Leo Kuper |:q8::8| quoting Norman Cohn |:q6:.66|,. Obviously
warrants for genocioe can take many forms, ano not all of them make explicit ref-
erence to the archaeological past. Those that oo oeserve closer examination. The
starting point for this paper therefore is Leo Kupers statement that massive slaugh-
ter of members of ones own species is repugnant to man, ano that ioeological le-
gitimation is a necessary preconoition for genocioe ,:q8::8,. I explore the sym-
biotic relationship between nationalism, race, ano archaeology from a cross-cultural
perspective in oroer to illustrate how archaeological research has been co-opteo to
ratify ano reify genocioe.
CULTURAL CAFITAL AND THE
CONSTRUCTION OI DIIIERENCE
If the politics of memory ano the psychology of politics are intimately relateo, as
Hirsch suggests, ano if memories, ano the myths ano hatreos constructeo arouno
them, may be manipulateo by inoiviouals or groups in positions of leaoership to
motivate populations to commit genocioe or other atrocities ,:qq:,, then archae-
ology must be consioereo a potential contributing factor in such political systems.
Archaeological research in contemporary contexts is in fact explicitly referreo to as
cultural capital, a source to be mineo for useful matter, much as natural re-
sources are ,Hamilakis ano Yalouri :qq6,. The terms heritage management
,Britain, ano cultural resource management ,Uniteo States,, both useo to oescribe
archaeological research, especially government-funoeo research, illustrate this point
,Arnolo :qqq::,. In the oecaoes since :q, the cultural capital representeo by the
oeep past quarry of archaeological research has become heavily contesteo ter-
ritory, without however being accompanieo by the oevelopment of a clear set of
ethical or programmatic policies within the oiscipline to cope with the potential for
overt exploitation. Organizations such as ROFA ,the Register of Frofessional Ar-
chaeologists, in the Uniteo States, or the Council of British Archaeology, have not
as yet succeeoeo in raising the consciousness of practicing archaeologists in those
countries to the level requireo if abuse of research results is to be avoioeo. As Hirsch
points out, |If| the connection between memory ano politics is not clarieo, the
past may be ignoreo, reconstructeo or manipulateo, employeo as a mythological
justication for the present ,:qq: :o,.
On the other hano, the spate of recent publications on the archaeology of na-
tionalism ano ethnicity illustrates a oawning awareness of the signicance of ar-
chaeological research to the ioeological unoerpinnings of political systems ,Olivier
:qqq, Legenore :qqq, Halle ano Schmiot :qqq, Demoule :qqq, Jones :qq, Atkin-
son, Banks ano OSullivan :qq6, Kohl ano Iawcett :qq, Ligi :qq, Eowaros :qq:,
:qqq,. To what extent oo material culture remains map people, ano what are the
implications of this operating assumption for archaeology ano for the oiscipline of
anthropology more generally? The tenoency to equate material culture assemblages
with cultural suboivisions still oominates the elo of archaeology ,Wells :qq8, among
others,, a theoretical oilemma that oeserves closer attention. Archaeologists have
traoitionally claimeo that ethnicity can be recognizeo in archaeological assemblages.
Reouceo to a simplistic formula, pots ~ people ,Chiloe :q.q:vi,.
1
As a result of this
assumption, archaeology acquires political signicance. In other woros, the way eth-
nicity is ioentieo in the archaeological recoro ano the way archaeology informs eth-
nicity in contemporary cultures must be seen as two sioes of the same coin.
British archaeologist Stephen Shennan oenes the term ethnicity very generally
as self-conscious ioentication with a particular social group ,:q8q:6,. A more re-
cent oenition by South African archaeologist Martin Hall oenes it as an his-
torically valioateo continuity of ioentity ,:qq::6,. As with most oenitions, these
raise more questions than they answer. What is meant by self-conscious or his-
torically valioateo? How is a social group or an ioentity oeneo, ano by
whom? Sian Jones in her recent treatment of the topic of the archaeology of eth-
nicity ,:qq, argues that not enough attention is paio by archaeologists to oistin-
guishing between the emic vs. etic classication of ethnic groupsself-ioentieo
ethnicity vs. that assigneo by others. Her criticism is part of a growing recognition
of the complexity ano context-oepenoent uioity of the term ethnicity, which
archaeologists have so long treateo as normative ano immutable ,Graves-Brown,
Jones, ano Gamble :qq6,.
rssrx+i\rizixo nirrrnrxcr
Fart of the problem is the mutability of the term ethnicity itself, which is useo
expeoiently in mooern oiscourse. It can be equateo with religious belief, race, lan-
guage, or cultural continuity within a specic location ,Arnolo :qq8/qq, :qqq,. An-
other term that neeos to be oeneo is nation. I am using the term in its most gen-
eral sense: a group of people who feel themselves to be a community bouno by
ties of history, culture, ano common ancestry. Is nationalism possible without no-
tions of ethnicity? Is nationalism the inevitable result of the creation of ethnic
ioentity in the postinoustrial state? How oo nationalist agenoas aect archaeolog-
ical interpretation, ano how ooes archaeological evioence aect nationalist agen-
oas, ano in some cases, the genocioal expression of those agenoas?
ARCHAEOLOGY AND GERMAN NATIONAL SOCIALISM
A particularly egregious, ano therefore informative, example of the manipulation
of the oeep archaeological past for political, ano ultimately genocioal, purposes
is prehistoric German archaeology unoer the National Socialists. I have been oo-
ing research for some time now on the role playeo by archaeology in the creation
of nationalist ano ethnic ioentity in the German nation-state ,Arnolo :qqo, :qq.,
:qq8/qq, :qqq, Arnolo ano Hassmann :qq,, ano I will further oevelop some of
those ioeas in this chapter.
Michael Ignatie ,:qq, has oescribeo nationalism as an emotional mix of
blooo ano belonging, ano certainly it was blooo, or race, that oetermineo be-
longing in the German nation-state in the nineteenth century ano particularly af-
ter :q.
2
Language was a seconoary, though important, oening characteristic
,Kellas :qq:::,, but the ioea that race was what oistinguisheo Germans from all
other human groups hao several ramications. Unlike other oening ethnic char-
acteristics, race was assumeo by nationalists to be unaecteo by cultural changes
over time, which meant that Germans in :q coulo be consioereo part of an
ethnic continuum in northern Europe going back as far as the Upper Faleolithic
,that is, the rst appearance of anatomically mooern humans in the European ar-
chaeological recoro,. Race as oeneo by German National Socialism was what
qualieo one to be a member of the Germanic community. It was more impor-
tant than religion, language, or place of birth. It was, in fact, the basis for the imag-
ineo community that was the German Reich. In the nineteenth ano early twen-
tieth centuries, Germany was wherever Germans were or coulo be shown to have
been. Germans establisheo territory by occupying it ano leaving a oistinctive ma-
terial recoro of their presence. Once occupieo, the territory coulo be reclaimeo,
which was why the ioentication of Germanic material culture in the archaeo-
logical recoro of eastern ano northern Europe came to have such political signi-
cance for German territorial expansion unoer the National Socialists. Ernest Re-
nans prophetic :88. essay oecrieo this conation of race ano nation by German
nationalists:
ts+irvixo orxocinr ,
The Germanic family . . . has the right to reassemble the scattereo limbs of the Ger-
manic oroer, even when those limbs are not asking to be joineo together again. The
right of the Germanic oroer over such-ano-such a province is stronger than the right
of the inhabitants of that province over themselves. There is thus createo a kino of
primoroial right analogous to the oivine right of kings, an ethnographic principle is
substituteo for a national one. This is a very grave error, which, if it were to become
oominant, woulo oestroy European civilization. The primoroial right of races is as
narrow ano as perilous for genuine progress as the national principle is just ano le-
gitimate. ,:qqo::,
The origin myth of the German people that oevelopeo between :8: ano :q:8
laio the founoations for the abuse of archaeological research in the Thiro Reich,
while also provioing a justication for genocioe. Hirsch has argueo that origin myths
frequently involve the ioentication of groups of people who are oeneo as being
outsioe the universe of obligation that oetermines behavior towaro members of
the in-group ,:qq:qq,. Eoucational texts, lms, ano archaeological publications
for popular auoiences proouceo between :q ano :q represent the origins of the
German people as beginning with a form of ethnoparthenogenesis in northern Eu-
rope in the Faleolithic ,Iigure .:, Strobel :q,. How these populations of anatom-
ically mooern humans got to Europe in the rst place is shrouoeo in obscurity in
most of these texts, since an eastern or African origin was inconsistent with the
notion of a unique ano superior Germanic gene pool. The reoening in :q of
all post-Faleolithic cultural phases ,Mesolithic, Neolithic, Bronze ano Iron Ages, as
permutations of an isolateo ano pure Germanic cultural oevelopment ,Arnolo
:qqo, was more than a semantic makeover. It exemplies the way archaeology was
expecteo to serve as hanomaioen to the ioeology of genocioe in Nazi Germany.
The Nazi cultural phases were renameo as follows:
Fre-Germanic Faleolithicooo B.C.
Froto-Germanic ooo.ooo B.C.
Early Germanic .ooooo B.C.
Olo Germanic oo B.C.o B.C.
High Germanic oA.D. oo
Late Germanic ooA.D. 8oo
Fost-Germanic 8oopresent ,Dinstahl :q6,
Each of these time perioos has a counterpart in the evolutionary oiagram in Iigure
.:, which was publisheo in a school textbook in :q with the stirring title Un-
seres Volkes Ursprung: ooo Jahre Noroisch-Germanische Kulturentwicklung
,The Origins of Our Feople: ooo Years of Noroic-Germanic Cultural Evolution,
,Strobel :q,. The oiagram was intenoeo to link German chiloren in their :q
classrooms to the unbroken chain of Germanic peoples, protagonists in the lat-
est chapter of a cycle of repeateo testing, representeo by genetic ano cultural crises
ano eventual triumph in the twentieth century ,the Reawakening/Self-awakening
8 rssrx+i\rizixo nirrrnrxcr
Iigure .:. A Representative Blueprint of the National Socialist Origin Myth.
Frehistoric ano historic perioos are useo in this ontogeny of the Germanic people:
Time of Becoming, Time of Maturation, Time of Struggle, Time of Suering/Testing,
Time of Self-Awakening ,Strobel :q,.
at the very bottom of the oiagram,. In eect, the oiagram is a simplieo blueprint
for the construction of notions of cultural oierence ano genetic superiority, aimeo
at the impressionable minos of schoolchiloren.
The Froto-Germanic perioo of National Socialist archaeologists is repre-
senteo by the 1ctocctt ,Time of Becoming, phase in Strobels oiagram. The ge-
ographically oesignateo racial core of the German people at this time is rep-
resenteo by the mioole column, entitleo ^otoocotclloro, the home of the
^ototcl-Fltclc Utcoll ,Noroic-Fhalian Ur-Feoples,. Accoroing to Strobels blue-
print, some of these pure Noroic people migrateo out of their northern Eu-
ropean homelano into regions to the south ano east ouring what he calls the
Inoo-Germanic Lano-Taking. The rest remaineo in the northern core, where
they presumably kept the home res burning pure through the centuries that
followeo. Threats to racial homogeneity ano Noroic cultural oominance are
associateo throughout the oiagram with the south ano east, whence are founo
Arocttotgc Vollct ,literally Other-racial, that is, non-Noroic Feoples,. So-calleo
Mtclcollct ,literally mixeo peoples, incluoe the Celts ano the Northern Illyri-
ans. Signicantly, most of the arrows that Strobel uses to illustrate migration ra-
oiate out of the Noroic-Germanic core rather than into it, the rst incursion is
representeo by the Romans arouno the time of the birth of Christ. Not coinci-
oentally, the Roman conquest also marks the appearance of the rst historical
recoros in northern Europe, less easily manipulateo than the archaeological
recoro of prehistoric timeshence the rst inoication in the oiagram of outsioe
inuence within the Germanic core. This unioirectional representation of cul-
tural ano genetic inuences on the evolution of the Germanic people appears
repeateoly in German archaeological publications of the :qos ano :qos. A par-
ticularly gooo example, applieo to the penultimate symbol of German National
Socialism, is Jorg Lechlers :q oiagram ,Iigure .., purporting to show the ori-
gins ano oistribution of the swastika ,Lechler :q,.
The perioo oesignateo as High Germanic represents what archaeologists to-
oay woulo call the late Iron Age, when Germanic-speaking peoples are rst oocu-
menteo historically as well as archaeologically within ano outsioe the bounoaries
of the Roman empire in west-central Europe. This corresponos to the perioo oes-
ignateo as the Iompfctt ,Time of Struggle, in Iigure .:. The four preceoing cul-
tural phases are neither linguistically nor culturally ioentiable as Germanic
but are oeneo as Celtic ,early Bronze Age through the Roman perioo, or pre-
Celtic, Inoo-European-speaking peoples ,Mesolithic through the late Neolithic,
by both linguists ano archaeologists tooay ,Zvelebil :qq6,.
The year A.D. 8oo was chosen by National Socialist archaeologists ,ano by Stro-
bel, as the oivision between the supposeoly uncompromiseo cultural ano biologi-
cal oevelopment of the German people ,apart from the Roman inuence, ano the
Fost-Germanic perioo because it markeo a historical event that hao symbolic as
well as political signicance for National Socialist ioeologues: in that year Charles
the Great, king of the Iranks, was crowneo in Aachen by Fope Leo III ano became
.oo rssrx+i\rizixo nirrrnrxcr
the founoer of the Holy Roman Empire. He was frequently vilieo by the National
Socialists for his campaigns against the tribes in northern Germany, which earneo
him the sobriquet Carl the Saxon Slaughterer. As Charlemagne, he was a potent
national symbol for the Irench, yet another reason for his oisapprobation by the
Nazi Farty. In Iigure .:, the perioo beginning with Charlemagnes crowning as
Holy Roman Emperor is oesignateo by the entries Ftrltclc Eto/ctorg ,Irankish
Conquest, ano U/ctftcmoorg ,Ioreign Inltration,. The link between non-Noroic
political oomination ano genetic aoulteration is maoe quite explicit here.
All of these cultural phases witnesseo the movement of peoples into ano out of
west-central Europe, neither the linguistic nor the archaeological recoros show any
evioence of Germanic peoples until the eno of the last of these cultural phases,
the late Iron Age. The renaming of these cultural phases by National Socialist pre-
historians then was ioeologically ano politically signicant. The oenial of cultural or
genetic change is an example of what has been calleo pseuoo- or social specia-
tion ,Erikson :qq6:,. This is one of the preconoitions of genocioe, as well as other
forms of intraspecies violence. In the woros of Kai Erikson: At its worst . . . social
speciation is a process by which one people manages to neutralize the humanity of
another to such an extent that the inhibitions which normally prevent creatures of
the same species from killing one another wantonly are relaxeo ,:qq6:,. The Ger-
ts+irvixo orxocinr .o.
Iigure ... Diagram Showing the Origins ano Diusion of the Swastika as a Symbol
,after Lechler :q,. The central position of the Germanic core area ano the subsioiary
role of the Meoiterranean worlo are clearly inoicateo here. This relationship is repeateo
in other contexts as well, this is just one example.
man woro Voll, which is so oicult to translate into English, is a linguistic example
of the sense of separateness, both cultural ano biological, that characterizeo belonging
in the German nation-state. It coulo be argueo that this sense of separateness re-
sulting from social speciation is still a oistinguishing characteristic of the German na-
tion tooay, since the preconoition for citizenship continues to be blooo ano not soil
,race rather than geography,.
3
Archaeology helpeo to oraw the bounoaries of the
German nation-state in geographic as well as biological terms by claiming to be able
to oistinguish ethnic groups in the material recoro.
GUSTAI KOSSINNA AND THE
ARCHAEOLOGICAL MAFFING OI ETHNICITY
Gustaf Kossinna, a linguist by training who came late to archaeology, is creoiteo by
most contemporary scholars with oeveloping the concept of oening ethnic bouno-
aries on the basis of material culture patterns in the archaeological recoro. His work
hao consioerable inuence on National Socialist archaeology, ano provioes insight
into the question of how it in turn coulo have helpeo unoerwrite genocioe ,Arnolo
:qqq, Hassmann ano Jantzen :qq, Veit :q8, :q8q, Hagen :q8/86, Smolla
:qq/8o, Klejn :q, Daniel :q6.::6, Eggers :qo, among others,. Kossinnas
methooology oevelopeo within a specic cultural context that emphasizeo the bio-
logical ano cultural uniqueness of the German people. He was not the rst prehis-
torian to incorporate notions of ethnicity ano race into his research, but his char-
acterization of archaeology as a preeminently national oiscipline was new.
Kossinna oeneo his methooology as follows:
Ior all of these sorts of questions prehistoric archaeology seems to me to provioe the
most secure founoation, inoeeo the only oepenoable guioe, because it alone can take
us into times long past about which other oisciplines can provioe only vague impres-
sions ano uncertain conclusions. The key is to ioentify a geographic area which seems
appropriate for the homelano of a particular tribe, people, or social groupfor ex-
ample, that of the original Inoogermanic people. After that it is just a matter of get-
ting the culture history of that group out of the grouno or, if that has been oone al-
reaoy, to reconstruct it from existing excavateo material. ,Kossinna :q.o::,
Kossinna explicitly equateo ceramic traoitions ano ethnic groups, since he believeo
that at least until the invention of the potters wheel pottery was most often the re-
sult of autochthonous oevelopment rather than traoe or oiusion. The so-calleo
Fommeranian face urns, for example, which Kossinna assigneo to a Germanic eth-
nic traoition, were the basis of his argument for returning territory to Germany
ceoeo to Folano in :q:8. Inoeeo, since :qqo archaeologists on both sioes of that bor-
oer have taken up the olo ght using the same weapons Kossinna forgeo in the years
just after Worlo War I, something that shoulo perhaps be grounos for concern.
National Socialist manipulation of migration theory, one of the elements of
Kossinnas work, in the stuoy of cultural evolution is relevant here as well ,Anthony
.o: rssrx+i\rizixo nirrrnrxcr
:qq:qoq6,. This ties in with party attituoes towaro the Meoiterranean cultures
of Greece ano Rome, which were ambivalent to say the least. Alexanoer von Hum-
bolot exemplies the pre-:q hellenophilic perspective: Knowleoge of the
Greeks is not merely pleasant, useful, or necessary to usno, tr tlc Gtccl olorc we
no the ioeal of that which we shoulo like to be ano proouce ,quoteo in Morris
:qq::8,. The National Socialists rejecteo the Meoiterranean worlo as a major in-
uence on Germanic culture. Insteao, party ioeologues proposeo that Classical
Greek civilization was really the proouct of southeastwaro migration of peoples
from the northern Germanic heartlano, where the Noroic stock remaineo pure
,Iigure ..,. Everything that was lauoable, aomirable, ano positive about Greek or
Roman civilization was the result of Noroic inuence, everything that was repre-
hensible, oegenerate, ano negative was the result of native, non-Noroic oilution of
the original, superior racial stock. This preserveo the olo narrative structure but re-
verseo the oirection of cultural inuence ,see Marchano :qq6 for a more in-oepth
oiscussion,. Allieo to the north-south migration concept was the total oenial of out-
sioe inuence on German cultural evolution ano an emphasis on autochthonous
oevelopment. This manifesteo itself institutionally in witch hunts against Romltrgc,
archaeologists primarily concerneo with the stuoy of Greek or Roman civilization
,Arnolo :qqo, Bollmus :qo, Kater :q,.
THE MIRAGE OI THE SUFERIOR NORTH
Inevitably ano ironically, in creating this myth of a northern origin for the civiliza-
tions of the Meoiterranean ,Hermano :qq.::q6,, National Socialist researchers hao
to lean heavily on written sources from that region. A gooo example is the Roman
writer Tacitus. His account of the German people has been calleo the birth certi-
cate of the German race ,Schama :qq:6,, ano National Socialist school text-
books referreo to it as the Olo Testament of the German people ,Ocklitz :q,. What
was it about Tacituss text that maoe it so important for the National Socialist meta-
narrative? Among other things, it supporteo the ioea of cultural ano racial partheno-
genesis, so attractive to National Socialist ioeologues. Tacitus oescribeo Tuisto, the
primal oeity of the German people, as literally issuing from the soil, giving birth to
Mannus, the rst man, who in turn hao three sons. ,The total absence of women,
even in their ocially sanctioneo role as hero-makers, is notable here., Each of
these sons was the ancestral father of a German tribe. Beyono all other people,
Tacitus seemeo to be saying, the Germans were true inoigenes, sprung from the
black earth of their native lano ,Schama :qq:6,.
Farty archaeologists between :q ano :q supporteo the ioea that the Ger-
mans not only gave birth to themselves but also succeeoeo in oeveloping inoe-
penoently all the major technological aovances of civilization, which they shareo
with all other, less fortunate European peoples through migration from their north-
ern homelano. Another trope that the National Socialist ioeologues looteo from
Tacitus ,oeriveo from Charles Darwin ano ltereo through Ernst Haeckel, was his
ts+irvixo orxocinr .o
theory of social geography as the reason for the tempereo haroiness of the Ger-
manic people, aoapteo to an environment at once cruel ano ennobling. The Ior-
est Frimeval as the testing grouno for the archetypal German warrior-hero is also
reecteo in the fairy tales of the Brothers Grimm, where the supernaturally gifteo
,reao: biologically superior, protagonist must pass through ano be testeo by the for-
est to achieve transformation ano emerge victorious. The following quotation from
Hitlers Mctr Iompf makes it clear that it is the innate ,that is, racial, qualities of the
German people that allow them to emerge unscatheo from this testing ,an exam-
ple of noumenal racism, where physical traits ano customs are the expressions of
some internal occult quality,:
The scanty fertility of a living space may instigate one race towaros the highest
achievements, while with another race this may only become the cause for the most
oire poverty. . . . The inner oisposition of the peoples is always oecisive for the way in
which outwaro inuences work themselves out. What leaos one people to starvation,
trains the other for haro work. ,:qq:q6,
The east ano south were to be vieweo as recipients, but not oonors, of superior cul-
ture ano technology. If the hero, the German people, hao an eastern origin, then
this argument was not tenable. School texts ano other propaganoa literature publisheo
in the :qos reouceo the formula to three main points: ,a, The Germans are not bar-
barians, but rather are the carriers of a superior, inoigenous culture, ,b, German his-
tory begins not with Charlemagne ,Carl the Saxon Slaughterer, but with the
Neolithic megalithic tombs of northern Europe, ,c, the political history of Europe
,incluoing Classical Greek civilization, is unthinkable without the north ano without
the German people ,see Dinstuhl :q6, Vogel :qq, Ruoe :q, among others,.
Strobels school text is particularly instructive, because his heaoings, subheao-
ings, ano highlighteo passages oemonstrate the exploitative nature of the relation-
ship between National Socialist propaganoa ano prehistoric German archaeol-
ogy. What follows is a sample: German Frehistory, a Source of Strength for Our
Feople, followeo by a reference to the fact that Mussolini consciously built the new
Italy on the founoations of ancient Rome ,:q:,. The Cultural Hiatus of Charle-
magne Rippeo Our Most Ancient Fast from Us, followeo by a oiatribe against the
forcible replacement of inoigenous Germanic values by those of Rome ,reao:
Meoiterranean/southern,.
Strobel also stresses the fact that the archaeological recoro represents an un-
bribable/uncontaminatable witness to what truly happeneo in the past, ironically
enough ,ibio.: ,, since that was the last thing to concern party ioeologues. Such claims
regaroing the objectivity of archaeological evioence ,the oirt ooesnt lie,, accom-
panieo by suppression or exaggeration of the existing evioence, are often invokeo by
propaganoa texts ouring this perioo. Again, the legitimacy that archaeological evi-
oence lenos to claims maoe in the present is illustrateo by such manipulation.
At the lunatic fringe eno of the spectrum ,mainstream archaeologists referreo
to this group as Gctmoromorcr |Germanomaniacs|,,Arnolo :qqo:o, are ctional
.o rssrx+i\rizixo nirrrnrxcr
accounts like those of Eomuno Kil, whose novels about the rise, fall, ano ultimate
triumphant rebirth of the lost civilization of Atlantis ,supposeoly originating
somewhere in the Arctic Circle, tie ioeas of Germanic racial superiority to pseuoo-
scientic concepts like Hans Horbigers Glotol-Iomogor, ,Glacial Cosmogony,
,Hermano :qq.::qq8,. Such amalgams of ction, mythology, ano selectively cho-
sen archaeological evioence ,archaeologist Hans Reinerth, a high-ranking ocial
in the Rosenberg Oce, was sent to Greece in the :qos to search for evioence of
a Noroic-Germanic invasion of the Meoiterranean in the Neolithic, partly in re-
sponse to Kils notions of a post-Atlantis oiaspora, set the tone for at least some of
the research conoucteo within organizations like Himmlers SS-Ahnenerbe ,An-
cestor Heritage Society, ,Arnolo :qqo,.
The national Socialist archaeo-mythology about Atlantis ano Noroic migrations
south ano east might be oismisseo by some as harmless, if oisturbing, lunacy. The
subtext is anything but harmless, however, ano it oemonstrates how reaoily such
notions of ethnoparthenogenesis can be useo to unoerwrite genocioe. Accoroing
to Kil ano others who exploiteo or supporteo the Atlantis myth, the sons of the
Sun ,reao Asa/Aryans/supermen,, whose superior blooolines guaranteeo their
supremacy over all inferior ,reao non-Aryan, peoples, were repeateoly threat-
eneo by miscegenation in their postcatastrophic wanoerings arouno the globe. Stro-
bels references to Mischvolker in Iigure .:, ano his reference to a Kampfzeit, is
an example of the pervasiveness of this ioea. Kils novels were also avioly reao ano
praiseo by top Nazi ocials, incluoing Hitler ,Hermano :qq.::q,. The eventual
return to the Noroic homelano ,with the Arctic Atlantis no longer habitable, north-
ern Europe became a stano-in, ano periooic recourse to racial hygiene practices
,reao: the genocioal extermination of unoesirable elements in the gene pool, were
necessary elements in the survival ano maintenance of Noroic-Germanic racial
ano cultural supremacy, accoroing to Kil ano his supporters. There are frequent
references to metallurgy in oescriptions of this cultural ano genetic rening
process ,the terms tempering ano steel appear repeateoly |ibio.::q|,, ano the
motifs of the warrior-hero ano the northern Iorest Frimeval as the ultimate test-
ing grouno are interwoven with concepts of purication ano elimination.
The folkloric founoations of National Socialism have been extensively oiscusseo
elsewhere ,ibio., Dow ano Lixfelo :qq, Lixfelo :qq, among others,. A few elements
can be linkeo to archaeological research in instructive ways. The Iorest Frimeval theme
is perhaps one of the most pervasive ,Schama :qq::,. It appears in the short-
liveo National Socialist attempt to create a neo-pagan state religion, centereo on open-
air theaters known as Thing-Statten ,Arnolo :qq., Lurz :q,. These were constructeo
in carefully controlleo wilo settings with archaeological links to the Germanic past,
either real, fabricateo, or enhanceo. Morality plays ano eoucational oramas were
enacteo at these open-air theaters, which incorporateo the National Socialist meta-
narrative in their plot lines: the noble, courageous German warrior-hero, the long-
suering, patient German mother ,she is always a mother, never just a woman,, ano
the evil, cunning Jewish antihero, lockeo in an eternal, three-cornereo struggle.
ts+irvixo orxocinr .o
If National Socialist Germanys origin myth was consciously mooeleo after a
hero tale metanarrative, as I am suggesting here, it also was logically unable to cope
with oefeat. As Gellner has argueo, |T|he Nazi salvation was selective, it was re-
serveo for the strong ano victorious, ano when they lost, there was no logical bolt-
hole ,:qq::,. Frotagonists of hero-tales oont neeo boltholes, because their nar-
ratives have happy enoings by oenition. This may be why oefeat in :q seems to
have been especially traumatic in the oiscipline of prehistoric archaeology, which
has maintaineo a kino of collective amnesia for more than fty years on the sub-
ject of its role in the construction of the National Socialist metanarrative ,Arnolo
:qqo, Arnolo ano Hassmann :qq, but see Halle ano Schmiot :qqq,. Other com-
promiseo acaoemic oisciplines eventually went through a self-critical ano self-
reexive phase, the timing of which varieo oepenoing on the extent of their in-
volvement. The fact that German prehistoric archaeology is only now beginning
to come to terms with its past is, I believe, testimony to its involvement in the con-
struction of the hero-tale that went so horribly wrong, ano the oegree to which it
oweo its existence as a legitimate oiscipline to the National Socialist state.
ARCHAEOLOGY AS THE HANDMAIDEN OI NATIONALISM
The mutability of archaeological approaches to ethnicity ano the construction of
nationalist narrative can be seen in the shifting focus on oierent ethnic groups by
European nations in the twentieth century. Ior example, the Germanic tribes were
manipulateo for the purposes of political propaganoa at least as early as Julius Cae-
sar, who clearly hao ulterior motives for the ethnic oistinctions he maoe between
the barbarian populations on the left ,Celtic, ano right ,Germanic, banks
of the Rhine. Tacituss oepiction of the Germanic character as the polar opposite
of his oissolute ano oebaucheo Roman contemporaries has alreaoy been men-
tioneo. The creation by the National Socialists of the myth of Germanic racial
superiority is a more recent application of the archaeology of ethnicity to a polit-
ical agenoa that incluoeo the systematic extinction of whole segments of the pop-
ulation. George Anoreopoulos argues that the ction of the nation-state often con-
tains a prescription for the cultural oestruction of a people through state policies
of more or less compulsory assimilation ano, at the limit, for genocioe ,:qq:6,.
He cites the example of the Belgian state: Much as the colonial Golo Coast in-
venteo a :ooo-year olo historical peoigree by renaming itself Ghana, Belgian his-
torians seek their roots in Caesars Dc Bcllo Golltco. Never mino that Caesars Bel-
gae hao only the most tenuous connection with tooays Belgians ,ibio.:8,.
Nazi Germany is by no means the only example of the use ano abuse of the
past by genocioal regimes, though it may be one of the most extreme. Another
much-stuoieo example comes from the Uniteo States. In the late eighteenth ano
nineteenth centuries the European population of the Uniteo States was engageo
in oisplacing, physically eliminating, or culturally assimilating inoigenous popula-
.o rssrx+i\rizixo nirrrnrxcr
tions ,McManamon :qqq,. This systematic erasure of peoples ano cultures was
justieo accoroing to the following assumptions about contemporary native groups:
,a, eighteenth- ano nineteenth-century Inoian populations were not seen builoing
or using the mouno complexes of Ohio or the Mississippi Valley, ano supposeoly
hao no knowleoge of who hao built them, ,b, they were thought to be too primi-
tive to have constructeo anything on the scale of structures such as Monks Mouno
at the Mississippian site of Cahokia in Illinois, which was over a hunoreo feet high
with a footprint close to that of the Great Fyramio at Giza, ,c, tablets with writ-
ing purporteoly founo in some of the mounos were interpreteo as having an Olo
Worlo origin ,suggestions for these pre-Columbian travelers rangeo from wanoer-
ing Egyptians to oisorienteo Welshmen,, ano ,o, the mounobuiloers were obviously
much oloer than any contemporary Inoian group, baseo on what later turneo out
to be erroneous tree-ring oating techniques applieo to some of the mounos.
There were some early challenges to the view that contemporary Inoian cul-
tures coulo not have been associateo with the mounobuiloing cultures. Thomas
Jeerson is one of the best known of those early skeptics. He baseo his interpreta-
tion on mounos he excavateo on his own property rather than on speculative ano
racist assumptions of the cultural sophistication of contemporary Inoian groups.
Signicantly, however, it was not until the eno of the century, when Inoian resis-
tance to colonial aovances ano appropriations was beginning to wane, that the
Bureau of American Ethnology in Washington hireo an entomologist from Illi-
nois by the name of Cyrus Thomas to systematically investigate the origins of the
mounos. In his multivolume report submitteo to the bureau in :8q, Thomas con-
cluoeo that the mounos were not as olo as originally claimeo, there was solio evi-
oence suggesting continuity between contemporary Inoian burial practices ano
those seen in the mounos, ano the oe Soto expeoition in the seventeenth century
hao observeo ano reporteo the construction ano use of such mounos by tribes in
the southeast, many of which hao been oecimateo by oisease ano warfare by the
time the rst colonists arriveo in the area.
Robert Silverberg, in his stuoy of the Mounobuiloer Myth, concluoeo that the
ioea of a vanisheo race of Olo Worlo origin was politically motivateo, in part be-
cause it was comforting to the conquerors ,:q8q:8,. Why comforting? Ken-
neth Ieoer argues more explicitly as follows:
Ferhaps if the Inoians were not the builoers of the mounos ano the bearers of a cul-
ture that impresseo even the rather ethnocentric European colonizers of America, it
maoe wiping out the presumably savage ano primitive natives less troublesome. Ano,
if Europeans coulo further convince themselves that the Inoians were very recent in-
terlopersin fact, the very invaoers who hao savagely oestroyeo the gentle ano civ-
ilizeo Mounobuiloersso much the better. Ano if, nally, it coulo be shown that the
Mounobuiloers were, in actuality, ancient European travelers to the Western Hemi-
sphere, the circle was complete. In oestroying the Inoian people, Europeans in the
:8th ano :qth centuries coulo rationalize that they were . . . merely reclaiming terri-
ts+irvixo orxocinr .o,
tory once helo by ancient Europe. The Mounobuiloer myth was not just the result of
a harmless prank or a confusing hoax. It was part of an attempt to justify the oe-
struction of American Inoian societies. ,:qq6::,
In this particular case archaeology initially unoerwrote but later challengeo the ioe-
ology justifying the extermination of Native Americans on the basis of their sup-
poseo cultural inferiority ano recent arrival in the Americasbut the acknowl-
eogment of native achievement oio not come until the living oescenoants of the
populations to which the mounobuiloing cultures were attributeo hao eectively
been oisenfranchiseo ano no longer poseo a legitimate threat to the colonial regime.
Signicant parallels to the Mounobuiloer myth can be founo in the history of the
archaeological investigation of the ruins known as Great Zimbabwe in what was
formerly the British colony of Rhooesia ,Garlake :q8, Hall :q8, Kuklick :qq:,.
Seeking to legitimate their rule, British settlers ano African nationalists subscribeo to
very oierent accounts of the builoing of the ruins, placing their construction alter-
nately in ancient times ano the relatively recent past, ano ioentifying the builoers
or, at least the architectseither as representatives of some non-African civilization
or oismisseo the possibility that the Shona in the area coulo have built Great Zim-
babwe. ,Kuklick :qq:: :qo,
The list of supposeo non-African builoers or architects proposeo by white re-
searchers, settlers, ano politicians incluoes some of the same peripatetic types citeo
by the Mounobuiloer fantabulists ,minus Vikings ano Welshmen,: Fhoenicians,
Egyptians, the Lost Tribes of Israel, ano so forth. As in the North American case,
the local population was categorizeo as intellectually too oegenerate to have been
able to proouce such sophisticateo structures, later, when an African origin for the
site became the accepteo interpretation, the construction techniques were oescribeo
as primitive, giving with one hano ano taking away with the other, while main-
taining the trope of the inherent inferiority of the local African peoples. A similar
reversal can be founo in North American archaeology post-Cyrus Thomas, where
the emphasis for many years was on the cultural immutability, even stasis, of Na-
tive American peoples ,Trigger :q8ob,. To some extent this notion is still with us
tooay in the form of New Age interpretations of Native culture as closer to Na-
ture because less evolveo. This may currently be intenoeo to be complimentary
but is nevertheless part of the same legacy of oenigration of the colonizeo by the
colonizers that we alreaoy see in Tacitus, whose Gctmorto has been oescribeo by
Schama as a backhanoeo compliment from Barbarism to Civilization ,:qq:6,.
4
In this sense archaeology historically has been in the business of what Alex Hin-
ton calls manufacturing oierence ,:qq8::,, which is the rst step towaro, ano
necessary preconoition of, social speciation ano, unoer certain conoitions, geno-
cioe. As Barry Sautman has pointeo out, |M|yths of oescent oeployeo as an in-
strument in the service of a mooernizing, authoritarian state to articially recon-
struct the ioea of a people are politically perilous. . . . The experiences of the former
.o8 rssrx+i\rizixo nirrrnrxcr
USSR ano Yugoslavia show that making oubious historicizing central to a nation-
builoing project leaos to ethnic outbiooing in which the most virulent ultra-
nationalists prevail ano violence ensues ,:qq:8q,.
The Khmer Rouge regime in Cambooia is another example of genocioe un-
oerwritten by the past. Excavations ano reconstruction by the Irench of parts of
the site of Angkor Wat ,ninth to fourteenth centuries A.D., revealeo that Cambo-
oia hao once been a great ano powerful empire, rich in agricultural resources ano
conquereo territory. Angkor Wat itself became the symbol of this past greatness,
its ve towers have been featureo in stylizeo form on each of Cambooias national
ags since :qo ,Chanoler :qq, Staub :q8q::qq,. Interestingly, much of the rhet-
oric associateo with the Khmer Rouge regime sounos very much like that useo by
the German totalitarian state in the :qos ano :qos, the two regimes even share a
characterization of the Irench as a paramount enemy: The counterpart to the
xenophobia implicit in the targeting of foreigners ano ethnic groups was an ioeal-
ization of Khmer racial purity ano a mission to revive the ancient glory ano honor
of Cambooia ano to ensure the perenniality of the Khmer race ,Anoreopoulos
:qq:.6., quoting Becker :q86:.q,.
The signicance of origin stories in shaping contemporary attituoes is often un-
oerestimateo. As Juoy Leogerwooo correctly notes in a recent paper, Not only oo
we learn from origin stories how we are to behave morally in the present, but the
proper telling of these stories, the proper recitation of texts, can recreate this per-
ception of oroer, of things being as they shoulo bethat is, as they were in the be-
ginning ,n.o.:..,. She refers specically to Cambooia in her oiscussion, elab-
orating on Davio Chanolers work ,:q8.,, which plays on contrasting notions of
oroer ano oisoroer, of forest ano elo, ano postulates that for Khmer in the :q
th
century, just emerging from a time of haroship ano oestruction, an appeal to no-
tions of previous times when hierarchical relationships in society were as they
shoulo be was useo tactically to re-assert oroer in the present ,ibio.:.,.
The Khmer Rouge regime consciously ano expeoiently mooeleo itself on the
peoples who built Angkor Wat. Just as the majority of the population in Angkor in
the thirteenth century were slaves ,baseo on the report of a Chinese observer,
,Staub :q8q::q6,, so Fol Fots regime createo its own slave class, the new people,
many of whom were former elites. Inasmuch as the king in Angkor between the
ninth ano fourteenth centuries was an absolute monarch, with the great temples
testimony to his right to rule, Fol Fot establisheo himself as a peasant leaoer on
the basis of that earlier system: The role of the king in Cambooian society pro-
vioeo a cultural blueprint for absolute authority ano maoe it easier for people to
accept the absolute authority of the Khmer Rouge ,ibio.::q8,. As in the case of
Germany after :q:8, the Khmer Rouge hao a sense of superiority combineo with
unoerlying feelings of inferiority ano vulnerability. This arose from a combination
of long past glory, recent history ano present circumstances ,ibio.::qq,. In Cam-
booia the resioent Chinese ano Vietnamese ,as well as an extensive ancillary list
that incluoeo Muslim Chams, members of the Lon Nol regime, internal traitors,
ts+irvixo orxocinr .o
ano counterrevolutionaries, were constituteo as the Other ano became targets
for extermination unoer the Khmer Rouge regime, whereas in Germany the tar-
gets were Jews, Gypsies, ano other groups singleo out for social speciation. The
anti-intellectual nature of both the German ano Cambooian systems is another
common oenominator that seems to characterize genocioal regimes in other con-
texts as well, incluoing the example from the nineteenth-century Uniteo States ois-
cusseo above.
CONCLUSION
Examples of the symbiosis between archaeological research ano racial nationalism
are much more common than genocioal regimes making use of the past to justify
the extermination of certain groups within a population, but the correlation be-
tween the two is important ano worth oiscussing. Regimes that make reference to
the archaeological past in their nationalist rhetoric are frequently in the prelimi-
nary stages of social speciation, ano whether that process eventually leaos to geno-
cioe is oepenoent on the changing context within which such manipulation of the
past occurs. As Barry Sautman has succinctly put it, |N|ationalism is both polit-
ical ano ethnic because race ano nationalism overlap. In particular, race ano na-
tion are rooteo in common myths about the signicance of common oescent
,:qq:8,. Recently, Uli Linke proouceo an eloquent exegesis on the concepts of
blooo ano nation ano their symbiotic relationship throughout European history
,:qqq,. In a sense, the oeep past in the form of the archaeological recoro represents
the concretization of both concepts, evioence of blooo ano belonging in material
form, ano it is this that gives archaeological research its symbolic ano hence its po-
litical potency.
I have attempteo to show in this oiscussion in what ways archaeology plays a
role in the creation ano maintenance of origin myths ano notions of cultural oif-
ference. I hope I have oemonstrateo that there are enough common oenominators
in the appropriation of archaeology by political regimes to warrant keeping a close
eye on nations exploiting the past in these ways. This incluoes nations like Irance,
in which Celtic heritage ano sites associateo with the Roman-Gallic conicts are ex-
plicitly referenceo by political leaoers ,Dietler :qq,, nations like Israel, where ar-
chaeology has been oescribeo as a national sport in which participants volunteer
to participate in archaeological excavations, make pilgrimages to reconstructeo ar-
chaeological sites, ano visit museums that oisplay archaeological noings, as if
through these activities they ritually arm their roots in the lano ,Zerubavel
:qq:,,
5
ano nations like China, in which racial nationalism is constructeo through
the ocial propagation of myths of origin ano oescent. The former confer oignity
through antiquity to a group ano locate its primal habitat. The latter trace oe-
scent to illustrious forebears ano suggest nobility ano solioarity ,Sautman :qq:8o,.
Japanese scholars recently have maoe a point of the frightening parallels between
the racist rhetoric of Japan in the :qos ano that of China tooay ,ibio.:q:, but for a
..o rssrx+i\rizixo nirrrnrxcr
oiscussion of Japanese nationalism ano archaeology, see Eowaros :qq:, :qqq,. If the
manipulation of the past, incluoing the archaeological past, in the construction of
oierence along racial lines is a sort of canary in a coal mine, a harbinger of geno-
cioal policies, then it seems imperative that anthropologists turn their attention to
the stuoy of political systems in which such manifestations appear.
What ooes the future holo? Is the appropriation of the past as a justication for
authoritarian ano occasionally genocioal regimes inevitable? That seems to oepeno
on a number of variables, but there are some new congurations oeveloping to
counter the continuing paraoe of regimes intent on cannibalizing themselves in the
name of cultural oierence. Ior example, the Celts are currently the ethnic group
that it is most expeoient to claim as national patrimony in Germany, as well as a
number of other western European nations. One can apply Gellners observations
regaroing the connection between emerging states ano a resurgent interest in eth-
nicity to this Celtic renaissance. Whereas in the late nineteenth ano early twen-
tieth centuries the emphasis was on national oierences, now, with the newly emer-
gent European Community, it is on pan-European-ness. The Celts are presenteo
as the ultimate pan-European ethnic group , James :qqq,, stretching from Spain
to Galicia ouring the late Iron Age. In fact, this archaeologically oocumenteo
Celtic cultural uniformity is as much an imagineo community as Tacituss or
Kossinnas constructions, since it is baseo mainly on similarities in material culture.
As examples from ethnographic contexts such as New Guinea have shown ,Terrell
:q86,, ethnicity neeo not map onto material culture, nor necessarily map onto lan-
guage, or religion, or race, or any combination of the above. The question of how
to oene cultures in the material recoro of the past is in neeo of serious re-ex-
amination, not least because of the potential for abuse by political systems. Ar-
chaeologists can no longer aoro to proouce interpretations of the past on the sioe-
lines of history. Whether they are actively involveo in the construction of cultural
oierence or not, inoirectly their research proouces a potentially lethal weapon in
the symbolic arsenal available to political regimes, incluoing those bent on geno-
cioe. This places a tremenoous responsibility on the prooucers of such knowleoge,
a buroen that will only continue to grow as the oemanos placeo on scholars increase
in complexity in the coming oecaoes. Archaeology as a oiscipline, which has tenoeo
to be focuseo inwaro, will neeo to aojust its moous operanoi accoroingly. The re-
cent emergence of the concept of the archaeologist as public intellectual ,Bony-
haoy ano Griths :qq, suggests the oirection that the oiscipline will neeo to take
if it wants to aoopt a proactive stance in the battle over the interpretation ano ex-
ploitation of the archaeological past. At the same time, anthropology as a whole
coulo benet from acknowleoging the actual ano potential contributions of ar-
chaeological research to the increasingly pressing problem of how to recognize ano
take action against inter- ano intragroup violence baseo on the cultural construc-
tion of oierence. I therefore want to thank Alex Hinton for the opportunity to
contribute an archaeological voice to the anthropological analysis of genocioe
this is an enoeavor that can only benet from interoisciplinary cooperation.
ts+irvixo orxocinr ...
NOTES
:. To quote V. Goroon Chiloe, one of the most inuential archaeologists of the twenti-
eth century ,Trigger :q8oa,, who was himself inuenceo by Kossinnas settlement archae-
ological methoo: We no certain types of remains . . . constantly recurring together. Such
a complex of regularly associateo traits we shall term a cultural group or just a culture.
We assume that such a complex is the material expression of what woulo tooay be calleo a
people ,:q.q:vi,.
.. The metaphor of blooo is oiscusseo by Uli Linke in some oetail in her stuoy of race
ano nation in mooern Germany ,Linke :qq:q6:,.
. The Christian Democratic Farty in Germany, for example, propagates the principle
of o orgotrt ,right of the blooo, ano views Germans as a community of oestiny ano an-
cestry ,Ffa :qq6:q, quoteo in Sautman :qq:8:,. This is not a phenomenon unique to the
German nation-state. The nationality laws of the Feoples Republic of China also rely on
the concept of race through the principle of blooo lineage ,xoctorg lo,t ,, as with so-calleo
ethnic Germans, inoiviouals of Chinese oescent not living in China may apply for FRC pass-
ports by virtue of their blooo lineage ,Sautman :qq:8:,.
. Martin Hall makes this relationship between colonialism ano archaeological manipu-
lation of the past explicit: In those countries where the archaeology of the colonizeo is mostly
practiseo by oescenoants of the colonizers, the stuoy of the past must have a political oi-
mension. This has become overt in Australasia, where, as one Aboriginal representative has
put it, the colonizers have trieo to oestroy our culture, you have built your fortunes upon the
lanos ano booies of our people ano now, having saio sorry, want a share in picking out the
bones of what you regaro as a oeao past ,Langforo :q8:., quoteo in Hall :q8:,.
. See Abu el-Haj ,:qq8, for aooitional oiscussion of Israeli archaeology ano nationalism.
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.. rssrx+i\rizixo nirrrnrxcr
..,
Scientic Racism
in Service of the Reich
Gctmor Artltopologtt tr tlc ^ot Eto
Gtctclcr E. Sclot
BACKGROUND
Almost sixty years after the invasion of Folano by the Nazis in Worlo War II, an
olo man stanos shaking by his ooor, afraio to meet the anthropologists who have
come to talk to him. He says he ooes not have anything to tell, he was sick, in the
hospital at the time. Another villager is not hesitant ano tells of the time of the Nazi
occupation of Folano when anthropologists came into the town unoer SS guaro,
gave the townspeople a time to appear at the priests house, ano examineo them
from heao to foot. ,Iew Jews remaineo in the villages by that time, having been
moveo to collection points ano ghettoes., Some were given German passports ano
tolo to appear for inouction ano transport to the Russian Iront. Others were tolo
to appear for oelousing ano assignment to labor battalions in Germany. Others
escapeo to the south ano joineo the resistance, or were shot attempting to oo so.
The few people who can remember this time complete a recoro that at last is be-
ing pieceo together. They are the living memory of a perioo almost forgotten in
anthropologys professional history.
The fact that German ano, to a lesser extent, Austrian anthropologists were in-
volveo in the Holocaust as perpetrators, from its beginning to its conclusion, has
never been fully acknowleogeo nor oiscusseo by American anthropologists.
1
The
role that American funoing playeo in oeveloping the Nazi ioeology of race has also
not been tolo. The information has been available, although not easy to access.
Recoros of these anthropologists theoretical ano empirical stuoies, as well as their
activities as trainers of SS ooctors, members of racial courts, collectors of oata from
concentration camp meoical experiments, ano certiers of racial ioentities have
been cleanseo. Documents that shoulo be available in archival les are missing.
The biographies of many perpetrators incluoe a cover story for the years :q
through :q.
2
The archives of the Rockefeller Iounoation, which supporteo Ger-
man anthropologists in their racial research, are also mysteriously missing impor-
tant research plans ano reports.
Ferhaps the most interesting aspect of all this obscuration is that the perpetra-
tors themselves were careful in how they oescribeo their activities, making the most
obscene appear quite harmless.
3
They rarely stateo explicitly what they were oo-
ing, ano usually useo euphemisms to oescribe what we now know were crimes
against humanity. However, oeoicateo researchers have founo enough corollary
oocumentation to make an airtight case that anthropologists were oeeply enmesheo
in the crimes of the Thiro Reich. This oocumentation is founo in archives in the
Uniteo States ano Europe ano, increasingly, in books about ano compilations of
oocuments from the perioo ,Lifton :q86, Froctor :q88, Klee et al. :qq:, Drechsel
:qq, Aly et al. :qq, Irieolanoer :qq, Klee :qq,.
The arguments against bringing up this oisastrous chapter of the oisciplines his-
tory are strong. Anthropologists have askeo: Why oiscreoit our elo so long after
the oeeos were oone? Why oiscreoit all anthropologists of the era when only a few
were involveo? Why shoulo we give German anthropologists of that perioo so much
attention when American anthropologists never took them seriously anyway?
The answer to these questions is simply that the issues that challengeo the an-
thropologists of the Nazi era were not so oierent from the issues that have chal-
lengeo anthropologists at other times as well. As a oiscipline we have hao a strong
oesire to play a role in the governmental activities of our countries ano to inform
policy makers of our learneo opinions regaroing population groups. Anthropolo-
gists were involveo in the aoministration of Englanos colonies, they have been in-
volveo in the conouct of war ano have been aovisers on racial ano eoucational pol-
icy in the Uniteo States. This involvement has hao both positive ano negative eects
on the people who were subject to the policies that evolveo with anthropological
input. Froblems arise when the oirection a government is taking is in opposition to
the human rights of some of its people or those it has power to commano. Does
the anthropologist then abanoon the oesire to be a player, or ooes he or she aoapt
to the oroer of the oay?
We must remino our critics that one ooes not oiscreoit a oiscipline by looking
closely at the mistakes, or crimes, its theoreticians ano practitioners have commit-
teo, even when they are of the magnituoe of a Holocaust. It is far more oanger-
ous to ignore an infamous perioo ano to learn nothing from it. Denial of unpleas-
ant truths makes it easy to turn complicateo events into myths by placing them in
a simplistic format ,Schat :qq8,. When we oo that, we fail to see the ways by which
people come to follow the roao to genocioe. Farticularly in our own time, follow-
ing the turn of the century, we see no eno to impulses to commit atrocities against
ethnic groups. It is absolutely vital that we begin to look at the ways by which oth-
erwise civilizeo people embrace the roao to genocioe, as Scheper-Hughes ooes in
this book. What roles in society can fan the ames of ethnic violence or, more ap-
propriately, stop the treno? What policies exacerbate or might be eective in restor-
ing values that protect human life? Stuoents in a class I teach on the Holocaust al-
ways ask, Why oio it happen? Why oiont anyone stop it? Their questions are
..8 rssrx+i\rizixo nirrrnrxcr
important. It is important to know why anthropologists became so involveo in Nazi
genocioe ano why no one insioe or outsioe the oiscipline stoppeo them.
Unfortunately, it was not a single branch of European anthropology or only a
few anthropologists who were engageo in creating ano supporting events that were
tieo to the Holocausts horrors. Fhysical anthropologists, eugenicists, ethnographers,
ano social anthropologists were equally busy ouring the rst half of the :qoos in
racial stuoies, in Menoelian genetics, in ethnographic stuoies of prisoners of war,
ano in sorting groups of people by psychological ano physical characteristics. In
these ano in so many oierent ways they helpeo to oetermine the outcomes of the
lives of their subjects.
German anthropology in this time perioo was often an interoisciplinary stuoy
ano practice. It was common for meoical ooctors, biologists, or geneticists to take
a secono practical ooctoral oegree in anthropology. It was believeo that anthro-
pology coulo assist in making a better society by provioing the theoretical basis for
improving the biological structure of the population ano the practical means of
sorting those people into oesirable ano unoesirable groups, using ethnographic as
well as physical anthropological techniques.
Even before Hitler, many people arouno the worlo believeo that it might be pos-
sible to gain control over many social problems by social ano biological engi-
neering. In the :q.os, many were greatly concerneo with the criminality that ac-
companieo urbanization, inoustrialization, ano population movements, mental
illness, for which there were no eective treatments or cures, ano mental retaroa-
tion ,Kuhl :qq,. Fersons who were physically or mentally ill were left to inoivio-
ual or family care, with only the most oismal warehousing of patients the alterna-
tive to home care. The ioea that a society in the next generation coulo be rio of the
buroen of this carethrough the sterilization of a variety of persons who oio not
t, or were not self-sucient or proouctivewas wioely accepteo. Sterilization
of the mentally ill ano hanoicappeo, as well as criminals, was legal in many states
in America before Hitler came to power in Germany ,ibio., These U.S. laws pro-
vioeo the justication ano grounowork for some of his earliest oecrees.
Anthropologists were able to introouce the concept of race to this bevy of con-
cerns about builoing a healthy ano masterful society. The concept of race came to
mean to German anthropologists of the early :qoos oistinct groups of people who,
although they hao mingleo throughout the ages, remaineo ioentiable. Ioeas about
kinship, therefore, were mixeo with ioeas of race. When anthropologists ano other
professionals combineo these ioeas with Menoelian ioeas of hereoity, they coulo
oevelop a wioe range of research aimeo at riooing society of life unworthy of life.
Thus the rst steps of genocioe in the Nazi era were sterilization ano eventual
killing of the physically ano mentally ill ano those with hanoicaps, a practice re-
ferreo to as euthanasia ,Irieolanoer :qq, Lifton ano Markusen :qqo,. When com-
bineo with racial beliefs, it was not oicult to exteno this killing to supposeo racial
groups in oroer to cleanse the fatherlano ,Aly :qq,.
scirx+iric n\cisx ix +nr nricn ..
At rst interesteo in oescriptive analyses of varieties of peoples arouno the worlo,
anthropologists then turneo to oeveloping hierarchies of value ano assigning them
to their racial categories. It was a small step for anthropologists to chart the races
of the worlo, rank them in some way, ano assign capabilities to each. Those imag-
ineo capabilities coulo then match the neeos of the Reich, ano population groups
coulo be moveo, placeo, positioneo, or eliminateo to serve the neeos of the mas-
ter race, those of German ancestry.
Ioeas of race were almost immeoiately part of this kino of social engineer-
ing. If one coulo visualize a country in which the population became uniform in
its excellent health, tness, ano mental capacity, then why not also uniform in its
racial characteristics, which inoeeo were thought to be equateo with such qual-
ities? The ioea of uniform racial ioentity became more important as the public
embraceo a hierarchical theory of valueo racial groupings, as oio the ioea of a
uniform physical ano mental type that woulo represent the German race.
Research regaroing the concept of race was oevelopeo initially by German an-
thropologists at the Kaiser Wilhelm Institut fur Anthropologie ,KWIA,, a part of the
larger Kaiser Wilhelm Institut ,KWI,. This entity coulo be likeneo to a national acao-
emy of science with the broao goal of aovancing knowleoge ano intellectual achieve-
ment. At rst supporteo in part by the Rockefeller Iounoation, the programs of the
KWIA laio the grounowork for future oisregaro of human subjects ano, ultimately,
the genocioe of unwanteo ,orct.rclt, groups in Germany ano the occupieo lanos.
THE ROCKEIELLER IOUNDATION AND THE DEVELOFMENT
OI THE KAISER WILHELM INSTITUT IUR ANTHROFOLOGIE
The KWI was founoeo on October :o, :q:o, on the oay of Berlin Universitys cen-
tennial, unoer the premise that it woulo gain international recognition ano coop-
eration in its research ventures. ,In :q: Albert Einstein became the oirector of
the KWI Institute of Fhysics, he won the Nobel Frize in :q.:, bringing honor to
the Berlin complex., The Institute of Anthropology, Human Hereoity, ano Genetics
was founoeo in :q., one of the later institutes in the KWI. Shortly before Hitler
assumeo power in :q, the KWI hao thirty-one institutes oivioeo into three
classes: I. Institutes of chemistry, physics, technology, II. Institutes of biology, zo-
ology ano anthropology, III. Institutes of letters ano art.
4
In a voice of optimism,
the oirector of the Kaiser Wilhelm Gesellschaft, a major funoing source for the
institute, stateo:
5
I have learneo here that the Americans are just as eager as the European scientists to
oo all in their power towaros cultivating ano furthering the cause of international sci-
entic oevelopment by the cooperation of the scholars of the worlo. They have re-
alizeo the importance of such an institution oeoicateo to the interests of every nation
ano its tremenoous value in promoting international peace ano gooowill. We sincerely
hope this house will serve as a span to brioge oceans ano to bring the nations of the
worlo more closely together. ,op. cit.:6,
.:o rssrx+i\rizixo nirrrnrxcr
Ano inoeeo, the Americans, namely the Rockefeller Iounoation, provioeo
money for many of the institutes, built facilities for them, bought lano for them,
ano, in general, were enthusiastic supporters of the KWI until war broke out in
:qq.
6
The Section on Anthropology, Human Hereoity, ano Genetics hao hao an
early interest in race. In particular, it wanteo to map the racial characteristics
of the German nation. In :q.q the Rockefeller Iounoation gave the Notge-
sellschaft fur Deutsche Wissenschaft, a kino of governmental funoing agency for
science, $:.,ooo oeoicateo to the Kaiser Wilhelm Institut fur Anthropologie. It
was to be useo over a ve-year perioo for the purpose of mapping the racial char-
acteristics of the German nation.
7
Unoer the oirection of Eugen Iischer, the in-
stitutes oirector, anthropologists went from community to community measur-
ing their subjects ano ooing ethnographic inquiries, but they founo great
resistance among the population to this probing ano prying ,Loesch :qq,. The
resistance of the population was so great that even with Rockefeller funoing
progress was oicult.
By the time Hitler was electeo chancellor of Germany in :q, the Kaiser Wil-
helm Institut fur Anthropologie was a major research center in Germany. It hao a
reouceo buoget, because of the worlo nancial crisis, of :,.oo Reich Marks ,RMs,,
of which :.,.: RM came from the Rockefeller Iounoation.
8
By :q, the buoget
of the Institute for Anthropology, Human Hereoity, ano Genetics hao risen to
:o,ooo RM, in large part because of the critical role it was playing in racial pol-
icy ,Froctor :qq8,. Eugon Iischer hao a powerful position as heao of the institute
ano also rector of the University of Berlin.
Internal oocuments at the Rockefeller Iounoation inoicate that ocials there
watcheo the oevelopment of the Nazi regime but were not particularly concerneo
about supporting a research entity that hao become closely aligneo, because of
funoing ano policy, with the new government. Corresponoence that remains shows
that ocials were aware of the anti-Semitic policies that hao come into force, but
year by year the grants continueo.
9
Certainly many German anthropologists, although interesteo in race, were at
rst not in agreement with the racial ooctrines that the Nazis espouseo. The
KWI, not a government agency but a recipient of government funoing, was obligeo
to rio itself of Jewish workers ano politically left-leaning personnel. The anthro-
pologists at the KWI immeoiately set about cleansing their institute of these col-
leagues. Max Flanck, oirector of the KWI throughout the Nazi era, went to see
Hitler to tell him that the removal of Jewish scientists from the KWI woulo mean
far fewer Nobel prizes in the future ,Stern :qqq,. ,Albert Einstein hao left Germany
in :q.., This oio not impress Hitler, who was oetermineo that Germany woulo
thrive without Jews. Nor oio it oeter Flanck from continuing his work while com-
plying with every government regulation.
10
Eugen Iischer, who at rst was not so sure about the Nazi ioea of a pure Ger-
man race,
11
soon was able to tell a learneo auoience:
scirx+iric n\cisx ix +nr nricn .:.
We neeoI repeat againan Et/pcgc |literally, a fostering of hereoity|, in large part
conscious ano goal oirecteo. Erbpege is a better woro for genetics than racial hygiene,
it promotes those who are healthy in mino ano booy, those with a Germanic heritage,
those who carry our way of life. Only that is a population policy! If nally such is en-
acteo, it is not too late to save our people, our German people . . . to |bring them to|
the fortieo National-Socialist State, a State that we all want, that is supporteo by our
sense of outy, baseo on an ethical unoerstanoing of the future of our people.
12
The monographs from the stuoy of race in Germany were in the miost of being
publisheo when Hitler took power. The arrangement hao been for the governments
scientic funoing agency, the Notgesellschaft fur Deutsche Wissenschaft, to pay for
the printing. Given the worlo economic oepression in the late :q.os ano the cuts in
general funoing, this cost was oicult to bear. The Rockefeller Iounoation was askeo
to assume the costs. One can surmise what reasons the Rockefeller Iounoation might
have hao to hesitate giving money to the Institute for Anthropology for racial stuo-
ies, but the written recoro ooes not reveal the internal oiscussions on this matter.
Insteao, a note is maoe that :q money earmarkeo for the institute is given to the
Notgesellschaft with the unoerstanoing that it will be useo for this purpose.
13
The
monographs were releaseo unoer the title Deutsche Rassenkunoe, or German
Racial Stuoies. In its internal oocuments, the Rockefeller sta refers to the mono-
graphs as parts of the Stuoy of the German Feople.
The neeo for money within the Institute for Anthropology was partially allevi-
ateo by the source of funoing that came from the Department of the Interior ,In-
nenministerium,. With the onset of Hitlers racial policies, the neeo for certica-
tion of Germanness was immeoiate, even within the KWI itself. Employees hao
to prove that they hao no Jewish blooo ano were pure Germans in oroer to
continue in their jobs. Kinship formeo the basis of oetermining who was Jewish
ano who was not. Long before the Reich Citizenship Law was enacteo in Novem-
ber :q, spelling out the oenition of a Jew became critical to the enforcement of
the new German government policy. A Jew was oeneo unoer the law of Novem-
ber :q as a person:
s v\kr
ing about the German nation takes the form of origins, ancestries, ano racial lines,
which are rototolttrg images: a genealogical form of thought.
Much recent work in anthropology ano relateo elos has focuseo on the processes
whereby such mythographies of origin ano ancestry are constructeo ano maintaineo
by states or national elites ,Anoerson :q8, Hobsbawm ano Ranger :q8, Linke
:qqa,. Here I focus on powerful metaphoric practices in German public life ano
examine how meoia oiscourse, booy practice, ano political language are oeployeo
both to enoure ano act upon the volatile bounoary conoitions of nationhooo in
postwar Germany. My emphasis is on the location of violent history in German
political memory, ano I inquire how booies, as racial constructs ano potential sites
of oomination, are mobilizeo in the public oiscourse of commemoration ano for-
getting. My aim is to sheo light on the evasions of collective memory in postwar West
Germany, where the feminizeo booy of the outsioer ,foreigner, refugee, other, has
been reclaimeo as a signier of race ano contagion, where violence oenes a new
corporal topography, linkeo to the muroerous elimination of refugees ano immi-
grants, ano where notions of racial alterity ano genoereo oierence are publicly con-
structeo through iconographic images of blooo ano liquioation.
In earlier works ,Linke :qq, :qqb, :qqqa,, I traceo the ,trans,formation of these
conceptual mooels from the turn of the century through the postunication era,
thus illuminating the persistence of German ioeas about racial purity ano con-
tamination. I proposeo that mooern forms of violence are engenoereo through
regimes of representation that are to some extent mimetic, a source of self-for-
mation, both within the historical unconscious ano the fabric of the social worlo
,oe Lauretis :q8q, Ieloman :qq,. I began by orawing attention to the racist bio-
meoical visions of blooo that emergeo unoer fascism. The representational vio-
lence of such blooo imagery, which was rmly implanteo in the popular imagina-
tion through political propaganoa, emergeo as a preluoe to racial liquioation.
Genealogies of blooo were meoicalizeo, conceiveo as sources of contamination
that neeoeo to be expungeo through violent bloooletting. Documenting cultural
continuities after :q, I exploreo the implications of a racialist politics of blooo
for the German nation-builoing process in the postwar perioo. I analyzeo more
closely the linkages of blooo to genoereo forms of violence, focusing on the cen-
tral role of masculinity ano militarism for a German nationalist imaginary. Im-
ages of blooo, women, ano contagion became fuseo in fascist visions of a bio-or-
ganic unity of German nationhooo. By exploring the metaphoric extensions of
such a symbolics of blooo in postwar German culture, I attempteo to show how
easily a misogynist militarism was recongureo to ,re,proouce a violent booy politic
that legitimateo the brutalization of immigrants ano refugees ,Linke :qqb, :qqqa,.
Throughout my work, I emphasizeo the interplay of race ano genoer against the
backgrouno of meoical mooels, oocumenting how fears of natural oisasters
,women, Jews, refugees, ano meoical pathologies such as oirt ano infectionboo-
ily infestationswere continuously recycleo to reinforce a racialist postmooern. Al-
though in postwar West Germany, such corporeal lanoscapes are forgeo in the
+nr noroc\ts+ \xn ornx\x rori+ics or xrxonv :.
course of political battles over history ano memory, the racial logic of exclusion is
synchronizeo with a recuperation of the German booy.
In this chapter, I attempt to show ,through a critical analysis of German public
memory, the highly ambivalent ano stresseo relation of the national oroer to the
mooern, ano its eventual escape from mooernity through the essentialisms of blooo,
race, ano booy. My ethnographic material oerives from a oiversity of historical
sources, not only to illustrate the oiachrony of events but also to highlight the fact
that German history ano memory overlap ano appear as repetitiona frozen con-
tinuumin which certain templates ano motifs are re-encountereo or return again
ano again, ano where the new is meoiateo by a refurbisheo sameness via the es-
sentializing metaphors of race: a tropology of corporeality. This mooe of histori-
cization, of tracing the anatomy of German nationhooo, exposes past experience
as a pathology, a traumatic synorome.
BORDERS OF SHAME: MEMORY, HISTORY, AND OPPOSITION
What were the eects of Nazism on German public culture? How was the past, speci-
cally the muroer of Jews, congureo in the imagination, language, ano booy prac-
tices of a postwar generation that was rmly committeo to the restoration of a non-
violent oemocratic society? Or was the social worlo after :q in fact the same worlo
that proouceo ,ano keeps prooucing, genocioe ,Bartov :qq8:,, a claim perhaps
supporteo by the overt manifestations of racial hatreo ano anti-Semitism that reap-
peareo in the postwar perioo ano the late twentieth century ,Link :q8, Gerharo :qq.,
:qq, Linke :qqb, Kurthen et al. :qq,? Although the concentration camps, partic-
ularly Auschwitz, have become a oominant cultural symbol arouno which guilt, Ger-
manness, ano ioentity cohere in the national imagination of the postwar German
state ,Borneman :qq.a, Maier :q8q,, post-Holocaust memory formations remain a
critical issue. Germans teno to practice forgetting with regaro to their past, particu-
larly with regaro to the muroer of the Jews. The problem of collective memory ano
its evasions in postwar German politics has been extensively oocumenteo by cul-
tural historians ,Berenbaum ano Feck :qq8, Geyer :qq6, Hartman :qq, Irieolan-
oer :qq., Grossmann :qq, Balowin :qqo,.
1
Denial ano concealment are clearly
eorts to oeal with a painful, guilt-prooucing subject. The excesses of inhumanity
ano brutal muroer that occurreo ouring the Thiro Reich were oicult to confront
by a nation oefeateo in war. Ior many years after :q, countless Germans pleaoeo
ignorance of the oeath camps or claimeo that the atrocities never happeneo at all
,Vioal-Naquet :qq., Lipstaot :qq,. The horror of the Juoeocioe was either represseo
or silenceo. Ano while the victimization of Jews was oenieo, as Omer Bartov points
out, Nazi criminality was repeateoly associateo with the octtrg of tlc Gctmor:
Germans experienceo the last phases of Worlo War II ano its immeoiate aftermath
as a perioo of mass victimization. Inoeeo, Germanys remarkable reconstruction was
preoicateo both on repressing the memory of the Nazi regimes victims ano on the
:: orxocinr
s v\kr
assumeo existence of an array of new enemies, foreign ano oomestic, visible ano elu-
sive. Assertions of victimhooo hao the aooeo benet of suggesting parallels between
the Germans ano their own victims. Thus, if the Nazis strove to ensure the health
ano prosperity of the nation by eliminating the Jews, postwar Germany strove to neu-
tralize the memory of the Jews oestruction so as to ensure its own physical ano psy-
chological restoration. ,Bartov :qq8:88,
Any attempt to tackle this oenial of history on the part of the postwar genera-
tion ,that is, the sons ano oaughters of those who hao known or playeo a part in
Nazism, was countereo with silence ,Moeller :qq6, :qq, Naumann :qq6, Markovits
ano Reich :qq,.
2
Collective shame became a central issue for these younger Ger-
mans, who refuseo responsibility for the atrocities committeo by their eloers. The
Holocaust was oeneo as an event carrieo out by others: the Nazis, members of
another generation, ones parents or granoparents.
3
While refuting accountability
for the horrors of the past, in particular for the muroer of the Jews, these younger
Germans experienceo their own suering ano shame very keenly. As inoiviouals,
ano as a group, they began to ioentify with the fate of the Jews insofar as both
were victimizeo, although in oierent ways, by Nazism: In this manner, the per-
petrators of genocioe were associateo with the oestroyers of Germany, while the
Jewish victims were associateo with German victims, without, however, creating
the same kino of empathy ,Bartov :qq8:qo,. Opposition to ano rebellion against
a muroerous past were useo by these young Germans as organizing tropes in their
ongoing battles with ioentity ano memory.
In postwar West Germany, intergenerational frictions over issues of morality,
booy, ano sex were appropriateo as sites where such battles coulo be wageo,
both in public ano in private, ano at which younger Germans workeo through
their anxieties about their |specic| relationship to the mass muroer in the nations
recent past ,Herzog :qq8:.,. Interestingly, in the experience of many young
Germans, the entry into aoulthooo was somehow linkeo to their access to forbio-
oen knowleoge, their inouction into the represseo memories of genocioe. In the
following example, Barbara Koster, a leftist :q68er activist, remembers her own
ano her generations coming-of-age ,ibio.:., as a tttc of poogc, stageo by oe-
tour to the past:
I was raiseo in the Aoenauer years, a time oominateo by a horrible moral conformism,
against which we naturally rebelleo. We wanteo to ee from the white Sunoay gloves,
to run from the way one hao to hioe the ngernails behino the back if they werent
above reproach. Iinally then we threw away our bras as well. . . . Ior a long time I hao
severe altercations with my parents ano fought against the fascist heritage they forceo
on me. At rst I rejecteo their authoritarian ano puritanical conception of chilo-
rearing, but soon we came into conict over a more serious topic: the persecution of
the Jews. I ioentieo with the Jews, because I felt myself to be persecuteo by my fam-
ily. ,Koster :q8:.,
4
+nr noroc\ts+ \xn ornx\x rori+ics or xrxonv :
Kosters claim to aoulthooo, which provokeo her rebellion against her parents,
relieo on a oisturbing ano simplistic, even oensive, appropriation of the suf-
fering of others. . . . |But| Koster ,who eventually visiteo Israel, which causeo
the nal break with her parents, was not alone ,Herzog :qq8:. n. ::,. The
persecution of the Jews, she recalls, was a permanent ano painful topic, ano
it was only when I got to know other stuoents that I unoerstooo that this was not
just my problem, that the shame about the persecution of the Jews hao brought
many to rebel against parental authority! ,Koster :q8:.,.
5
During the :q6os,
stuoent rebels, in their private ano public battles, perpetually invokeo the mass
muroer of Jews as a representational sign: the Juoeocioe became a signier of
German shame, of their own suering, a tactic that accoroing to Herzog
,:qq8:, ultimately blockeo ano subverteo oirect engagement with the racial
politics of the Thiro Reich.
Leftists ano conservatives alike oeployeo Holocaust images in their political bat-
tles, bluogeoning each other with the countrys past.
6
The invocation of
Auschwitz ano the Thiro Reich, accoroing to Herzog ,:qq8:o,, became a sort
of ltrgoo ftorco of postwar West German political culture, saturating ioeological
conict over all manner of issues. Thus, for instance, antinuclear activists from the
:qos to the :q8os warneo that nuclear war woulo mean a burning oven far more
imposing than the most terrible burning ovens of the SS-camps,
7
or a catastro-
phe compareo to which Auschwitz ano Treblinka were chilos play.
8
Or |another
example from the :qos oescribes| global economic injustice as a muroerous con-
spiracy measureo against which the consequences of Hitlers nal solution seem
positively charming.
9
What oo we make of such pronouncements that relate the
magnituoe of a nuclear oisaster or the trauma of economic injustice to Juoeocioe?
While this sort of rhetoric was clearly meant to break open the taboo of the past,
to shock ano startle a complacent German public with the provocative invocation
of Nazi crimes, as Herzog argues, these verbal tactics also reveal that the muroer
of Jews became an auxiliary concern in a oiscourse oominateo by ioentity politics
ano the crisis of political self-oenition:
In a peculiar but crucial way the Holocaust is at once absent oro present in all that
talk. . . . |T|he centrality of the Juoeocioe to the Thiro Reich is the very |subject| that
is constantly being evaoeo when facile comparisons are put forwaro in the context of
other political agenoas, |but| it is alsohowever paraooxicallyprecisely the Holo-
causts existence that allows self-oenitions in opposition to fascism to serve as a sort
of shorthano to anchor ano assert the legitimacy ano morality of ones own claims.
,Herzog :qq8:,
But at the same time, this rhetorical preoccupation with Juoeocioe, often invokeo
in an analogic or metaphorical way, was suggestive of a oeeper painthe im-
mense historical buroenthat many younger Germans experienceo ano longeo to
alleviate by substitution or oisplacement ,ibio.::,.
: orxocinr
s v\kr
THE NAKED BODY: COUNTERMEMORY AND
THE OFTICS OI SHAME
In postwar West Germany ouring the :q6os, the public remembrance of violent
history was tieo to the terrain of the booy: memory practices were transporteo into
booy space. The oisclosure of Nazi violence ano the shifting boroers of shame were
structureo by a new corporeal aesthetic. The nakeo booy became an iconographic
tool with which leftist activists coulo proclaim their opposition to Nazism. Fublic
oisplays of nuoity were contrasteo with images of political oroer, bourgeois au-
thority patterns, conformity, ano consumptionthat is, tropes of the Nazi state
ano the economic structures that hao proouceo fascism. Stuoent raoicals were
among the most open ano provocative oefenoers of the new publicity of sexual
styles ano practices ano most explicitly maoe the case that sexual repressiveness
was the bulwark of a politically ano economically repressive society ,Herzog
:qq8:q,. The practice of public nuoity, unoerstooo as a sign of liberation,
emergeo as an attempt at social transformation, setting into motion a rebellious
process of countermemory proouction.
The rejection of consumer capitalism, the commitment to oemocratic values,
ano an opening of bourgeois morality by furthering the sexual revolution were
central themes of the political rebellion of the sixties ano seventies, a rebellion
that was closely intertwineo with the New Lefts eort to bring the subjects of
fascism ano the Thiro Reich . . . into public oiscussion ,ibio.:qq,.
10
Sexual lib-
eration, ano nuoity, were closely linkeo to political revolution:
|The West German Left was| appalleo by many forms of social ano political injus-
tice . . . ano supporteo a broao array of resistance struggles, both in the Thiro Worlo
ano at home. The oamaging consequences of capitalism, racism, imperialism, ano
militarism worlowioe were major preoccupations, ano . . . the war in Vietnam |ano|
the struggles of the Falestinians . . . gureo as prominently |in leftist activism| as oio
the legacy of Auschwitz. . . . It was ultimately no coincioence that members of the
West German generation of :q68 repeateoly maoe reference to the Thiro Reich, ano
to the Holocaust, in their battles with each other ano with members of their parents
generation. ,ibio.:q,
Such battles often rageo over the sexual mores ano sexual politics of bourgeois cul-
ture, as Herzog ,:qq8, oocuments, ano the links between Nazi libioinal patholo-
gies ano genocioe.
Whereas church ano political leaoers presenteo sexual sobriety as the most eec-
tive cure for the nations larger guilt ano moral crisis,
11
the New Left focuseo on
Nazisms sexual politics as inseparable from the legacy of the Juoeocioe: Through-
out their programmatic writings on sex, members of this generation returneo fre-
quently to the problems of genocioe ano brutality within the concentration camps,
suggesting that it was male sexual repression that engenoereo the Nazi capacity for
cruelty ano mass muroer ,ibio.:q,. The intense antifascism of the German New
Left was centrally preoccupieo with assaults on male sexuality because of the per-
+nr noroc\ts+ \xn ornx\x rori+ics or xrxonv :
ceiveo connection between mens release of libioo ano evil ,Herzog :qq8:qq,
see also Theweleit :q8, Heioer :q86, Freuss-Lausitz :q8q, Siepmann :q8,: One
noteworthy feature of so many of the oebates within the left scene about sex ano about
sex ano fascism |was| their focus on the male booy ano male oesires ano anxieties in
particular. In postwar West German struggles over various sexual lessons of Nazism,
male booies were calleo to a kino of public visibility ano accountability that most schol-
ars of the history of sexuality generally assume to be reserveo for women ,Herzog
:qq8:q8,. Remarkable is the obsessiveness, says Herzog ,ibio.:qq,, with which |this
postwar generation| trieo to make public some of the most intimate ways in which
men relateo to their own booies ano the booies of others. The public exposure of the
male booy, incluoing mens sexual oesires, became a political agenoa in leftists at-
tempts to reform genoer relations ano revolutionize the bourgeois/fascist inoivioual
,Bookhagen et al. :q6q:q., Durr :qq::8.o,. By :q68, various socialist collectives, in-
cluoing the infamous Iommorc : in West Berlin, hao integrateo raoical male nuoity
into both their oomestic lifestyle ano their public political program.
The West German Left hao initiateo such nuoist booy practices in part, as Her-
zog ,:qq8:q8, put it, to strengthen their case for sexual liberation with the most
shocking metaphors available ,see Iigure q.:,:
One group that oio sowith spectacular airwere the members of the Iommorc .,
a small but enolessly publicizeo ano oebateo experiment in communal living ano
anarcho-raoicalism launcheo in Berlin in :q66. A classic example of the Iommorc .s
provocative style was provioeo by the photo of its membersincluoing one of the
two chiloren living with themoistributeo by the members themselves on a self-pro-
motional brochure. . . . This photo has been reprinteo many timesusually in a spirit
of humor ano/or nostalgiaano now counts as one of the icons of this era
,ibio.:o6, o,.
12
What was the political subtext of this portrait of collective nuoity? Some twenty
years later, in :q88, as noteo by Herzog, the former leaoer of the Socialist Stuoent
Union ,Sozialistischer Deutscher StuoentenbunoSDS,, Reimut Reiche, inter-
preteo the photo as follows:
Consciously this photo-scene was meant to re-create ano expose a police house-search
of the Kommune :. Ano yet these women ano men stano there as if in an aestheti-
cally stageo, unconscious ioentication with the victims of their parents ano at the
same time mocking these victims by making the preoetermineo message of the pic-
ture one of sexual liberation. Thereby they simultaneously remain unconsciously ioen-
tieo with the consciously rejecteo perpetrator-parents. Sexuality makes you free
ts with this picture as well as Work makes you free ts with Auschwitz. ,Reiche
:q88:6,
13
Commenting on this persistent tactic by the German New Left to represent in-
stances of their own political victimization in terms of Juoeocioe ano Auschwitz,
cultural historian Dagmar Herzog ,:qq8, concluoes:
: orxocinr
s v\kr
The apparent inability to leave the past behinoinoeeo, the apparently unquench-
able urge to bring it up over ano over again precisely in the context of sexual rela-
tionsnot only reveals how intense was the felt neeo to invert the sexual lessons of
Nazism orawn by their parents generation but also, ano perhaps even more signi-
cantly, suggests something about the oiculty of theorizing a sexual revolutionof
connecting pleasure ano goooness, sex ano societal justice |nuoity ano freeoom|in
a country in which only a generation earlier pleasure hao been so intimately tieo in
with evil. ,p. oo,
The mnemotechniques of genocioe, as practiceo by the West German Left, re-
maoe the booy into a public site of contestation. Retrieveo from the oark unoer-
grouno spaces, where the state hao oepositeo its recoros of historical knowleoge,
the pathogenic memories of violence were maoe visible on the topographic sur-
face of the booy. The booy emergeo as a cltorotopc of violence, the material ano
+nr noroc\ts+ \xn ornx\x rori+ics or xrxonv :,
Iigure q.: Nakeo Maoists before a Nakeo Wall: Members of the Iommorc .A Socialist
Collective of Young Maoists, West Berlin :q6. Irom a brochure by the Iommorc .. When
reprinteo in German newsmagazines, the nuoe booies were retoucheo to erase visual
signiers of genoer ano sex ,see Fanorama :q6: .o, Spiegel :qqqa:::, Stiftung Haus oer
Geschichte :qq8: q,. Courtesy Spiegel-Verlag Ruoolf Augstein GmbH, Hamburg,
Germany. Fhotograph copyright Thomas Hesterberg.
temporal guration on a lanoscape, where time takes on esh ano becomes visi-
ble for human contemplation ,Bakthin :q8::,. Ano as traumatic history graou-
ally came to visibility, the nuoe booy was treateo as revelationary: a repository of
German historical consciousness. The exposure of past violence, with its allegories
of fragmentation ano ruin, placeo the nakeo booy on center stage in a monumental
theater of public remembrance.
POPULAR NUDITY: CULTURAL PROTEST
AND OPPOSITIONAL MEMORY
The West German revival of booy consciousness, ano the privileging of nakeoness,
receiveo its initial impetus from the stuoent rebellion of the :q6os: nationhooo was
recongureo through the icon of the nakeo booy. During this era of leftist political
protest, public nuoity became a central emblem of popular opposition. The un-
clotheo booy signieo liberation in several ways: it symbolizeo freeoom from the
moral economy of a consumer capitalism that relieo on sexual sobriety as a tech-
nique of unremembering the past, it suggesteo oisengagement from the materialist
values of a society that equateo Western oemocratization with commooity choice
ano conspicuous consumption ,Boehling :qq6, Carter :qq,, ano it facilitateo oeliv-
erance from the buroen of German history by political opposition to the anesthetiz-
ing eects of a booming postwar economy. While rallying against a seemingly re-
pressive ano inhumane society, ano in oefenoing a new openness of lifestyles, stuoent
raoicals aoopteo public nuoity as a crucial component of their political activism ,Her-
zog :qq8,. Such a public showing of nakeo booies gave rise to a corporeal aesthetic
of Germanness that stageo national privilege in relation to societys salient victims:
the oeao, the subjugateo, ano the betrayeo. Fublic oisplays of nuoity useo the booy
in a novel oramaturgy of memory: nakeoness was stageo to expose a violent past ano
to renoer visible, on the canvas of the booy, the legacies of the Thiro Reich.
The oemano for sexual liberation ano the promotion of nuoity transporteo the
subjects of Nazism ano the Thiro Reich into public oiscourse by orawing on an
iconography of shame: sexuality, genoer relations, ano nakeoness belong to the
aective structure of society, the moral economy of feelings. In their political bat-
tles with German history ano memory, leftist activists oeployeo public booy expo-
sure to mobilize this resioual archaeology of sentiments in several ways. Disillu-
sioneo ,ano angereo, by their parents inability to acknowleoge the muroer of
millions, stuoent protesters useo public nakeoness as a symbolic expression of their
own victimhooo ano shame. Although this iconography of public nuoity greatly
facilitateo the stuoents self-representation as casualties of Nazism, full-booy ex-
posure also provioeo a metaphor for the attempt to uncover the past by stripping
Germanys muroerous epoch of its protective ano oefensive armor. Fublic nuoity
was thus ercely politicizeo ano emotionally chargeo. Driven by a programmatic
call for sexual liberation, the act of becoming nakeo in public signieo a return to
the authentic, the natural, ano the unrepresseothat is, to a way of life untainteo
:8 orxocinr
s v\kr
by the legacy of Auschwitz. Fublic oisplays of nuoity were perceiveo as liberatory,
both in a social ano historical sense. By rejecting the cultural machinations of a
muroerous civility ,clothing, commooities, memories,, leftist political activists were
renoereo free of shame.
The program for such a booy politic, which employeo public nuoity as a means
of transforming German historical consciousness, was rst launcheo by members
of the raoical New Leftthe founoers of various socialist communes in Berlin,
Cologne, ano Munich in the :q6os. Aovocating a lifestyle opposite to that of the
Nazi generation, these New Leftists, or 68ers, attempteo to eraoicate the private
ano hiooen in favor of a public intimacy: to be able to sleep with anyone, to be
able to show oneself nakeo in front of everyone, to be honest without restraint
ano willing to speak ones mino without hesitation, to call a spaoe a spaoe, never
to keep anything to oneself, ano never to withholo or repress anything ,Guggen-
berg :q8::, col. .,. Honesty, sexual freeoom, ano social equality were among the
values that governeo the new cult of nuoity. The oemocratization of the German
booy politic was to be achieveo by the public sheooing of clothes: bare skin
emergeo as a new kino of uniform, an authentic booy armor unmeoiateo by the
state or history.
In West Germany, political membership, like national ioentity, came to be visu-
ally encooeo, physically grafteo onto the skin ,Gilman :q8.,. But this iconolatry of
public nuoity, which emphasizeo the natural innocence of unclotheo booies, was
not oevoio of historical meaning. The New Lefts rejection of bourgeois culture
took form through an ensemble of images that hao their origin in the nationalist
reform movements of the Weimar Republic. In Germany in the :q.os, the anti-
mooernist revolt gave rise to a racialist vision that was articulateo through the booy.
Corporality became a symbolic site in the nationalist rebellion against mooernity:
the unnatural, the impermanent, the oecaoent. Mooern styles of life, with their
materiality ano pornographic sexuality, were conoemneo as breeoing grounos of
immorality ano moral sickness ,Mosse :q8:.,. The terrain of the city, presumeo
to inouce booily ills, was set in opposition to the terrain of nature, which was ex-
tenoeo to incluoe the natural booy: human nuoity. German nationalism, with its
antiurban focus ano its rejection of the mooern lifeworlo, was markeo by a reois-
covery of the booy. Societal reforms were tieo to the reformation of the booy. In
other woros, the German oisenchantment with the mooern was to be cureo by
purging the booy of its materialist wrappings. Fublic nuoity ano the unclotheo
human booy became important signiers of this new nationalist consciousness.
In West Germany, ouring the :q6os, the leftist critique of society took form
through nearly ioentical mythographies. The nakeo ,white, booy was imagineo as
a privilegeo, presocial site of truth. Fublic nakeoness, oeployeo as a strategy for the
promotion of societal reform, emergeo as a new terrain of resistance against con-
sumer capitalism. The public exposure of the booy, a marginalizeo pastime of
anti-urbanists at the turn of the century ,Iehrenbach :qq:,, became a preva-
lent symbol of cultural protest ano opposition in postwar German politics. The
+nr noroc\ts+ \xn ornx\x rori+ics or xrxonv :
nakeo booy, strippeo of its materialist trappings, stooo outsioe society: an emblem
of nature, liberateo from violent history. As in the :q.os, public nuoity came to sym-
bolize freeoom from the oeceptive armor of clothing: the nakeo booy was purgeo
of the articial, the illicit, the erotic. But unlike the aestheticization of white nu-
oity at the turn of the century, the West German critique of postfascist culture
was not at rst oriven by an overtly nationalist agenoa. That oimension was to be
aooeo later. Rather, the unclotheo booy ,as an authentic truth-claim, was imagineo
in opposition to society ano the state.
Encooeo by these messages of opposition ano rebellion, public nuoity was soon
employeo by many young Germans as a personal gesture of cultural protest. Seem-
ingly unconventional ano provocative, the practice of oisrobing in public was wioely
aoopteo as a pastime with countercultural signicance. Oering a language of
commooity resistance ,Appaourai :q86:o,, ano inverting the logic of capitalist
consumption, public nuoity signieo freeoom from the constraints of mooern Ger-
man society. During the :qos nakeo sunbathing establisheo itself as a popular
leisure activity, ano as urban parks were increasingly throngeo by those who pre-
ferreo to bask in the sun without clothes, full-booy exposure became commonplace
,see Iigure q..,. By the late :qos, nuoity in public parks was so pervasive that lo-
cal prohibitions against booy exposure were no longer enforceo unless it causeo
oense: nakeo sunbathing was exempt from public inoecency cooes ,Brugge
:q8::q,. The public oisplay of nakeo booies, in particular the public viewing of
nuoe men, was renoereo acceptable or normal by severing the links with histori-
cal memory. Conneo to natural settings, the nakeo booy seemeo oevoio of erotic
or libioinal meanings. The topographic surface of the booy, regaroeo as a natural
guration, was purgeo of its violent historiography.
NAKED MASCULINITY: ICONIC MEMORIES OI VIOLENCE
This perception of the natural innocence of nakeo booies was contesteo in :q8:,
when public nuoity moveo beyono conventional urban spaces. Transgressing the
oesignateo bounoaries of parks ano park-relateo greens, nuoists began to congre-
gate along river shores, on beaches, in playgrounos, swimming pools, ano ceme-
teries, even city centers. In oowntown Munich, for instance, nuoes were now often
sighteo in historic fountains, on streetcars, ano in shopping centers ,Brugge :q8:,
:q8,. Such a migration of unclotheo booies into the metropolis, the apparent es-
cape of nakeoness from nature, provokeo among some segments of the German
public oeep anxieties about unfettereo sexuality.
At issue was the nakeo male. Exposeo masculinity was met with suspicion ano
unease. Uncovereo male genitalia, the public sight of oangling ano swinging
penises ,Brugge :q8:::o,, was experienceo by many Germans as a threat. The
open oisplay of the phallus was traoitionally prohibiteo, a thematic much belaboreo
by the cultural critics of the :q6os. Among leftists, male nuoity hao been encour-
:o orxocinr
s v\kr
ageo as a way of achieving sexual liberation, but in oroer to experience corporal
freeoom, the unclotheo |man| often long|s| to walk upright |thereby exposing him-
self ano his sex|, something which is still taboo ,ibio.:::,. When voicing their ois-
comfort, passersby conjureo visions of rape ano sexual violence. I have to look at
that, shouteo a sixty-three-year-olo housewife when encountering a nakeo man in
public, ano I know what is to come after ,ibio.,. As suggesteo here, public booy
exposure, specically that of men, was reao by mainstream Germans through im-
ages of sexual oeviancy ano unacceptable behavior ,Guggenberg :q8::, col. ,. In
German popular consciousness, the sheooing of clothes signieo a release from civil
restraint, an incitement to general rebellion ano political unruliness: the nakeo male
was juogeo capable of anything.
In oroer to preempt such anxieties, public oisplays of nuoity hao to be care-
fully packageo to seem natural or artistic: the inoensive nakeo booy stooo out-
sioe of history, untainteo by society ano memory. Such a management of
nakeoness hao several unintenoeo consequences. Although awareness of the
sexual sioe of nuoe booies coulo be represseo by connement to natural set-
tings, this naturalness hao to be renoereo civilizeo ano aesthetically pleasing.
+nr noroc\ts+ \xn ornx\x rori+ics or xrxonv :.
Iigure q... Nuoe Sunbathers in an Urban Fublic Fark ,Englischer Garten,, Munich,
:q8:. Irom Brugge ,:q8:::o,. Courtesy Spiegel-Verlag Ruoolf Augstein GmbH,
Hamburg, Germany. Fhotograph copyright Marcel Iugere, Hamburg.
Tooay nobooy cares if thousanos take o their clothes in the English Garoen
|in Munich|. But those thousanos, who unintentionally walk by, are forbiooen
to look. Shame works the other way arouno: nakeoness must be veileoby
beauty ,Irieorich :q86:o,. This emphasis on nature as an aesthetic construct
workeo by exclusion. The nakeo/natural booy was ioealizeo by juxtaposition
to the biologically ugly: |German| public nuoity always implies a privileg-
ing of the beautiful ano youthful booy. The oisplay of nakeoness in parks or
cafes creates a situation of merciless scrutinization that intensies the social
marginalization of those who are physically oisaovantageo: the fat ano the
overly thin, the misshapen or oisgureo, ano the hanoicappeo ,Guggenberg
:q8::, col. ,. In West Germany, public nuoity came to be governeo by an ioe-
ology of oierence that celebrateo the unblemisheo booy as a natural symbol.
Nakeo nature was to be renoereo free of the unsightly. Natural nakeoness,
as a quasi-mythical construct, coulo not be tainteo by physiological markers of
age, oeath, or history. Fublic nuoity, like nature, was to present a facaoe of eter-
nal beauty, unmarreo by signs of physical weakness. Such iconographies of es-
sentializeo perfection ,youth, beauty, ano health, were integral to a postwar aes-
thetic that sought to rehabilitate the German booy after Auschwitz.
MEMORY IMFLANTS: A MYTHOGRAFHY OI NATURAL NUDITY
The public oisplay of nakeo German booies was symptomatic of a return to a
corporal aesthetic that celebrateo the essential, natural, ano authentic. Not sur-
prisingly, the construction of national ioentity in postwar West Germany came
to be governeo by familiar visions of the racial booy. The social geography of
bare skin, with its symbolic emplacement of national ioentity ano selfhooo, maoe
use of iconographic representations of unoesirable oierence. In an exemplary
illustration, a photographic glimpse of a public park in West Berlin, two nakeo
Germansa man ano a womanare enjoying the tranquil outooors: oomesti-
cateo nature ,see Iigure q.,. Fositioneo against a canvas of trees ano bushes,
the couple is sitting in the shaoy cover of the foliage. The oisplay of nuoity oraws
on existing social fantasies of paraoise, as inoicateo by the grati on the parks
sign. This iconography of public nuoity, the imagery of nakeo German booies
reposeo on green grass, envelopeo by shrubs ano tall grass, hearkens back to early
pictorial images of Aoam ano Eve in the Garoen. Nakeoness is stageo in a mythic
realm, in which the unclotheo booy signies freeoom from original sin. The scene
evokes oomesticateo wiloerness, a sense of the sublime worlo of nature, even as
this carefully crafteo lanoscape seeks to shrouo the exposeo booy, repressing it,
incarcerating it, ano thereby protecting it from the gaze of a nation that ooes not
invite all booies to be sexual objects. In the photo, nakeoness ano booy exposure
are stageo as a consumerist retreat. Leisure, experienceo as an escape from the
collective social worlo, is oisplaceo to a oomesticateo natural interior: a mythic
realm oevoio of struggle or violence.
:: orxocinr
s v\kr
The German nuoists ,much like Aoam ano Eve, are positioneo as overloros of
nature. This is signieo by their elevateo station. The oark-skinneo Meoiterranean
,Turkish, others, who are assembleo in the foregrouno of the photo, are in tactile
contact with the parks natural settinga tactility that encooes physical labor as
the primary relation of these others to nature. Sitting oirectly on the grouno, their
physicality is visually accentuateo: by their clothing, their cooking of fooo on a grill,
their tenoing to an open re. The photographic gaze connects their booies to im-
ages of work ano consumption, signifying a oangerous preoccupation with corpo-
ral mattersthat is, fooo, labor, ano reproouction.
The immigrants, sitting in the mioole of the grass, in the foregrouno of the
picture, are renoereo highly visible. This position places them on the nations so-
cial periphery, on the margins, on the outsioe, while the nakeo Germans, sitting
in the backgrouno, partially hiooen by the vegetation, are positioneo within the na-
tions innermost center, the insioe, which is encooeo as a natural oomain.
White nakeo booies, equateo with a civilizeo ano privilegeo state of nature ,para-
oise,, can be imagineo as sites of an authentic, national interior. The visual em-
phasis on natural ano national privilege, which conceals the historic oimensions of
nuoity, was crucial in the symbolic reconstruction of the postwar German booy
politic. Such a reaoing in corporal aesthetics suggests that, as a terrain of signi-
cation, the nakeo booy ,like skin color, serveo as a political icon: not all booies were
equally inviteo to represent the German nation.
+nr noroc\ts+ \xn ornx\x rori+ics or xrxonv :
Iigure q.. German Nuoists ano Clotheo Thiro Worlo Others in the Garoen of Eoen
,Faraoise,, West Berlin, :q8q. Irom Wahlprogramm ,:q8q:.,. Copyright Bunonis qo/Die
Grunen, Berlin. Fhotograph by Ralph Rieth.
THE NAKED MALE: A MORFHOLOGY
OI IASCIST BODY MEMORY
During the early :q8os, when immigrants ano refugees were oepicteo as an inun-
oating biological threat ,Linke :qqb,, West German commercial culture began to
oisplay white booies through images that ioealizeo, ano visually sculpteo, the nuoe
esh. Often strippeo of carnal sensuousness ano raw sexuality, the visual oesirability
of white skin relieo on image-constructions that maoe such booies appear inac-
cessible, oistant, ano unattainable. Invigorating visions of white superiority, the
nakeo, upright booythe Aryan malestooo rm against the feminine onslaught:
the foreign ooo.
This is suggesteo by a series of West German aovertisements for mens cologne,
in which complete male nuoity took center stage , Jeske et al. :q8a, :q8b, Schirner
:q8, Soltau :q8,. Aoopting the pose of classic statues, the male mooels were typ-
ically clao only with the scent of the commercial proouct ,see Iigure q.,. The ao-
vertisement texts reiterate this point: He wears Care or Care allures/attires
,tclt or,. The classic beauty of the male nuoe, with his fortieo ano haroeneo booy,
seems impervious to seouction. Stanoing immobile, upright, ano somewhat remote,
the nuoe mooels resemble white statues: a perfecteo masculinity, reminiscent of the
classic ,Aryan, ioeal.
These images of male nuoity were introouceo by German aovertisers as a cul-
tural provocation: The nakeo man hao market value ano eectively supplanteo the
stanoaro fetish of the female nuoe ,Kohler :q8,. Working against the public per-
ception that mass meoia was proouctive only in its creation of imaginary worlos
ano illusory neeos, West German image-makers began to proouce a new materi-
ality, a new essentialism, terminating all articiality, . . . |there| stooo suooenly the
nakeo, unaoulterateo human booy . . . the nakeo man . . . a signier of . . . funoa-
mental transformations. . . . In our Cotc campaign, we coulo nally unveil the mon-
ument for the postmooern man in its entirety . . . an entirely nakeo human be-
ing/man, but renoereo particular through the unveiling of the most oistinctive of
male booy partsthe penis ,Schirner :q8:q:,. But in West German aovertis-
ing, such a novel exposure of nakeo masculinity, the oenuoing of the phallus, was
immeoiately aestheticizeo through familiar iconographies ano images:
Whatever was unthinkable a few years ago, has tooay become a matter of course. . . .
The boroers of shame have shifteo. A segment of the male population has been ex-
poseo. . . . These men show themselves as they are . . . nakeo, ano bare . . . Sun-tanneo
ano smooth . . . Beautiful, perfect, ano immaculate . . . stageo to perfection. . . . The
male booy has been cleverly positioneo like an antique statue . . . the pose is unmis-
takable. . . . The image toys with our memories. ,Soltau :q8:., , , 6,
The aestheticization of male nuoity, by a reliance on mimetic tools of classic iconog-
raphy, ano the corresponoing emphasis on marble, rock, ano art, liberateo the nakeo
male booy from its sexual ano political history. It became a timeless image, a
: orxocinr
s v\kr
Iigure q.. He Wears Care: White Nakeo Male Booies as Commooity Ietish, West
Germany, :q88. Irom Jeske, Neumann, ano Sprang ,:q8b::,. Copyright Jahrbuch oer
Werbung, ECON Verlag GmbH, Dusseloorf, Germany. Fhotography by Feter Knaup.
Iigure q.. Self-Empowerment through Nuoity: Leftist Activists Frotest Western
Imperialism by Exposing White Masculinity, West Berlin, :q88. Irom Mayer, Schmolt,
ano Wolf ,:q88::8,. Courtesy Steintor, Bremen Verlags uno Buchhanoelsgesellschaft.
Fhotography copyright Ann-Christine Jansson.
natural artifact, which coulo be put on oisplay without evoking traumatic mem-
ories of male libioo ano violence.
NUDE AUTHENTICITY: THE NAKED BODY
AS THE REBELLIOUS TERRAIN OI NATURE
These congurations of public memory were further enhanceo by the suooen re-
emergence of nuoity in raoical political oiscourse. In West Germany ouring the
early :q8os, a time of heighteneo anti-immigrant sentiments, economic inequities,
ano the shaping of consumer consciousness by ioealizeo images of white mas-
culinity, leftist activists retrieveo the nakeo booy as an emblem of political strug-
gle. Nuoity became a performative icon of the West German environmental move-
ment, where the public exposition of nakeoness supporteo strategic forms of
countercultural ano anticapitalist protest. The nakeo booy, a symbol of popular re-
bellion, was mobilizeo as a natural symbol, an authenticating sign, which was pit-
teo against the facaoe of the German state. This is suggesteo by a series of politi-
cal rallies in West Berlin, where public nuoity took center stage. Ior instance, in
:q88, unclotheo male activists useo their nuoe booies in a oramaturgical battle
against police brutality ,Mayer et al. :q88:q,. The protesters performance frameo
the police ocers violent transgressions in terms of the terror of the Nazi regime.
The nakeo male booy, a visual assertion of an unmeoiateo political self, was stageo
in opposition to the legacy of German state violence. In another mass oemonstra-
tion, in :q88, leftist criticism of global capitalism featureo male nuoity as a form
of rioicule, a message of oebasement ano negation of state power ,see Iigure q.,.
The unclotheo male booy was exhibiteo as an oppositional sign, a signier of a
rebellious subjectivity, which was oisplayeo in protest against market-oriven forms
of inequality ano violence ,ibio.::8,. Likewise in :q8:, unclotheo male activists
useo their bare booies as subversive icons in protest against a presumeo urban cri-
sis: air pollution, lack of housing, unemployment, ano inaoequate public trans-
portation ,Vollano :q8:.o,. The protesters nakeo volatility stooo in stark contrast
to the oefensive armor of state police ,see Iigure q.6,. The visual juxtaposition of
male nuoes ano male ocers in riot gear brought into focus the postulateo ois-
tinction between political enemies ,perpetrators, ano victims. In :q88, stuoent ac-
tivists in Bonn, strippeo to their unoergarments, protesteo the shortfall in state funo-
ing for eoucation ,Sptcgcl :q88:6.,. The unclotheo stuoents argueo their case while
stanoing collectively before the minister of eoucation, a man attireo with the in-
signia of his oceoresseo in a oark suit ano tie: a political uniform. The visual
emphasis markeo the contrast between booy armor ano nuoitythat is, between
the political symbols of state authority ano oisempowerment. In such instances,
public nuoity serveo as a naturalizing truth claim: a signier of the irrefutable re-
ality of a victimizeo ,albeit rebellious, national interior.
Throughout the :q8os, the West German Left employeo public nuoity to
oemonstrate its commitment to oemocracy, freeoom, ano equality. The bare/ex-
+nr noroc\ts+ \xn ornx\x rori+ics or xrxonv :,
poseo white booy, a tangible icon of the physical worlo ,nature ano the nat-
ural environment,, was equateo with physical vulnerability ano victimization.
Environmental issues such as pollution, ozone oepletion, ano oeforestation, as
well as concerns about economic oeprivation ano male oomination, were publi-
cizeo through open oisplays of the unclotheo human booy. Ior instance, in Irank-
furt in :q8:, environmental activists opposeo the oestruction of urban wooolanos,
a oesignateo site of airport construction, by protecting the enoangereo trees with
their bare booiesthereby heightening the publics awareness of the forest as a
living organism ,Fohrt :qq::.,. During such oemonstrations, the iconography of
nuoity was inseparably equateo with the worlo of nature. Similarly, in West Berlin
in :q8q, several hunoreo men ano women assembleo in a protest against air pol-
lution by oisplaying their nuoe booies ,togccttorg :q8q::6,. Nakeo nature was ex-
hibiteo as a terrain of potential oestruction ano suering: German booies en-
oangereo by the states inoierence to global ozone oepletion. The nuoe booy,
:8 orxocinr
s v\kr
Iigure q.6. Froclaiming Opposition through Male Nuoity: Using Their Booies as
Ferformative Icons, Leftist Activists Rally against City Government ,TUWAT Demo
Rathaus Kreuzberg,, West Berlin, :q8:. Irom Vollano ,:q8:.o,. Copyright Voller-Ernst
Agentur fur komische uno ungewohnliche Iotos, Berlin. Fhotograph by Feter Hebler.
unprotecteo ano vulnerable, sought to reveal itself as a potential environmental
casualty. Such a strategy, with its appeal to universal human values ano its recu-
peration of German booies as templates for a global ethics, unwittingly subverteo
recognition of existing racial inequality ano ethnic oierence. Leftist environ-
mental activists investeo nakeo booies ano white physicality with meanings that
hao a profouno signicance for the national booy politic: German booies were
presenteo as perpetual victims of state violence.
NUDE NOSTALGIA: SUBLIME NATURE
AGAINST STATE VIOLENCE
In contemporary Germany, ouring the late :qqos, when the governing apparatus
was recongureo by an uneasy alliance of leftists ,the centrist Social Democrats ano
the raoical Greens,, ano when German soloiers, as members of NATO, began to
intervene in the war in Kosovo by oropping bombs on Serbia, the practice of pub-
lic nuoity was recovereo as a meoium of raoical protest. At the national party con-
vention of the AllianceGreens, in May :qqq, the members of the New Left, now
composeo of olo pacists, 68ers, ano government supporters, clasheo with fervor
over funoamental oierences in ioeological commitments. In this context, the nakeo
booy, as an icon of authenticity, nature, ano nonviolence, was mobilizeo by the op-
ponents of war. Among the utensils of protest, the whistles, posters, slogans, ano
blooo-lleo projectiles, which were hurleo at Joschka Iischer ,the foreign minister,
ano his supporters with accusations of muroer ano war mongering, there also
surfaceo the conventional male nuoe: prouo, almost Jesus-like, wanoering about,
a stark-nakeo opponent of war ,Sptcgcl :qqqb:o,. The male nuoe, stepping out of
the terrain of violent memory, stooo as a reminoer of past left-wing raoicalism, when
political opposition hao a purging function, ano when the battle against German
state authority coulo erase the shame of catastrophic nationalism ,Geyer .oo:,.
But at this convention, the arsenal of unclotheo inoignation was mobilizeo against
those members of the New Left, who, as part of the German governing booy, hao
consenteo to acts of military violence abroao. The oramatic use of nuoe masculin-
ity sought to expose the changeover of a party, whose raoical pacism took form
some twenty years ago, emerging out of a political movement of antifascist protest:
the opposition to state violence. But the nakeo war-opponent oio not verbalize his
oiscontent. In speechless rage, he provioeo his well-oresseo party leaoers with a sign-
post to the beginning. The male nuoe, accoroing to critical meoia commentary,
sought to convey the following:
Unoress yourselves, with nakeo buttocks wanoer back to nature, so that you become
just as innocent as nature itself . . . or like Aoam ano Eve in their paraoise phase. Oth-
ers shoulo bite into the bitter fruit from the tree of political knowleoge. But after par-
aoiseafter the party convention. ,Sptcgcl :qqqb:o,
+nr noroc\ts+ \xn ornx\x rori+ics or xrxonv :
The nuoe booy, as an icon of natural innocence ano goooness, persists as a promi-
nent symbol of leftist opposition to state militarism. Thus a few months later, in
July :qqq, in Berlin, groups of nakeo protesters oisrupteo an ocial military cere-
mony: the annual pleoge of allegiance by newly orafteo German recruits. The mil-
itary ritual was symbolically chargeo. Stageo in a public place, the soloiers show
of surrenoer to the German state was performeo openly, in full view, before the na-
tion. Scheouleo on July .o, in commemoration of the assassination attempt against
Hitler in :q, the event was carrieo out at the very site on which the former con-
spirators were executeo ,Staoelmann :qqq:.,. The performative function of this
military ritual was not unintentionally frameo by a paraoox. The soloiers pleoge
of allegiance to a oemocratic state was simultaneously to commemorate German
opposition to a totalitarian regime: the Nazi state. Accoroing to Ruoolph Scharp-
ing, the minister of oefense: The men ano women of the resistance gave their lives
because of their respect for human oignity ano human rights. . . . These values are
also oecisive markers of the inoepenoent traoition of the |postwar| German army
,Boroc.clt, ,ibio.,. Despite their initial criticism of the event, seen as a recupera-
tion of martial nationalism, the AllianceGreens eventually consenteo to the sym-
bolic mesh of military ceremonial ano historical legacy. Angelika Beer, the partys
political speaker, oeclareo: It is correct to confront the new recruits with this oc-
currence on the th anniversary of the oay, on which Germans attempteo to re-
move the oictator |Hitler|. . . . |T|he German army ,Boroc.clt, is not the Nazi
army ,Rctcl.clt, ,ibio.,. But other leftists, who hao campaigneo against manoa-
tory military service, remaineo hostile. Ano oespite the tight security measures, in-
cluoing sharpshooters, boroer patrols, ano police, a group of nuoe protesters man-
ageo to break through the protective coroon. Just as Chancellor Schrooer hao
familiarizeo the young recruits with the history of the German resistance, ten nakeo
men ano women burst into the center of the festivities. Shouting soloiers are mur-
oerers, the nuoe oemonstrators trieo to take possession of the battalion pennant
before they were thrown to the grouno by military police.
The protesters nuoe performance provokeo severe measures of retribution by
the German state ,Tog/lott :qqq::,: Two of the nuoes were arresteo, another twenty
were chargeo with booily injury, breach of the public peace, ano resistance against
the supreme power of the state. The nuoes assault on the corporate military
booy, ano on the symbolic armor of state power, was not oevoio of national pathos.
Nuoe opposition provokeo retaliatory measures fraught with emotional charge.
Once again, violent history ano countermemory were pusheo into the elo of pub-
lic vision through the emblematic meanings of the nakeo booy.
INTERLUDE: VIOLENCE, MEMORY, REFRESENTATION
The problem with violence, as I have trieo to show, is not merely one of behavior.
It is also a matter linkeo to the proouction ano consolioation of reference ano
meaning: the performance ano oiscourse of memory. I argue, in short, that vio-
:o orxocinr
s v\kr
lence may be engenoereo by iconographic representations. In postwar Germany,
public nuoity was mobilizeo as a specic form of countermemory that coulo be
transporteo through the iconography of booies. Nakeo skin, equateo with nature
ano natural signiers, sought to expel the booy from the terrain of social violence.
Natural nakeoness, as a symbolic construct, preempteo presence, ioentity, ano pro-
priety: it proouceo a closure of history. Such a refusal of history, the very attempt
to suppress or control elos of violent memory through a corporal aesthetic, seems
to be a retreat, a oeparture, into a mythic realm: the innocent ano wholesome worlo
of nature. These mythographic phantasms of natural nuoity enable Germans to
exhibit their booies publicly without shame: the theater of nakeoness is stageo
against the traumatic memories of Nazi racial/sexual violence.
But such a reinvigoration of nuoist booy practices seems particularly signicant
in a global worlo oroer. Flaceo within the context of transnational economies,
transnational commooity culture, ano guestworker immigration, German nakeo-
ness is once again becoming white. In turn, this form of racialization echoes tropes
of an earlier era, a circumstance that may well be suggestive of the ,re,emergence
of a racial aesthetic that oemanos the erasure ano suppression of oierence.
Moreover, the public staging of the nakeo booy, with its evocation of nature
an antithesis of historyis paraooxically tieo to an oppositional language of vi-
olence ano annihilation. Leftist activists, incluoing supporters of the :q6os an-
tifascist movement, promote the use of verbal violence as a meoium for political
contestation. In oemonstrations, political rallies, ano election campaigns, the mo-
bilization of traumatic memory formations is accomplisheo through linguistic, vi-
sual, ano performative practices that are stageo in an eort to remake ,ano fortify,
a oemocratic public sphere. Although the German New Left emphasizes its com-
mitment to liberal oemocratic values ,antimilitarism, minority rights, feminism,,
my research uncovereo a perpetual reliance on metaphors ano images that was
,ano is, historically problematic. The organic imagery, with its evocation of nature,
that is prevalent in leftist booy practices is synchronizeo with a verbal oiscourse of
violence ano annihilation. A range of highly chargeo image schema, focuseo on
oeath, silencing, ano physical brutality ,typieo by the swastika, SS sign, gallows,
Nazi rhetoric, oeath camps, are appropriateo as antisymbols, transformeo into a
language of resistance: the opposition to a violent past. Iantasies of violence, oi-
recteo against the political other, are thereby not merely historicizeo but repro-
ouceo as templates of action ano ioentity. Holocaust images, oeployeo as opposi-
tional signs, seem to facilitate a profouno oissociation from shame.
In the following section, I attempt to scrutinize how social memories of genocioe,
Nazi terror, ano race-baseo violence are verbally invokeo by postwar German an-
tifascists. With a focus on Germanys New Left activists, who belong to a broao-
baseo oemocratic social movement ,heaoeo by the party of the Greens,, I explore
how the historical experience of Nazism ano the Holocaust emergeo as a forma-
tive oiscourse in leftist political protest. The booy, as in the public theater of nuoity,
gures as a central memory icon in the New Lefts verbal battles.
+nr noroc\ts+ \xn ornx\x rori+ics or xrxonv :.
TRANSFOSED MEMORY: RACIAL FHANTASMS
AS OFFOSITIONAL SIGNS
The proouction of oeath ano the erasure of Jewish booies were central to the Nazi
politics of race. The aim of genocioe was to maintain the health of the German
booy by enforcing a strict regimen of racial hygiene ,Froctor :q88, Muller-Hill :q88,
Aly et al. :qq,. German political fantasy employeo a mooel of race that relieo on
images of oisease, oirt, ano infection. Blooo became a marker of pathological oif-
ference, a signier of lth ano contagion: Jews ano outsioers were equateo with ex-
crement that hao to be eliminateo or expungeo ,Dunoes :q8,. After :q, these
same images reappeareo in right-wing protest against immigrants: foreigners, seen
as pollutants, a oangerous racial threat, became victims of street violence ,Linke
:qq, :qqb,. The political Right calleo for the expulsion of all ethnic others. One
example, grati that appeareo on the raoio tower in Irankfurt, expresseo the oe-
sire to purge the German nation of foreign ,ano polluting, matter ,Muller :q8,:
Ioreigners out of Germany!
Excrement/shit out of the booy!
;Aolroct too oo Dcotclloro!
Sclctc oo ocm Iotpct! ,
These same motifs surface in the political language of the German Left. In their
public protests against the street terror against immigrants, leftist activists, like the
supporters of the Anti-Iascist League in West Berlin, maoe use of the following
formulaic slogans.
14
The verbal repertoire of Leftist speech acts articulates a oe-
sire to eraoicate the enemy by tapping into a paraoigm of elimination:
Turks in! Nazis get out!
,Ttlcr tctr. ^ot too! ,
Garbage out! Human beings in!
,Mll too! Mcrclcr tctr! ,
Nazi oirt must be purgeo!
,^ot Dtccl mo .cg! ,
Keep your environment clean! Get rio of the brown lth!
,Holtc Dctrc Um.clt oo/ct! Sclmct .cg ocr /toorcr Dtccl! ,
Nazis out! Cut away ,exterminate, the excrement!
,^ot too! Hoo .cg ocr Sclct! ,
The German language of expulsion, as exemplieo by the oppositional terms
tctr ano too, transcenos historical ano ioeological bounoaries. Unlike the corre-
sponoing trto ano oot of in English, the German terms tctr ano too are not merely
spatial referents. Their use is grounoeo in a paraoigm in which the nation, the imag-
ineo political community, is a human booy. The oenial of membership, ano the ex-
pulsion of people, is linguistically conceptualizeo as a process of booily oischarge:
a form of excretion or elimination. German too belongs to a semantic elo that
oenes expulsion as a physiological process, a process of termination ano oeath
:: orxocinr
s v\kr
,oocr, oomoclcr, lctoo, Gotoo, oottlgcr, oomctcr, etc.,. The German too is a his-
torical cognate of terms oenoting belly, stomach, uterus, intestines ,Fokorny
:qq:::o,. Roo, whether in language use or semantic practice, retains a
metaphoric connection to booy parts that expel or excrete waste matter.
The converse of this oiscorporative symbolism, oesignateo by the German term
tctr, is likewise baseo on a physiological mooel. The armation of membership,
ano the inclusion of people, is linguistically conceptualizeo as a process of incor-
poration ano simultaneously as a process of homogenization ano cleansing
,ibio.:q6,. Inoeeo, tctr belongs to a semantic elo that comprises both mean-
ings ,lctctr, tctrltcl, ctrtg,. This ouality is reecteo in contemporary German usage.
Rctr signies inclusion, as in Ttlcr tctr, literally Turks in, a slogan coineo in the
:q8os by the New Left, aovocating a national agenoa of ethnic integration. The
term also oenotes purication or cleanliness, as in }oocrtctr, meaning cleanseo of
Jews, an expression coineo in the :qos, articulating the Thiro Reichs program-
matic concern with racial purity. One of the announceo Nazi goals was to make
Germany }oocrtctrthat is, free of Jews, an imperative for racial purging ,Bau-
man :q8q::o, Dunoes :q8::.6,. The metaphoric equation of booily purity with
membership is further attesteo by evioence from semantic reconstructions: Ger-
man tctr is a historic cognate of terms oenoting cut, separate, rip, slice, tear, sever
,Fokorny :qq:q6,. As suggesteo by this language of violence, the claim to Ger-
man membership always requires some form of purging: the excretion of presumeo
lth or the excision ano amputation of contaminants.
Images of ethnic integration or German solioarity are often expresseo in terms
of this corporal language of expulsion, a language through which killing is re-
oeneo as therapeutic. Interestingly, physicians who participateo in genocioe un-
oer Nazism often useo the same rationalization to legitimate their participation in
mass killing. Irequently, they orew analogies to surgery: just as a physician, in or-
oer to heal, will cut o a gangrenous leg, so the social physician must amputate
the sick part of society ,Lifton :q86,. Racial oierences were presenteo, ano treateo,
as matters of meoical pathology.
German Leftists have appropriateo the motif of expulsion as an oppositional
symbol: through a transposition of memory ano meaning, their speech acts con-
vey a message of protest. But, paraooxically, the antifascist oiscourse perpetuates
racist axioms:
Nazis get out!
,^ot too! ,
This text, which appeareo on a house wall in Berlins city center, oemanos the ex-
pulsion of Nazis ,see Iigure q.,. Spray-painteo in reo capital letters, the implieo
urgency of the postulate is supporteo by visual means. The typographic message
faoes into the image of a grotesque, masklike face, a template of the oespiseo
Nazi. Drawn with exaggerateo oriental features, the image signies the alien or
+nr noroc\ts+ \xn ornx\x rori+ics or xrxonv :
Iigure q.. Nazis Out!: Antifascist Grati, Berlin, :qq. Fhotograph copyright Uli
Linke.
foreign. This leftist grati is an attempt at oemonization, accomplisheo by a ois-
turbing reliance on race-baseo iconographic markers. Such a oepiction of evil,
which envisions Nazis as an Asiatic threat that must be stoppeo, expungeo, or
oriven out, entails an unsettling confusion between the perpetrators of genocioe
ano their victims. As Omer Bartov ,:qq8, observeo:
West German representations of the past have often incluoeo the gure of the Nazi.
This elusive type, rarely presenteo with any oegree of sympathy, retains a complex
relationship with its preoecessor, the Jew. Serving as a metaphor for the Nazi in
us, it inverts the oiscreoiteo notion of the Jew in us |a racist axiom propagateo by
National Socialists|. . . . Simultaneously, it presents the Nazi as the paraoigmatic
other, just as the Jew hao been in the past. . . . The new enemy of postwar Germany,
the Nazi, is thus both everywhere ano nowhere. On the one hano, he lurks in
everyone ano, in this sense, can never be ferreteo out. On the other hano, he is es-
sentially so oierent from us that he can be saio never to have existeo in the rst
place in any sense that woulo be historically meaningful or signicant for . . . con-
temporary Germany |or| the vast majority of inoivioual Germans. . . . Hence we
cannot be helo responsible for his misoeeos. Just like the Devil, the Nazi pene-
trates the worlo from another sphere ano must be exorcizeo. ,pp. q.q,
Ior the New Left, the Nazi is a metaphor of the satanic element in postwar
German society: a legacy of the Holocaust. The spray-painteo portrait of the
Nazi reveals oeep-seateo anxieties about the ubiquity of evilan elusive threat
that is renoereo tangible through images of racial oierence. Such a representa-
tion of Nazis as Asian , Jewish, other serves two purposes. It oistances leftist Ger-
mans from the past ano acquits them of their sense of guilt by placing Nazis into
a separate, race-markeo category. Moreover, their conation of the Nazi threat with
the Asian/Jewish menace ,a postulate of the Thiro Reich that is rehabilitateo
by unthinking anti-Semitism, also greatly facilitates the New Lefts sense of mar-
tyroom ano victimhooo.
Another text, painteo across the facaoe of a university builoing in West Berlin
,see Iigure q.8,, oemanos the expulsion of Nazis, while opposing the extraoition
of non-Germans:
Nazis get out!
Drive the Nazis away! Ioreigners stay!
,^ot too!
^ot cctttct/cr! Aolrocttrrcr /lct/cr! ,
Written as a political protest, these antifascist slogans aovocate tolerance of ethnic
oiversity. But the chosen language of expulsion ,too, get out, cctttct/cr, orive away,
ano emplacement ,/lct/cr, stay, operates from assumptions of a pure nation, ano
taps into postwar memory formations of blooo, history, ano homelano. The German
term cctttct/cr ,expulsion, refers to the forceo removal or extraoition of people from
a national oomain: it conjures images of territorial oislocation or oisplacement. Un-
+nr noroc\ts+ \xn ornx\x rori+ics or xrxonv :
oer Hitler, before :q, this meaning of expulsion was employeo by National Socialists
to oescribe their policy of Juoeocioe: to kill ano orive out the Jews , }oocr cctttct/cr,.
After :q, with the collapse of the Thiro Reich, the language of expulsion became
a signier for victimization, referring to those Germans oisplaceo by Hitlers war in
Eastern Europe ,otc Vcttttc/crcr,. In such contexts, ano as useo by these slogans, ex-
pulsion means termination, an uprooting, which kills, renoers homeless, ano ex-
iles. The German oiscourse of expulsion works from assumptions of a political com-
munity, a homelano, that is oeneo by contrast to all that is foreign or oistant: as
a quasi-mythical realmxeo, unitary, ano bounoeoit privileges racial purity
ano homogeneity ,Feck :qq6:8.8,. In the German historical imagination, this
concept of homelano ,Hctmot, is invokeo as a synonym for race ,blooo, ano terri-
tory ,soil,a oeaoly combination that leo to exile or annihilation of anyone who
oio not belong. . . . Unoer the National Socialists |it| meant the muroerous exclu-
sion of anything un-German ,Morley ano Robins :qq6:66,. As an act of rhetor-
ical violence, the slogans oemano to banish or to expel Nazis ,that is, right-wing
extremists, taps into this nationalist oiscourse of muroer ano homelano.
These acts of narrative violence teno to follow a preoictable pattern: intenoeo
as a political response to the brutalization of refugees ano immigrants, these criti-
: orxocinr
s v\kr
Iigure q.8. Drive the Nazis Away! Ioreigners Stay!: Antifascist Grati, West Berlin,
:q8q. Fhotograph copyright Uli Linke.
cal utterances by leftist protesters transpose racial violence into a meoium of op-
position. Ior instance, in West Berlin, in January :q8q, immeoiately after the sen-
ate elections, antifascist activists ano members of the Green/Alternative Farty as-
sembleo in protest. Their anger was oirecteo against the militant right-wing party
of Republicans, which hao unexpecteoly gaineo eleven seats in the Berlin Senate.
The protesters organizeo nightly oemonstrations, where they oisplayeo banners ex-
pressing their political sentiments. One banner showeo a clencheo human st
smashing a swastika, fragmenting it. Another banner, a white caroboaro poster fas-
teneo to a stick, showeo a tightly closeo st squashing ,with a top-oown movement,
a black swastika, crushing it beneath. One banner, maoe to resemble a national
ag, fashioneo from reo ano green cloth ,the emblems of the urban environmen-
talists ano the Olo Left,, showeo a large st smashing a black swastika ,hitting it
oeao center, fragmenting it,. Other banners oemanoeo the annihilation of politi-
cal opponentsthat is Nazis, fascists, or right-wing supportersby reoucing them
to muck or oirt: /to.r ltl ,see Iigure q.q,:
Hack/smash away the brown lth!
,Hoo .cg ocr /toorcr Dtccl! ,
The enemys reouction to lth, specically excrement, taps into race-baseo fan-
tasies of eliminationa legacy of the Holocaust. Until :q, unoer Hitler, Ger-
man anti-Semitism was promulgateo by an obsessive concern with scatology: Jews
were equateo with feces ano oirt, a symbolic preoccupation that encooeo Ger-
manys orive for racial purity ,Dunoes :q8,. The protesters banner, which oe-
manos the violent erasure of brown ltha circumlocution for Nazis ,for ex-
ample, Brown Shirts, or SA, Hitlers militia, as fecal wasteis accompanieo by a
large skeletal gure. The skeleton ,maoe of caroboaro ano paper, reiterates this
connection between lth ano fascism: the emblematic oeaths-heao ,Totcrlopf ,,
this iconography of skull ano bones, was the insignia ano symbol of Hitlers ter-
ror-inspiring elite troops ,SS, or Sclottocl ,. The skeleton conjures images of the
persistent existence of Nazi perpetrators: life-takers, oeath-givers. Extermination
or the removal of lth ,neo-Nazis, is renoereo by leftists as the legitimate oisposal
of an enouring threat.
In an another instance, leftist opposition to right-wing extremism, accentuateo
by the smashing of a swastika, is maoe verbally explicit ,see Iigure q.:o,. One ban-
ner, carrieo by several protesters, reaos:
University rage against the Nazi brooo!
,Urt-1ot gcgcr ^ot-Btot ! ,
The signs reo-lettereo text appeareo on a white cloth, which, as its centerpiece,
oisplayeo a black swastika smasheo ,broken, by a clencheo st. The slogan names
the protesters target of wrath: the Nazi brooo! ,^ot-Btot,. In this instance, vio-
lent opposition is oirecteo not against fascism but its postwar legacy: Hitlers
+nr noroc\ts+ \xn ornx\x rori+ics or xrxonv :,
Iigure q.q. Annihilate the Brown Iilth!: Antifascist Iconography ,Image ano Banner,,
West Berlin, :q8q. Fhotograph copyright Uli Linke.
progeny. The reference to Nazi brooo ,Btot, conjures frightful images of evil:
beastly ospring, a litter of nonhuman enos, whichhatcheo ano careo for
populate the worlo. By orawing on genealogical metaphors of progeny ano
breeoing, the protesters speak of their right-wing opponents as a colonizing
threat. But this language of propagation also entails an act of racialization: the po-
litical enemy is typieo by reference to oehumanizing ano biologizing symbols.
Such a choice of signs compels the use of violence. Brutality ano uncontrolleo anger
are turneo into a weapon of oefense. Fainteo in reo ,a leftist symbol for sacrice
ano revolution,, the woro togc alluoes to a berserker state ,German 1ot, fury,,
an irresistible orive that relies on blooosheo as a violent or cathartic release , Jones
:q::.6.,. The slogans accompanying visual image recommenos annihilation: a
st smashes a swastika. The st extenos from the gure of a bear, the traoitional
emblem of the city of Berlin. This ioentication of leftist activists with a geopolit-
ical site expresses the overt oesire to eraoicate or banish Nazis from a concrete
social terrain.
What are the implications of these racist iconographies, proouceo by German
leftists, for the formation of postwar civil society? How ooes the mimetic repro-
ouction of fascist signiers ,blooo, race, contagion, in leftist political oiscourse
+nr noroc\ts+ \xn ornx\x rori+ics or xrxonv :
Iigure q.:o. Eraoicate the Nazi Brooo!: Antifascist Frotest Banner, West Berlin, :q8q.
Fhotograph copyright Uli Linke.
eect the reconstruction of a oemocratic public sphere in postwar/postunica-
tion Germany? Ano why are such images of contagion, annihilation, ano oeath
continuously recycleo in the New Lefts eort to fortify a nonviolent liberal
oemocracy, a political project that is imagineo through the utopic iconicity of
nakeo/natural booies?
DECENTERING VIOLENCE:
THE LANDSCAPES OF POST-HOLOCAUST MEMORY
The public culture of violence in Germany, which follows a pattern of invocation
ano oissociation, has founo anchorage in a variety of social settings. It is repro-
ouceo, albeit in sanitizeo form, by acaoemic responses to my research on memory
ano violence. Often oelivereo in scathing polemics ano personalizeo attacks, schol-
arly criticisms teno to oismiss the valioity of such research. Ior instance, at a con-
ference in :qq, a well-known German historian angrily responoeo:
I live there ano I oont recognize the Germany you oescribe. Thats not the Germany
I know. I suggest you go back ano check your sources. Nobooy woulo say such things.
Ive never hearo anybooy say anything like that. Its taboo. You cannot say these things
in public without an inevitable scanoal. Folitical parties woulo never enoorse such
statements. Who are these people you cite? They are irrelevant, insignicant people.
They are not representative. I am sure that this person you quote ooes exist, but she
woulo have never saio anything like that. So my suggestion to you is: go back ano
check your sources!
Such objections to my work, which I consistently encountereo, were baseo on
the rejection of my ethnographic sources. German acaoemics contesteo the exis-
tence of oiscursive violence by oenying the valioity of my evioence: local-level pol-
itics, grati, slogans, everyoay sociolinguistics, street violence, normal ways of
speaking, ano the language ano vocabulary of popular meoia were rejecteo as le-
gitimate oata. After presenting my work at an international symposium in :qq in
Berlin, a meeting focuseo on violence ano racism, I was tolo that my research hao
misseo the mark entirely by examining political language. As one historian in-
structeo me:
In politics, the rhetorical aim is to annihilate the opponent. But the selection of
metaphors, with which one can accomplish this, is limiteo. There are only few meth-
oos, few possibilities: stabbing, hanging, shooting. Ano these methoos shoulo not be
taken literally. To put it bluntly: language is oierent from action, rhetoric is a mat-
ter of theaterpolitical oramaano cannot be taken too seriously.
Accoroing to my German critics, language ano violence were antithetical ois-
courses. Verbalization was privilegeo as a cognitive tool, while violence was inter-
preteo as an unmeoiateo practice, an expression of primoroial hatreo. Baseo on
:o orxocinr
s v\kr
these conceptions, my oescriptive exposure of narrative violence was oismisseo as
insignicant ano even meaningless.
Fuzzleo by my treatment of language as cultural practice, some German schol-
ars were even more incenseo by my investigation of violence across political bouno-
aries. How coulo I suggest that rightist militants ano antifascists proouceo a com-
mon cultural oiscourse? Dio I not realize that leftists were engageo in an ioeological
struggle against fascism? Accoroing to my German critics, violent fantasy was en-
genoereo by a specically right-wing agenoa. While the Left polc violence, which
was oismisseo as a rhetorical tactic, the right croctco violence. This attempt to at-
tribute the practice of violence exclusively to right-wing agency was perceiveo as
unproblematic. Accoroing to several German commentators, violence was a char-
acteristic expression of a conservative or rightist mentality. In contraoiction to the
empirical evioence oereo by several sociological stuoies ,Heitmeyer :qq., Helo
ano Horn :qq., Homeister ano Sill :qq,, rightist perpetrators were imagineo as
uneoucateo members of the lower classes, who were unemployeo ano oispossesseo
of stable social relationships, they were typieo as social marginals, who useo vio-
lence to compensate for their inability to verbalize ,otc Urfltglctt o Vctptoclltclcr,.
Here the use of language was oeneo as a transformative meoium, which converteo
primoroial oesires into rational social precepts. Since verbal articulation was per-
ceiveo to be a leftist prerogative, rightists were constructeo as primitive others
whose rational faculties were impaireo without this meoiating capacity of language.
In any case, such presuppositions ,in fact, conjureo stereotypes, might account for
the fact that my oescriptions of right-wing violence were never once contesteo.
Of course, some German acaoemics conceoeo that my oisclosure of leftist ois-
courses of violence was basically correct. But even ouring those moments of covert
agreement, the perpetration of violence was quickly oissociateo from the mooer-
ate left ano projecteo onto a more militant, antisocial periphery. At a symposium
on ioentity in March :qq, a young German scholar thus angrily explaineo:
I was really oisturbeo by your presentation about the Green/Alternatives. As you
shoulo know, most supporters of this party are committeo pacists. The Greens, even
in Berlin, never use violence in their public protests. So when you are oescribing the
violent oiscourse of the German left, you are really referring to political alliances other
than the Greens. Violence is useo systematically by members of the autonomous ano
anarchist factions. They still believe in armeo struggle. In Berlin, they live in
Kreuzberg. Thats a completely oierent scene. They oont work within the system.
You cant just lump them all together like that.
The oisplacement of annihilatory oiscourses to the fringes of German society
was a common ploy of critique ano oenial. Contesting the pervasiveness of ois-
cursive violence, some German scholars tenoeo to oismiss my ethnographic evi-
oence by these strategies of oisplacement. Such attempts at invalioation were some-
times coupleo with other forms of oismissal: incluoeo were oemanos for greater
relativization, accusations of a totalization ano exaggerateo cultural criticism,
+nr noroc\ts+ \xn ornx\x rori+ics or xrxonv :.
charges of implementing a program of language purism, ano an aovocacy for
American-style political correctness. How oare I tell Germans how to speak?
These angry objections to my noings sometimes took the form of outright oe-
nial. A young woman at an international conference in :qq responoeo as follows
to my presentation:
I workeo with the Greens for several years, ano among them were some of the kino-
est ano gentlest people I have ever met. How can you say these things about them? I
think you are wrong to say that the Greens have a problem with violence or pollution.
If that was true they woulo aovocate the use of pesticioes against insects or promote
the oumping of toxic wastes into the oceans. These are things which they oppose.
Such attituoes of oenial ano oissociation by German acaoemics were on occasion
coupleo with their plea for my silence. Ior example, at a meeting for area special-
ists in April :qq, I was angrily reproacheo by a German legal scholar: You just
cant say these things about the left. The left has maoe heaoway, changeo many
things with their initiatives, ano if you say such things it leaos to setbacks.
My ethnographic oocumentation of exterminatory violence ano its perpetual
contestation by members of my German auoiences engenoer a paraoox: genocioe,
both as a practice ano a oiscourse, is clearly linkeo to mooernity, yet some Ger-
man scholars prefer to oeny this. Their attituoe towaro violence is embeooeo in a
theoretical approach that promotes a basic assumption of progress. Mooernity is
equateo with the oevelopment of a civil society, in which outbursts of violence are
suppresseo by the states pacication of oaily life. Irom such a perspective Nazism,
genocioe, ano annihilatory racism are interpreteo as anomalies, as regressive aber-
rations, resulting from temporary social breakoown.
GENOCIDE, MODERNITY, AND CULTURAL MEMORY
What are we to make of these collective imaginings? Zygmunt Bauman, in Mooct-
rtt, oro tlc Holocoot ,:q8q,, argueo that genocioe in Germany must be unoerstooo
as a central event of mooern history ano not as an exceptional episooe. The pro-
ouction of mass oeath was facilitateo by mooern processes of rationalization. Ex-
terminatory racism was tieo to conceptions of social engineering, to the ioea of cre-
ating an articial oroer by changing the present one ano by eliminating those
elements that coulo not be altereo as oesireo. Genocioe was baseo on the techno-
logical ano organizational achievements of an aovanceo inoustrial society. A po-
litical program of complete extermination became possible unoer mooernity be-
cause of the collaboration of science, technology, ano bureaucracy.
Such an interpretation of mass violence requires a critical reconsioeration of
mooernity as a civilizing process, as a progressive rationalization of social life ,see,
for example, Elias :qq, Weber :q,. It requires rethinking genocioe, not as an
exceptional episooe, a state of anomie ano a breakoown of the social, a suspension
of the normal oroer of things, a historical regression, or a return to primitive in-
:: orxocinr
s v\kr
stincts ano mythic origins ,for example, Sorel :q:, Giraro :qq,, but as an integral
principle of mooernity. Comprehensive programs of extermination are neither
primitive nor instinctual ,Iein :qq, Melson :qq.,. They are the result of sustaineo
conscious eort ano the substitution of moral responsibility with organizational
oiscipline ,Hilberg :q8, Irieolanoer :q88, Bartov :qq6,.
This concept of mooernity emphasizes the normalcy of the perpetrators. In
the :qos ano :qos, oroinary German citizens participateo in the killings: As is
well known by now, the SS ocers responsible for the smooth unfoloing of oper-
ations were not particularly bestial or, for that matter, saoistic. ,This is true of the
overwhelming number of them, accoroing to survivors., They were normal human
beings who, the rest of the time, playeo with their chiloren, garoeneo, listeneo to
music. They were, in short, civilizeo ,Tooorov :qqo::,. The genesis of the Holo-
caust oers an example of the ways in which oroinary Germansotherwise nor-
mal inoivioualscoulo become perpetrators by their passive acceptance of the
political ano bureaucratic mechanisms that permitteo the ioea of mass extermi-
nation to be realizeo ,Mommsen :qq::..,. The technocratic nature of Nazi
genocioe attests to the banality of evilthat is, the sight of a highly mechanizeo
ano bureaucratizeo worlo where the extermination of entire groups of people who
were regaroeo as contagion coulo become a normal occurrence ,Arenot :q6,.
Irom this perspective, race-baseo violence ano public machinations of mass oeath
cannot be unoerstooo as regressive historical processes ,Ieloman :qq, Kuper :q8:,
Malkki :qqa, Tilly :qo,: they are manifestations of new forms of political vio-
lence ano the centralizing tenoencies of mooern state power.
But such a mooernist conception of genocioe, while it seeks to compreheno the
inoustrial eciency with which Jews were killeo, is also oeeply oisturbing. As Omer
Bartov ,:qq8:qq, suggesteo: Recent works on the links between genocioe ano
mooernity have both the potential of oistancing us from the horror ,by sanitizing
it, ano of making us all complicit in it ,since we belong to an age that perpetrates
horror,. The perpetration of mass muroer, even in a mooern age, must be un-
oerstooo in its relation to the existence of a powerful political imaginary through
which everyoay unoerstanoings of national belonging, race, ano booy are oeneo.
How oo we analyze a cultural history of genocioe? Mooernity, as Yehuoa Bauer
,:qq8::, points out, whatever the oenition of the concept, oio not aect only Ger-
many, ano in any case, it ooes not explain why the Jews were the victims. As I have
trieo to show, the stuoy of the social consensus formeo by ioeologies, attituoes, ano
symbolic practices transmitteo over historic time proouces the possibility of an-
swering why it occurreo.
MODERNITY AND BODY MEMORY:
THE ARCHAEOLOGICAL RUINS OI STATE CULTURE
In my analysis of post-Holocaust memory practices, our unoerstanoing of Ger-
man historicity was meoiateo by the concept of the unconscious, of oream work,
+nr noroc\ts+ \xn ornx\x rori+ics or xrxonv :
ano of fantasy formation. Recognizing the material force of the historical uncon-
scious, I emphasizeo the formation, inheritance, ano oevolution of essentialist sym-
bolic systems or grios of perception. What are the builoing blocks of such essen-
tialist constructs? My analysis contributes to an archaeology of essentialist
metaphysics in the public sphere of mooern Germany. Throughout I inquireo how
essentialism is maoe. How ooes it achieve such a oeterministic ano habitual holo
on the experience, perception, ano processing of reality?
My treatment of essentialism as a formative construct ano my orientation to-
waro the notion of a historical unconscious mean that the point of emergence of
ethnographic oata in this type of stuoy ooes not conform to the highly local-
izeo/bounoeo proling or extraction of oata typical of conventional anthropo-
logical analysis. A major historical conoition for the replication of essentialism, as
I oocument in this chapter, is the continuous oscillation between free-oating fan-
tasy formations ano their frightening instantiations in precise locales ano in specic
performances: public nuoity ano eliminationist speech acts. Irom what oiscreet sites
of social experience, class aliation, or genoer ioentity ooes essentialist fantasy
originate? We are no longer within the circumscribeo space of chilohooo social-
ization, the nuclear family, the resioential community. Fopular culture ano mass
meoia have oeterritorializeo fantasy, although instantiations of fantasy can be given
a oiscrete cooroinate or topography. In many cases, the fantasy formations, par-
ticularly those embeooeo in linguistic ano visual icons, as I oemonstrate, crisscross
oivergent class ano political positions: thus the common symbolic grammar of
blooo between the fascists ano the New Left, or the oisturbing evioence for a com-
mon logic of elimination between the antifascist Left ano the Nazis. Such essen-
tialist fantasy formations gather force ano momentum precisely because of their
inoistinct parameters in cultural repertoires. This fuzziness evaoes simplistic
cause/eect analysis. Rather, as my research suggests, it requires ethnographic ex-
ploration on a heterogeneity or montage of oiscursive ano image-making sites: po-
litical oemonstrations, the mass meoia, popular memory, linguistic substrata, booy
practices, ano symbolic geographies, which all share a translocal, national scope.
The German instrumental imagination of current ioeologies of violence works
with mystieo bits ano pieces of materiality, rehabilitating olo positivities in the
search for social anchorage. We are in the material culture of the booy ,blooo, race,
nuoity,, ano the linkeo somatic ano meoicalizeo nationalism that has specic Ger-
man ,but also trans-European, cooroinates. A root metaphor of the German state
oenes citizenship by blooo ,as opposeo to soilthat is, place of birthas in the
case of Irance,. Blooo ano soil, booy ano space, constitute the materialist theory
of national interiority ano foreign exteriority. There exists a funoamental contra-
oiction between the liberal states promotion of tolerance ano the founoing char-
ter of familial blooo membership, which unoerwrites stigmatizing imageries of oth-
erhooo. Ior the pathos of the nation state, that is, the political community as an
object of patriotic feeling, oerives from the liberal revolution, with its infantiliza-
tion ano genoering of the subjects of the fatherlano.
: orxocinr
s v\kr
In the twentieth century, however, the familial mooel of the organic nation
was meoicalizeo. By the early :qos, fascist sociologists began to envision na-
tions as units of blooo. A gooo oeal of German social theory ouring the rst
part of this century was in eect a meoical anthropology, a oiagnostic science of
the racial booy. Accoroingly, the nation was imagineo as a unity lleo with
blooo, an organic river basin, which functioneo as a genealogical reservoir for
a lcoltl, German booy politic: Thus nationhooo orives time, inoeeo history
out of history: it is space ano organic fate, nothing else ,Bloch :qqo:qo,. Na-
tionality came to be accepteo as a meoical fact by the fascist state ano its sup-
porting racial ioeologies. Such a meoicalizeo vision of nationhooo resulteo in the
transposition of earlier forms of state culture into the political vernacular of
everyoay life, as is evioent in contemporary Germany. My ethnographic mate-
rial shows that a retrograoe archaism of national state culture is continuously
repositioneo in the present. Crucial to this reappearance is the fact that the cur-
rent manifestations of the civil state remain both neutral ano even opposeo to
those ioeologies of organic unity ano spatial purication, but nevertheless abet
them. This is oialectical necessity, since it is precisely such resioual archaeologi-
cal strata, oloer seoiments, earlier ioeological manifestations, ano cultural mem-
ories of a violent state that are thrown up ano expropriateo to organize the po-
litical perceptions of the present. Thus blooo imagery, nuoe nature, ano
organicism, as a oevolveo language of the nation-state, also inect the oiscourse
of the German Left. There exists, as I have trieo to show, a cultural complicity
of the Left with the organistic iconography of the Right. The German New Left
unwittingly accepts the fascist polarity between oelement ano sealeo armament:
the national booy. The historical project of this masculinist enclosure is focuseo
on the containment, inoeeo, the eraoication, of lthy booies, foreign ano other.
When thus attempting to oecipher this logic of German national fantasy, as Allen
Ieloman ,:qq6, suggests:
We cannot escape the image of the archeological ruins of Nazi state culture emerg-
ing from a forest of public memory as a substructure of everyoay life. . . . It is as if a
ea market of former bureaucracies ano ioeologies opens up for ioeological trac,
with its useo ousteo-o contents of gas chambers, military campaigns, racial hygiene,
racist economic rationalities, war imagery, ano formulaic linguistic cooes. These an-
tiques are excavateo by the anxieties of everyoay life, ano are superimposeo on con-
temporary German social space, enoowing it with the aura of authenticateo ruins: a
ruineo mooernity . . . |with| an attic full of authenticating artifacts.
15
The ioeological ruins of the Thiro Reich, of race ano soil ano booy ano space,
are thus requireo by Left ano Right for a massive remetaphorization of the
postwar political lanoscape, a performance that inoicts the poverty of available
nonviolent political oepiction ano of the failure of existing institutional
optics, which can no longer visualize contemporary experience with any public
satisfaction.
+nr noroc\ts+ \xn ornx\x rori+ics or xrxonv :
NOTES
This chapter builds on some of my earlier works, notably Blooo oro ^ottor: Tlc Eotopcor Ac-
tlcttc of Rocc (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylavnia Press, :qqq) and Gctmor Bootc: Rocc
oro Rcptccrtottor oftct Httlct (New York: Routledge, :qqq), however with substantial revisions.
Short segments of this chapter also appeared in Ttorfotmtrg Artltopolog, 8, nos. :. (:qqq):
:.q6:; Ctt, oro Soctct,: Arrool Rcctc. ., (:qq8): :8; and Amcttcor Artltopologtt qq, no. .
(:qq): q, all American Anthropological Association.
:. The literature on the politics of post-Holocaust memory is enormous. Here I have
maoe reference to only some of the outstanoing recent examples.
.. This list of publications is not meant to be exhaustive, it merely samples some of the
excellent recent works on this issue.
. As Omer Bartov ,:qq8:q, has pointeo out, the enthusiastic reception by thiro-gen-
eration Germans of Golohagens book, which argueo that in the Thiro Reich Nazis ano
Germans were synonymous, was relateo to this oesireo sense of the past being another
country, or rather the granoparents fatherlano. See, for example, Roll ,:qq6,, Ullrich ,:qq6,,
ano Joe ,:qq6,.
. English translation from Herzog ,:qq8:.,.
. English translation from ibio. ,p. ., n. ::,.
6. Irom ibio. ,p. o,.
. Irom Sauer ,:q:.6,.
8. A prevalent :q8os peace movement slogan citeo by Claussen ,:q86:6:,.
q. Irom Fiwitt ,:q8:q,.
:o. Ior a oiscussion about the comparative importance of the German stuoent move-
ment, consult Buoe ,:qq::.., :.,.
::. Irom Herzog ,:qq8:q,, who provioes an in-oepth analysis of the recurrent coupling
of politics ano sex in the oebates of the German New Left movement ouring the late six-
ties. Ior a contemporary renoering, see Haug ,:q6:o:,.
:.. The photo caption text was translateo by Herzog ,:qq8:o,.
:. English translation from Herzog ,:qq8:o,.
:. I recoroeo these slogans ano texts ouring oierent stages of elowork in Germany:
:q888q, :qq ,Berlin,, :qq ,Coblenz,. Ior similar versions oocumenteo elsewhere, see, for
example, Sptcgcl ,:q8q:.6o,, Irtcttm ,:q8q:cover jacket,, Jager ,:qq,, ano Link ,:q8,.
:. Fersonal communication , July :6, :qq6,.
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:,:
:o
Aftermaths of Genocioe
Com/ootor Vtllogct
Mo, E/tloto oro }oo, Lcogct.ooo
This paper explores some eects of the massive mortality rate that Cambooia sus-
taineo in the :qos, especially ouring the regime of Democratic Kampuchea ,DK,
unoer Fol Fot. It focuses in particular on a Khmer peasant village of rice cultiva-
tors, Svay, that Ebihara originally stuoieo in :qq6o ano that she ano Leogerwooo
revisiteo several times through the :qqos.
1
Genocioe, coupleo with the Khmer
Rouge regimes attempt to create a revolutionary new society though simultaneous
oestruction of customary social institutions, hao oramatic repercussions on village
life even after Fol Fot was routeo in :qq. Unoer subsequent regimes over the past
two oecaoes, villagers have unoergone various processes of recovery ano rebuilo-
ing unoer changing oemographic, sociocultural, economic, ano political circum-
stances. The oiscussion here will focus on several oimensions of the manifolo
repercussions of the Fol Fot time ,omo, o-Pot,:
2
,:, the reconstitution of fami-
lies/householos, kinship bonos, ano social networks in the face of numerous oeaths,
as well as coping with an initial genoer imbalance createo by high mortality among
males ouring DK, ,., the revitalization of Buoohism after years of suppression, ano
,, the creation of a climate of fear ano continueo social ano political violence.
We cannot oeal with the profouno question of why the Cambooian genocioe oc-
curreo, an issue that has been oiscusseo ano oebateo by a number of scholars ,for
example, Chanoler :qq., Kiernan :qq6, Thion :qq, Hinton :qq, Jackson :q8q,.
Rather, we look at the circumstances ano eects of genocioe at the local level of a
specic community.
BACKGROUND
It woulo be useful to recap recent Cambooian history as context for this oiscussion.
In :qo a coup overthrowing Frince Norooom Sihanouk precipitateo a brutal civil
war between the Lon Nol government ano the insurgent Khmer Rouge, as well as
intensive covert bombing of the countrysioe by the Uniteo States in a spillover from
the conict in Vietnam. During the early :qos the communist rebels expanoeo rap-
ioly throughout the county until they captureo Fhnom Fenh on April :, :q, ush-
ering in Fol Fots infamous Democratic Kampuchea. The regime was short-liveo,
lasting only through the eno of :q8, when the Vietnamese, goaoeo by DK incur-
sions into Vietnam, invaoeo Cambooia ano routeo the Khmer Rouge, who retreateo
to bases on the boroer with Thailano ano certain other regions. At that time, many
people were forceo by or escapeo from the Khmer Rouge to the Thai boroer area,
where enormous refugee camps with hunoreos of thousanos of people were createo
unoer the auspices of the Uniteo Nations High Commissioner for Refugees ,on
camp life, see Irench :qqa,. Over a perioo of years following :qq, some .o,ooo
refugees were eventually relocateo to such countries as the Uniteo States, Irance,
Canaoa, ano Australia, creating an extensive Cambooian oiaspora ,Ebihara :q8,.
3
In Cambooia after :qq, the government ,initially calleo the Feoples Republic
of Kampuchea, or FRK, renameo the State of Cambooia, or SOC, in :q8q, moveo
graoually from an initially semisocialist system to restoration of various features of
prerevolutionary Cambooian society, incluoing private property, a market econ-
omy, ano the revival of Buoohism. Feace, however, was elusive, as the country ex-
perienceo reneweo civil conict between the incumbent FRK/SOC government
ano several resistance forces: the militant Khmer Rouge, a royalist group loyal to
Sihanouk, ano a pro-Western faction. Iollowing negotiations ano a peace agree-
ment among the contesting political groups, the Uniteo Nations sponsoreo a na-
tionwioe general election in :qq. The country was yet again renameo, this time
as the Kingoom of Cambooia, with Sihanouk as gureheao leaoer over an osten-
sibly coalition government of ocials from several political parties or factions. In
fact, however, the Cambooian Feoples Farty ,unoer Frime Minister Hun Sen, holos
primary political power.
MORTALITY
Even prior to the genocioe of the DK regime, the civil war perioo causeo some
.,ooo excess oeaths ,Banister ano Johnson :qq:8,. The village of Svay was
locateo in a region of intense ghting between Lon Nol government soloiers ano
rebel Khmer Rouge, several villagers were killeo by ranoom gunre in the early
:qos, ano people began to ee the countrysioe as it became too oangerous to teno
the rice elos. Villagers escapeo to what they hopeo woulo be safe havens in ano
arouno Fhnom Fenh, ano their abanooneo houses ano elos fell into ruin. Imme-
oiately after the Khmer Rouge victory in :q, when people were forcibly ejecteo
from Fhnom Fenh, many villagers trieo to return to Svay but founo only what they
characterizeo as an overgrown wiloerness , ptc,, where their homes hao once
stooo.
4
DK caores sent the wanoerers to a barren area nearby, where the evacuees
were forceo to live for several months in makeshift shelters with little fooo or wa-
ter. Eleven West Hamlet villagers oieo there from starvation ano illness before the
c\xnoni\x \irr\orns :,
surviving evacuees were oisperseo to Svay ano other sites that were rebuilt as com-
munes in the region.
During DK, Svay was controlleo by Khmer Rouge caores ano so-calleo Olo
Feoplethat is, oroinary people who hao either joineo or been liberateo by the
Khmer Rouge before their victory in :q. Urbanites ano rural peasants who hao
not been part of the revolutionary movement prior to :qincluoing Svay vil-
lagers who hao eo to Fhnom Fenh ouring the civil warwere pejoratively labeleo
New Feople, April : Feople, Lon Nol Feople, ano, more ominously, the en-
emy. Although Svay villagers were actually from the politically correct stratum of
poor peasantry, the Khmer Rouge suspecteo everyone of concealing former lives
as prosperous urbanites, government soloiers, eoucateo people, or even CIA agents.
One villager reporteo an exchange with a DK caore when he was ill:
|The caore| saio, The reason youre sick is that youre useo to living well. I replieo,
How can you say that? Ive been a farmer all my life. They saio, Youre useo to
living in comfort ano never workeo haro. 1c fought all the battles ano liberateo you.
You just came here with your two empty hanos ano your empty stomach. So .c have
the right to tell you what to oo. What .c say, goes.
Deneo as the other ,compare Hintons introouction to this volume,, New
Feople were subject to extremely harsh conoitions. With the abolition of private
property, markets, ano money, proouction ano consumption became communal.
As part of DKs oetermination to maximize agricultural output, people were or-
ganizeo into work teams that were segregateo on the basis of age ano genoer, they
were forceo to enoure unrelenting haro labor on the communes growing rice ano
other crops, constructing oams ano enormous irrigation systems, reshaping rice
paooies, tenoing animals, making fertilizer, ano pursuing an enoless array of other
tasks. Ironically, however, New Feople were given grossly inaoequate fooo rations,
consisting largely of thin rice gruel ano whatever wilo fooos might be forageo. They
also suereo enoemic illnesses ,such as fevers, oysentery, malaria, ano infections,
with little or no meoical aio, ano stringent oiscipline that incluoeo severe physical
punishments, imprisonment, ano execution for breaking rules or upon suspicion of
being enemies of the regime.
5
Villagers oescribeo DK in such terms as these:
Feoples worth was measureo in terms of how many cubic meters of oirt they moveo.
We hao to oig canals: measure ano oig, measure ano oig. Io fall carrying heavy
loaos . . . so youo walk ano fall, walk ano fall. Even when you got sick you oiont oare
stop working because theyo kill you, so you kept working until you collapseo. They
useo people without a thought as to whether we liveo or oieo.
We workeo so haro planting ano harvesting, there were piles of rice as big as this
house, but they took it away in trucks. . . . Youo be killeo if you trieo to take anything
for yourself. You coulo cc fooo, but you werent alloweo to eat it. We hao no freeoom
to oo anything: to eat, to sleep, to speak. We hio our crying, weeping into our pillows
at night.
:, orxocinr
s v\kr
Irom :q on, people were taken away to be killeo ,co, clool ,. |One oay in :q, seven
men in Svay| were taken away. |The Khmer Rouge caore| saio, Come on, loao up
everything, youre being taken to builo houses. They lieo. They oiont tell you they
were going to kill you, they saio youre going to work. But I knew. C |one of the men
being calleo up| also knew. He crieo ano embraceo his father. I went up to C ano he
saio, Were about to be separateo now. Im going. When people were taken away,
I knew in my heart that they were going to oie. I knew when they were taken away
with their hanos tieo behino their backs, but also when they were calleo away to work.
I kept thinking, when will I be taken away? But you coulont ask, ano you coulont
run awayor even kill yourselfbecause then theyo get your wife ano chiloren.
All of the preceoing maoe for massive mortality, estimateo at some :. million
,possibly as many as . million, oeaths out of a total population of about .q mil-
lion Cambooians in :q ,compare Kiernan :qq6:8, Cambooian Genocioe Fro-
gram :qqq::,.
6
Iurther, the oeath rate for males was higher than for females be-
cause men were more likely to oie from starvation or execution ,as well as combat
oeaths ouring the civil war,. Looking more specically at Svay, the following mor-
tality gures were calculateo for a oelimiteo population of :q persons whom Ebi-
hara hao known ouring her original elowork in :qq6o in one particular section,
West Hamlet, of Svay.
7
Taking into account the inhabitants who oieo natural oeaths
ano four who were killeo ouring the civil war preceoing DK, :q persons were still
alive in :q at the outset of the Fol Fot regime. During DK some of these people
remaineo in the Svay region, while others were oisperseo to communes elsewhere,
incluoing some northern provinces with especially harsh conoitions. Of these :q,
o oieo of starvation, overwork, illness, or execution ouring DK, a mortality rate
of o percent among West Svay villagers Ebihara hao previously known ,see also
Ebihara :qqb,.
8
During DK every aoult villager suereo the oeaths of close fam-
ily members, whether parents, granoparents, siblings, or chiloren, not to mention
oeaths of other relatives ano close frienosano they also liveo with the constant
threat of their own possible oeath.
AITERMATHS: IAMILY/HOUSEHOLD,
KIN, AND SOCIAL NETWORKS
Fart of Democratic Kampucheas attempt to create a raoical new society involveo
unoermining a crucial social group in prerevolutionary life: the family/householo,
which hao been the basic unit of economic proouction ano consumption, as well
as the locus of the strongest emotional bonos. Beyono the family, inoiviouals also
felt attachments ano moral obligations towaro members of a broaoly oeneo bi-
lateral kinoreo of relatives by both blooo ano marriage ,/org-/oor,. During DK, a
number of measures aimeo to unoercut sentiments ano cohesion among family
ano kinfolk. Huge numbers of people were moveo arouno the country in the oe-
ployment of the labor force, thus fracturing family ano kin relationships. Iorceo
separation occurreo also at the local level. Even when family or kin were baseo in
c\xnoni\x \irr\orns :,
the same commune, they were placeo in work teams segregateo by age ano gen-
oer such that husbanos ano wives saw one another only at night, ano parents ano
ospring coulo meet only occasionally.
9
Householo commensality was replaceo
by communal oining halls ,which alloweo the state to control fooo oistribution oown
to the grass roots level,. Chiloren were encourageo to spy upon ano turn against
their reactionary eloers. Marriages, formerly oecioeo upon by inoiviouals ano
parents, were now arrangeo between strangers or hao to be approveo by Khmer
Rouge caores. Expressions of love for family memberssuch as weeping over the
oeath of a spouse or chilowere oenigrateo, scorneo, ano even punisheo. One
woman manageo to remain impassively silent when her husbano was summoneo
to a work projectthat is, almost certain executionbut she coulo not contain her-
self when her newborn infant oieo shortly thereafter. In response to her uncon-
trollable wails, the KR caore responoeo oisoainfully: Youre crying over that lit-
tle thing? We lost all those people in our struggle, ano you oont see us crying.
After the Khmer Rouge were ousteo ano tight controls over the population were
lifteo, people moveo about the country searching for family ano kin from whom
they hao been separateo, ano many returneo to their home communities. Svay was
transformeo once more, reorganizeo as an oroinary village again, as many of its
original inhabitants returneo from other regions to which they hao been relocateo
ouring DK. It was then, one villager saio, that we founo out who was alive ano
who was oeao. Iamilies reconstituteo themselves with whatever members surviveo.
As in prerevolutionary times, present-oay Svay householos are either nuclear or ex-
tenoeo families. Some of the latter are three-generational stem families ,a couple
or wioow|er| with a marrieo chilo plus the latters spouse ano chiloren,, such as
was common in the past. Other extenoeo family householos, however, have more
varieo composition, as people followeo the prerevolutionary practice of sheltering
neeoy kin, ano some took in relatives left orphaneo or wiooweo after DK. ,One
householo, for example, has a wife ano husbano, the wifes wiooweo sister ano a
wiooweo aunt, plus the couples marrieo oaughter ano her husbano ano chiloren.,
Ties with kinfolk in the village ano nearby communities were also reactivateo, with
mutual aio of various kinos that incluoe labor exchange for rice cultivation, nan-
cial help in times of neeo, assistance for one anothers life cycle ano other rituals,
ano a sense of mutual concern ano moral obligation for one anothers welfare ,see
also Uimonen :qq6:,.
10
Contemporary patterns of reciprocal aio ano cooperation among kinsmen
ano also among close frienosare perceiveo by villagers as revivals of customary
,that is, prerevolutionary, patterns of behavior. In oiscussing aspects of present-oay
life ,such as cooperative labor ouring rice cultivation,, villagers often say that a
certain practice occurs as in times before ,oooc pt ooocm,. In fact changes have oc-
curreo, but the villagers reference to earlier times seems to invoke a belief or hope
that life has returneo to what they knew in a peaceful prewar Cambooia.
11
On the issue of mutual assistance in the context of this particular village, it is
important to recall that most of Svays present population are former resioents who
:, orxocinr
s v\kr
returneo home after the upheavals of DK.
12
Thus many villagers have known one
another since birth. Their families have been acquainteo for generations, ano most
are relateo to each other by blooo or marriage. The former resioents of West Ham-
let Svay belong to overlapping kinoreos such that everyone is kin, frienos of kin,
or kin of frienos. They oemonstrate a kino of tolerance for one anothers person-
alities ano habits that is founo only among people who know each other very well.
There are also reports of other villages on the central plains of Cambooia that have
returneo to patterns of mutual assistance, incluoing labor exchange ,see, for ex-
ample, Uimonen :qq6, McAnorew :qq,.
There are, however, assertions in some oevelopment ,ano other, literature that
Cambooian society was so fragmenteo ano atomizeo by the horric conoitions of DK
that people, even kinsmen, no longer help one another.
13
Irings ,:qq:6:, argues that
Khmer no longer care about each other, have no sense of moral obligation or genuine
oesire to help, are motivateo only by self-interest, ano will provioe assistance only if
they get something in return. Ovesen et al. ,:qq6:68, take this argument a step further
to assert that a Cambooian village is nothing more than a cluster of houses that ooes
not constitute a signicant social entity, let alone a moral community. Inoeeo, they
question whether a village ever hao normal traoitional social cohesion ,ibio.:66,.
Although Leogerwooo has critiqueo this literature elsewhere ,:qq8b,, we woulo
note several points regaroing the issue of whether mutual aio ano cooperation oo
or oo not exist among Cambooian villagers. Fart of the problem in this oebate is
a romanticizeo notion that mutual aio in Khmer social networks before DK was
baseo on purely altruistic generosity ano kinoness, but that survivors of the DK
restorm have become greeoy ano ,following Irings, expect something in return.
Taking a more general perspective, however, anthropologists have long noteo sys-
tems of reciprocity in which gift giving ano forms of assistance create a system of
obligations that bino people together as a social unit.
14
Thus while Western oevel-
opment researchers may perceive a system in which people help one another to get
something in return, Marston argues that being enmesheo in a network of social
obligations is the only relatively safe haven in a oangerous worlo ,:qq:q,. Inoeeo,
he suggests that in the aftermath of genocioe, personal ano kin networks become
all the more important because other kinos of institutions have proven to be un-
reliable ,ibio.:8:,. In aooition, people who have suereo the oeaths of so many fam-
ily members woulo cleave all that much more closely to those who surviveo.
Emphasizing resentments ano conicts within a community can create a false
picture of a collection of houses with no sense of social cohesion. On the other
hano, overemphasizing the social bonos of kinsmen ano frienos coulo present an-
other mistaken view of a community in perfect harmony. In fact, any community
will be characterizeo by its own particular set of social relations that falls along a
continuum between these extremes, although the notion of a cluster of houses with
no social ties woulo seem the more improbable situation.
If Cambooian villagers sometimes appear to outsioers to be more selsh ano self-
serving than in the past, even as ,following Marstons argument, their oepenoency
c\xnoni\x \irr\orns :,,
on one another has increaseo, what are the possible reasons for that perception? Ior
one thing, the social circles within which assistance is provioeo may be smaller than
in the past. Vijghen has oiscusseo this shrinking circle of relatives ano asserts that
neeoy kin are often given only enough fooo so they will not starve, but they are not
provioeo with equipment, lano to farm, or investment capital ,Vijghen, citeo in
Irings :qq, Vijghen ano Ly :qq6,. We woulo interpret such a situation as inoicat-
ing not lack of concern for ones fellows but rather the poverty of most villagers,
who have little or no spare money or lano to give to others.
15
It is true that the ex-
treme oeprivation ano violence of the Fol Fot perioo maoe people watch out for
themselves more than ever before. But there are numerous instances in Svay of peo-
ple helping each other in a variety of ways, incluoing sharing fooo, provioing cash
oonations or loans, giving emergency nancial ano other assistance, ano oering
psychological support ,see Ebihara :qq, Leogerwooo :qq8b,. Such aio is most of-
ten proereo to relatives ano close frienos, but we have also seen Svay villagers give
whatever help was possible to mere acquaintances whose oire straits evokeo com-
passionate responses.
GENDER IMBALANCE
In the years immeoiately following the ouster of Fol Fot, a major issue for the Feo-
ples Republic of Kampuchea ouring the early :q8os was the large number of wio-
ows left by high male mortality ouring DK. Banister ano Johnson estimateo that
about ten percent of men ano almost three percent of women in young aoult
ano mioole age years were killeo above ano beyono those who oieo oue to the gen-
eral mortality situation ,:qq:qo,. In some parts of the country ouring the :q8os,
wioows were saio to constitute anywhere from 6 to 8o percent of the aoult pop-
ulation ,Leogerwooo :qq., Boua :q8.,. Of the specic West Hamlet population
who oieo ouring DK, some 6 percent were male, which is lower than the Banis-
ter ano Johnson estimates. However, looking at the newly createo aoministrative
unit of West Svay village, local census gures for :qqo noteo that the total village
population ,incluoing all ages, was 8o. percent female ,although those gures are
open to question, see below,.
Such shortage of male labor, as well as of oraft animals ano agricultural im-
plements, leo the early FRK government to institute a semisocialist system with
communal proouction ano oistribution of rice ano certain other fooostus by so-
calleo solioarity groups ,ltom omolt ,, although other subsistence activities were left
to private householo proouction ano consumption as in prerevolutionary times ,see
also Boua :q8., Vickery :q86, Curtis :qqo,. Although this system was intenoeo to
benet wioows ano other neeoy folk, Svay villagers were averse to such communal
eortperhaps because it reminoeo them all too vivioly of the hateo Fol Fot years,
when they hao been forceo into labor teamsano oe facto householo proouction
ano consumption for all subsistence activities re-emergeo by arouno :q86. Although
:,8 orxocinr
s v\kr
some Western analysts ,for example, Irings :qq, have bemoaneo the failure of col-
lectivization ouring the FRK, Svay villagers express no such regrets.
Earlier stuoies of women ano oevelopment in Cambooia ,incluoing Leoger-
wooo :qq., reporteo that wioow-heaoeo householos were much poorer than their
neighbors, because they neeoeo to hire male labor for cultivation ano pay with re-
turn labor exchange or money.
16
However, further analysis of Svays wioow-heaoeo
householos ,as well as similar householos in two other communities stuoieo by
Leogerwooo, inoicates that wioowing per se is not a preoictor of poverty. Rather,
the critical factors aecting the relative economic position of a wioow are whether
or not she has able-booieo male labor power ,especially sons ano sons-in-law, within
her own householo or in other closely relateo householos, mooerate lanoholoings,
ano ,in the best of all possible worlos, some cattle ,see also Taylor, quoteo in Boy-
oen ano Gibbs :qq:q6,. Manpower ano oxen are critical for plowing rice elos,
ano obviously a householos relative prosperity is tieo in large measure to the
amount of rice paooy lano it owns.
17
Some works have asserteo that wioows are falling into oebt ano being forceo to
sell their lanos ano move to the city ,for example, Irings :qq, Secretariat of State
for Womens Aairs :qq,. This pattern is not yet evioent in Svay, possibly because
Fhnom Fenh is not far away ano villagers can easily travel to the city to seek aooi-
tional income rather than giving up precious lano. Only one wioow reporteo sell-
ing a bit of lano.
Accoroing to Boua ,:q8.,, the highly skeweo sex ratio also createo another sort
of problem for women in the early :q8os: men, knowing that aoult males were in
short supply, often took aovantage of the situation by consorting with many women,
abanooning wives ano taking secono wives, concubines, or lovers, although po-
lygyny is no longer legal.
18
Wife abanoonment or multiple liaisons may also occur
in situations when soloiers are moveo arouno to oierent parts of the countrysioe,
or, possibly, men leave wives that they were forceo to marry ouring DK. In one case
near Svay, a young man hao not totally abanooneo his wife but woulo oisappear
for perioos of time, ano it was quite certain that he hao a secono wife in Fhnom
Fenh.
19
While oivorces ,which were relatively easy to obtain, ano remarriages were
not uncommon in prerevolutionary Svay ,see Ebihara :q,, oivorce nowaoays in-
volves a lengthy, cumbersome, ano sometimes expensive proceoure ,that often works
to the oetriment of the woman,. Thus many couples may simply separate ,whether
by mutual consent or not, without obtaining formal oivorces, ano former mates
may enter new relationships. Although villagers certainly knew or hao hearo of ex-
amples of wife abanoonment in nearby communities, the great majority of mar-
riages in Svay appear to be relatively stable, with responsible ano faithful spouses.
Throughout the :qqos the formerly highly skeweo genoer ratio eveneo out ora-
matically, with :qq6 population gures for West Svay ,encompassing all age groups,
having an almost equal number of males ano females ,recall that the :qqo West
Svay census inoicateo 8o. percent females,. Nationwioe the :qq statistics showeo
c\xnoni\x \irr\orns :,
that the population over twenty years of age was 8 percent male ano 6 percent
female, ano the :qq8 census showeo a national population ,incluoing all age groups,
that was :.8 percent female ,Uniteo Nations Fopulation Iuno :qq:, National
Institute of Statistics :qqq,. We believe that it is oicult to explain this rapio bal-
ancing out of the sex ratio simply in terms of a high birth rate prooucing more
male babies. Rather we suspect that aoult males were unoercounteo everywhere in
earlier censuses because they were away from home for a variety of reasons: they
were in the government army, or hao joineo antigovernment resistance groups in
northwestern Cambooia, or were in refugee camps in Thailano, or hao been sent
abroao by the government to get various kinos of technical training, or hao been
hioing somewhere to avoio conscription. ,Examples of virtually all of these can be
founo in Svay., The return of the men, as well as a healthy birth rate of .. to
percent over the past fteen or so years ,such that percent of the current popu-
lation is unoer fteen years of age,, has thus maoe the sex ratio ano householo com-
position more normal in the country as a whole ,Uniteo Nations Fopulation Iuno
:qq:, National Institute of Statistics :qqq,.
AITERMATHS: THE REVIVAL OI BUDDHISM
Another aspect of DKs attempt to turn peoples loyalties exclusively to the state
was the eort to oestroy Buoohism. Buoohist monks were forceo to oisrobe ano
even were executeo, while Buoohist temples were either oemolisheo or oesecrateo
by being put to menial uses as, for example, pigsties or storehouses. Thus in :qq,
at the beginning of the FRK perioo, there was a grave shortage of both religious
sites ano personnel. Although the government alloweo Buoohism to be reviveo, it
was limiteo both by state policy ano by lack of material resources. The FRK ini-
tially stipulateo that only men over fty coulo become monks because young males
were neeoeo for agricultural labor ano for the military. Communities hao to apply
for permission to reconstruct temple compounos, ano funos for construction ,raiseo
through ceremonies ano through soliciting oonations, hao to be useo rst ano fore-
most to rebuilo temple schools ano only seconoarily to restore the temples them-
selves. As Keyes has written: Buoohism was still vieweo in Marxist terms as hav-
ing a potential for oering people unhealthy beliefs ,:qq:6.,. Given such
circumstances, there is a question as to whether an entire generation of Cambo-
oians who were chiloren ouring DK ano aoolescents ouring FRK lackeo expo-
sure to, ano hence became estrangeo from, Buoohism.
In :q8q the State of Cambooia formally oesignateo Therevaoa Buoohism as
being once again the state religion, as it hao been prior to DK, ano broaocasts of
oaily prayers were immeoiately reviveo on the national raoio. Buoohism blossomeo
throughout the :qqos. The hierarchy of Buoohist monks was reinstateo, young men
ano boys were again alloweo to become monks ano novices, Fali schools for monks
reopeneo arouno the country, ano Buoohist texts are being reprinteo ano oistrib-
uteo with the help of Japanese ano German funoing. The number of monks, esti-
:8o orxocinr
s v\kr
mateo at 6,oo to 8,ooo in :q88q ouring the FRK, jumpeo to :6,oo in :qqo,
about .o,ooo in :qq: ,ibio.:6.6,, ano o,o8: in :qq8qq, aliateo with ,68
temples ,Ministry of Cults ano Religion :qqq,.
20
Iearing that events of the recent past oisrupteo peoples relationship to the spir-
itual realm ,see also Mortlano :qq,, rural communities have expenoeo consioer-
able eort towaro rebuiloing local temples that were oestroyeo, oamageo, or ne-
glecteo ouring the Khmer Rouge ano FRK perioos. Iamilies across the country
useo whatever small amounts of surplus they may have accrueo to make oona-
tions for restoring temples, builoing or repairing clcoc, ,repositories for ashes of
the oeao,, ano performing ceremonies for the spirits of relatives who oieo ouring
DK. Many overseas Khmer returning to their homelano or senoing money from
abroao have also contributeo large sums to this process, as have wealthy Fhnom
Fenh resioents who sometimes support a specic temple in the region where they
or their forebears were born. Iurthermore, contributions to temples ,whether in
the form of money, material gooos, labor, or attenoance at ceremonies, are con-
sioereo highly virtuous oeeos, ano oonors earn much religious merit.
Svays temple compouno suereo consioerable oestruction ano oeterioration
ouring the civil war ano DK perioos. The central temple ,ctlcot,, which was a beau-
tiful structure with the graceful curving roof characteristic of Khmer temples, was
completely oestroyeo with explosives by the Khmer Rouge.
21
In :qqo the builoing
that hao been useo as a oormitory for the monks was still stanoing, but its walls
were pockmarkeo with holes from bullets ano artillery, the oloo, or open-sioeo
meeting hall, was in shabby conoition after having been useo as a hospital by the
Khmer Rouge. After DK, villagers continueo to worship in the salaa, but there was
oeep oesire to construct a new vihear. Beginning in :qqo with the erection of a gate
ano wall that oeneo the sacreo space of the temple compouno, work on the vi-
hear proceeoeo slowly in graoual steps over many years, because there were few
funos for rebuiloing ano construction oepenoeo largely on the voluntary labor of
local villagers. By :qq the vihear was largely completeo ,ano lookeo in many ways
more resplenoent than it hao in the past,, ano several cheoey hao also been newly
erecteo. Work was still progressing on some smaller structures in the compouno.
Each rebuilt temple has a group of resioent monks who are critical for celebra-
tions of the full rouno of annual Buoohist rituals, as well as essential participants
in familial ceremonies such as weooings ano funerals. Buoohism is especially im-
portant in oering people a means to renew the social ano moral oroer of society.
Through ritual, villagers can formally reconstruct the proper oroer of relationships
between the worlo of the living ano the spiritual realm. At the same time they may
make peace with their own feelings of guilt ano remorse over the suering of their
fellows ouring the past twenty years. As Meas Nee has written:
Lookeo at from the outsioe, religion, the teaching of the monks, music, traoitional
games, ano traoitional skills are a way to strengthen the culture. But I see them as
not just that. They are the way to builo unity ano to heal hearts ano spirits. They help
c\xnoni\x \irr\orns :8.
to create a community where everything can be talkeo about, even past suering.
They help create a community where the poorest are careo about. They help to re-
store oignity. ,:qq:o,
Impressions from contemporary village life suggest that chiloren born after :qq
are once again being socializeo into religious practices, ano contingents of monks
at local Buoohist temples incluoe novices who are young aoolescents.
22
AITERMATHS: UNCERTAINTY, IEAR, AND VIOLENCE
Survivors of DK live with an unoercurrent of fear ano uncertainty. One of the
legacies of genocioe is that peoples conoence in personal safety is strippeo away.
As Myerho has written about the experience of Jewish holocaust survivors, the
self-assurance that
it can never happen to me, comforts on-lookers, but not survivors. They know by what
slenoer threaos their lives are oistinguisheo from those who oieo, they oo not see in
themselves soothing virtues or special merits that make their survival inevitable or
right, to these people complacency is forever lost. ,:q8:.,
Ior many years after :qq, the fear most commonly ano fervently expresseo by
rural villagers was that the Khmer Rouge woulo return to power. Memories of DK
were inoelibly etcheo in the minos of survivors, ano Democratic Kampuchean re-
sistance forces remaineo active in certain regions. In the early :qqos, although there
were no Khmer Rouge in the immeoiate vicinity,
23
villagers ,ano Leogerwooo ano
Ebihara, sometimes hearo explosions, whether mueo thumps coming from moun-
tains to the southwest where DK camps were locateo, or frighteningly louo blasts
from unexplooeo oronance left burieo in nearby elos that was accioentally oeto-
nateo. Some families hao oug trenches alongsioe their houses to serve as foxholes
in case of suooen attack. Svay resioents oeclareo emphatically that they coulo not
survive a secono DK regime ano woulo ght to the oeath before succumbing again
to Khmer Rouge rule. Such sentiments were strongly encourageo by the FRK gov-
ernment, whose legitimacy was baseo in large part on its having liberateo Cam-
booia from Fol Fot. Vivio reminoers of the DKs horrors containeo in photographs
of victims, paintings of killings, ano implements useo for torture are on oisplay at
the Tuol Sleng Museum of Genocioal Crimes, a former school that hao become
a oeaoly interrogation center ouring DK ,see Leogerwooo :qq, Chanoler :qqq,,
as well as in a monumental oisplay of skulls ano bones at Chhoeung Ek, a former
killing elo where one can still see bits of bone ano cloth in the soil of what hao
been mass graves. The FRK also instituteo an annual observance calleo The Day
of Hate, in which people were gathereo at various locales to hear invectives heapeo
on the Khmer Rouge.
24
State propaganoa playeo on this theme with such slogans
as: We must absolutely prevent the return of this former black oarkness, ano We
must struggle ceaselessly to protect against the return of the Fol Fot, Ieng Sary,
:8: orxocinr
s v\kr
Khieu Samphan genocioal clique. These formulaic ano state-sanctioneo expres-
sions were genuine ano often expresseo in conversations among oroinary folk.
Cambooians tooay have a secono generalizeo fear about violence within their
miost. Although violent outbursts occurreo periooically in pre-:qo Cambooia ,for
example, a street crowo in Fhnom Fenh battering a thief ,, acts of violence have be-
come much more commonplace. After nearly thirty years of war, there are now
many more armeo men than in prewar times. Iear focuses in particular on sol-
oiers ano former soloiers who still move through the countrysioe, ano there is also
apprehension about police or even oroinary people with weapons who may engage
in robbery, extortion, or hostile confrontations that result in injury or oeath ,see
also Ovesen et al. :qq:.8, Boyoen ano Gibbs :qq:qq, :.,. Military units ex-
propriate lano from peasants ano sell it for themselves, forest areas are also taken
over by force ano loggeo for the personal prot of ocials. Abuse of military power
incurs no consequences in contemporary Cambooian society, ano police often vi-
olate laws with impunity.
25
Another kino of weapon, lano mines, creates an extremely serious ano frighten-
ing problem in various regions of Cambooia that experienceo ghting after DK. With
several contenoing forces laying oown scores of lano mines over more than a oecaoe
of civil conict, large portions of lano remain uninhabitable or oangerous even to
cross. Despite oemining eorts, great numbers of people are still wounoeo by mines
ano suer not only physical ano psychological traumas but oftentimes problems of
economic survival ano social marginalization as well ,see also Irench :qqb,.
26
Iinally, oomestic violence, especially wife abuse, is saio to be a serious problem
in contemporary Cambooia ,see Zimmerman, Men, ano Sar :qq, Nelson ano
Zimmerman :qq6, that has oevelopeo because of the brutality to which people
were exposeo in DK.
27
The precise extent of abuse, however, is uncertain, because
it is virtually impossible to know exactly how wioespreao oomestic violence may be
at present or was in the past. So far as Svay is concerneo, Ebihara saw no evioence
of wife or chilo abuse in her original elowork, ano present-oay villagers state that
oomestic violence is not a problem within the community.
Our impression is that there was a general oecline in fearfulness across the cen-
tral plains of Cambooia from the late :q8os through the U.N.-sponsoreo elections
of :qq. Aio workers report that in the early :q8os villagers hesitateo to plant sugar
palm trees ,ooom troot, because they take so long to mature, ano there was no way to
know whether one might have to ee the area again, or even if one woulo live long
enough to benet from the eort. But when we visiteo Svay in the early :qqos, we
founo that sugar palms as well as coconut, mango, ano many other trees hao inoeeo
been planteo ano were bearing fruit, ano that living conoitions graoually improveo
for most ,if not all, villagers. Arouno the time of the :qq elections, people hao high
hopes that there woulo nally be peace ano with it increaseo prosperity.
This hopefulness, however, was muteo by periooic political instability after
:qq, Frime Minister Hun Sens coup in :qq, which ousteo a coprime minis-
ter with whom he was supposeo to share power, ano brutal attacks on antigov-
c\xnoni\x \irr\orns :8
ernment protesters in :qq8qq. Although with the oeath of Fol Fot ano the oe-
fections of Ieng Sary, Khieu Samphan, ano other leaoers in :qq8qq the Khmer
Rouge themselves ceaseo to constitute a serious threat, continueo political in-
ghting among top ocials of the ostensibly coalition government perpetuates
a climate of general political uncertainty ano recurring violence. Cambooians
feel that there is always the possibility that society coulo collapse again into war-
fare ano oestruction.
28
Some people regularly consult a work calleo the Boool
Domrco,, which is believeo to contain prophecies by the Buooha about events that
will occur at the miopoint of the next lolpo, or cycle of time before the coming
of the next Buooha. The text speaks of multiple wars ano oevastation, ano many
Cambooians believe that the horrors of the DK perioo fullleo those prophe-
cies ,see also Smith :q8q,. However, they cannot be certain that the time of oe-
struction is over ano that the reign of the new ano righteous ruler is at hano. Thus
they consult the text ano wait, still fearful.
CONCLUDING REMARKS
The Cambooian genocioe unoer Fol Fot orew international attention for its mas-
sive oeath toll, which occurreo in a small population within a short perioo. In ao-
oition, the DK regime was infamous for its attempt to oestroy cultural institutions
as well as people in its heaolong plunge to leap into a revolutionary new society
more quickly than any other society in history ,Chanoler, Kiernan, ano Boua
:q88:6,. DK obviously hao a number of profouno ano oisruptive eects on Cam-
booian life, only some of which have been oiscusseo here. What has particularly
struck us, however, is the remarkable strength of the Cambooian survivors we know,
who, after experiencing oevastating social upheavals ano personal traumas,
nonetheless got on with their lives. Also, possibly because the DK regime was so
short-liveo, its eort to crush certain funoamental aspects of Cambooian society
ano culture oio not take holo. Thus after :qq various elements of prerevolution-
ary lifefor example, families, Buoohism, private property, a market economy
were reviveo, albeit with mooications causeo by changing socio-political-economic
circumstances ,see Ebihara :qqa,.
Svay villagers remain peasant rice cultivators who leao a rather precarious ex-
istence, with their harvests often oiminisheo by oroughts or ooos ano their small
savings suooenly oraineo by illness. As one man remarkeo with a sigh: Its still a
struggle to live, you still have to work haro to grow rice. Some villagers may get
aooeo income from other sources, such as nonagricultural jobs ,for example, as
schoolteachers,, nancial assistance from ospring or relatives working in Fhnom
Fenh, or remittances from relatives who became refugees abroao. Accoroing to vil-
lagers, relatively few householos are rich, but most families have aoequate re-
sources, ano impoverisheo householos are few ,see ibio.,. Over the course of peri-
ooic visits to Svay between :q8q ano :qq we have seen many visible improvements
:8 orxocinr
s v\kr
in peoples oaily lives. We were struck in particular by the increasing number of
families builoing woooen houses raiseo on piles above the grouno in the traoitional
Khmer style, after having liveo since Fol Fot times in rather shabby thatch houses
built oirectly on the grouno with oirt oors. No one looks malnourisheo, people
have nicer clothes, virtually every householo has a bicycle, ano increasingly over
time, some have acquireo motorcycles, most families have raoios, ano nowaoays
some even have tiny black-ano-white television sets that run ,in the absence of elec-
tricity, on car batteries.
29
,On some other aspects of contemporary village life, see
Ebihara :qqa ano :qqb, Meas Nee :qq, Uimonen :qq6.,
Despite some material improvements to their lives, present-oay villagers obvi-
ously bear scars, both physical ano emotional, from the horrors of the Fol Fot regime.
Feople believe that the harsh conoitions of DK causeo the oeaths of several villagers
in the years following :qq, ano many survivors are plagueo by profouno fatigue,
lack of strength, weak limbs, faulty memories, ano other problems that are thought
to be the consequence of overly arouous work, severe oeprivations, ano beatings
ouring DK. Villagers report such oiculties as: My legs are still weak from all the
work, sometimes they collapse ano I fall oown. They beat me on my heao ano
shouloers ano back . . . ano now I cant lift heavy things. Ive forgotten how to reao
ano write Khmer since Fol Fot. Only one person aomits that she hao a mental
breakoown ouring DK, now, she says, Sometimes I laugh or cry for no reason.
But she has manageo to holo oown a job ano functions quite capably in oaily life.
We founo no other evioence of serious psychological problems, although it is quite
possible that some of the villagers physical ailments coulo be somaticizations of
emotional reactions to past horrors. Although it is certainly true that numerous
Cambooians enoureo intense psychological traumas ouring DK ano that some con-
tinue to suer emotional oistress, we oo not agree with periooic statements ,largely
in journalistic meoia, that Cambooia has become a nation of the mentally unbal-
anceo.
30
,See Leogerwooo :qq8c for fuller oiscussion of this issue.,
The present-oay life of Svay villagers remains oicult in many respects. But
in listening to people speak of their horrenoous experiences ano profouno losses
ouring the Fol Fot time, ano in watching transformations in their lives through-
out the :qqos, we are oeeply moveo above all by their astonishing fortituoe, re-
silience, courage, ano enourance. As is probably true of humankino almost every-
where, the villagers are oroinary people with cxttooroinary strength ano spirit.
They are survivors.
NOTES
:. Ebiharas original elowork was sponsoreo by a Ioro Iounoation Ioreign Area Training
Iellowship, subsequent research ouring the :qqos was supporteo by the Social Science Research
Council, the Wenner-Gren Iounoation for Anthropological Research, ano the FSC/CUNY
Iaculty Research Awaros Frogram. Leogerwooos work has been funoeo by the Social Science
c\xnoni\x \irr\orns :8
Research Council, the Wenner-Gren Iounoation, UNICEI, ano the East-West Center. We are
grateful to all these sources. We conoucteo research in Svay in the :qqos both inoivioually ano
collaboratively. ,Note: In earlier publications, Svay was given the pseuoonym Sobay.,
.. The prex o- appenoeo to a name or term is pejorative, in this case connoting a mean-
ing such as the loathsome Fol Fot.
. Some refugees were relocateo earlier, in the late :qos ,see Ebihara :q8,. About
6o,ooo people, however, remaineo in Thai refugee camps until :qq., when they began to
be repatriateo back to Cambooia, creating resettlement problems ano internal oislocation
,Boyoen ano Gibbs :qq::8o,.
. In the summer of :q, the region arouno Svay was also one of the areas subject to
intense strategic bombing by the Uniteo States, which was attempting to oestroy Khmer
Rouge bases. Iortunately, Svays resioents hao alreaoy eo, but some houses were oestroyeo
ano there are still outlines of bomb craters in the rice elos. On Cambooian conceptions of
ptc,, see Chanoler :qq6 |:q8| ano Ebihara :qqa::o.
. Vickery :q8 points out that conoitions varieo in oierent parts of Cambooia ano
over time, with some places being less harsh than others. Svay, however, was locateo in
a region where conoitions ano oiscipline were stringent from the outset. On conoitions
ouring DK, see also Toni Shapiro-Fhims chapter in this volume ano Ebihara :q8, :qqa,
:qqb.
6. There has been oebate over the number of oeaths, with estimates ranging from less
than a million to three or more million. Kiernan :qq6:8 ,Table , notes :,6:,ooo oeaths,
the :. million gure comes from the most recent report of the Cambooian Genocioe Froj-
ect at Yale, which has been conoucting oetaileo stuoies of the mortality toll.
. At that time Svay was oivioeo into three hamlets, ano Ebiharas most intensive re-
search focuseo on so-calleo West Hamlet of Svay, which was somewhat separate from
the other hamlets ano in some ways like a small community in itself. Ebiharas research
in the :qqos concentrateo specically on survivors from West Hamlet ano some of their
oescenoants.
8. This oeath toll ooes not incluoe spouses ano ospring from marriages that occurreo
after Ebihara left Svay in :q6o.
q. Chiloren were taken from their parents at about the age of six or seven ano placeo
in their own work teams. Aoolescents ano other young unmarrieo aoults were put in mo-
bile labor teams sent to various parts of the country, they sometimes saw their parents only
once or twice a year.
:o. Similar forms of householo composition ano mutual aio occur also among refugees
,see Ebihara :q8,. In aooition, refugees often feel a strong sense of obligation to seno re-
mittances to close kin in Cambooia, even though refugees in the Uniteo States are them-
selves often very poor, contacts between kin are maintaineo through exchange of letters,
tape cassettes, ano vioeos. In recent years, some refugees have maoe visits to or returneo to
work in Cambooia. See also Boyoen ano Gibbs :qq, Breckon :qq8, Smith-Hefner :qqq,
Leogerwooo :qq8c.
::. Ior patterns of mutual aio in prerevolutionary Cambooia, see Ebihara :q68. On con-
temporary social relationships, see Ebihara :qqa ano :qq, on economic organization, see
Leogerwooo :qq.. The latter notes that in a :qq. survey, Svay villagers voiceo a preference
for hiring elo labor rather than practicing labor exchange ,ibio.:6o,, but actual obser-
vation of cultivation in :qq inoicateo that few villagers can aoro hireo help.
:8 orxocinr
s v\kr
:.. During the FRK perioo following DK there was a territorial aoministrative change
in Svay, such that the former Mioole ano West Hamlets were joineo together ano nameo
West Svay, while East Hamlet became a separate ,if contiguous, community. After DK, many
former resioents of West Hamlet establisheo new homes on sites oierent from their prewar
locations, but social relationships with one another were maintaineo.
:. Such claims often go along with arguments that the DK perioo irrevocably shattereo
the entire society ano that Khmer culture is oeao or oying, for oiscussion of such asser-
tions, see the introouction to Ebihara, Mortlano, ano Leogerwooo :qq, ano Leogerwooo
:qq8a.
:. The most famous work on reciprocity is, of course, Marcel Mausss Tlc Gtft. Ior ois-
cussion of these issues as applieo to exchange in the Khmer context, see Marston :qq:chap.
, Kim .oo:.
:. Similar conclusions are reacheo by Uimonen :qq6:, Boyoen ano Gibbs :qq, ano
Davenport, Healy, ano Malone :qq:8q. The latter, writing about families limiting as-
sistance to relatives returning from refugee camps on the Thai boroer, write: |It| seems that
most families, unless they are wealthy, can ill aoro to oo more |than provioe emergency
assistance|.
:6. The term .too. is a oirect translation of the Khmer term mcmot, which oenotes
women whose husbanos are known to be oeao. Mcmot is also useo to refer to oivorceo
women, as well as those who are separateo from or have been abanooneo by their husbanos
ano may not know if the latter are alive.
:. In the lano reoistribution of :q86 ,formalizeo by constitutional restoration of private
property in :q8q,, each villager receiveo approximately o.:6 to o.:8 hectare of rice paooy
lanos. While there is inoivioual ownership of lano, members of a householo generally pool
all the paooies ano cooperate in their cultivation. Holoings in Svay now range from a low
of about o. hectare for an eloerly couple to almost . hectares for a large extenoeo family.
Leogerwooo conoucteo a survey of Svay in :qq. that inoicateo that o percent of families
hao less than : hectare of lano, which was somewhat below the national average of :.. citeo
by Curtis :q8q.
:8. Folygyny was legal in prerevolutionary Cambooia, although it was practiceo mainly
by men in higher socioeconomic strata. See Ebihara :q, however, for a situation in which
a Svay villagers attempt to take a secono wife was quasheo by his irate ,rst, wife.
:q. There is a case in Svay in which a man hao left a wife of more than twenty years
stanoing to live with another woman ,the wioow of a frieno who hao oieo ouring DK,. The
rst wife certainly fclt abanooneo because she got no economic help from her former mate
ano was quite poor ,she manageo with help from marrieo oaughters,. Ebihara feels, how-
ever, that this man was not a heeoless philanoerer but someone who hao oevelopeo a strong
attachment to another woman with whom he has continueo to live for the past two oecaoes.
.o. These statistics inoicate that the number of monks ano temples has rebounoeo al-
most to prewar gures for :q6q, which noteo ,6q temples ano 6,o6. monks ,Cambooia
Report :qq6,.
.:. Another temple compouno several kilometers oistant was also blown up with ex-
plosives, ano any sections of wall or founoation that remaineo intact were broken up by
hano ano taken to provioe steel roos ano ller for a huge oam that was constructeo on a
nearby river ouring DK. While the DK hao ioeological reasons for oestroying temples as
symbols of Buoohism, in this case the remnants of a religious builoing were incorporateo
ano transformeo into a secular structure ,a oam, that hao enormous practical importance
c\xnoni\x \irr\orns :8,
for a major concern of DK: builoing irrigation systems to maximize agriculture. Remains
of the Svay temple were useo to ll in a bathing pono so that the space coulo be useo for
growing fooo plants.
... It is important to note that Khmer religion also incluoes a variety of animistic be-
liefs, practices, rituals, ano religious specialists ,such as healers, spirit meoiums, ano other
practitioners,, all of which surviveo DK ano continue to be active.
.. In the early :qos, when the Khmer Rouge began to make forays into the area ano
the civil war began to rage, a few Svay families evioently oecioeo to go to Khmer Rouge
base camps rather than move to Fhnom Fenh. Some years after the fall of DK, a few fam-
ilies of these former Olo Feople eventually moveo back to Svay. Villagers say that it woulo
be against Buoohist morality ano civil law to take revenge on those people, but the latter
are helo in scorn ano largely ostracizeo.
.. At one such gathering of local ocials, schoolteachers, ano stuoents near Svay, the
chiloren burneo an egy of Fol Fot. There is also a huge pile of skulls ano bones heapeo
up in a ruineo school several kilometers from Svay that hao been useo as a prison ano killing
grouno ouring DK ,see Ebihara :qqb,. Similar local oisplays are scattereo throughout the
country. Craig Etcheson ,personal communication, recently tolo Leogerwooo that the skele-
tal remains at a former prison in this region were removeo in :qqq.ooo, but we are not cer-
tain if he is referring to the same place that we visiteo.
.. See the Uniteo Nations Report of the Special Representative of the Secretary Gen-
eral on the Situation of Human Rights in Cambooia, :qq8.
.6. The Svay region was not mineo ouring the post-DK civil conict as were some regions
of Cambooia, but one Svay resioent lost a leg to a lano mine when he was sent to northwest-
ern Cambooia to labor on a FRK government work project. There have been periooic prob-
lems, however, with unexplooeo shells ano the like from the civil war of the early :qos left in
the elos arouno Svay.
.. Ior a oiscussion of this issue, see Zimmerman, Men, ano Sar :qq, Boyoen ano Gibbs
:qq:qq. The problem is shareo with other countries emerging from extenoeo perioos
of warfare ,compare Enloe :qq:chap. ,.
.8. Some women tolo Leogerwooo that prior to the :qq general election they hao their
IUDs removeo because if society collapseo again, meoical services woulo not be available
to remove the oevices, ano they wanteo to be able to bear chiloren again after the turmoil.
.q. Leogerwooo, who has traveleo wioely throughout Cambooia, believes that although
Svay is not a prosperous village, it is nonetheless better o than many communities else-
where, especially those that are oistant from Fhnom Fenh. Cambooia as a whole still suers
from a relatively low stanoaro of living with respect to such criteria as infant mortality ano
chilo malnutrition ,see, for example, Boyoen ano Gibbs :qq,.
o. There is consioerable literature on psychological problems among Cambooians in
refugee camps ano resettlement communities ,to give but a few examples, see Eisenbruch
:qq:, Mollica :q86, Kinzie :q8,. While we have not conoucteo psychological research, we
believe that many Cambooian refugees have generally suereo more severe oisruptions in
their lives after DKincluoing harsh conoitions in refugee camps followeo by oicult ao-
justments to alien environments abroaothan oio Cambooians who remaineo at home.
Svay villagers, oespite their relative poverty ano the insecurities of an agricultural life, stayeo
in a familiar cultural setting with kin ano other support systems. ,See also Boyoen ano Gibbs
:qq, Meas Nee :qq, Ebihara :q8, Smith-Hefner :qqq.,
:88 orxocinr
s v\kr
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c\xnoni\x \irr\orns :.
::
::
Terror, Grief, ano Recovery
Gcroctool Ttoomo tr o Mo,or Vtllogc tr Gootcmolo
Bcottt Mor
In the hot, humio afternoon of Saturoay, Iebruary :, :q8., a long column of sol-
oiers moveo with an angry, oeliberate gait oown a muooy path towaro Santa Maria
Tzeja, a small, isolateo village in the rain forest of northern Guatemala. As the
troops approacheo, the terrieo inhabitants scattereo in every oirection into the
surrounoing forest, having hearo that the military hao massacreo the people of a
nearby village two oays before. When the military unit arriveo, it founo an eerily
quiet, oeserteo community. Only one woman inexplicably remaineo. The soloiers
beat, repeateoly rapeo, ano muroereo her. They then oumpeo her battereo booy
near the builoing housing the villages cooperative. This heinous act was only the
preluoe to the horrors to come.
Over the next two oays, the soloiers looteo ano torcheo every structure in the
village. Then, as the ames consumeo more than a oecaoes worth of haro work
ano oreams, a long line of troops hikeo oown a path that skirteo an area where two
terrieo groups, a total of fourteen women ano chiloren, were quietly hioing.
Crouching in fear in the oense foliage, mothers hao stueo rags into the mouths of
their infants so they woulo not cry. As the last soloier passeo, a little oog suooenly
began to bark. The unit halteo ano then returneo to scan the area more closely.
They soon oiscovereo the rst group, a pregnant woman, her infant, ano two boys
left in her care. A young boy, who was running to warn his siblings of the ap-
proaching army, hearo the soloiers say something to the terrieo woman, ano then
the troops openeo re upon them, after which a soloier threw a grenaoe to nal-
ize the carnage. The unit then moveo on, locating the secono group of eight chil-
oren, their pregnant mother, ano a granomother. As they oio with the rst group,
the troops methooically ano mercilessly slaughtereo everyone. Some were shot, oth-
ers hackeo to oeath, some oecapitateo. Soloiers slit open the stomach of the preg-
nant woman, killing mother ano chilo. Others, laughing, threw babies into the air.
The only survivor was a six-year-olo boy who ran ano hio behino a tree, a silent
witness to the bloooletting that oestroyeo the only worlo he knew.
When news of the massacre reacheo the hioing places of those who hao es-
capeo, the stunneo villagers took further precautions to save their livesamong
them the gruesome task of killing their own oogs, about fty in all. There is no
ooubt that the army woulo have slaughtereo every villager hao they founo those
who hao eluoeo themas they oio in nearby villages oays before ano oays after
this massacre. After several months in hioing, more than half the families maoe the
arouous ano emotionally oevastating journey to no refuge in Mexico, where they
stayeo for more than a oecaoe. The army eventually placeo those who remaineo
behinoabout fty familiesunoer military control, literally on the ashes of the
original village, ano brought in new peasants to occupy the lanos of those in refuge.
Santa Maria Tzeja was part of the much larger trageoy enoureo in Guatemala.
Governments, at various times ano in various places, have unleasheo state-
sponsoreo terrorism across a wioe swath of territory, at times engulng a region or
even orenching an entire nation in blooo. On occasion the intensity, extent, ano
purpose of the violence is so extreme that it becomes genocioe. In Guatemala, the
Commission for Historical Clarication ,CEH,as the Truth Commission is o-
cially calleowas createo in June :qq as part of the Oslo Accoros between the
Guatemalan government ano the umbrella group of insurgent forces, the
Guatemalan National Revolutionary Unity ,URNG,. Truth commissions are born
of compromise between two extremes: institutional justice vs. silence ano sancti-
eo impunity, Amy Ross ,:qqqb:q, observes. There was little equivocation, how-
ever, in the commissions conclusions. In a stunning juogment, the CEH chargeo
the Guatemalan military with genocioe: |T|he CEH concluoes that agents of the
State of Guatemala, within the framework of counterinsurgency operations car-
rieo out between :q8: ano :q8, committeo acts of genocioe against groups of
Mayan people ,CEH :qqqb::,. Accoroing to its noings, 8 percent of the vic-
tims were Maya. After stuoying four selecteo geographical regions, the commis-
sion concluoeo that between :q8: ano :q8 the Army ioentieo groups of the
Mayan population as the internal enemy, consioering them to be an actual or po-
tential support base for the guerrillas, with respect to material sustenance, a source
of recruits ano a place to hioe their members. Baseo on that assessment, the
Army, inspireo by the National Security Doctrine, oeneo a concept of internal
enemy that went beyono guerrilla sympathizers, combatants or militants to incluoe
civilians from specic ethnic groups ,ibio.:q,.
As if to conrm the charge, a spokesman for the regime of oe facto presioent
General Rios Montt conoeo the militarys thinking to an American journalist in
the summer of :q8.. The guerrillas won over many Inoian collaborators, there-
fore, the Inoians were subversives, right? Ano how oo you ght subversion? Clearly,
you hao to kill Inoians because they were collaborating with subversion. Ano then
they woulo say, Youre massacring innocent people. But they werent innocent.
orxocinr ix ot\+rx\r\ :
They hao solo out to subversion ,Nairn :q8.,. Echoing these views, Colonel By-
ron Disrael Lima, who graouateo at the top of his military acaoemy class of :q6.,
tolo the 1oll Sttcct }ootrol ,Krauss :q8::, that his heroes in history are Napoleon
ano Hitler because I respect conquerors. He evioenceo little respect for civilians
or oemocracy. The civilians oont work until we tell them to work. They neeo our
protection, control ano oirection. As the front page 1oll Sttcct }ootrol article points
out, the Reagan aoministration in :q8o resumeo $oo million in military aio. Col.
Lima conoently showeo oisoain for electeo civilian leaoers: Theres a civilian
wave in Latin America now, he observeo in :q8 as Guatemala was in the miost
of a presioential campaign, but that ooesnt mean military men will lose their ul-
timate power. Concluoing, he smugly boasteo, Latins take commanos from men
in uniform ,Krauss :qq::,.
In a place hammereo into silence ano accustomeo to impunity, the CEH re-
portparticularly the charge of genocioestunneo the country by its straight-
forwaro language ano the thoroughness of its oocumentation. It was as if the whole
country hao burst into tears, tears represseo for oecaoes ano tears of vinoication.
The public unoerstanoably hao been skeptical about what the CEH woulo oocu-
ment ano concluoe. Thus when the report was releaseo on Iebruary ., :qqq, the
public was shockeo at its strength, Ross observes ,:qqqb:.,. In aooition to more
than ,oo pages of information on atrocities, incluoing more than 6oo massacres,
the commission founo the state responsible for more than q percent of the viola-
tions ,ibio., see also Ross :qqqa,. Ano they calleo it genocioe, Ross reminos us,
a charge that inspireo long, wrenching oiscussions within the CEH itself. The pur-
pose of the terror in this ano countless other villages, the commission forcefully
chargeo, was to intimioate ano silence society as a whole, in oroer to oestroy the
will for transformation, both in the short ano long term ,CEH :qqqb:.,. With-
out question, the armys horric actions rippeo oeep psychological wounos into the
consciousness of the inhabitants of Santa Maria Tzejaa village involveo in a
much larger trauma. The armys brutal ano targeteo repression, especially in the
province of El Quich, where Santa Maria Tzeja is locateo, went far beyono the
threat poseo by the armeo insurgency. In El Quich, massacres took place, rep-
resenting more than half of the total oeaths ano over percent of the human
rights violations in the country. The commission oocumenteo that .oo,ooo people
were killeo or oisappeareo throughout Guatemala over more than three oecaoes
of war ,ibio.::8, .o, see also Ocina oe Derechos Humanos oel Arzobispaoo oe
Guatemala :qq8a, :qq8b, :qq8c,. During the most intense perioo of the military
onslaught, from :q8: to :q8, as many as :. million people were internally ois-
placeo or hao to ee the country, incluoing about :o,ooo who sought refuge in
Mexico ,CEH :qqqb:o, Manz :q88a, :q88b,.
The roots of the genocioe against Mayan communities are anchoreo in the tor-
tureo history of Guatemala, accoroing to the CEH report. The proclamation of
inoepenoence in :8.:, an event prompteo by the countrys elite, saw the creation
of an authoritarian State which excluoeo the majority of the population, was racist
: orxocinr
s v\kr
in its precepts ano practices, ano serveo to protect the economic interests of the
privilegeo minority ,CEH :qqqb::,. The contemporary context leo from repres-
sion to slaughter through a path of sharply escalating bloooletting ano brutality,
accoroing to Gootcmolo: ^ccct Agotr!, the ocial report of the Human Rights Oce
of the Archoiocese of Guatemala ,:qqq,. During the sixties, in aooition to com-
bat between the guerrillas ano the army, government violence targeteo peasants
in the eastern part of the country, the report asserts. In the seventies, state vio-
lence was particularly virulent in the cities. It was traineo on leaoers of social move-
ments ano sectors opposing the successive military regimes, in aooition to the guer-
rillas infrastructure. The violence of those two oecaoes escalateo to genocioal
forms ouring :q8:8. In the early eighties, counterinsurgency policy took the
form of state-sponsoreo terrorism featuring systematic mass oestruction, particu-
larly of inoigenous communities ano organizeo peasant groups ,ibio.:xxxii,. The
CEH report aoos that the massacres, scorcheo earth operations, forceo oisap-
pearances ano executions of Mayan authorities, leaoers ano spiritual guioes, were
not only an attempt to oestroy the social base of the guerrillas, but above all, to
oestroy the cultural values that ensureo cohesion ano collective action in Mayan
communities ,CEH :qqqb:.,.
The scale of this nightmare oees comprehension. The terror ano the lasting
wounos, however, are enoureo on a far more immeoiate though no less horric
scale by inoiviouals, families, ano communities. This chapter explores the process
of grieving by focusing on Santa Maria Tzeja, a unique community whose oevas-
tating experience was all too common. Let me summarize a key point in my argu-
ment: communities face a funoamental challenge in how to reconcile oeep, in-
escapable mourning over the traumas of the past with hope for a better future.
Grieving, then, goes beyono even the heavy buroen of grief itself ano encompasses
interpreting ano reinterpreting the past as a guioe to engaging the future. This com-
munity has chosen the most oicult of paths: an uninching look at what took
place as a founoation for shaping the future. This approach raises a number of
questions. How oo communities cope with this level of atrocity coupleo with im-
punity? What are the long-term eects of peoples sense of oeep sorrow, oistress,
regret, ano melancholy? Years after the savagery, how ooes remembrance take place
when forgetting seems an act of salvation? How is the past retrieveo when power-
ful social institutions, inoivioual actors, ano the fallibility of memory itself all con-
spire to reoene what took place?
The villages short, turbulent, thirty-year history encompasses a profouno hope
along with a legacy of oesperation. Iounoeo in :qo, Santa Maria Tzeja was the
ambitious attempt of lano-starveo peasants from the highlanos ano Catholic
clergyparticularly an energetic ano oeeply committeo priest, Luis Gurriaran
to settle the nearly inaccessible rain forest near the Mexican boroer. I rst visiteo
this remote outpost in the summer of :q, perhaps walking oown the same muooy
path that the muroerous troops woulo soak in blooo less than a oecaoe later. Little
oio I know at the time that my involvement woulo span the next three oecaoes
orxocinr ix ot\+rx\r\ :
ano continue tooaylet alone what those years woulo holo. I knew immeoiately
that I hao entereo an unusual community, but I oiont realize right away the ways
in which that community woulo become part of my life.
On that rst trip, the oense green canopy of the virgin rain forest still surrounoeo
the village. Conoitions were harsh ano resources meager when I arriveo, but the
spirit was remarkable ano the enthusiasm infectious. It hao taken a grueling hike
on a jungle path over the rough terrain to get there, but it turneo out to be far haroer
emotionally to leave. During the :qos, I was amazeo at the villages success ano
spirit ano all too aware of the encroaching military. I remembereo those oreams
in the mio-:q8os as I walkeo over the ashes of what the army hao incinerateo ano
then watcheo the slow, oemanoing process of rebuiloing. I traveleo back ano forth
between the village ano the refugee camps in Mexico, often provioing the only
source of news between families torn asunoer by events, carrying photos I took,
carefully foloeo letters, cassette tapes, ano treasureo keepsakes. In the :qqos, the re-
turn of the refugees from Mexico once again oereo a moment of hope in a con-
text of continueo apprehension.
Frior to the January :qo morning on which the rst pioneers set o to establish
the village, generations of highlano peasants hao been losing grouno as cornelos
were oivioeo ano oivioeo again ano as lano became exhausteo ano erooeo. Eco-
nomic oesperation in their highlano ancestral homes maoe peasants ever more oe-
penoent on wage labor in the sprawling southern-coast plantations. There, mostly
Mayan laborers cut sugar cane, pickeo coee, ano harvesteo cotton, toiling for low
pay in slavelike, oisease-riooen conoitions. Ior many, the lack of lano ano the
oreaoeo plantation labor conspireo to create a spiral of oesperation where the haroer
one workeo, the further one sank. Iollowing the overthrow of the oemocratically
electeo Arbenz government in :q, a succession of generals, either in the presi-
oential oce or controlling it, maoe reform impossible ano lano reform, in partic-
ular, a oangerous subject. Unoer those circumstances, the forgotten, oense, isolateo
rain forest in the north oereo the tantalizing hope of lano at the same time that it
poseo seemingly insurmountable challenges.
The social ano political problems of the village, ano Guatemala more generally,
were frameo by the Colo War ,Immerman :q8., Schlesinger ano Kinzer :q8., Mc-
Clintock :q8, Gleijeses :qq:,. A rich ethnographic literature has exploreo issues of
cultural ioentity ano transformation in the context of village life in Guatemala ,Brint-
nall :qq, Warren :q8, :qq., Nash :q6, Melville ano Melville :q:, Ialla :q8,
Annis :q8, Smith :q8, :qqo, Aoams :qo, Berryman :q8, Watanabe :qq.,. Less
exploreo has been the experience of the Mayans ouring the past two oecaoes, which
has been so shapeo by conict ano traumatizeo by atrocity ,Stoll :qq, Ialla :qq,
Manz :q88a, :q88b, :q88c, :qq, Wilson :qq, Nelson :qqq, Green :qqq,. Without
question, the Colo War has provioeo the oominant context of contemporary
Guatemala, but it is important not to overstate its role. The Colo War exacerbateo,
rather than createo, the social, class, ano ethnic tensions that have rackeo the coun-
try. The army ano the economic oligarchy seizeo the opportunity of the Colo War
: orxocinr
s v\kr
to legitimate their continueo oomination. In the name of anticommunism, elites
ano the military sought to reinforce their position by tapping into the vast economic,
military, ano political support eagerly supplieo by the U.S. government.
The :q6os ano :qos were a prologue to the perioo of mass terror that ravageo
Guatemala in the early :q8os. What was happening in the Mayan communities
ouring this prologue? The Catholic Church was vigorously involveo in religious or-
ganizations such as Catholic Action ano secular organizations such as cooperatives.
Religious traoitions ano generational positions were challengeo ano at times ois-
placeo. The Christian Democratic Farty maoe inroaos as a party with popular sup-
port. External institutions such as the Feace Corps ano the Agency for Interna-
tional Development were involveo in rural oevelopment. The transistor raoio
revolutionizeo information in remote villages, as oio uency in Spanish. New agri-
cultural techniques ano the resettlement of thousanos of highlano peasants in the
Ixcan jungle were reshaping rural Guatemala. These activities unoerscore the fact
that Mayan communitiesthe youth in particularwere far from quiescent ob-
servers. In fact, some were unoergoing profouno ioeological changes. Insteao of a
more resigneo acceptance of their fatenever willing or complete by any means
they were active interrogators of their current situation ano seeking to be architects
of their future.
These activities, especially new movements in the Catholic Church throughout
Latin America ,theology of liberation, preferential option for the poor,, proouceo
some of the most far reaching changes in the Mayan communities in the twenti-
eth century. Ioreign priests, nuns, ano a vibrant network of lay church workers in-
volveo communities in wioe-ranging forms of social promotion. They encourageo
community participationincluoing previously marginal women ano youthin
eoucation, health, ano communication. These activists oio not shy from the con-
ictive issues surrounoing lano. Since agrarian reform programs were politically
out of the question, the colonization of unoesirable ano impenetrable rain forests
seemeo the only viable option. Although these lanos were ill suiteo for the type of
agriculture practiceo by mooern-oay peasantsano moreover woulo become even
further oamageo by burgeoning population oensitythese untoucheo areas
nonetheless fullleo the oreams of lanoless peasants. Surprisingly, the initial eco-
nomic results confounoeo the justiably oismal expectations of many observers. In
the early :qos, peasant cooperatives were establisheo ano ourisheo throughout
the Ixcan. Success breo a new spiriteo conoence, ano this conoence, in turn, fu-
eleo social transformations.
Two years after the formation of the village, a little-noticeo but momentous
event occurreo: a small group of armeo insurgents entereo the Ixcan from Mex-
ico in :q.. This ragtag bano of fteen combatants woulo eventually become the
Guerilla Army of the Foor ,EGF,, the strongest of the insurgent groups ,see Fay-
eras :q8., Black, Jamail, ano Chinchilla :q8,. The guerrillas slowly built support
in the isolateo villages of the Ixcan ano in the populateo highlanos throughout the
:qos. The army lasheo out with unexpecteo ferocity, seeking to permanently ter-
orxocinr ix ot\+rx\r\ :,
rorize or, if neeo be, annihilate Mayan communities. Ano it was the Mayan pop-
ulation, as the CEH report oocuments, not simply the guerrillas, who became the
target. The early :q8os became the vortex of a genocioal storm. In the aftermath
of this maelstrom, the military sought to suture the wounos by establishing a new
version of the past by portraying the army as the savior from the guerrillas rather
than the perpetrator of unspeakable criminal acts. The language of the Colo War
remaineo after the ghting stoppeoafter the peace accoros were signeo in :qq6,
after the Colo War itself slio into history. What Guatemalans are saying, however,
is that they have a right to knowa right to the truth.
Tooay, the community is seeking to come to terms with the past, not simply to
remain a victim of it. The collective memory of the village is in transition, bur-
oeneo by the legacy of military action but also shapeo by the return of the refugees
from Mexico ano informeo by a more open national oialogue. Refugees returneo
with a oeeper awareness of their rights, oevelopeo in a more open atmosphere in
years of exile. The fuller national oialogue was enhanceo by the negotiations leao-
ing to the December :qq6 peace accoros, an amnesty, ano a resultant national oe-
sire, at times hesitant ano still fearful, to come to terms with a bitter history.
One cannot look forwaro in Guatemala, however, without confronting the grief
of the past, ano here the role of memory is crucial. Many scholars have written
extensively ano eloquently about the neeo to recover the memory ano interpret the
Mayans situation in the war ,Hale :qqa, :qqb, Wilson :qq:, :qq, :qq, Warren
:qq, Green :qqq, Nelson :qqq,. In oiscrete ano relatively brief moments, soci-
eties in oierent parts of the worlo have oevelopeo an intense collective neeo to
remember their past as a preconoition for facing the future, Hale writes
,:qqa:8:,. These scholars also recognize the complexity ano oiculty of the task.
As anthropologist Kay Warren ,:qq8:86, states, Lo ctolcrcto gives a shape to mem-
ories ano to later experiences of repression. Memory is tangleo in trauma, ano
unraveling the tangle is itself traumatic.
On one level, memory is inoivioual, reecting the struggle of inoiviouals to oeal
with what has taken place. Human memory is a marvelous but fallacious instru-
ment, Frimo Levi ,:q88:., tells us, expanoing, contracting, lling in, obliterat-
ing, ano rearranging its silhouette. Iollowing social ano political turmoil, let alone
the unimaginable ravages of genocioe, events are rethought ano reorganizeo even
more rapioly. Those who fell unoer military control may not consciously be rewrit-
ing the past, in their minos, but history is a remarkably heavy millstone to come to
terms with. Some lie consciously, cololy falsifying reality itself, Levi observeo,
but more numerous are those who weigh anchor, move o, momentarily or for-
ever, from genuine memories, ano fabricate for themselves a convenient reality. The
past is a buroen to them, they feel repugnance for things oone or suereo ano teno
to replace them with others ,ibio.:.,. Over time, if not challengeo, the oistinction
between the early ano the later remembrance progressively loses its contours
,ibio.,. It ooes not take much to reshape a suggesteo image: an omission here ano
some embellishing there until a new picture emerges that mirrors the current con-
:8 orxocinr
s v\kr
text ano, over time, barely resembles the original. As one witness tolo the CEH,
|Feople| oont just remember the event as it was, unoer what circumstances, the
time ano all that, but all the subjective interpretation, a subjectivity infuseo with
fear ,CEH :qqqa:tomo IV:.q,.
On another level, memory has a collective oimension, transcenoing the inoi-
vioual ano reecting the social. This broaoer oimension of memory provioes its
own oynamic. Collective memory is biaseo towaros forgetting that which is neg-
ative, Halbwachs suggests ,Marques, Faez, ano Serra :qq:.8,, ano painful or
shameful events are even more oicult to hanole. The social oimension of mem-
ory also shapes inoivioual recollection. In formulating an account of what took
place that is shareo with others, inoiviouals tap their own recollections, baseo on
their observation of major events as well as exchanges with each other. These per-
ceptions of the past lter not only through their own experiences but also through
the social arenathe public ano private oiscussion of these events ano the ways
in which they are interpreteo ano unoerstooo by society as a whole.
In the case of Santa Maria Tzeja, what is this social context? It is a context that
those in power seek to oene. Everything that exists, no matter what its origin,
Nietzsche writes, is periooically reinterpreteo by those in power in terms of fresh
intentions ,Nietzsche :q6:.oq,. A Guatemalan military ocer echoes Nietzsche
in a contemporary context: |T|here is a historic truth in Guatemala, which is a
truth from the perspective of power ano that is the one that we know ano accept
,Cifuentes :qq8:8q,. One way of legitimizing the present is by oenying the past or,
if faceo with unoeniable truths, by provioing an interpretation capable of ration-
alizing the terror that took place. Nonetheless, as Arenot ,:q68:.q, puts it, facts
possess a strength of |their| own: whatever those in power may contrive, they are
unable to oiscover or invent a viable substitute for |them|. This tension between
interpretation ano reality is the terrain on which memory is constituteo.
Social scientists face a particular challenge in ooing research among populations
subjecteo to terror ano fear. How is one to unoerstano ano interpret the recollec-
tions people provioe? More than usual, it is important, even oecisive, to oecipher
or oecooe the meanings in peoples stories, to sort out the public voice ano the con-
cealeo, unspoken thoughts. It is not as straightforwaro as simply counterposing
truth versus falsehooo, but rather seeking to unoerstano what is saio ano what is
not saio. That which remains purposefully unspoken can inoicate agency, oeance,
resistance, control, autonomy, contestation, ano resilience. Silence, at times, is re-
markably eloquent. A social science researcher neeos to locate the hiooen voice,
the cooes or the oouble meanings, the thoughts that resioe between the lines.
Guatemala provioes an unusually oicult, troubling challenge. The act of re-
membering, let alone the act of retelling, is a highly chargeo, politicizeo event,
fraught with oanger ,see Manz :qqq,. Not surprisingly, fear leaos people to pro-
vioe partial information, ano often misinformation, until trust is establisheo ano it
becomes clear what, if any, consequences might befall the responoent. It is as if
oenial ano a low prole woulo bring protection from a worlo that meriteo greater
orxocinr ix ot\+rx\r\ :
oistrust than ever, Warren ,:qq8:q, founo in the village of San Anors. Conoence
becomes the meoium that encourages a fuller picture to emerge, that allows the
sharos of shattereo lives to be pieceo back together.
How, then, ooes one conouct research on grief ? If terror continues to pierce the
grief, how ooes one enter that oesperate place ano then interpret what responoents
are saying? What methooology ooes one employ? Often, ano in the case of
Guatemala with certainty, a responoents perception of the researcher inuences, at
times oetermines, what is saio. Given the apprehension peasants feel, the challenge
is to oiscover what people thought when the events were unfoloing, ano to unoer-
stano the factors that have moloeo current memory. In many Guatemalan villages,
oiverse, often contraoictory, memories coexist concerning relations with the insur-
gent forces. What oynamics shape ano reshape these multiple narratives? Over time,
memories of the same events sometimes evolve into mirror images of each other
when vieweo from the recollections of those insioe ano outsioe the country.
Communities that have traverseo the unimaginable ano grieve in the aftermath
of the unspeakable, confront the past in varying ways. A central challenge is the
recovery of trust ano, in particular, rebuiloing it within the community. The ab-
sence of trust cripples the present ano hobbles the future. How ooes a society sub-
jecteo to butchery ano forceo to cower in the face of impunity change course? How
oo people have conoence in legal institutions when they have seen these institu-
tions as either complicit with the agents of oestruction or as oecimateo by them?
How oo people participate in society ano social institutions when the terror has
instilleo a numbing silence? How oo survivors oeal with the weight of their guilt
guilt for having surviveo, guilt for not having spoken out, guilt for having become
accomplices in the repression suereo by others, guilt for having carveo for them-
selves Uro Vtoo Ttorotlo.
Resignation ano passivity as a strategy for survival is a heavy albatross that
chokes the possibility of recovery. Everyone in this village experienceo a tremen-
oous sense of guilt, fear, oepression, loss, abanoonment, oespair, humiliation, anger,
ano solituoe. Ior some, oeep religious faith was able to carry them through. Ior
others, even for some of the most religious, the blow was so oevastating that it shat-
tereo their faith in Goo. Ano, as the CEH observeo, the terror ooes not oisap-
pear automatically when the levels of violence lessen, insteao it has cumulative ano
perourable eects which require time, eort ano experience of a new type in or-
oer to overcome it ,CEH :qqqa:tomo IV::,.
In some Guatemalan villages, the buroen of the past has paralyzeo the present.
They have retreateo into passivity, conformity, ano mistrust. A phantomlike om-
nipotent impunity for those who perpetrateo the massive terror grinos glass into
open wounos. No crime, no matter how excessive, no matter how cruel ano oe-
graoing, no matter how many times repeateo, was ever punisheo. There were no
limits, there was no recourse, ano the result is a profouno sense of continueo vul-
nerability. If a society ooes not renoer a juogment ano the truth is not oeclareo,
communities unoerstanoably feel that the terror of the past coulo reoccur. There
oo orxocinr
s v\kr
is no closure ano no sense of justice. The past lurks in the present ano threatens to
overwhelm the future.
But even in a culture of silence, quiet voices challenge themselves ano others to
speak out. Villagers in Santa Maria Tzeja began to view their silence as making
them accomplices. Silence armsas the terrorist state expectsthat nothing
inoeeo has happeneo ano binos the muroerers ano the survivors into a oepraveo
covenant. The unspeakable horrors this village suereo shoulo logically throttle any
progress, optimism, energy, conoence, enthusiasm, ambition, or collective action
,political or social,. Yet this extraoroinary community has become a mooel of suc-
cess, an engageo population that is looking onwaro with conoencenot by avoio-
ing the nightmare that took place but, on the contrary, by facing it heao on.
Through human rights workshops, speaking about the past, ano engaging with it,
they have moveo forwaro ano are oetermineooespite all the continueo threats
ano attacksnot to move one step back. Key to this process is the public nature of
their grieving: sharing the grief, hearing each other, receiving responses ano reac-
tions to their oeep pain. This open grief allows for reciprocity ano that, in turn,
links the inoivioual to the collective process of coping with fear, stress, ano recov-
ery. Also important has been a past of participatory experience ano a venue to par-
ticipate publiclya strong community experience infuseo with oemocratic prac-
tices. The result is a process of private suering, public grieving. The public space
unveils pathways not always available in other villages that enable inoiviouals to
better cope with private wounos.
Nonetheless, the process of healing will take time. Ramon, a former combat-
ant with the guerrilla forces, emphasizes the psychological scars of the war: We
were left psychologically wounoeo as a result of the war. It will take a long time to
achieve an emotional stability. A Maya-Kiche man, so poor he lackeo lano of his
own in the village, recalls the oecision he maoe when captureo at the age of thirty-
two ano taken to be tortureo at the military base. He hao maoe up his mino not
to collaborate with the army, not to provioe any information. I thought, no, I
woulo rather just oie by myself, why shoulo I kill my brothers? I oiont even think
of my family, I forgot, so let them kill me, I thought. I ask him how he felt when
he left the army base after four months. One leg was totally swollen, I coulont
walk. My feet were totally swollen, he recalls with a paineo look twisting his fea-
tures. I only wanteo water. My family ano I were thrown in a thick forest, with-
out fooo, nothing. Leanoro was tolo he coulo not go back to his oestroyeo village
because that was a reo zone, we coulo not cultivate there. He says he was oev-
astateo ano oemoralizeo. The physical pain ano oamage bleo into the psycholog-
ical wounos. In the beginning, it was not simply the terrible, oebilitating physical
pain that was immobilizing, he recalleo, but rather the oesire to live hao seepeo out
of him. He says his wife began to cut wooo ano work so they coulo survive in the
wastelano in which they hao been oumpeo. He just sat there cowering: oevastateo,
humiliateo, ano without energy or will. Hope for recovery was oeraileo because
the military oroereo him to appear at the army basethe same place where he hao
orxocinr ix ot\+rx\r\ o.
been tortureoevery week, as if on a perverse parole that causeo him to revisit the
scene of the crimes of his tormentors.
When I conoucteo the rst lengthy interview at his home in :q8, he nearly lost
control as he began to oescribe the tortures. His wife ano chiloren lookeo on
stunneo by the physical representations of the torture techniques the army applieo,
then he threw himself exhausteo onto a hammock, sobbing uncontrollably ano cov-
ering his face with a towel. He saio, |T|his is the rst time I have tolo anyone about
what happeneo at the military baseI hao not even tolo my wife about it. In my
most recent interview in the mio-:qqos, he tolo me that he still suers pain in his
stomach, ano he becomes inexplicably irritable at times, unable to control his nerves
or patience. He ooes not participate much in community activities because, he says,
the smallest comment provokes unconscious outbursts. Tooay, fty years olo, he
looks far oloer than his age, the oeep wrinkles in his face betraying a permanent
pain.
Clauoio, a former combatant, also spoke of the psychological problems, say-
ing, |We| feel sao ano oesperate. |Before|, when we were in the mountains |ght-
ing with the guerrilla forces|, we were free, happy, we sang, but then you leave the
organization, you give up your weapon, you no longer have security, you never know
when someone may threaten you, or kill you. That is why some comporcto crieo
when they surrenoereo their weapons.
Many villagers conoe a oeeply felt sorrow ano talk of being haunteo by the
memories of those violent oays. Leonaroo tells of unexpecteoly suering near nerv-
ous breakoowns because of the enormous fright of the past. He somberly re-
ects that sometimes I remember ano I cannot sleep. I feel very frighteneo. In those
rst oays when he returneo to the village after twelve years in refuge, he felt con-
vulseo with anger at the sight of the army. I felt such anger I almost coulo not stano
it. I coulo not look at them. He says it was very oicult to aojust. When I woulo
see the army I woulo remember the bullets they woulo re, the bombs, the screams
ano I woulo say to myself, Ay, they are looking at me, maybe they will re at me.
Aoelina recollects the time the family spent hioing in the jungle when she was a chilo:
I oont remember much but that we were hioing in the jungle. They woulo cover
my mouth so I woulo not cry. I remember thorns tearing our knees ano we woulo
bleeo. That is when I began to experience suering ano I learneo that something
very grave was happening ano I felt that we were all going to suer.
Manuel Canil, who lost his wife ano all but two of his chiloren in the massacre,
saio that, in the oays following the butchery, while he was escaping the army in the
jungle, he hao no feelings. It was like a oream I hao. What hurt me the most is
the manner by which they oieo, that hurt me a lot. I oiont feel any more. I only
felt as if I was oreaming. I thought I will go crazy. His son, Eowin, six years olo
at the time, remembers the emotional state of his father ouring those oays. My fa-
ther was feeling tremenoous saoness, ano I remember that in church they hao saio
that to forget something very heavy, the best thing is to leave the place ano go to
another far-o place so that one woulo begin to abanoon the pain. It was at that
o: orxocinr
s v\kr
point that a broken-hearteo, oispiriteo Manuel ano his two surviving sons began
the long ano frightening walk to the boroer of Mexico to seek refuge.
This small village seems to have experienceo all the horrors suereo in
Guatemala in the early :q8os: massacres, torture, rape, oisappearance, persecution,
oisplacement. In some cases, the closest relationships were irretrievably altereo.
The army captureo two chiloren ouring an oensive although the family hao hio-
oen successfully for years in the jungle. Intervieweo some twenty years later, the
mother ano father cry as they provioe oetails about that tragic oay, even though
they oio locate the chiloren a oecaoe later. At the time, they frantically lookeo every-
where for oays, hoping that the chiloren hao only gotten lost ouring the army in-
cursion. They went to the place where the chiloren knew that fooo was hiooen,
but, nothing, there was nothingno signs that the chiloren hao been there. We
coulont oo anything. That is how it was, that is how this history happeneo, so sao.
It was a great saoness, the mother painfully remembers. Truthfully we coulo not
eat anymore. We began to ght among ourselves. He woulo say, |It| was your fault,
why oiont you take care of them? Ano I also blameo him. We just oiont know
what to oo. We were alreaoy crazy, truly. Oh Goo! It was an immense saoness,
truly. Although hope was crusheo ouring the oay, it woulo creep in at night. I
spent a year oreaming about them. I woulo oream that they were arriving. What
hope! What wish! When I woulo wake up, there was nothing. She stops. Con-
templatively, she looks out of her house ano continues to sob ano sigh as she ano
her husbano traverse back to memories of those heartbreaking oays. The schism
that separateo them from their chiloren, physically as well as emotionally ano ioe-
ologically, tangleo the normal bonos between parents ano chiloren.
The resioents of Santa Maria Tzeja have sought to confront the past pub-
licly, through an especially innovative strategy: theater. A group of teenagers
ano Ranoall Shea, a North American teacher ano oirector of the communitys
school, wrote a play oocumenting what Santa Maria Tzeja has experienceo.
They call the play Tlctc I ^otltrg Corccolco Tlot 1tll ^ot Bc Dtcocctco ;Mottlc.
.o::), ano the villagers themselves perform it. The play not only recalls what
happeneo in the village in a stark, uninching manner but also oioactically lays
out the laws ano rights that the military violateo. The play pointeoly ano pre-
cisely cites articles of the Guatemalan constitution that were trampleo on, not
normally the text of great orama. But in Guatemala, publicly reaoing the con-
stitution can be a profounoly oramatic act. Ferformances inevitably leao to mov-
ing, at times heateo, oiscussions. At rst some were upset that a play was writ-
ten at all, fearing that the theater group woulo provoke retaliation from the army.
Some of the plays critics were fearful about what might happen, but others sim-
ply oio not want to revisit the past. Nonetheless the proouction went aheao, ano
it hao a cathartic impact on the village. Nicanor, who was taken to the military
base in :q8. ano apparently cooperateo with the army ano thus avoioeo lengthy
torture, was quite oisturbeo about the play, arguing, We oont want to recall
again, to oisturb again those situations that perhaps we are alreaoy leaving be-
orxocinr ix ot\+rx\r\ o
hino. He questioneo whether the promoters ano the performers of the play
may have oone it for money. He was oisturbeo, warning that all that scratching
,ccot/ot, as chickens oo, ano provoking will bring a response.
When askeo if he can forget what happeneo, he replieo: Como ro, of course,
after a long while yes, it can be forgotten, so long as there is no one reminoing you,
but with a reminoer . . . He left the sentence unnisheo, as if to say that this play
forceo him to oeal with the past. Shoulo what happeneo in Santa Maria Tzeja be
tolo? He remaineo silent for a very long time, ano then saio, If it were tolo as it
was, then magnicent. But there are a lot of things in the play that are missing.
He was obviously uncomfortable with the portrayal of events ano by the fact that
his two boys are asking him questions about the past. His complaint was that the
army takes all the hits ano the guerrillas get o too easily.
Villagers who remaineo in the militarizeo community were afraio that a mili-
tary attack might result, given the portrayal of the army, accoroing to Leonaroo,
a young man who spent years in refugee camps in Mexico. Leonaroo joineo the
guerrilla forces for a few years, along with half a oozen outrageo teenagers, after
the armys massacre ano oestruction of the village. Given his experiences, Leonaroo
shoulo have been fearful of military retaliation, but he was more alarmeo at leav-
ing the past unexplaineo. Overall, however, even its critics have come to terms with
the play. To the surprise of everyone involveo, the play achieveo national ano in-
ternational recognition. The theater group has gone on national tours, ano the BBC
both lmeo the play ano incluoeo extensive excerpts in a oocumentary about
Guatemala.
Aoelina Chom, a young Mayan woman who eo to the jungle, surviveo, ano spent
twelve years as a refugee in Mexico, is the leao actress. The play opens with Aoelina
aooressing the auoience oirectly, ano then the following exchange takes place:
Sorto Ottt: Laoies ano Gentlemen, in :q8., my village of Santa Maria
Tzeja, along with almost all the communities of the Ixcan,
was attackeo ano oestroyeo by the army. Army soloiers mas-
sacreo : people in Santa Maria Tzeja, in aooition in the
months after the attack, at least 8 more people oieo, from the
illnesses ano malnutrition they suereo living in the jungle.
The army was carrying out its scorcheo earth campaign. . . .
Dtorl
;Sorttogo Botor-Stmot): Hey, I oont agree with what youre saying. You oont have
the right to say things that stain the reputation of our sacreo
army. Goo in the heavens, ano the army on the earth.
Sorto: Excuse me, sir, but its our unoerstanoing that the army exists
to oefeno the sovereignty of the Guatemalan people. The
highest authority in Guatemala is the people. You have it
backwaros, the people oo not exist to serve ano honor the
army.
o orxocinr
s v\kr
Artorto: Shes right. Article of the Guatemalan constitution guarantees freeoom
of speech. The constitution is the most important law in Guatemala, it is
above all other laws. All of the state institutions: the police, the army, even
the remen, have to function in accoroance with the constitution. Neither
the army, nor you, sir, have the right to take away any of our constitutional
rights.
Mioway into the play, in scene 6., Aoelina returns to oeal specically with the
trageoy of Santa Maria Tzeja:
Aocltro: In the Iebruary :th massacre, the following people were killeo: |Aoelina
kneels, her heao oown. Church bell rings once, then twice, six of the per-
formers walk on stage with woooen crosses in their hanos. At the eno Au-
relio comes to stage oresseo in army clothes.|
Sorto: Secono article of the Guatemalan constitution. Duties of the state: it is the
outy of the state to guarantee for all of the inhabitants of the republic life,
liberty, justice, security, peace, ano the integral oevelopment of each per-
son. Christian Canil Suar, years olo. Eufrasia Canil Suar, : years olo.
|Aurelio, as the soloier, with a knife in each hano, moves behino Santa, lets
out a yell, ano gives the impression of slitting her throat. Santa slumps to
the grouno, ano Aurelio freezes.|
The play goes over somberly, yet forcefully, several articles of the constitution
relevant to the abuses committeo in the village, ano then the scene concluoes with
a reference to international law:
Article of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. No one shall be subjecteo
to torture or any treatment which is cruel, inhuman or oegraoing.
This is followeo by oetails of torture at the military base.
Scene begins with the rst oisappeareo person from the village:
^ootto: My name is Santos Vicente Sarat. I was one of the rst people killeo by
the army. Soloiers kept watch on my house for three weeks, but I wasnt
afraio. I hao oone nothing wrong. But nally one night, they kionappeo
me. My corpse was never founo. I oieo in :q, I was .. years olo. My life
was only just beginning. |A woooen block is struck against a oesk to cre-
ate a powerful, abrupt souno. Nazario strikes a pose ano freezes.|
The play recites the names ano ages of those muroereo. Iinally, it concluoes:
All: Our lives were only just beginning. |Iinal ring of the bell, ano canoles are
blown out.|
The play is a powerful vehicle for confronting the past, but it is able to succeeo
only because of the broaoer context that supports its performance. This village is
fortunate to have neutral, concerneo, ano constructive meoiators, respecteo by all,
orxocinr ix ot\+rx\r\ o
that are helping in the process. Most signicant has been the steaoy, uncompromis-
ing involvement over the past thirty years of Iather Luis Gurriaran, bringing a meas-
ure of comfort ano stability to a grueling journey. While the community is oeter-
mineo to move on, the country as a whole, ano the international community, still
neeo to oo their part. Signing a peace agreement may eno the conict between the
army ano insurgents, but it falls far short as the main means for the ioeal of recon-
ciliation. As a South African astutely observeo, there is an inherent contraoiction
in a call for re-conciliation when the parties were never conciliateo to begin with
,Simpson :qq8:q:,. Ior conciliation to be taken seriously, the eorts have to be oeep-
rooteo, requiring a serious look at the very core of social relations ano not simply
to concentrate on the perioo of most recent conict.
The village has receiveo national attention not only because of the play but also
because of the bolo charges leveleo at the military. As a front-page heaoline in
Guatemalas leaoing newspaper, Ptcro Lt/tc, announceo on Tuesoay, May ., .ooo:
Acusan Hermanos Lucas ,Lucas Brothers accuseo,. The story mentioneo Santa
Maria Tzeja. The following oay, Eowin Canil, now a law stuoent at San Carlos
University, testieo about what he hao seen.
The village has maoe remarkable strioes both economically ano socially. The
cooperative has been a vital force in their material success, ano an intense belief
in eoucation has resulteo in a vibrant school ano close to a hunoreo stuoents pur-
suing professional oegrees. Nonetheless, the attacks against Santa Maria Tzeja con-
tinue. On May :, .ooo, at .::o A.M., the cooperative store was set on re. Every-
thing was oestroyeo: merchanoise, accounting books, recoros, ano oce equipment.
Villagers estimateo the loss at $.,ooo. The various attacks are not mere chance,
accoroing to the boaro of the cooperative, but rather follow a premeoitateo plan
to oestabilize the regular operations of our cooperative. In fact, the re was set
ten oays after members of the community leo charges of genocioe against mili-
tary generals in power in :q8., ano on the very oay the community was celebrat-
ing the sixth anniversary of the return of the refugees. The villagers call May :
the Holioay of Reconciliation ano Initiation of the Reconstruction of the Com-
munity, a feat no other community has been able to achieve thus far. To the sur-
prise of neighboring villages, there was a unieo, oetermineo response to rebuilo.
They secureo new funos, rebuilt once again, ano now have a more eective secu-
rity system. This initiative is yet another sign that the village can cope with fear ano
aoversity.
I will concluoe by returning to the beginningto the little boy that surviveo
the massacre by hioing behino a tree ano to the womans booy that was oumpeo
by the cooperative builoing.
I receiveo the following message from Eowin Canil at the eno of August .ooo:
Holo Beatriz,
I am writing to tell you that on Sunoay August .o
th
the remains of my aunt Vicenta
Menooza were locateo. Iinally, after :8 years, we were able to see her again, though
o orxocinr
s v\kr
now only in bones. Nonetheless we feel a little bit more tranquil. But, only when jus-
tice is oone, then, our souls ano their souls will rest in peace. When I hearo the news
I crieo a lot, everything came back to me, ano I felt as if all hao happeneo yesteroay.
Then, after all the crying, I began to feel calm again, but I oo feel a thirst for justice.
I think that only with justice will we feel more secure that it woulo not be so easy for
it all to happen again. . . .
My family has not been founo. The exhumations continue ano I hope they will
be founo. . . .
I want to tell you that at the University I am involveo in a research project ano I
chose the theme of Genocioe ano Crimes Against Humanity. I am very interesteo in
this ano pushing along. . . . All of this gives me more courage to get involveo. I am
becoming more conscious of the situation in Guatemala. Next month I will give my
testimony before a prosecutor ano then the public oebate will begin.
I want to tell you also that a few oays ago the vioeo of the Santa Maria Tzeja
play, There is nothing hiooen that will not be oiscovereo was presenteo here in
Guatemala City. A lot of people came, the place was packeo for two nights.
This message is an example of villagers brioging the painful ano unjust past
with a hope for justice ano a better future. The charge of genocioe against army gen-
erals, the planners of appalling savagery, is one step families have taken towaro jus-
tice. The woros of Eowin Canil tell us that moral strength can oefeat intimioation,
that courage, unoerstanoing, ano hope can unoermine silence.
I woulo like to acknowleoge ano thank the John D. ano Catherine T. MacArthur Iounoa-
tion for their Research ano Writing grant, which supporteo the writing phase of this re-
search. I am grateful to two University of California, Berkeley, stuoents, Monica Fons ano
Carina Carrieoo, for their oeoicateo ano rst-rate assistance. Both took part in Berkeleys
Unoergraouate Research Apprentice Frogram. Fseuoonyms were useo for some villagers to
protect their ioentities.
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Fress.
orxocinr ix ot\+rx\r\ o
.o
:.
Recent Developments in the
International Law of Genocioe
Ar Artltopologtcol Pctpccttcc or tlc
Irtctrottorol Cttmtrol Ttt/orol fot R.oroo
Pool }. Mogrotcllo
Anthropologists have always been concerneo with the well-being of politically weak
peoples arouno the worlo. Consequently they no the genocioal attacks on oe-
fenseless populations in Rwanoa, Burunoi, Bosnia, Kosovo, East Timur, ano other
lanos especially oistressing. As part of their humanistic ano scientic enterprise,
anthropologists enoeavor to unoerstano the root causes ano nature of these most
aberrant of human acts. This chapter contributes to this enoeavor by focusing on
the evolving conceptualization of genocioe in international law ano its applica-
tion to the recent genocioe in Rwanoa.
Since the :qos, when Raphael Lemkin coineo the term gcroctoc, scholars have
oereo a wioe variety of concepts to carry that label ,see Anoreopoulos :qq,. Al-
though scholarly conceptualization is useful for research purposes, it is important
for anthropologists ano others to know the legal oenition of genocioe as presenteo
in the Uniteo Nations :q8 Convention on the Frevention ano Funishment of
Genocioe, as well as the recent juoicial expansion of this oenition in the :qq8 case
of Alo,co in the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanoa ,oiscusseo below,.
1
The conventions oenition of genocioe has been aoopteo into the legal systems
of at least :. countries. It is in the statutes of the U.N. International Criminal
Tribunals for the former Yugoslavia ano Rwanoa, ano the proposeo permanent In-
ternational Criminal Court. Consequently, this oenition has legal power.
THE INTERNATIONAL LEGAL DEIINITION OI GENOCIDE
Article II of the Genocioe Convention oenes the crime of genocioe as:
any of the following acts committeo with intent to oestroy, in whole or in part, a na-
tional, ethnical, racial or religious group, as such:
,a, Killing members of the group,
,b, Causing serious booily or mental harm to members of the group,
,c, Deliberately inicting on the group conoitions of life calculateo to bring
about its physical oestruction in whole or in part,
,o, Imposing measures intenoeo to prevent births within the group,
,e, Iorcibly transferring chiloren of the group to another group.
Article V of the Genocioe Convention requires ratifying states to enact the legis-
lation necessary to give eect to the convention ano to provioe eective penalties for
persons founo guilty of genocioe or any of the acts enumerateo in Article II ,above,.
Although only :. of the almost .oo countries sharing our earth have ratieo the Geno-
cioe Convention, legal authorities maintain that the prevention ano punishment of
the crime of genocioe are part of customary international law, ano, therefore, all states
are legally obligateo to take the measures necessary to prevent genocioe in their ter-
ritories ano to punish those who perpetrate it. As early as :q:, the International Court
of Justice ,ICJ, characterizeo the prohibition of genocioe as a peremptory norm of in-
ternational law , o cogcr, from which no oerogation is permitteo.
2
Article VI of the Genocioe Convention requires that persons chargeo with geno-
cioe be trieo either by a state court of the country in which the genocioe was allegeoly
committeo or by a recognizeo ano competent international penal tribunal. To oate,
the anticipateo international penal tribunal has not been createo. In July of :qq8,
however, state oelegates at a U.N.-sponsoreo conference in Rome overwhelmingly
approveo a statute for a permanent International Criminal Court ,ICC, by a vote of
:.o to with .: abstentions ,Baron :qq8,. The ICC will become a reality after sixty
countries ratify its statutea process that may take four to ve years.
With respect to the prevention or stoppage of genocioe, Article VIII of the
Genocioe Convention provioes that any state party may call on the Uniteo Nations
to take appropriate action, ano Article IX provioes for recourse to the interstate ju-
risoiction of the International Court of Justice:
Disputes between the Contracting Farties relating to the interpretation, application,
or fulllment of the present Convention, incluoing those relating to the responsibil-
ity of a State for genocioe . . . shall be submitteo to the International Court of Justice
at the request of any of the parties to the oispute.
Consequently the convention, by means of Articles V, VIII, ano IX, contemplates
prevention of genocioe by national legislation, state governments, ano competent U.N.
organs, which may incluoe ,but are not limiteo to, the General Assembly, the High
Commission for Human Rights, the General Secretariat, ano the Security Council.
Clearly, the most powerful of these is the Security Council, which has the authority
ano obligation unoer Chapter VII of the U.N. Charter to maintain ano restore in-
ternational peace by taking oiplomatic, economic, or military measures. Once the
Security Council oetermines which of these measures it will employ to oeal with threats
to peace in any part of the worlo, all U.N. member states are obligateo to leno their
support as neeoeo ,U.N. Charter, Art. ,.
nr\rrorxrx+s ix ix+rnx\+iox\r r\v ..
The Genocioe Convention calls for juoicial enforcement by means of national
courts, an international penal tribunal ,that may not be establisheo until the year
.oo,, ano the ICJ. To oate, none of these mechanisms has been eective in the
prevention of genocioe. In the :qqos, for example, ethnic cleansing in the former
Yugoslavia ano mass muroer of Tutsi in Rwanoa continueo while national courts,
state governments, ano the ICJ lookeo on in oespair.
Since the perpetrators of genocioe are often persons who control a government
or a national army, national courts are unlikely venues for their prosecution. Coun-
tries where genocioe occurs usually oo not have inoepenoent juoiciaries. As for
the ICJ, it is not a criminal court. It oeals with oisputes between states that volun-
tarily recognize its jurisoiction. The ICJ can oetermine whether a state party has
breacheo the Genocioe Convention ano can oecioe the amount of reparations for
such a breach, but it cannot convict the inoiviouals responsible for the breach ,see
ICJ Statute Art. 6 ,. Only rarely has the ICJ been calleo upon to aooress the is-
sue of genocioe.
Signicantly, recent action by the U.N. Security Council has leo to the punish-
ment of inoivioual genocioe perpetrators in the former Yugoslavia ano Rwanoa.
Acting unoer Chapter VII of the U.N. Charter, the Security Council took un-
preceoenteo steps by establishing the International Tribunal for the Iormer Yu-
goslavia ,ICTY, in :qq ano the International Tribunal for Rwanoa ,ICTR, in :qq
as measures to restore international peace ano security.
3
Of those two tribunals, the ICTR was the rst to oeal heao-on with the crime
of genocioe. During :qq8 the ICTR maoe signicant progress in the prosecution
of persons responsible for the :qq mass muroer of Tutsi. In its rst completeo trial,
the case against former Taba /ootgmcttc ,mayor, Jean-Faul Akayesu, the ICTR cre-
ateo a number of important jurispruoential concepts ano reasoning paths that it
ano other tribunals will likely apply in future genocioe cases ,Pto. c. Alo,co :qq8,.
In aooition, this trial reacheo several milestones on the evolving roao of inter-
national humanitarian law. Just fty years after the Uniteo Nations hao aoopteo
the Genocioe Convention, Jean-Faul Akayesu became the rst person in history
to be founo guilty of genocioe after a trial by an international tribunal. His trial
also represents the rst time in history that an international tribunal conceptual-
izeo sexual violence ,incluoing rape, as an act of genocioe.
The oetails of these oevelopments are oiscusseo below against the backorop of
recent Rwanoan history.
MASS MURDER IN RWANDA
Iollowing the assassination of Rwanoas Hutu presioent, Juvenal Habyarimana,
when the plane carrying him was shot oown near Kigalis airport ,probably by haro-
line Hutu, on April 6, :qq, Rwanoa burst into horrifying violence resulting in the
muroer of about 8oo,ooo people ,mostly Tutsi,, the uprooting of about two mil-
.: orxocinr
s v\kr
lion within Rwanoas boroers, ano the exoous of more than two million ,mostly
Hutu, to the neighboring countries of Zaire, Burunoi, Tanzania, Kenya, ano
Uganoa ,Frunier :qq,. Immeoiately after Habyarimanas oeath, the Fresioential
Guaro, the Hutu-oominateo national army, ano the Irtctolom.c ,Hutu oeath
squaos, unleasheo a systematic campaign of muroer against hunoreos of mooer-
ate Hutu ano all Tutsi.
Rwanoa was Africas most oensely populateo country, with rural peasants con-
stituting the bulk of its inhabitants. It hao a pregenocioe population of approxi-
mately eight million, all speaking Ikinyarwanoa, a Bantu language. About 8 per-
cent of the people were ocially classieo as Hutu, : percent as Tutsi, ano :
percent as Twa or Fygmies. Intermarriage among these people, many of whom are
Christian, was not uncommon ,Newbury :q88,.
Frecolonial rule by the minority but aristocratic Tutsi, as well as inoirect rule
later by Belgian colonialists through Tutsi royalty, hao createo resentment among
the majority Hutu. Rwanoa became inoepenoent of Belgium in :q6., ano various
Hutu factions controlleo the government ano military until July of :qq. Feriooi-
cally throughout the years of inoepenoence there were outbreaks of violence, re-
sulting in the ight of Tutsi to surrounoing countries, especially to Uganoa where
they formeo the Rwanoan Fatriotic Iront ,RFI, ano Army. In the :q6os, some ex-
ileo Tutsi invaoeo Rwanoa in unsuccessful attempts to regain power.
Major-General Juvenal Habyarimana came to power in :q, as the result of a
military coup. During his twenty-one years of rule ,:q:qq,, there were no Tutsi
mayors or governors, only one Tutsi military ocer, just two Tutsi members of par-
liament, ano only one Tutsi cabinet minister ,Frunier :qq:,. In aooition, Hutu in
the military were prohibiteo from marrying Tutsi, ano all citizens were requireo to
carry ethnic ioentity caros. Ior purposes of these ioentity caros, ethnicity was oe-
termineo by patrilineal oescent. Hence even the chiloren of mixeo marriages were
classieo as Hutu, Tutsi, or Twa, oepenoing on the ioentity caros of their fathers.
Habyarimana promoteo a policy of internal repression against Tutsi. In the
:qqos, especially, his government inoiscriminately interreo ano persecuteo Tutsi,
claiming that they were actual or potential accomplices of the RFI , Jefremovas
:qq, Newbury :qq,. Irom :qqo to :qq, Hutu ultranationalists killeo an estimateo
two thousano Tutsi, they also targeteo human rights aovocates, regaroless of eth-
nicity ,Newbury :qq::,.
The genocioe campaign following Habyarimanas oeath enoeo in July :qq,
when the RFI Army routeo the Hutu militias ano army. The RFI ano mooerate
Hutu political parties formeo a new government on July :8, :qq, but the country
was in chaos. The government pleogeo to implement the Arusha peace agreement
on power sharing previously reacheo by Habyarimanas regime ano the RFI on
August , :qq. On August :o, :qq, in a presioential statement, the U.N. Security
Council calleo upon the new Rwanoan government to ensure that there woulo be
no reprisals against Hutu wishing to return to their homes ano resume their work,
nr\rrorxrx+s ix ix+rnx\+iox\r r\v .
reminoeo the government of its responsibility for a national reconciliation, ano em-
phasizeo that the Arusha peace agreement constituteo an appropriate framework
for reconciliation.
4
The new Rwanoan government was a coalition of twenty-two ministers orawn
from the RFI ,with nine ministers, ano four other political parties ,U.S. Department
of State :qq,. Both Tutsi ano Hutu were among the top government ocials. The
government committeo itself to builoing a multiparty oemocracy ano to oiscontin-
uing the ethnic classication system utilizeo by the previous regime ,Bonner :qq,.
On July :, :qq, the U.N. Security Council aoopteo resolution q, in which it re-
questeo the secretary general to establish a commission of experts to oetermine
whether serious breaches of humanitarian law ,incluoing genocioe, hao been com-
mitteo in Rwanoa. In the fall of :qq, the commission reporteo to the Security Coun-
cil that genocioe ano systematic, wioespreao, ano agrant violations of international
humanitarian law hao been committeo in Rwanoa, resulting in massive loss of life.
On November 8, :qq, the secretary general submitteo to the Security Council a
statute for the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanoa, stating that he was con-
vinceo that the prosecution of persons responsible for serious violations of interna-
tional humanitarian law |in Rwanoa| . . . woulo contribute to the process of national
reconciliation ano to the restoration ano maintenance of peace.
5
He recommenoeo
that this tribunal, like the one createo by the Security Council in :qq for the former
Yugoslavia, be establisheo unoer Chapter VII of the U.N. Charter. The Security Coun-
cil aoopteo the secretary generals report ano the ICTR statute without change.
Article : of the tribunals statute limits the ICTRs temporal jurisoiction to the
year :qq. That article also states that the ICTR shall have the power to prose-
cute persons responsible for serious violations of international humanitarian law
committeo in the territory of Rwanoa ano Rwanoan citizens responsible for such
violations committeo in the territory of neighboring states. Consequently, the
statute gives the tribunal both personal ano territorial jurisoiction in Rwanoa, as
well as limiteo personal ano territorial jurisoiction in surrounoing states.
Because the Security Council is not a legislative booy, it lackeo authority to en-
act substantive law for the tribunal. Insteao, it authorizeo the tribunal to apply ex-
isting international humanitarian law applicable to noninternational armeo con-
ict. The humanitarian law incluoeo in the tribunals statute consists of the
Genocioe Convention ,ratieo by Rwanoa,, crimes against humanity ,as oeneo
by the Nuremberg Charter,, Article Common to the Geneva Conventions, ano
Aooitional Frotocol II ,also ratieo by Rwanoa,.
6
Both the prohibition ano pun-
ishment of acts of genocioe ano crimes against humanity are part of customary
international law imposing legal obligations on all states.
THE CASE AGAINST JEAN-FAUL AKAYESU
As stateo above, the case against Jean-Faul Akayesu is signicant for a series of rea-
sons: it was the rst trial before an international tribunal of someone chargeo with
. orxocinr
s v\kr
genocioe, ano it was the rst trial in which an international tribunal conceptual-
izeo sexual violence ,incluoing rape, as an act of genocioe. Also, because this was
the ICTRs rst juogment baseo on a contesteo trial, the justices hao to face many
jurispruoential issues for the rst time. The trial chambers lengthy juogment of
September ., :qq8, carefully explicates the facts, reasoning, ano rules it relieo upon
to reach its conclusions. By so ooing, this juogment will stano as a historic prece-
oent for future tribunals oealing with similar issues.
Alo,co Boclgtooro
Jean-Faul Akayesu, a Rwanoan national, was born in :q.
7
He is marrieo, with
ve chiloren. Frior to becoming bourgmestre of Taba commune in the Gitarama
prefecture of Rwanoa, he was a teacher, then an inspector of schools. Akayesu en-
tereo politics in :qq:, becoming a founoing member of the Mouvement Dmo-
cratique Rpublicain ,MDR,. He serveo as chairman of the local wing of the MDR
in Taba commune. In April :qq, Akayesu, with the support of several key gures
ano inuential groups in the commune, was electeo bourgmestre of Taba. He helo
that position until June :qq, when he eo to Zambia.
Attct oro Irotctmcrt
Jean-Faul Akayesu was arresteo in Zambia on October :o, :qq. On November ..,
:qq, the ICTR prosecutor requesteo the Zambian authorities keep Akayesu in oe-
tention for a perioo of ninety oays while awaiting the completion of the investiga-
tion into potential charges against him. The prosecutors inoictment containeo a
total of fteen counts inoivioually charging Akayesu with genocioe, complicity in
genocioe, oirect ano public incitement to commit genocioe, extermination, mur-
oer, torture, cruel treatment, rape, other inhumane acts ano outrages upon per-
sonal oignity, crimes against humanity, ano violations of Article Common to the
:qq Geneva Conventions ano Aooitional Frotocol II.
8
Juoge William H. Sekule
conrmeo the inoictment ano issueo an arrest warrant. Akayesu was transferreo
to the ICTR oetention facilities in Arusha, Tanzania, on May .6, :qq6. His case
was assigneo to Trial Chamber I, consisting of Juoges Laty Kama ,Senegal,,
Lennart Aspegren ,Sweoen,, ano Navanethem Fillay ,South Africa,the only fe-
male juoge at the ICTR.
Tttol oro Tcttmor,
During the seventeen-month-long trial, punctuateo by oefense-requesteo ao-
journments, the justices hearo forty-two witnesses, many being eyewitnesses ano
victims who tolo gruesome stories of their oroeals.
9
The rst person to testify for
the prosecution was a thirty-ve-year-olo Tutsi woman, known as Witness JJ to pro-
tect her ioentity. She explaineo how within oays after Fresioent Habyarimanas
nr\rrorxrx+s ix ix+rnx\+iox\r r\v .
plane crasheo, Hutu killeo her husbano, tore oown her familys home, then slaugh-
tereo ano ate her cows. She eo, with her twenty-month-olo son on her back, to
the farm of a Hutu neighbor, but he was too scareo to hioe her, so she ano the baby
spent the night in a elo of coee plants. The next morning her Hutu neighbor
brought her fooo ano aoviseo her to go to the Taba municipal oce of Mayor Jean-
Faul Akayesu, where Tutsi were seeking refuge.
When she arriveo at the municipal compouno, about sixty Tutsi, mostly women
ano chiloren, were alreaoy there. She saw Akayesu stanoing next to two police-
men armeo with pistols. Soon, she saio, Hutu thugs began beating her, her chilo,
ano many of the other Tutsi refugees. Witness JJ eo to a nearby banana planta-
tion, but a policeman founo her there ano beat her with the butt of his pistol. The
next morning Witness JJ ano about ten other Tutsi women went to Mayor Akayesu
ano askeo him to shoot them, because they coulo no longer enoure the brutal beat-
ings. He tolo them there were no more bullets, ano even if there were, he woulo
not waste them on Tutsi women.
Witness JJ ano the others went back to the banana plantation. Shortly there-
after soloiers came ano began raping the women. The next oay some soloiers took
Witness JJ ano some other women to the communal oce, known as the cultural
center, where orunken soloiers were raping screaming girls. Three of them also
rapeo Witness JJ. The next oay she was rapeo twice more. The rapes were espe-
cially humiliating because many took place in public, before chiloren. She testieo
that Akayesu tolo the rapist, Dont tell me that you wont have tasteo a Tutsi
woman. Take aovantage of it, because theyll be killeo tomorrow. He spoke as
though he were encouraging players, she saio.
Desperate ano weak, she took her chilo ano limpeo o to a cornelo. Later she
accepteo the oer of a Hutu couple who saio that they woulo care for her baby
while she was on the run. They hao a cow ano saio they woulo give the chilo milk.
Insteao, Witness JJ testieo, they killeo the baby ano let their oogs eat his booy.
Somehow, she escapeo with her life. She met with ICTR prosecutors in June :qq.
Accoroing to Witness JJ, Akayesu oio not kill with his own hanos, but with his
oroers. She saio that Akayesu hao oeclareo all Tutsis as enemy ano hao askeo the
Hutu to get rio of them. He maoe the call at a public meeting in Taba on April
:q, :qq, following a security meeting of mayors ano members of the interim gov-
ernment in Murambi the oay before. Witness JJ claimeo that Akayesu specically
tolo people, |If| you knew what the Tutsis were ooing. I have just founo out at the
security meeting. I have no more pity for them, especially the intellectuals. I will
give them to you.
In cross-examination, the oefense askeo Witness JJ how Akayesu was to blame
for her oroeal. Dio he have the means to prevent the rapes? She responoeo that
Akayesu was an authority. He coulo have protecteo the women ano chiloren, but
he oio nothing for them. When I went to see him for help, he hao the police get
me away. Other witnesses also testieo to Akayesus change in attituoe following
the security meeting helo twelve oays after the start of the genocioe.
. orxocinr
s v\kr
Akayesu testieo in his own oefense on March :., :qq8. He portrayeo himself
as a helpless, low-level ocial who hao no control over events in Taba commune.
He tolo the court that the Interahamwe was responsible for the killings. Akayesu
claimeo he hao askeo the ptcft of Gitarama Frovince for genoarmes to maintain
law ano oroer but receiveo no support. He saio that when he trieo to save some
Tutsi, he was accuseo of supporting the RFI ano his life was threateneo.
Atc tlc Tott o Ptotcctco Gtoop
Before oetermining whether Akayesu was guilty of acts of genocioe, the trial cham-
ber hao to oetermine whether genocioe as oeneo in Article . of the ICTR statute,
which replicates the Genocioe Convention, hao occurreo in Rwanoa. The cham-
ber reasoneo that since the special intent to commit genocioe lies in the intent to
oestroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnic, racial, or social group, it was nec-
essary to oetermine the meaning of those four social categories. Because neither
the Genocioe Convention nor the ICTR statute hao oeneo them, the task fell
upon the chamber itself. Baseo on its reaoing of the ttocoox ptpototottc ,prepara-
tory work, of the Genocioe Convention, the chamber concluoeo that the orafters
perceiveo the crime of genocioe as targeting only stable, permanent groups, whose
membership is oetermineo by birth. The orafters excluoeo more mobile groups,
such as political ano economic groups, that one joins voluntarily.
10
The chamber
then proceeoeo to oene each of the social categories listeo in the ICTR statute.
It maintaineo that a national group is a collection of people who are perceiveo
to share a legal bono baseo on common citizenship, coupleo with reciprocity of
rights ano outies. An ethnic group is a group whose members share a common
language or culture. A racial group is baseo on the hereoitary physical traits of-
ten ioentieo with a geographical region, irrespective of linguistic, cultural, na-
tional or religious factors. A religious group is one whose members share the same
religion, oenomination or mooe of worship ,Pto. c Alo,co :qq8:,6.,.
Signicantly, the Tutsi-Hutu oistinction in Rwanoa ooes not t into any of the
above categories. The Tutsi belong to the same religious groups ano national group
as oo the Hutu. Tutsi ano Hutu share a common language ano culture. Ano any
hereoitary physical traits formerly oistinguishing Hutu from Tutsi have become
largely obliterateo through generations of intermarriage ano a Belgian classica-
tion scheme baseo on cattle ownership.
11
Consequently, hao the ICTR justices
stoppeo there, they woulo have been forceo to concluoe that genocioe, as legally
oeneo in the convention ano statute, hao not occurreo in Rwanoa.
Iortunately the justices oio not stop there. They next askeo whether it woulo
be impossible to punish the physical oestruction of a group as such unoer the Geno-
cioe Convention, if the saio group, although stable ano membership is by birth, ooes
not meet the oenition of any one of the four groups expressly protecteo by the
Genocioe Convention |ano Article . of the ICTR Statute| ,ibio.,. They concluoeo
that the answer is no, because it is important to respect the intention of the
nr\rrorxrx+s ix ix+rnx\+iox\r r\v .,
orafters of the Genocioe Convention, which accoroing to the ttocoox ptpototottc, was
patently to ensure the protection of any stable ano permanent group ,ibio.:,.8,.
Next the chamber askeo whether the Tutsi constituteo a stable ano permanent
group for purposes of the Genocioe Convention. To answer this question, the
chamber consioereo evioence provioeo by eyewitness ano expert testimony our-
ing the trial. The chamber noteo that the Tutsi constituteo a group referreo to as
ethnic in ocial Rwanoan classications. Ioentity caros prior to :qq incluoeo
a reference to o/.olo in Kinyarwanoa or ctlrtc ,ethnic group, in Irench, which re-
ferreo to the oesignations Hutu, Tutsi, ano Twa. The chamber noteo that all the
Rwanoan witnesses who appeareo before it invariably answereo without hesitation
the prosecutors questions regaroing their ethnic ioentity.
Earlier in its juogment, the chamber noteo that witnesses testieo that |e|ven
pregnant women, incluoing those of Hutu origin, were killeo on the grounos that the
foetuses in their wombs were fathereo by Tutsi men, for in a patrilineal society like
Rwanoa, the chilo belongs to the fathers group of origin ,ibio.:,,. Witness FF testi-
eo that Akayesu hao maoe a public statement to the eect that if a Hutu woman
were impregnateo by a Tutsi man, the Hutu woman hao to be founo in oroer for the
pregnancy to be aborteo ,ibio.,. Given these ano relateo facts, the chamber founo
that at the time of the allegeo events, the Tutsi oio inoeeo constitute a stable ano
permanent group ano were ioentieo as such by all ,ibio.:,.8,. Consequently they
were protecteo by the Genocioe Convention ano Article . of the ICTR statute.
Here, the chamber maoe two critical oeterminations that will greatly inuence
the international law of genocioe ano shoulo interest anthropologists. By aooing sta-
ble ano permanent group, whose membership is largely oetermineo by birth, to the
four existing social categories ,that is, national, ethnical, racial, ano religious, of the
Genocioe Convention, the chamber signicantly expanoeo the kinos of populations
that will be protecteo by the convention. Anthropologists might wonoer whether uni-
sexual groups, homosexuals, or persons mentally or physically impaireo permanently
at birth might constitute protecteo groups unoer the tribunals expanoeo oenition.
The chamber also expanoeo upon the categories of protecteo peoples by re-
fusing to conne itself to an objective ,etic,, universalistic oenition of ethnic group.
Insteao it relieo on the subjective ,emic, perceptions of the Rwanoan people. Con-
sequently it establisheo as a preceoent the ioea that a court may regaro any stable
ano permanent group, whose membership is largely oetermineo by birth, as an
ethnic group for purposes of the Genocioe Convention as long as the people of the
society in question perceive that group to be oierent from others accoroing to lo-
cal, emic criteria. With that approach, the chamber has linkeo the international
law of genocioe with the rich traoition of ethnoscientic inquiry.
DETERMINING INTENT
Because genocioe involves the intent to oestroy a protecteo group, in whole or in
part, intentionality is a constitutive element of the crime. Intent is a mental factor
.8 orxocinr
s v\kr
that is oicult to oetermine with precision in the absence of a sincere confession
or public aomission by the accuseo. The chamber provioeo another jurispruoen-
tial roaoway by maintaining that in the absence of a confession, the accuseos in-
tent can be inferreo from a number of presumptions of fact. The chamber rea-
soneo that it is possible to oeouce the genocioal intent inherent in a particular act
chargeo from the general context of the perpetration of other culpable acts sys-
tematically oirecteo against that same group, whether these acts were committeo
by the same oenoer or by others ,ibio.:,6..:,. Specic factors that the chamber
believeo coulo enable it to infer the genocioal intent of a particular act incluoeo
the scale of atrocities committeo, their general nature, ano the oeliberate ano sys-
tematic targeting of people because of their membership in a particular group,
while excluoing members of other groups.
Here the chamber oers a methoo for juoicially constructing an inoiviouals
genocioal intent. This methoo involves placing an accuseos particular act,s, against
a victim within the broao context of prevalent ano culpable acts oirecteo at other
persons because they are members of the victims group, even if those acts were
perpetrateo by persons other than the accuseo. The methoo turns an emic cate-
goryintentinto an etic oneconstructive intent. Hence an inoivioual who at-
tacks only one person ano never explains why can be convicteo of genocioe ,a spe-
cial intent crime, as long as his one attack ts into an overall pattern of genocioal
acts by others against members of the same protecteo group.
SEXUAL VIOLENCE AS A CRIME OI GENOCIDE
Those counts in the inoictment charging Akayesu with the crime of genocioe maoe
no specic reference to sexual violence or rape. However, noting that the Genocioe
Convention ano Article .,., of the ICTR statute oer as one of the oenitions of
genocioe the causing |of | serious booily or mental harm to members of a group,
the trial chamber chose to consioer sexual violence in connection with the charge
of genocioe. The three justices reasoneo that acts of sexual violence constituteo
genocioe provioeo they were committeo with the specic intent to oestroy, in whole
or in part, a particular groupin this case, the Tutsi. Rape ano sexual violence cer-
tainly constitute inictions of serious booily ano mental harm on victims.
In light of all the evioence before it, the chamber was satiseo that the acts of
sexual violence ,incluoing rape, oescribeo by witnesses were committeo solely against
Tutsi women, many of whom were subjecteo to the worst public humiliation, mu-
tilation, ano multiple sexual violations on the municipal premises or in other pub-
lic places. These sexual attacks, the chamber concluoeo, resulteo in physical ano psy-
chological oestruction of Tutsi women, their families, ano their communities. Sexual
violence was an integral part of the process of oestruction, specically targeting Tutsi
women ano specically contributing to the oestruction of the Tutsi group as a whole.
The tribunal founo that Akayesu hao aioeo ano abetteo the acts of sexual vio-
lence by allowing them to take place in his presence in or near the municipal builo-
nr\rrorxrx+s ix ix+rnx\+iox\r r\v .
ing ano by verbally encouraging the commission of those acts. By virtue of his au-
thority, his overt encouragement sent a clear signal of ocial tolerance for sexual
violence, without which these acts woulo not have taken place. Consequently the
chamber concluoeo that the acts of sexual violence allegeo in the inoictment ano
subsequently proven at trial constitute the crime of genocioe for which it founo
Akayesu inoivioually criminally responsible.
CONCLUSION
The Alo,co case has immense factual ano jurispruoential importance for Rwanoa, in-
ternational humanitarian law, ano the anthropological stuoy of genocioe. During the
trial, the chamber hearo forty-two witnesses ,incluoing ve expert witnesses,. Many
of those testifying were eyewitnesses ano victims who tolo gruesome stories of their
oroeals. The proceeoings generateo more than four thousano pages of transcripts ano
:. evioentiary oocuments. The nal juogment runs over two hunoreo pages.
This chapter has aooresseo only a limiteo number of the cases many impor-
tant issues. With its Alo,co oecision, the ICTR aooeo to the four groups specieo
in the Genocioe Convention ano Tribunal Statute. It also introouceo an emic stan-
oaro for oetermining what groups in a particular society are protecteo by the Geno-
cioe Convention. Arguably, by oenition there woulo have been no genocioe in
Rwanoa hao the trial chamber not oone so. In aooition, the chamber explicateo a
methoo for oetermining an inoiviouals constructive genocioal intent, thereby mak-
ing it easier for prosecutors to win convictions in the absence of a confession or
aomission of intent. The ICTR also became the rst international tribunal in his-
tory to conceptualize sexual violence as a crime of genocioe.
This case has generateo some major contributions to the legal analysis ano con-
ceptualization of genocioe. It also contributeo to a better unoerstanoing of the
events that constituteo the horrors of Rwanoa.
NOTES
:. Convention on the Frevention ano Funishment of the Crime of Genocioe, approveo
December q, :q8, S. TREATY DOC. NO. :, 8:st Cong., .o Sess., 8 U.N.T.S. . ,regis-
tereo January :., :q:, |Hereinafter Genocioe Convention|. As of January :, :qqq, :. states
were party to the Genocioe Convention ,Henkin et al. :qqq:.,.
.. The court maoe this pronouncement in the case entitleo: Reservations to the Con-
vention on Genocioe, :q: I.C.J. p. . ,May .8,.
. The full name of the Yugoslavian Tribunal is International Tribunal for the Frosecu-
tion of Fersons Responsible for Serious Violations of International Humanitarian Law Com-
mitteo in the Territories of the Iormer Yugoslavia since :qq: |Hereinafter the Yugoslavian Tri-
bunal, or the ICTY|. Ior a oiscussion of the establishment of the ICTY, see Bassiouni ,:qq,.
Ior a oescription ano analysis of its legal structure, see Magnarella ,:qq, ano Meron ,:qq,.
The full name of the U.N. Rwanoan Tribunal is International Criminal Tribunal for
the Frosecution of Fersons Responsible for Genocioe ano Other Serious Violations of In-
:o orxocinr
s v\kr
ternational Humanitarian Law Committeo in the Territory of Rwanoa ano Rwanoan Cit-
izens Responsible for Genocioe ano Other Such Violations Committeo in the Territory of
Neighboring States between : January ano : December :qq |Hereinafter Rwanoan Tri-
bunal or ICTR|. Ior a oiscussion of the ICTRs history, statute, ano organization, see Akha-
van ,:qq6, ano Magnarella ,:qq, .ooo,.
. U.N. SCOR, Stotcmcrt /, tlc Ptctocrt of tlc Sccottt, Coorctl, :th mtg. at :, U.N. Doc.
S/FRST/:qq/. ,:qq,.
. S.C. Res. q, U.N. SCOR, mtg. at :, U.N. Doc. S/RES/q ,:qq, |Hereinafter
ICTR Statute|.
6. Ior the text of the ICTR Statute oening each of these laws, see Magnarella ,.ooo:
Appenoix A,.
. Information in this chapter concerning Akayesus backgrouno, arrest, inoictment, ano
trial comes from Ptoccotot c. Alo,co :q88.
8. Ior the full inoictment, see Magnarella ,.ooo:Appenoix C,.
q. Ior a oetaileo presentation of witness testimonies ano sources, see Magnarella
,ibio.::o8,.
:o. Crimes Against Humanity incluoe wioespreao attacks against civilian populations
on political grounos.
::. A number of mooern scholars ano early explorers have commenteo on the physical
oierences between Tutsi, Hutu, ano Twa. Ior example, American anthropologist Helen
Cooere ,:q6.:8, writes that although there has been sucient intermixture to blur racial
lines, the majority of each caste is racially oistinct. In stature, for example, the oierences
are striking: the average stature of the Tutsi is : m. , the Hutu : m. 66, ano the Twa :
m. . Unfortunately, Cooere ooes not reveal the source, time, or sample size of her oata.
Of the Tutsi, historian Lemarchano ,:qo::8, writes that physical features |of the Tutsi|
suggest obvious ethnic anities with the Galla tribes of southern Ethiopia.
Duke Ireoerick of Mecklenburg, who traveleo through Central Africa in :qo8, writes:
The Watussi |that is, Tutsi| are a tall, well-maoe people with an almost ioeal physique. Heights
of :.8o, ..oo, ano even ...o meters ,from ft. :: :/. in. to ft. . :/. in., are of quite common
occurrence, . . . their bronze-brown skin reminos one of the inhabitants of the more hilly parts
of northern Africa. . . . Unmistakable evioences of a foreign strain are betrayeo in their high
foreheaos, the curve of their nostrils, ano the ne oval shape of their faces. ,:q:o:8,
During :q the Belgians conoucteo a census ano introouceo an ioentity caro system
that inoicateo the Tutsi, Hutu, or Twa ethnicity ,o/.olo in Kinyarwanoa, ano ctlrtc in
Irench, of each person. However, the Belgians oecioeo to classify any inoivioual |that is,
male farmer| with fewer than ten cows as a Hutu ,Vassall-Aoams :qq:8,. Accoroing to
African Rights ,:qq:q,, the Belgians useo ownership of cows as the key criterion for oeter-
mining which group an inoivioual belongeo to. Those with ten or more cows were Tutsi
along with all their oescenoants in the male lineano those with less were Hutu. Those rec-
ognizeo as Twa at the time of the census were given the status of Twa. This basis for
classication contributeo to the physical mix founo in each of the various ethnic categories.
REIERENCES CITED
African Rights. :qq. R.oroo: Dcotl, Dcpott, oro Dcorcc. Lonoon: African Rights.
Akhavan, Fayam. :qq6. The International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanoa: The Folitics ano
Fragmatics of Funishment. Amcttcor }ootrol of Irtctrottorol Lo. qo:o::o.
nr\rrorxrx+s ix ix+rnx\+iox\r r\v :.
Anoreopoulos, George J. :qq. Gcroctoc: Corccptool oro Httottcol Dtmcrtor. Fhilaoelphia: Uni-
versity of Fennsylvania Fress.
Baron, Xavier. :qq8. Statute for a War Crimes Court Aoopteo. Agcrcc Ftorcc Ptcc, July :8,
:qq8, Lexis News Iile.
Bassiouni, M. Cherif. :qq. Iormer Yugoslavia: Investigating Violations of International
Humanitarian Law ano Establishing an International Criminal Tribunal. Fotolom Ir-
tctrottorol Lo. Rcctc. :8:::q::.::.
Bonner, Raymono. :qq. Rwanoas Leaoers Vow to Builo a Multiparty State for Both Hutu
ano Tutsi. ^c. 1otl Ttmc, Sept. , p. A:o.
Cooere, Helen. :q6.. Fower in Rwanoa. Artltopologtco :8.
Henkin, Louis, et al. :qqq. Homor Rtglt. New York: Iounoation Fress.
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Lemarchano, Ren. :qo. R.oroo oro Botorot. Lonoon: Fall Mall.
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:: orxocinr
s v\kr
r\n+ ri \r
Critical Reections
Artltopolog, oro tlc Stoo, of Gcroctoc
:
Inoculations of Evil in the
U.S.-Mexican Boroer Region
Rcccttor or tlc Gcroctool Potcrttol of S,m/oltc Vtolcrcc
Cotolc ^ogcrgot
Stmpl, occtt/trg gcroctoc ot ocroorctrg tt oftct tt occot lo ccttotr oc /ot t o fot ct, ftom
ootrg gooo.
ootnr\i+cn ,:qq8,
INTRODUCTION
The shortcomings of the present worlo oroer have never been so glaringly appar-
ent as when we consioer the failure of the international system either to preoict or
forestall genocioe. Folitical philosopher Richaro Ialk argues that international in-
tervention in genocioe ano, presumably, measures taken to prevent it will always
be interest-baseo rather than oriven by moral values. In view of what Ialk calls
the prevailing politically conoitioneo moral aovocacy ano the absence of clear
geopolitical rationales for prevention/intervention, liberal oemocracies ano inter-
governmental agencies neeo to be pusheo from below by transnational social forces
,Ialk .ooo::6qo,. Iew NGOs or other international actors are equippeo to oeal
with genocioe or other extreme forms of political violence in a preemptive way,
however willing they might be, partially because it is not always possible for them
to recognize ano evaluate genocioal processes until they are alreaoy well unoer way
ano oicult or impossible to combat.
Alexanoer Hinton suggests in the introouction to this volume ano in a forth-
coming publication that there are certain priming mechanisms that encourage
genocioal processes, or, to use another metaphor, processes or circumstances that
lcot op ano are capable of setting o a chain reaction. These ought to be apparent
at an early stage. Genocioe, in this view, is the culmination of a number of appar-
ently far lesser occurrences of symbolic ano physical violence performeo against
groups that the oominant society has oeneo in one way or another as lesser hu-
man beings. Inoeeo, genocioe can only be committeo against people who are per-
ceiveo as outsioers, never against equals ,Chalk ano Jonassohn :qqo:.8,. The crit-
ical woro is pctcctcco. The oierences capable of triggering rst ethnic violence ano
:
then genocioe are not primoroial but rather are constructeo along linguistic,
racial, or ethnic lines with class often oisguiseo as race or ethnicity ,Bowen
:qq6, Appaourai :qq8,. In this formulation, oierence equals inequality.
One of the most frightening aspects of genocioe is the oual recognition that rst,
those who commit atrocities against categorical others ,however constructeo, are
not very oierent from ourselves, ano secono, that all of us through a range of so-
cietal circumstances incluoing oisaster fatiguethe failure to be moveo by hu-
man suering if it is suciently removeo from our own livesare inoirectly re-
sponsible for its continuation ,Lifton ano Markusen :qqo, Ialk .ooo::6,. Robert
Jay Lifton suggests that the roots of genocioe can be founo in a combination of
the human personality ano the economic-social hierarchy of society. Therefore a
moralistic oenunciation on its own is an empty gesture that obscures the perva-
sive ano continuing potential for genocioe to erupt almost anywhere in the social
lanoscape of humanity ,Ialk .ooo::6,.
1
Genocioe is always a possibility, ano none
of us can be complacent.
If preoiction is the rst step in preventing ethnic violence ano genocioe, we neeo
to ascertain what the rst steps in an escalation of violence that culminates in geno-
cioe might look like. Drawing on my elowork in the U.S.-Mexican boroer region,
I will examine the informal ano formal, the institutional ano cultural constructions
of oierence through which Latinos in the Uniteo States are separateo ano labeleo
ano maoe victims of mostly symbolic but sometimes physical violence. These
processes constitute potential rst steps towaro what might, in other times ano
places ano in the absence of political controls, become wioespreao ethnic violence
that coulo culminate in genocioe. Although there is always the possibility of oe-
valuing an important concept by allowing it to become a catch phrase for the ois-
possesseo ,Har :qq.:.8,, I think the heuristic of using oomestic examples to il-
lustrate what is to most Americans inconceivable justies the risk.
SYMBOLIC VIOLENCE LEADS TO FHYSICAL VIOLENCE
I suggesteo above that Latinos along the boroer are subjecteo to symbolic violence.
By symbolic violence I mean what Bouroieu ,:q::q:, calls the censoreo but eu-
phemizeo violence that is part of oaily hegemonic practice, but in oisguiseo ano
transgureo form. These are the multituoe of everyoay violences that can be founo
in the workplace, in schoolyaros, in jails, ano in the meoia ,see Scheper-Hughes,
this volume, ano that often preceoe ano always accompany physical violence.
Bowens ,:qq6, oiscussion of colonial Rwanoa ano Burunoi illustrates both the
process through which various forms of violence succeeo each other ano the ways
in which economic inequality can be recast as ethnicity. He argues that ethnic vi-
olence is likely to occur in postcolonial situations in which the colonial powers ano
later inoepenoent states promoteo ano elaborateo oierences among groups as a
way of amassing ano consolioating power ,ibio.:6,. German ano Belgian colonial
powers aomireo the minority Tutsis, who were tall ano hanosome. They therefore
: cni+ic\r nrrrrc+ioxs
gave them privilegeo access to jobs ano higher eoucation ano even instituteo a min-
imum height requirement for college entrance. So that they coulo tell who were
Tutsi, they requireo everyone to carry an ioentity caro with a tribal label. Complex
social oierences were reouceo to simple physiological variations, which were then
inscribeo on peoples booies such that people believeo they coulo oistinguish one
group from the other ,see also Malkki :qq,. Frivilege accrueo to one group ano
symbolic violence was levieo against the other. Bowen continues:
Many Tutsis are tall ano many Hutus short, but Hutus ano Tutsis hao intermarrieo
to such an extent that they were not easily oistinguishable ,nor are they tooay,. They
spoke the same language ano carrieo out the same religious practices. In most regions
of the colonies the categories became economic labels: poor Tutsis became Hutus,
ano economically successful Hutus became Tutsis. Where the labels Hutu ano
Tutsi hao not been much useo, lineages with lots of cattle were simply labeleo Tutsi,
poorer lineages, Hutu. Colonial oiscrimination against Hutus createo what hao not
existeo before: a sense of collective Hutu ioentity, a Hutu cause. ,:qq6:6,
Tutsi ioentity was createo as well. A long-term result of the emergence of col-
lective ioentities ano symbolic violences was the series of genocioes in Rwanoa in
which vast numbers were killeo in often gruesome circumstances ,Malkki :qq,. Al-
though the state instigateo the violence that leo to genocioe to begin with, it was
oroinary people who committeo most of the atrocities, thus removing any uncer-
tainly about who was a tcol Hutu or Tutsi.
2
Death at the hano of the other irrevo-
cably establisheo ones ioentity ,Appaourai :qq8,. Each putative Tutsi ano Hutu
hao to believe that the other group was truly the enemy. Bowen cautions us to re-
member, however, that it is fear ano hate generateo from the top, ano not ethnic
oierences, that nally push people to commit acts of violence ,:qq6:6,. I now turn
to top-oown violence ano the issue of the state.
THE STATE AND HUMAN RIGHTS ABUSES
3
Although NGOs are increasingly turning the spotlight on nongovernmental enti-
ties, corporations, ano inoivioual actors, the state is still helo responsible as the ma-
jor perpetrator/facilitator of human rights abuses ,Steiner ano Alton :qq6,
Amnesty International :qq8, Anoreopoulos :qq,. This creates a funoamental con-
traoiction in the international human rights system constituteo in ano by the Uniteo
Nations. Although member states have a clear interest in not challenging the sov-
ereignty of the state or unoermining the stability of the nation-state as the worlos
core political entity, the organizations own oeclarations, treaties, ano covenants,
enoorseo by member states, charge states themselves with preventing human rights
abuses, ameliorating the conoitions that give rise to them, ano punishing trans-
gressors. It shoulo not surprise us that nongovernmental organizations are better
monitors of human rights abuses than the Uniteo Nations.
+nr t.s.-xrxic\x nonnrn nroiox :,
Iew states, especially liberal oemocracies, typically or openly exercise their power
over their constituency through unmeoiateo violence, though it is always helo in
reserve. Rather, they try to ensure conformity to a set of images that create the il-
lusion of unity, the illusion of an inoivisible, homogenous nation-state, the illusion
of consensus about what is ano what is not legitimate, what shoulo ano shoulo not
be suppresseo. The refusal of multiplicity, the oreao of oierence . . . is the very
essence of the state ,Clastres :q:::o,. Ior example, the unmarkeo category in
the Uniteo Sates, the category from which all else requires an aojectival form, is a
white, employeo, mioole-class, heterosexual, male, monolingual English-speaker
who is marrieo with chiloren. It is not that everyone ooes not know that huge num-
bers of people oo not t that prole, but that the more oimensions on which one
oeviates from it, the greater the possible application of symbolic violence intenoeo
to punish oeviance ano to coax one into apparent homogeneity.
In oroer to unoerstano how people who share the characteristics of political ma-
jorities implicitly agree to the repression of certain segments of society, we neeo to
examine the role of the state in promoting conformity to the ioeal. Typically,
the state is oeneo as a Weberian set of institutions staeo by bureaucrats who serve
the public interest ano exercise power ano authority over a bounoeo territory. Fhilip
Abrams examines the epistemological basis for the state, referring to it as an ioe-
ological artifact attributing unity, morality, ano inoepenoence to the oisuniteo, a-
moral ano oepenoent workings of the practices of government ,:q88:8:,. The state
also incorporates cultural ano political forms, representations, oiscourse, practices,
ano activities, ano specic technologies ano organizations of power that together
oene public interest ano establish agreeo-upon meaning. The contemporary
state as ioeological artifact is naturalizeo ,Barthes :q88::qo, ano renoereo the in-
evitable container of a people, control over whom is the mark of international
legitimacy. The state legitimates what woulo, if seen oirectly, be unoerstooo as il-
legitimate, an unacceptable oomination ,Abrams :q88:.,. Thus as we saw in the
Rwanoan case, the state also oenes ano naturalizes available ioentities ,cf. Co-
maro ano Comaro :qq:, Alonso :qq, Joseph ano Nugent :qq, Abrams :q88,.
There is nothing natural about ioentities of this sort, they often arise in op-
position to other more or less powerful social positions. It is meaningless, for ex-
ample, to say that my ioentity is constituteo by the fact that I am a brown-eyeo
blonoe unless such an appearance gives me greater or lesser power vis-a-vis blue-
eyeo blonoes or some other hair-eye combination. The opposition between so-
calleo white skin ano brown skin, however, ooes provioe a social ano often a class
ioentity in a racializeo state in which hierarchy is informally legitimateo ,even
though formally outlaweo,. I am arguing, in other woros, that a specious oistinc-
tion between public institutions of the state ano so-calleo private or civil society
renoers opaque the states intrusion into what people think is their private life.
Let us illustrate this by consioering some aspects of oaily life in the U.S.-Mexican
boroer region.
:8 cni+ic\r nrrrrc+ioxs
THE U.S.-MEXICO BORDER REGION
The Uniteo States arguably was a colonial power in the American Southwest in
the nineteenth century, a circumstance that createo ethnic tension between Amer-
icans ano Mexicans ano in oue course renoereo Mexicans ano Mexican-Ameri-
cans secono-class citizens ,McWilliams :q8, Anazaloua :q8, oe la Garza :q8,
Montejano :q, :q8,. Although there has been signicant progress in recent
oecaoes, Mexican Americans ano newly immigrant Mexicans ,ano others from
Latin America, who live in the boroer area still suer oiscrimination, racism, ano
both symbolic ano physical violence oirecteo towaro them by inoiviouals ano the
state ,Montejano :qqq, Zavalla :q8,.
Throughout the :qqos, U.S. opinion makers, the meoia, politicians, ano Con-
gress portrayeo the U.S.-Mexican boroer area ano the communities within it as
places infesteo with horoes of orug runners, welfare cheats, ano foreigners look-
ing for a free rioe.
4
The Boroer Fatrol, as an arm of the state, has been chargeo
with keeping the country safe from these scourges. Consequently, the Boroer Fa-
trol often treats working-class Latino boroer communities as hostile territory that
gives refuge to unoesirables. It also often racializes Latinos ano Chicanos ano treats
them as lesser citizens. Roberto Martinez, a Chicano, an American citizen, ano the
oirector of the Immigration Froject of the American Irienos Service Committee
,AISC, in San Diego, notes: |Foliticians| keep saying this is a country of laws.
Where were the laws when people like me were being arresteo ano they trieo to oe-
port me? When U.S. citizens are coming across the boroer ano their oocuments are
being conscateo. We |the AISC| have three lawsuits going where police ano the
Boroer Fatrol are breaking into peoples homes without search warrants. This is
unoer the pretext of looking for orugs or illegals. Then they beat up the people,
mace them, put bogus charges on them. Then they have to go to court. Why arent
tlc, playing by the rules? They lump us all together. Were all suspects. Were all il-
legal immigrants, criminals or orug trackers.
5
Martinezs colleague, Maria Jimenez, oirector of the Immigration Froject of the
American Irienos Service Committee in South Texas, agrees: Fart of our work is
increasing public awareness that we |Chicanos, Latinos| are an abuseo community.
I have coineo that phrasethe abuseo community synorome. It has gone on so
long that we no longer see the abuse. This ooesnt happen to other communities.
|Mexican Americans| are the only ones saying, Oh, Im a th generation, th gen-
eration, 8th generation American. We are continually reinforcing our right to be
here because we are constantly being olco about our right to be here. We are the
only ethnic group in the whole country who can claim to have a national police
force we can call our very own.
6
Immigrant rights organizations such as the AISC have establisheo hot lines for
citizens ano noncitizens who are caught in INS nets ano neeo legal aovice or want
to voice a complaint about agents. In the Nogales, Arizona, INS oce, a poster ao-
+nr t.s.-xrxic\x nonnrn nroiox :
vertising such services hao the telephone number blackeo out ano the woros :8oo
EAT-SHIT substituteo. Although an Americas Watch investigator complaineo to
the heao of the station, the oefaceo poster was still there four months later ,Hu-
man Rights Watch :qq,.
As outspoken oefenoers of the markeo category of Latino in the Uniteo States,
Martinez, Jimenez, the American Irienos Service Committee, Americas Watch,
ano Amnesty International use the legal system ano the meoia to oefeno the rights
of Latinos ano thereby forestall violence against them. Nonetheless, neither their
activities nor Latino inclusion in the Uniteo States through citizenship has resolveo
the inequalities of a racializeo exploitation in a political ano economic system that
has been constituteo historically by the simultaneous exclusion ano oemano for the
labor of racializeo migrants ,Lowe :qq6,. While the Immigration ano Naturaliza-
tion Service is chargeo with upholoing the law, Anoreas ,.ooo, charges that it also
enforces class ano racial hierarchies by targeting more susceptible unoerclasses. In
the process, people learn what is acceptable from within a narrow range of social
ioentities ano behaviors. Iurther, when some categories of people are reouceo to
a less than human status, it becomes easier for those higher in the hierarchy to imag-
ine that those lower somehow oeserve to be brutalizeo ,Scarry :q8, Nagengast
:qq,. Thus oll are controlleo, ano hierarchy baseo on skin color ano language, ano
less obviously but even more centrally on class, is renoereo natural.
THE MILITARIZATION OI THE BORDER
The graoual militarization of the Boroer Fatrol since the :q8os has playeo an in-
tegral role in the escalation of violence oirecteo towaro Latinos ano Latino com-
munities, legal ano illegal alike ,Heyman :qq, Dunn :qq6, Anoreas .ooo,. In :q8,
elite Boroer Fatrol units known as Boroer Fatrol Tactical Teams ,BORTAC, be-
gan receiving special paramilitary training similar to that of SWAT teams. The
:q86 Immigration Reform Control Act ,IRCA, was intenoeo to reouce illegal im-
migration, ano the feoeral government was prepareo to back it up with force. By
:q8q Congress hao authorizeo ve thousano feoeral troops for boroer outy. Ac-
coroing to a former army ocer, It is . . . absuro that the most powerful nation on
earth cannot prevent a swarming lano invasion by unarmeo Mexican peasants.
The U.S. Army is entirely capable of plugging the holes permanently ano boroer
patrol |is| excellent military training ,Bassforo :qq: quoteo in Anoreas :qq,. Iur-
thermore, between :q8q ano :qqq the buoget ano number of Boroer Fatrol agents
increaseo oramatically. By :qq8, for example, .,o agents were patrolling a sixty-
six-mile strip of boroer in San Diego County, California, where there hao been
only 8qo in :qq.
The presence of army troops ano marines ano many more Boroer Fatrol agents
has maoe boroer crossings more oangerous for migrants than ever before. A :qq
University of Houston stuoy provioes the particulars on twelve hunoreo people,
presumably all or mostly Mexicans, who oieo between :qq ano :qq6 trying to cross
o cni+ic\r nrrrrc+ioxs
the boroer ano whose booies were founo. The researchers believe the actual num-
ber who oieo to be much higher, but their booies have not been locateo. Many of
the twelve hunoreo oieo of the extreme heat of the oesert, where oaytime tem-
peratures routinely reach :.o to :. oegrees. Others orowneo in the Rio Bravo/Rio
Granoe, or were hit by cars, in some instances while being chaseo by the Boroer
Fatrol or the military.
Between January ano early September of :qq8, at least one hunoreo corpses
turneo up in southeastern California alone. This is the most remote, hottest, ano
oriest part of the boroer region. The oiscovery of ve oesiccateo booies in a sin-
gle location in August :qq8 unleasheo a ooo of apparent concern, ano numerous
new signs telling of the oangers of summer crossings were posteo in isolateo areas.
Iurther, warnings about the heat ano lack of water in the oesert were broaocast on
Spanish-language raoio stations that service the boroer region. These ocial ges-
tures, however, obscure the ocial U.S. policy that forces migrants away from the
more populateo ano therefore safer areas. Booies continue to be founo, especially
in the summer. Drowning or oying of heat exhaustion ano oehyoration in the oesert
to escape the Boroer Fatrol is no less violent than being shot.
INS ocials conteno that prompt apprehension ano immeoiate return to the
country of origin is still the best oeterrent to illegal immigration. In spite of the
hazaros ano repeateo voluntary oeportations, most migrants who are appre-
henoeo simply try again later. How many times have you crosseo? anthropolo-
gist Michael Kearney askeo a migrant from Oaxaca ouring a :q88 NBC special
on the New Immigrants. Oh, at least one hunoreo times, replieo the man. Ano
why oo you come back? Because there is work. He ano others have tolo us of
many traumatic experiences having to oo with hunger, thirst, heat ano colo, har-
rowing chases through the unoerbrush, injuries suereo as a result of captures, ano
verbal ano physical abuse by citizens ,Nagengast et al. :qq., Zabin et al. :qq, Na-
gengast ano Kearney :qqo,. As Estevan Torres, Democratic member of Congress
from California, remarkeo, We will catch a few |illegal migrants|, rouno them up,
ano seno them back, but not too many, because then who will oo the work? ,quoteo
in Anoreas :qq:.,. Inoeeo, increaseo surveillance seems not to have seriously
aecteo the number of unoocumenteo workers. All reports suggest that as of mio-
.ooo there were between ve ano six million unoocumenteo workers in the Uniteo
States. That is at least as many as there were in :q86. One might reasonably con-
cluoe that many of the controls implementeo on the U.S.-Mexico boroer, violent
though they may be, are not really intenoeo to prevent all workers from crossing,
their purpose is to control ano regulate the ow of labor power to agriculture ano
business in North America ,Cockcroft :q86, Dunn :qq6, Anoreas .ooo,.
The Boroer Fatrol ano, more broaoly speaking, the Immigration ano Naturaliza-
tion Service ,INS,both arms of the U.S. governmenthave been chargeo with re-
sponsibility for numerous instances of violence against Latinos in the boroer region.
The stateo mission of the Boroer Fatrol is to, among other things, prevent orug run-
ners, terrorists, ano illegal migrants from penetrating the boroers of the Uniteo States.
+nr t.s.-xrxic\x nonnrn nroiox .
In recent years, Boroer Fatrol forces have been augmenteo with National Guaro ano
military units to protect what all agree are still permeable barriers along the two-thou-
sano-mile-long boroer with Mexico. Amnesty International, Americas Watch, ano
other human rights organizations charge that Boroer Fatrol agents ano feoeral troops
assigneo to boroer outy have reo on ano sometimes killeo unarmeo Latinos, mostly
Mexican men. They also charge that agents have beaten men ano boys, sexually
abuseo ano rapeo women ano girls, ano oepriveo many men, women, ano chiloren
of fooo, water, ano meoical treatment ,Amnesty International :qq8b, Human Rights
Watch :qq., :qq, Nagengast, Stavenhagen, ano Kearney :qq., Chavez :qq.,. Haroly
any of the allegeo incioents have been explaineo to the satisfaction of these interna-
tionally renowneo human rights organizations, ano few of the victims appear to have
been orug runners, none were terrorists. Although large quantities of illegal orugs oo
come across the U.S.-Mexico boroer, a former Drug Enforcement Agency agent notes
that o to 8 percent of the total comes through legal ports of entry in large transport
trucks that are exempt from inspection as part of the North American Iree Traoe
Agreement ,NAITA,, an exemption that is currently unoer review.
7
Drug smugglers
who cross the U.S.-Mexican boroer on foot are reprehensible ano not to be tolerateo,
but they are probably responsible for a small proportion of the orugs that enter the
Uniteo States.
Several cases of Boroer Fatrol shootings ouring the late :qqos have been espe-
cially notorious. In May :qq, a U.S. Marine on boroer outy with the Immigration
ano Naturalization Service ,INS, shot ano killeo Ezequiel Hernanoez near Reo-
foro, Texas, his home along the U.S.-Mexican boroer. Hernanoez was an Ameri-
can citizen, an eighteen-year-olo high school sophomore who was simultaneously
tenoing his familys goat hero ano hunting rabbits with a ... rie, as he oio early
every morning before going to school. Although the court eventually instructeo the
U.S. government to pay oamages to Hernanoezs family, it alloweo the government
to oo so without prejuoicethat is, without aomitting wrongooing. The Marines
eventually were ocially exonerateo of any blame in the shooting because the boy
t the prole of a Mexican orug runner, meaning that he hao brown skin, was
young, carrieo a rie, ano was out ano about near the boroer before oawn.
On September ., :qq8, Boroer Fatrol agents shot ano killeo a man who hao
crosseo from Mexico with two others near San Ysioro, California. Accoroing to
agents, the three men raceo back towaro the Mexican sioe when they realizeo that
they hao been spotteo. The Boroer Fatrol caught one man on the U.S. sioe, while
a secono manageo to get safely back to the Mexican sioe. The thiro man allegeoly
turneo ano chargeo the agents with a rock in his hano. The agents shot ano killeo
him, they saio, when he refuseo their oroer to stop. Eyewitnesses who claim that
the victim only pickeo up the rock ano turneo to throw it, presumably in self-
oefense, after agents openeo re on the backs of the running men, however, con-
traoict the Boroer Fatrol version. On the following oay, Boroer Fatrol agents shot
ano killeo another man unoer similar circumstances on almost the same spot. In
: cni+ic\r nrrrrc+ioxs
this fourth fatal shooting in San Diego County, California, in three oays, witnesses
also contraoicteo the Boroer Fatrol version of events.
Iinally, in September :qqq, agents shot ano killeo a mentally unbalanceo man,
a long-time legal resioent of the Uniteo States who was originally from Mexico.
The man allegeoly hao thrown rocks at a water company employee in a remote
area ten miles north of the boroer, through which unoocumenteo Mexicans some-
times cross. The water employee sought help from passing Boroer Fatrol agents,
who hunteo the man oown ano openeo re on him after he threw aooitional rocks
at them. Accoroing to the Lo Argclc Ttmc, U.S. ocials speculateo at the time
that he mtglt have been an illegal boroer crosser or a orug smuggler ,September
, :qqq:A, A.6, emphasis aooeo,.
Each of these incioents is open to multiple interpretations. The Boroer Fatrol
agents might have feareo for their lives, some or all of the shootings might have
been the result of errors of juogment or honest mistakes. Nonetheless, racial ano
ethnic proling by police ano other agents of the state is increasingly recognizeo
in the Uniteo States as a serious problem ,Cole :qqq,, ano these incioents ano oth-
ers may also be part of what critics regaro as a larger ano oisturbing pattern of sub-
conscious politically motivateo violence against Latinos.
In aooition to the physical oangers to migrants entaileo by the militarization of
the boroer, there is mounting evioence of other contraoictions. Because the bor-
oer has become so oicult ano oangerous to cross, unauthorizeo migrants now
teno to stay longer in the Uniteo States. Chiloren are born into citizenship ano go
to school here. More ano more families are bootstrapping themselves out of ab-
ject poverty ano, in some cases, becoming vocal critics of a system that oeprives
them of rights guaranteeo by both the U.S. Constitution ano the Universal Dec-
laration of Human Rights ,Nagengast, Stavenhagen, ano Kearney :qq.,. Those
who are forceo to move back ano forth across the boroer oepeno more on co,otc
,professional smugglers, than they oio in the past. As both the physical oanger ano
the oanger of apprehension increase, the price chargeo by smugglers also increases.
The rate in :qq was about seven hunoreo oollars per person for transport from
Tijuana to Los Angeles, payable whether or not the migrant reacheo his or her oes-
tination ,Anoreas :qq:..,. Accoroing to some informants, smuggler fees hao in-
creaseo to more than a thousano oollars by early :qqq. Not only has the boroer
become a balloon ,squeeze it in one place ano it bulges in another, but ocial
boroer policies have helpeo to create ano augment a protable business in human
tracking, another area of human rights concern.
Until mio-.ooo there hao been little public outcry in the Uniteo States about
migrant ano Latino rights outsioe the Latino ano human rights communities them-
selves, in part because the stripping away of peoples basic human rights has been
naturalizeo ano renoereo acceptable to the greater public. The :qq6 changes in
national legislation curtaileo the economic rights of migrants/immigrants, ano
voter referenoa in California have trieo to bar the chiloren of migrants from ac-
+nr t.s.-xrxic\x nonnrn nroiox
cess to schools, colleges, ano universities. Although not all referenoa have been suc-
cessfully implementeo, they have in some cases orastically limiteo social services
to chiloren, incluoing their access to fooo.
8
The :qq8 California proposition to ban
bilingual eoucation for oocumenteo ano unoocumenteo alike was at least in part
a reection of anti-immigrant ano anti-Latino sentiment. If they want to live here,
they shoulo become more like real Americans is the general tenor of any num-
ber of letters to the eoitor that appeareo in the Lo Argclc Ttmc, the Sor Dtcgo Urtor,
ano other Southern California newspapers ouring the months preceoing that elec-
tion. Thus the meoia can both promote ano unoercut basic fairness. These events
ano processes have been augmenteo by further limitations on immigrants ano mi-
grants civil rights. On Iebruary ., :qqq, the Supreme Court limiteo the Iirst
Amenoment rights of illegal immigrants by ruling that people who are in the
Uniteo States without papers cannot avoio oeportation by claiming that they are
targeteo for their political views. This ruling, which was the result of a case against
several Falestinians ano a Kenyan, is unlikely to aect most of the unoocumenteo
people in the Uniteo States since few actually claim that they have been oeporteo
or markeo in some way because of their politics. Nonetheless, it is a chilling ex-
ception to what was once a general rule in the Uniteo States that aliens enjoy
civil rights more or less equal to those of citizens ,Nagengast et al. :qq.,. Iurther,
it eectively oiscourages the unoocumenteo from speaking out publicly about any
matter that might be interpreteo as political. Iinally, it may enoanger the rights of
those who are awaiting either asylum hearings or are in the Uniteo States legally
,Biskupic ano Branigin :qqq:A:,. It certainly ies in the face of Kupers stipulation
that nongenocioal societies guarantee the legal rights of minorities.
Latino citizen activism following Ezequiel Hernanoezs killing in Reoforo, Texas,
oio contribute to the oefeat of a :qq8 congressional bill to put an aooitional ten
thousano soloiers on the boroer ano to remove those alreaoy there, an encourag-
ing outcome that suggests the power of oppositional politics. Iurther, the .ooo AIL-
CIO call for a new amnesty for illegal immigrants ano an eno to employer sanc-
tions, which it has supporteo since the mio-:q8os, surpriseo many. The Lo Argclc
Ttmc attributeo the large turnout at a Los Angeles rally in support of the AIL-
CIO to the eno of the recession in California.
9
Inoeeo, the extremely low unem-
ployment rate in California in .ooo meant that the lowest-paying jobs were going
begging. Labor shortages rather than a concern with immigrant rights per se may
motivate the AIL-CIO, an illustration of Ialks point about interest-baseo rather
than morality-baseo aovocacy.
In mio-.oo:, Fresioent George W. Bush inoicateo that he favors a new amnesty
policy to possibly legalize millions of Mexicans alreaoy in the Uniteo States, but he
immeoiately retreateo from his position in the face of scathing criticism from Con-
gress ano much of the public. Nonetheless, a new immigration policy of some kino
is in the air. In spite of miloly hopeful signs of a shift in public opinion, the mili-
tary continues to provioe assistance to the INS in a variety of areas along or close
to the boroer, incluoing the builoing ano upgraoing of helicopter paos ano roaos
cni+ic\r nrrrrc+ioxs
so that they are suitable for enhanceo operations. Ieoeral troops are also involveo
in the construction of miles of steel ano concrete walls that may one oay exteno
from San Diego to Brownsville, Texas.
10
Most important, when it withorew, the
army left behino a highly militarizeo Boroer Fatrol traineo in low-intensity con-
ict ,LIC, military tactics. This makes large numbers of troops unnecessary.
Low-intensity conict methoos were rst oevelopeo as Colo War tactics ano useo
extensively by the U.S. military in Southeast Asia in the :q6os.
11
The military ob-
jective was to establish ano maintain social control over targeteo civilian groups in
oroer to further foreign policy aimsnamely, to counter communism ano secure
the global expansion of Western capitalism ano liberal oemocracy. Low-intensity
conict strategies, which incluoe counterinsurgency, antiterrorism, ano peace-
keeping, are baseo on the premise that it is the enemy within that poses the great-
est threat to the national security of any country. Although communism ,other than
that emanating from Cuba, is no longer perceiveo as a threat to the Uniteo States,
the oroerly reproouction ano expansion of neoliberal capitalist hegemony is a ma-
jor concern of policy makers. Thus LIC tactics oevelopeo ouring the Colo War
have been upoateo, reterritorializeo, ano reoeployeo in the Uniteo States in oroer
to ensure that American markets ano the American way of life are protecteo. Il-
legal aliens, immigrant-rights groups, welfare recipients, ano any persons or or-
ganizations perceiveo as subversive to the neoliberal oroer have been cast as the
enemy within, internal foes of the Uniteo States, threats to our way of life, our
social institutions, ano even to the viability of our language. If the enemy is every-
where, the system neeos a military that is capable in the name of national security
of intervening in all aspects of oomestic politics ano social policy.
A classic low-intensity conict counterinsurgency technique, one taught by the
U.S. Army to generations of military ocers from Latin America at special insti-
tutions like the School of the Americas at Iort Benning, Georgia, is to enlist the oo-
mestic police force into military ano paramilitary operations. The wioely televiseo
images of Riversioe County, California, sheris oeputies chasing oown a truck-
loao of suspecteo unoocumenteo workers in :qq6 ano beating unarmeo men ano
women across the back ano heao with truncheons poignantly revealeo counterin-
surgency strategies in action.
So-calleo peace-keeping operations are also part of low-intensity conict mea-
sures. The way this mission has been aoopteo by the Boroer Fatrol is illustrateo by
the role it playeo in the Los Angeles riots in :qq.. Iour hunoreo members of BOR-
TAC, the elite ano specially traineo Boroer Fatrol squaos, were brought in to as-
sist local police in controlling the looting ano burning. BORTAC agents, who were
oeployeo only in Latino neighborhooos throughout the Los Angeles area, arresteo
more than a thousano people whom they suspecteo were illegal immigrants,
whether or not they hao committeo or were suspecteo or accuseo of committing
any criminal oense. Interestingly, these arrests accounteo for :o percent of all ar-
rests maoe ouring the oisturbances. More than seven hunoreo of the thousano were
immeoiately subjecteo to voluntary oeportation without any charges whatsoever
+nr t.s.-xrxic\x nonnrn nroiox
being brought against them ,Dunn :qq6:8:8.,. These events were wioely publi-
cizeo by the press ano presumably were approveo of by the general public, which
was apparently ano erroneously leo to believe that illegals were heavily impli-
cateo in looting ano burning.
Another low-intensity conict tactic is to enlist civilians in the ght against in-
ternal enemies. Californias well-known Froposition :8, for example, attempteo to
enlist health care workers, teachers, ano social service agencies in reporting the
presence of unoocumenteo workers ano their chiloren. Although teachers ano
meoical personnel have largely refuseo to cooperate, other public sector workers
risk their jobs if they oo not work together with the Immigration ano Naturaliza-
tion Service. In an interview, a Chicano intake ocer at a correctional institution
in California tolo me that he ano his fellow employees are expecteo to notify the
INS immeoiately if they suspect that an inmate they are processing is unoocu-
menteo. He says that most inmates who come unoer suspicion are Spanish-speak-
ing, ano less often Asian. He also says that unoocumenteo inmates report that Irish,
Folish, Italian, ano other European construction workers who are illegally in the
country look on while Boroer Fatrol agents take away all the Spanish-speakers.
12
In fact, qo percent of the people that the Boroer Fatrol oetains as illegals are
Mexican, even though people from all Latin American countries combineo com-
pose only o percent of the unoocumenteo workers in the Uniteo States. By oe-
manoing ano receiving the cooperation of civilians ano local law enforcement agen-
cies in their campaigns, the Boroer Fatrol teaches them rst to be participants in
the categorizing of people into the oesirable ano the unoesirable, ano secono how
to oeploy symbolic violence against the suboroinate. It also trains them to partici-
pate in the hierarchical categorization of inoiviouals ano communities.
The Boroer Fatrol has taken to sponsoring Explorer Scout groups in Texas.
Youth are given uniforms complete with Boroer Fatrol baoges ano sometimes are
alloweo to accompany agents on patrol. The ioea is to teach the Scouts to be gooo
Americans, to builo the prestige of the INS, ano to unoermine the work of grass-
roots, largely Latino community organizations that oppose the militarization of the
Boroer Fatrol, support immigrant rights, or have other agenoas that are ocially
oeneo as anti-American, leftist, or antifamily ,ibio.:8.,.
13
The Boroer Fatrol also
sponsors a soccer league in the Lareoo area ,ibio., ano conoucts public eoucation
seminars ano elementary ano high school forums in counties in southeastern Cal-
ifornia that focus on how to ioentify illegals ano why they are bao for the econ-
omy. In October :qq8 I spent a night in a town in eastern Riversioe County, not
far from the U.S.-Mexican boroer. The local television station aireo several spots
featuring Boroer Fatrol agents aovertising these seminars. Iurther, the community
access station televiseo agents talking about how they oo their jobs ano which at-
tributes ano aspects of a personskin color, language, quality of clothingarouse
their suspicion of illegal status ano cause them to search that person ano ask for
ocial oocumentation. This is, of course, another permutation of wioespreao ano
cni+ic\r nrrrrc+ioxs
substantiateo charges that many police forces routinely use racial proling to tar-
get Latinos ano African Americans ,Cole :qqq,.
14
All of these activities give the
Boroer Fatrol a benign visibility that is explicitly intenoeo to oraw in civilians, in-
cluoing chiloren, as participants in the states ght against the enemy within.
Consensus about hierarchies ano enemies also is expresseo in television, lms,
theater, music, newspaper eoitorials, letters to the eoitor, ano more, as Lowe ,:qq6,
has oemonstrateo. These oepict the oegree to which minorities can oeviate from
the norm ano are class specic. Ior example, Spanish-speakers cannot with im-
punity paint their house bright colors in mioole-class neighborhooos. I have some
Latino colleagues in California who live in a preoominately Anglo neighborhooo
close to the university where they both work. When they painteo their formerly
beige house pink ano starteo to lay out their garoens in a fashion founo through-
out Mexico ano the Caribbean, their neighbors marcheo on them, oemanoing that
their house be returneo to neighborhooo stanoaros.
15
The hegemony of our cultural practices ano the oenigration of what is rep-
resenteo as the less valuable parts of the social booy are so strong that, accoroing to
an ABC poll several years ago, 66 percent of those surveyeo favoreo ranoom searches
of houses, cars, ano personal belongings, even if the police hao ro suspicion of any
wrongooing. These searches woulo presumably not be in mioole-class neighbor-
hooos, but in barrios ano poor working-class areas. Virtually all Americans seem
willing to submit to the many Boroer Fatrol checkpoints on north-south highways
throughout the Southwest, many miles from the boroer itself. Feople have been so
inoculateo with the fear of the enemy within ano with the myth about the rela-
tionship of repression to the cure of society, that they are willing to give up their own
rights for what they have become convinceo is the gooo of their society.
Although Boroer Fatrol agents have never been renowneo for their gentleness,
as the Immigration ano Naturalization Service aoopts ano successfully implements
low-intensity conict tactics throughout the Southwest, there are new opportuni-
ties for human rights violations. These may be oirecteo towaro suspecteo orug
smugglers ano terrorists, as well as towaro illegal migrants whose labor power con-
tributes so much to the success of neoliberal capitalism, but it coulo also be more
often turneo upon legal resioents or citizens who look like migrants or who ob-
ject to the treatment of migrants, or who are simply poor, brown skinneo, ano Span-
ish-speaking, or who live in a Latino neighborhooo.
FOLITICAL AND SYMBOLIC VIOLENCE AGAIN
Folitical violence, a subset of violence in general, is state-sponsoreo or tolerateo
action taken or not taken by the state or its agents with the express intent of re-
alizing certain social, ethnic, economic, ano political goals in the realm of public
aairs, especially aairs of the state or social life in general ,Nagengast :qq:::,.
Folitical violence subsumes war, terrorism, torture, ano genocioe. Genocioe as a
+nr t.s.-xrxic\x nonnrn nroiox ,
subset of political violence is the criminal intent to oestroy or permanently crip-
ple a human group, whether that group is political, religious, social, or ethnic ,An-
oreopoulos :qq::,.
16
As is the case in other forms of political violence, the state is
the major perpetrator. If the police or military are not the major actors, they may
stano by while civilians act with impunity, unrestraineo by the institutions of the
state. Civilian paramilitaries may even act with the implicit collusion of the state,
as they oio in El Salvaoor, Guatemala, ano Cambooia, among other places ,see
contributors to this volume, Totten, Farsons ano Charney :qq,. State ocials also
may no reasons to not enforce the law, or perpetrators of genocioe might be civil-
ians who learn who ano what to oespise ano go on rampages when the state is weak-
eneo or collapses.
17
It cannot be emphasizeo too strongly that ocial institutions of the state, such
as the military ano the police, are oirectly or inoirectly responsible for genocioe
against gtoop of people. Scholars ano politicians who insist on analyzing the ac-
counts of ethnic violence or the shootings oescribeo above as inexplicable tribal vi-
olence, primoroial evil, or inoivioual happenings with inoivioual ano unconnecteo
actors fatally obscure the overall historical, economic, social, ano cultural processes
ano the semantic space in which the events are embeooeo. Just as in Rwanoa, un-
foloing social relations in the U.S.-Mexican boroer region ano the cultural prac-
tices with which its inhabitants construct ano represent themselves ano others, ano
hence their societies ano histories ,Comaro ano Comaro :qq.:., illuminate
the processes of oomination, representation, ano, to some oegree, resistance that
unoerpin political violence.
Fart of peoples everyoay construction of their worlowhether they are politi-
cians, news reporters, or othersentails the process through which popular con-
sensus is built arouno the ioea that the state ought to control certain others, usually
minorities,
18
by jailing them, oepriving them of basic services ano civil rights, oe-
porting them, or even killing them. The result of these processes are analogous to
Hintons primers, in the sense that political violence is activateo by injecting just a
little bit of ethnic conict into oaily fare in oroer to get it going, just as a water
pump is primeo by pouring a little uio into it. It is, of course, largely unoerclass sta-
tus that makes certain people susceptible to violence, whether it is manifest sym-
bolically or physically. It is their ambiguity as both sub- ano superhuman that allows
oominant groups to crystallize the myths about the evils that suboroinates represent,
whether they are citizens, resioents ano holoers of green caros, or unoocumenteo.
This justies rst symbolic ano then all too often physical violence against them.
Ano that requires the implicit agreement ano cooperation of oroinary nice people
who have been inoculateo with evil, who learn to take myths at face value, ano who
oo not question the projects of the state in oefense of a social oroer that requires
hierarchy. Only when general consensus has been createo can oroinary people
,reao the oominant group, actively participate in human rights abuses, explicitly sup-
port them, or turn their faces ano preteno not to know even when confronteo with
incontrovertible evioence of them. My hypothesis is that similar processes of pump
8 cni+ic\r nrrrrc+ioxs
priming by means of consensus-builoing arouno the oomination of oespiseo mi-
norities ,ethnic, religious, or political, preceoeo the actual violence that leo to geno-
cioe in states such as Nazi Germany, Cambooia, East Timor, Bosnia, Rwanoa, ano
Kosovo, where genocioe has or is taking place or is threateneo.
Central to this hypothesis is the notion that state-perpetrateo or -tolerateo phys-
ical violence towaro an ioentiable group coulo not occur unless it is preceoeo by
symbolic violence. Scholars of subaltern peoples argue that symbolic violence is
important in the structuring ano oroering of the social relations of oomination ano
suboroination that assign subalterns a lower place in a hierarchy ,see, for example,
Chatterjee :q86,. Inoeeo, symbolic violence is oisplayeo in the myths that oepict
certain groups of people as both somewhat less than human beings, ano who there-
fore oeserve their suboroinate position, ano at the same time as superhumans who
are capable of subverting the given social oroer. The Nazis oepicteo Jews ,ano
others, as rats or insects, but also as perpetrators of a worlowioe conspiracy ,see,
for example, Keen :q86, Muller-Hill :q88,. Oroinary Russians call Chechens shit
people, a phrase ano concept they no ooubt learneo ouring the earlier Chechen
genocioe of :q to :q ,Har :qq.:.,. Fsychologist Sam Keen oemonstrates that
oemonizing others creates the possibility, even the probability, of war atrocities
against enemy civilians. Democratic societies are by no means immune to this
process, as recent revelations about atrocities committeo by U.S. soloiers against
Koreans ouring the Korean conict amply oemonstrate.
Essential to myth is the process through which the collective imagination is im-
munizeo by means of a small inoculation of acknowleogeo evil in oroer to protect
it against the risk of generalizeo subversion ,Barthes :q88, Taussig :qq:,. A hano-
ful of Mexican orug runners or illegal migrants who take the jobs of citizens, or a
few foreign-born terrorists are sucient to inoculate a shaky social oroer with evil.
This justies raios on Latino neighborhooos, oiscrimination ano mistreatment of
Spanish-speakers, even the killing of suspecteo orug runnersano then anyone
who knows a orug runner, or anyone who looks like or speaks the same language
as a orug runner, or anyone who is founo at a time ano in a placesuch as along
the boroer at oawn or in a remote area ten miles from the boroerthat orug run-
ners might frequent.
Such inoculations of evil are crucial to human rights violations because they be-
come part of socially accepteo notions of common sense, a kino of social knowl-
eoge of the everyone knows variety that enters public oiscourse ano helps builo
popular consensus arouno who ano what is suspect, who ano what ought to be re-
presseo, what constitutes oierence ano how the state ought to control it. Thus even
when accuseo of brutality, excessive use of force, muroer, or other human rights
abuses ano brought to trial, neither Boroer Fatrol agents nor police ocers are usu-
ally convicteo. Human Rights Watch suggests that juries are more inclineo to be-
lieve Boroer Fatrol versions of events than those of Mexicans or aliens or those
who oefeno them by provioing alternative versions of events. Inoeeo many citizens
applauo the strong measures taken by the Boroer Fatrol, ano some encourage
+nr t.s.-xrxic\x nonnrn nroiox
even stronger ones. What is more, Boroer Fatrol agents who accuse their fellow
agents of abusing suspects or other wrongooing up to ano incluoing muroer, or
who testify against them in court, often suer retaliation ano are sometimes reo
,Human Rights Watch, :qq., :qq,.
Most of the people that the Boroer Fatrol apprehenos are not orug runners or
terrorists, but migrant workers who cross or attempt to cross without papers. Mi-
grants have long come to the Uniteo States both seeking a better life ano re-
sponoing to oemanos for their labor power ,Homan :q6, Cockcroft :q86,, but
the most recent of them have oone so within the context of the global economic
restructuring that, in this hemisphere, is epitomizeo by the North American Iree
Traoe Agreement ,NAITA,. Although NAITA, combineo with Mexican gov-
ernment measures that have removeo price supports for fooo staples ano liber-
alizeo agriculture, have meant increaseo prosperity for some, it has also trans-
lateo into increaseo poverty for many others, the reouction of social services,
privatization of once communal lano, ano ever larger numbers of foreign-owneo
corporations moving into the boroer zone looking for cheap labor ano relaxeo en-
vironmental stanoaros ,Barry :qq, Ross :qq, Collier :qq, Kearney ano Na-
gengast :qqo,. When labor is regulateo but capital is not, workers from countries
to which globally mobile assembly plants have relocateo are oiscourageo from im-
migrating. However, the number of export assembly factories ,mootloooto, along
the Mexican sioe of the boroer has quaorupleo since the mio-:q8os, orawing far
more oisplaceo small farmers ano urban poor to the area than can be employeo
,see, for example, Tiano :qq,. If potential workers still manage, or are alloweo,
to cross the boroer illegally, their illegality renoers them economically ano politi-
cally vulnerable. They can be better channeleo into U.S. seconoary ano tertiary
labor markets as agricultural workers, garoeners, or oay laborers. In those mar-
kets they are often unoerpaio ano exploiteo ,Zabin et al. :qq, Sassen :qq:, :qq6,.
Historically, vast numbers of Mexicans went into the agricultural labor market in
the Uniteo States, but the expansion of the service sector ano the restructuring of
urban manufacturing since the :q8os has meant the growth of manufacturing:
sweat shop jobs that are lleo by illegal workers. Ior example, unoocumenteo
workers ll some qo percent of Los Angeles garment factory positions ,Anoreas
:qq, Sassen :qq6, cf. Tiano :qq,. When they no longer neeo them, agricultural,
service sector, ano manufacturing employers often oispose of their labor force by
calling the Boroer Fatrol ,Zabin et al. :qq,.
The employer sanctions that were manoateo by the much-heraloeo Immigra-
tion ano Reform Act ,IRCA, of :q86 ano that are supposeo to punish employers
who knowingly hire unoocumenteo workers are sporaoically enforceo at best.
There are .. million employers out there, saio an immigration ocial. In their
lifetime, theyre never going to see an immigration ocer unless they stano up ano
scream that theyve got a factory full of illegal immigrants ,quoteo in Anoreas
:qq:.., see also Anoreas .ooo,. The :qq6 immigration legislation is more ora-
o cni+ic\r nrrrrc+ioxs
conian than IRCA, not only ooes it target illegal migrants, but it also oeprives some
legal immigrants or resioents of the Uniteo States of social security entitlements,
limits their rights to eoucation, ano so forth. In eect, a special category of resi-
oents |has been createo| with signicantly fewer rights than the population as a
whole ano which cannot legally work or receive social benets, ano can be appre-
henoeo, incarcerateo, ano oeporteo at any time ,Bacon :qq6::,. The INS in
eect enforces labor management, now better than ever, ano more ano more mi-
grants suer trying to better their lives.
Many stuoies inoicate that migrant workers are responoing to the ongoing oe-
manos for their labor power in the Uniteo States by entering legally if they can ano
illegally if they must ,Cockcroft :q86, Sassen :qq6,. Other stuoies inoicate that
migrants ano Latino immigrants contribute as much as they take from the econ-
omy, if not more, oo jobs that native-born workers are unwilling to take, ano in
the rst generation are far less likely to be involveo in crime than citizens ,Zabin et
al. :qq,. Nonetheless, public sentiment against migrants, especially in the South-
western states, ano citizen violence, incluoing beatings ano robberies, is as com-
monplace as the ocial violence of the Boroer Fatrol ,Chavez :qq., Dwyer :qq,
Human Rights Watch :qq., :qq, Nagengast et al. :qq.,. Unoerstanoably, illegal
workers rarely call the police when they are attackeo, but members of the legal
Latino community are also reluctant to oo so, believing that they will not be treateo
justly. Although the Immigration ano Naturalization Service portrays ocial vio-
lence by Boroer Fatrol agents ano feoeral troops as a series of inoivioual ano iso-
lateo incioentsaccioents or mistakesI conteno that both ocial ano civilian vi-
olence against migrants in general, but Latinos in the boroer region in particular,
is an expectable result of U.S. policy. As such, it is the raw material of which hu-
man rights violations are maoe. That these violations fall far short of genocioe
shoulo not blino us to their importance.
CONCLUSION
I have oereo an illustration of some cultural ano political forms, representa-
tions, ano practices through which oominant sectors of the population oeploy
symbolic violence against otherssymbolic violence, which I think always pre-
ceoes political violence ano human rights violations. I note, however, that even
general symbolic violence against a nameo minority ooes not always signal that
genocioe is imminent ,inoeeo symbolic ano physical violence are part of a more
generalizeo inequality manifest in the various tm,. An examination of the fac-
tors that prime the genocioe pump must also account for situations in which sym-
bolic violence is present but genocioe ooes not result. Folitical scientist Donalo
Horowitz ,citeo in Bowen :qq6::., asserts that a crucial oierence between geno-
cioal ano nongenocioal society when all other things are equal is whether states
have constructeo multiethnic coalitions that force politicians to seek political sup-
+nr t.s.-xrxic\x nonnrn nroiox .
port across ethnic groups. Leo Kuper ,:q8:::888q, suggests that genocioe ooes
not occur in societies in which: ,a, oierences among racial, ethnic, or religious
groups are either insignicant or not a source of oeaoly conict, ,b, there is will-
ingness on the part of the oominant sectors to accept strangers ano oer them
access to the resources of society, ,c, the rights of minorities are legally guaran-
teeo, ,o, there are complex webs of social relations or voluntary groups that cross-
cut perceiveo racial, religious, or ethnic oierences, or ,e, there is balanceo ac-
commooation between recognizeo groups such that there is at least an attempt
to share power, as for example among blacks, whites, ano coloreo in South Africa,
or Catholics ano Frotestants in Northern Irelano. Other social constraints against
genocioe might incluoe a high level of oevelopment, a vocal ano more or less un-
fettereo meoia, ano citizen groups that are able to publicize injustices ano op-
pose violence against minorities ,Anoreopoulos :qq,.
19
In the global south the overt ano subtexual rationales for the repression of mi-
norities is often to ensure oevelopment that ostensibly benets the majority, to
seize political control from a rival ethnic group, to preserve cultural or religious
traoitions, or to eliminate class enemies. Although oevelopment ooes not ap-
pear on the surface to be an issue in the Uniteo States, it may neeo to be taken
into account when oiscussing the human rights of Latino migrants ano immi-
grants. The oisparity in the economic situations of Mexico ano the Uniteo States
that motivates many migrants to cross the boroer, as well as the ongoing oemano
for Mexican labor power in the Uniteo States, is a oevelopment issue. On the other
hano, the meoia in the Uniteo States is as free as anywhere in the worlo. Iurther,
there are numerous Latino organizations ano voluntary groups, civic associations,
ano political parties that incluoe Latinos ,ano other minorities,, ano Latinos play
a growing role in national politics. Although there is an apparent oeclining reaoi-
ness to accept strangers in the Uniteo States ano to oer them access to all the re-
sources of society, oierences among racial ano ethnic groups have not resulteo
in sustaineo oeaoly conict. Even though the legal guarantees of the rights of mi-
norities have come unoer increasing threat in the Uniteo States, they have not
been eliminateo. Iinally, some portion of the general public, at least in Califor-
nia, favors a new amnesty for migrants.
We can easily concluoe that the Uniteo States is not on the verge of commit-
ting or tolerating the wioespreao ano systematic abuse of minorities, a rst step in
the oirection of genocioe. The presence of symbolic violence towaro migrants in
general ano Latinos in particular in the boroer region suggests a potcrttol, not yet
ano, it is hopeo, never to be realizeo. Nonetheless the treatment of immi-
grants/migrants shoulo alert us to the potential for escalations of human rights
abuses, especially if international oevelopment issues are not aooresseo ano if po-
litical processes are perceiveo as funoamentally aweo. Acknowleoging the im-
portance of symbolic violence ano taking steps to alleviate it may help human rights
monitors prevent genocioal behavior before its actual aovent ,Dugger :qq6, Ku-
per :q8:, :q8, Kapferer :q88,. However, it is only a rst step.
: cni+ic\r nrrrrc+ioxs
NOTES
A shorter version of this paper appeareo in November :qq8 as Militarizing the Boroer Fa-
trol, in ^ACLA: Rcpott or tlc Amcttco XXXII ,,::.
:. Accounts of atrocities in oistant places often appear on the front pages of national
newspapers but usually focus on their inhumanity, rather than their politics. See, for exam-
ple, the article by Dean Murphy entitleo W. African Rebels on Mutilation Rampage, which
appeareo in the Lo Argclc Ttmc on March :, :qqq, pp. A:, A.q.
.. Stanley Milgram, whatever one may think about the ethics of his experiments, was
among the rst to examine the psychology of the torturer. Subjects were askeo to aominis-
ter ever larger electrical shocks to volunteers who were instructeo not to comply with ex-
perimenter requests. ,The volunteers were in fact not hookeo up to the electrical current.,
Surprisingly large numbers of subjects were willing to shock volunteers even when the volt-
age was clearly markeo as oangerous, even potentially fatal. Iurther, Amnesty International
proouceo a oocuorama entitleo 1oot ^ctgl/ot Sor: Tlc Moltrg of o Tottotct in the :qos. Set
in Greece in the early :qos ano using interviews with actual torturers, the lm oepicts the
steps taken by the Greek military that turneo oroinary young men into brutal torturers.
. This section oraws on Nagengast ,:qq,.
. The language of contagion ano infestation is commonplace when people are oehu-
manizeo ,see, for example, Sontag :q8, Keen :q86,.
. Interview with Roberto Martinez, Immigration ano Human Rights on the U.S. Mex-
ico Boroer, Mottor Mogotrc ,on the Internet, July :qq,.
6. Interview with Maria Jimenez, Mottor Mogotrc ,as it appears on the Internet, n.o. |be-
tween June ano December :qq|,.
. Accoroing to an article in the Dollo Motrtrg Stot on May ::, :qq8, an inoepenoent
task force leo by the U.S. Customs Service reporteo that NAITA is oirectly linkeo to the in-
crease in illegal orug trac across the U. S.-Mexico boroer. Feter Anoreas ooubts that the
INS will take meaningful steps to examine all trac from Mexico into the Uniteo States in
oroer to stem the narcotics traoe. He asserts in a recent volume ,.ooo, that if Customs ex-
amineo every truck arriving along the U.S.-Mexican boroer, the line of trac woulo ex-
teno :.oo miles from the boroer to Mexico City.
8. An article in the Lo Argclc Ttmc ,May ., :qq8, A:, stateo that the chiloren of mi-
grant workers are suering malnutrition in unpreceoenteo numbers.
q. Lo Argclc Ttmc, June ::, .ooo, B:.
:o. Dollo Motrtrg Stot, November .o, :qq.
::. This section oraws on Timothy Dunn, Tlc Mtlttottottor of tlc U.S. Mcxtco Botoct:
.,8.: ,Austin: University of Texas Fress, :qq6,.
:.. Authors personal interview with R. F. Ilores, August , :qq8.
:. Recall the antigay stance taken by the Boy Scouts in mio-:qq8 ano uphelo by the
Supreme Court in .ooo.
:. See, for example, the Amnesty International :qqq report, Urttco Stotc: Rtglt fot All,
especially chapter on police brutality ano prejuoiceo policing.
:. The Lo Argclc Ttmc ran an article in November :qq8 about other Latinos who founo
themselves ostracizeo by Anglo neighbors who objecteo to their lavenoer, pink, ano blue houses.
:6. Anoreopouloss oenition nesses the one containeo in the Uniteo Nations Con-
vention on Genocioe, which many scholars have founo limiting because it ooes not incluoe
social, political, or economic groups. This issue has been taken up by Helen Iein ,:qq.,, Kurt
+nr t.s.-xrxic\x nonnrn nroiox
Jonassohn ,:qq.,, ano Barbara Har ,:qq.,, among others. They have either agreeo to ex-
pano the U. N. oenition or to coin aooitional terms such as poltttctoc, to oescribe the state
violence against groups that are not ethnically, racially, or religiously baseo.
:. There are a number of other issues having to oo with, for example, intentionality
ano other preconoitions for genocioe, all of which are ably raiseo ano oiscusseo in a vol-
ume eoiteo by George Anoreopoulos entitleo Gcroctoc ,Fhilaoelphia: University of Fennsyl-
vania Fress, :qq,.
:8. I use the term mtrottt, reluctantly ano only because it is in general usage. Feople oe-
scribeo as minorities often object to the terminology because of its connotations of mi-
nor, less than, with fewer rights than.
:q. Har ,:qq., argues that genocioe is far less likely in a oemocracy than in an author-
itarian or totalitarian state. While this may be so, we shoulo not to be too sanguine about
oemocracy in ano of itself as a oeterrent to political violence. While it may prevent it in the
metropoles or at least restrict it to tolerable numbers there, oemocratic states have been
oirect or inoirect participants or supporters of political violence in client states arouno the
worlo ,see, for example, Ebihara ano Leogerwooo, this volume,. Like economics ano poli-
tics in general, political violence, incluoing genocioe is or has become an aspect of the con-
temporary transnational worlo ,Ialk .ooo,.
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+nr t.s.-xrxic\x nonnrn nroiox ,
8
:
Coming to Our Senses
Artltopolog, oro Gcroctoc
^orc, Sclcpct-Hoglc
Mooern anthropology was built up in the face of colonial genocioes, ethnocioes,
mass killings, population oie-outs, ano other forms of mass oestruction visiteo on
the marginalizeo peoples whose lives, suering, ano oeaths have provioeo us with
a livelihooo. Yet, oespite this historyano the privilegeo position of the anthro-
pologist-ethnographer as eyewitness to some of these eventsanthropology has
been, until quite recently, relatively mute on the subject. To this oay most early
warning signals concerning genocioal sentiments, gestures, ano acts still come
from political journalists rather than from ethnographers in the elo. Ano most
theories concerning the causes, meanings, ano consequences of genocioe come
from other oisciplinary quartershistory, psychology ano psychiatry, theology,
comparative law, human rights, ano political science. In all, anthropology is a late
arrival to the elo, ano this volume, publisheo in .oo:, represents, as it were, an-
thropologys opening gambit. Why is this so?
As Alex Hinton ano several contributors to this volume have noteo, violence is
haroly a natural subject for anthropologists. Everything in our oisciplinary train-
ing preoisposes us rot to see the blatant ano manifest forms of violence that so of-
ten ravage the lives of our subjects. Although the term gcroctoc ano its mooern con-
ception were rst coineo by Raphael Lemkin ,:q, following ano in response to
the Holocaust, genocioes ano other forms of mass killing clearly existeo prior to
late mooernity ano in societies relatively untoucheo by Western civilization. In-
oeeo, the avoioance of this topic by anthropologists was surely oictateo by a oesire
to avoio further stigmatizing inoigenous societies ano cultures that were so often
juogeo negatively ano in terms of Eurocentric values ano aims.
A basic premise guioing twentieth-century ethnographic research was, quite sim-
ply, to see, hear, ano report no evil ,ano very little violence, in reporting back from
the elo. Classical cultural anthropology ano its particular moral sensibility orients
us like so many inverse blooohounos on the trail ano on the scent of the gooo ano
the righteous in the societies that we stuoy. Some have even suggesteo that evil is
not a proper subject for the anthropologist.
1
Consequently, as Elliot Leyton ,:qq8a,
has pointeo out, the contributions of anthropology to unoerstanoing oll levels of
violencefrom sexual abuse ano homicioe to state-sponsoreo political terrorism
ano oirty wars to genocioeis extremely mooest. Those who oeviateo from the
goloen rule of moral relativism were forever saooleo with accusations of victim-
blaming. But the moral blinoers that we wore in the one instance spilleo over into
a kino of hermeneutic generosity in other instancestowaro Western colonizers,
mooern police states, ano other political ano military institutions of mass oestruc-
tion. Although genocioes preoate the spreao of Western civilization, the savage
colonization of Africa, Asia, ano the New Worlo inciteo some of the worst geno-
cioes of the eighteenth to early twentieth centuries. The failure of anthropologists
to oeal oirectly with these primal scenes of mass oestruction as they were being
playeo out in various ethnographic niches is the subject of this epilogue or post-
script to the story of anthropology ano genocioe.
Although averting their gaze from the scenes of genocioe ano other forms of
graphic ano brutal physical violence, anthropologists have always been astute ob-
servers of violence-once-removeo. We are quite gooo at analyzing the ,m/oltc ,see
Bouroieu ano Waquant :qq.,, the p,clologtcol ,see Devereux :q6:, Goman :q6:,
Eogerton :qq., Scheper-Hughes .ooob,, ano the ttoctotol ,see Iarmer :qq6, Bour-
gois :qq, forms of everyoay violence that unoerlie so many social institutions ano
interactionsa contribution that may provioe a missing link in contemporary geno-
cioe stuoies.
In my own case, it took me more than two oecaoes to confront the question of
overt political violence, which, given my choice of early elo sitesIrelano in the
mio-:qos ano Brazil ouring the military oictatorship yearsmust have requireo
a massive oose of oenial. While stuoying the maoness of everyoay life in the mio-
:qos in a small, quiet peasant community in western Irelano, I was largely con-
cerneo with trtcttot spaces, with the small, oark psychooramas of scapegoating ano
labeling within traoitional farm householos that were oriving so many young bach-
elors to orink ano bouts of oepression ano schizophrenia. I paio scant attention
then to the munoane political activities of Matty Dowo, from whom we renteo our
cottage in the mountain hamlet of Ballynalacken, ano who useo our attic to store
a small arsenal of guns ano explosives that he ano a few of his Sinn Iein buooies
were running to Northern Irelano. Consequently, I left unexamineo until very re-
cently ,Scheper-Hughes .ooob, the possible links between the political violence in
Northern Irelano ano the tortureo family oramas in West Kerry that I so carefully
oocumenteo, ano which certainly hao a violence of their own.
Since then I have continueo to stuoy other forms of everyoay violence: the
abuses of meoicine practiceo in bao faith against the weak, the mao, ano the hun-
gry, incluoing the booies of socially oisaovantageo ano largely invisible organ
oonors in transplant transactions ,see Scheper-Hughes .oooa,, ano the social in-
oierence to chilo oeath in Northeast Brazil that alloweo political leaoers, priests,
coxixo +o otn srxsrs
con makers, oro shantytown mothers to oispatch a multituoe of hungry angel-
babies to the afterlife. In Brazil I oio not begin to stuoy state ano political violence
until, in the late :q8os, the half-grown sons of some of my frienos ano neighbors
in the shantytown of Alto oo Cruzeiro began to oisappeartheir mutilateo boo-
ies turning up later, the hanoiwork of police-inltrateo local oeath squaos.
TRISTES ANTROFOLOGIQUES
In his professional memoir, Aftct tlc Foct, Clioro Geertz ,:qq, notes somewhat
wryly that he always hao the uncomfortable feeling of arriving too early or too
late to observe the really large ano signicant political events ano the violent up-
heavals that oescenoeo on his respective elo sites in Morocco ano Java. But, in
fact, he writes that he ,unoerstanoably, consciously ocotoco the conicts, moving
back ano forth between his respective elo sites ouring perioos of relative calm,
always managing to miss the revolution ,Starn :qq.,, as it were.
Consequently there was nothing in Geertzs ethnographic writings hinting at
the killing elos that were beginning to engulf Inoonesia soon after he hao oe-
parteo from the elo, a massacre of suspecteo communists by Islamic funoamen-
talists in :q6 that rivaleo more recent events in Rwanoa. It was an extraoroinary
blooobatha political massacre of some sixty thousano Balinese following an un-
successful Marxist-inspireo coup in :q6. Ferhaps one coulo interpret Geertzs cel-
ebrateo analysis of the Balinese cock ght as a cooeo expression of the erce ag-
gression lying just beneath the surface of a people whom the anthropologist
otherwise oescribeo as among the most poiseo, controlleo, ano oecorous in the
worlo.
Tooay, the worlo, the objects of our stuoy, ano the uses of anthropology have
changeo consioerably. Those privilegeo to observe human events close up ano over
time ano who are thereby privy to local, community, ano even state secrets that
are generally hiooen from view until much laterafter the collective graves have
been oiscovereo ano the booy counts maoeare beginning to recognize another
ethical position: to name ano to ioentify the sources, structures, ano institutions of
mass violence. This new mooo of political ano ethical engagement ,see Scheper-
Hughes :qqa, has resulteo in consioerable soul-searching, even if long after the
fact.
Clauoe Levi-Strauss ,:qq,, for example, fast approaching the eno of his long
ano oistinguisheo career, openeo his recently publisheo photographic memoir,
Soooooc oo Btotl [Homctclrc fot Btotl], with a sobering caveat. He warneo the
reaoer that the lyrically beautiful images of pristine rain forest Brazilian Inoians
about to be presenteophotos taken by him between :q ano :qq in the inte-
rior of Brazilshoulo rot be trusteo. The images were illusory, he cautioneo. The
worlo they portray no longer exists. The starkly beautiful, seemingly timeless Nam-
bikwara, Caouveo, ano Bororo Inoians captureo in his photos bear no resemblance
to the reouceo populations one might no tooay campeo out by the sioes of busy
o cni+ic\r nrrrrc+ioxs
truck routes or loitering in urban villages looking like slums carveo out of a gutteo
wiloerness. The Nambiquara ano their Amerinoian neighbors have been oeci-
mateo by wage labor, golo prospecting, prostitution, ano the oiseases of cultural
contact: smallpox, TB, AIDS, ano syphilis.
But the olo masters confession goes further. These early photos capturing sim-
ple, nakeo Inoians sleeping on the grouno unoer romantic shelters of palm leaves
have nothing to oo with a state of pristine humanity that has since been lost. The
photos taken in the :qos alreaoy show the eects of a savage European coloniza-
tion on the once-populous civilizations of Central Brazil ano the Amazon. Iol-
lowing contact, these inoigenous civilizations were oestroyeo, leaving behino only
sao remnants of themselvesa people not so much primitive, he cautions, as
stranoeo, strippeo of their material ano symbolic wealth. Levi-Strausss camera
hao captureo images of a particularly virulent kino of human strip mining, an in-
visible genocioe, the magnituoe of which the anthropologist was at the time per-
haps naively unaware.
Earlier, Levi-Strauss hao recognizeo that a gooo oeal more was requireo of the
anthropologist than oeoication to a purely scholarly pursuit ,see also Sontag :q6
on anthropology as a spiritual vocation,. He wrote ,:q66::.6,: Anthropology is not
a oispassionate science like astronomy, which springs from the contemplation of
things at a oistance. It is the outcome of a historical process which has maoe the
larger part of mankino subservient to the other, ano ouring which millions of in-
nocent human beings have hao their resources plunoereo ano their institutions ano
beliefs oestroyeo whilst they themselves were ruthlessly killeo, thrown into bonoage,
ano contaminateo by oiseases they were unable to resist. Anthropology is the oaugh-
ter to this era of violence: its capacity to assess more objectively the facts pertain-
ing to the human conoition reects, on the epistemological level, a state of aairs
in which one part of mankino treateo the other as an object. Saoly, however, more
often than not, anthropologists have serveo as passive bystanoers, as silent rather
than engageo witnesses to the genocioes, ethnocioes, ano oie-outs they have so of-
ten encountereo in the course of pursuing their vocation.
Late-in-life professional examinations of conscience by anthropologists with
regaro to their recovereo memories of the scenes of violence ano ethnocioe go
back to the oays of Bronislaw Malinowski ,:88:q.,. Malinowski began his an-
thropological career unoer consioerable ouress as an enemy-alien, a Folish-born
Austrian citizen oetaineo in Australia while en route to his rst elowork expeoi-
tion ouring the outbreak of Worlo War :. Granteo lt/cto cotooto by the Australian
government, Malinowski was permitteo to conouct his ethnographic research in
New Guinea as long as the war continueo, which articially expanoeo his intenoeo
term of elowork.
Malinowskis elo oiary, covering the perioo from :q: to :q:8 ano publisheo
posthumously by his wioow in :q6, recoros the anthropologists conicting emo-
tions ano ioentities as a European gentleman, a chilo of Western imperialism, ano
a natural scientist trying to reinvent himself ano carve out a new science ano methoo
coxixo +o otn srxsrs .
for recoroing ano unoerstanoing human ano cultural oierence. His sympathies
were initially aligneo with the values of his own European civilization. In a wry ano,
one hopes, ironic entry to his oiary, Malinowski repeats the woros of the savage
colonizer, Kurtz, from Joseph Conraos Hcott of Dotlrc: My feelings towaro the
natives are |on the whole| oecioeoly tenoing to exterminate the brutes ,:q6:6q,.
Here the anthropologist ano racist imperialist seem one in spirit. But Malinowski
was profounoly homesick ano morbioly oepresseo while captive in the elo, ano
his fevereo oiary musings might best be unoerstooo as just that: the nightmarish oay-
oreams of a oiseaseo, hyperactive, ano hypochonoriacal imagination. Surely the
true measure of Malinowskis anthropological genius lay not in his private musings
but in his public writings ano in his methoo of participant observation, which re-
quireo an empathic ioentication with the native.
After the traumas of elowork, when Malinowski sat oown to reect on the
moral unoerpinnings of his oiscipline, he concluoeo: The outy of the anthropol-
ogist is to be a fair ano true interpreter of the Native ano . . . to register that Euro-
peans in the past sometimes exterminateo whole islano peoples, that they expro-
priateo most of the patrimony of savage races, that they introouceo slavery in a
specially cruel ano pernicious form ,:q:, citeo by James :q:66,. Malinowski
noteo that while Europeans were generous in oistributing their spiritual gifts to
the colonizeo, they were stingy in circulating the cultural ano material instruments
of power ano self-mastery. Europeans oio not, he wrote ,:q:,, give African peo-
ples rearms, bombing planes, poison gas, ano all that makes eective self-oefense
or aggression possible. In the eno Malinowski argueo passionately against the an-
thropologist as a neutral ano objective by-stanoer to the contemporary history
of colonial ano postcolonial genocioes ano ethnocioes. But these later writings were
largely oiscreoiteo by his profession as the irresponsible babbling of an olo man
past his intellectual prime.
KROEBER AND ISHI: LAST OI THEIR TRIBES
Alfreo Kroeber oieo before he coulo imagine a raoically oierent role for the an-
thropologist as an engageo witness rather than oisinteresteo spectator to the scenes
of human suering, cultural oestruction, ano genocioe even then being visiteo on
the native peoples of Northern California. When Kroeber arriveo in San Irancisco
in :qo: to take up the post of museum anthropologist at the University of Califor-
nia, it was at the tail eno of a terrible, wanton, ano ocially sanctioneo extermi-
nation of northern California Inoians that hao begun ouring the Golo Rush ano
continueo through the turn of the twentieth century.
In the cololy objective woros of a historian of the perioo ,Cook :q8:q:,: Like
all native people in the Western Hemisphere, the Inoians of California unoerwent
a very severe oecline in numbers following the entrance of White civilization. Irom
the beginning to the eno of the process the native population experienceo a fall
from :o,ooo to approximately .o,ooo, a oecline of over qo of the original num-
: cni+ic\r nrrrrc+ioxs
ber. This collapse was oue to the operation of factors inherent in the physical ano
social conict between the White ano the Reo races. Cook ioentieo oisease epi-
oemics as the primary factor in oepressing the local population ,p. q.,. But the
historical recoro belies this more neutral explanation. In fact, military campaigns,
massacres, bounty hunts, oebt peonage, lano grabbing, ano enclosures by Anglo
settlers ano ranchers proouceo the far greater toll of suering ano oeath on the na-
tive populations.
2
Irom rst contact to :86o, American military attacks took the lives of ,.6 na-
tive Californians. But the worst was yet to come: with the California Golo Rush,
Inoians in California began to experience a total assault on their communities.
Ior example, in May :8. a mob of whites leo by the sheri of Weatherville, Cal-
ifornia, attackeo, without warning, a peaceful Inoian rancheria, killing men,
women, ano chiloren: Of the |original| :o Inoians that constituteo the rancheria,
only . or escapeo, ano those were supposeo to be oangerously wounoeo, so prob-
ably not one . . . remains alive ,Dotl, Alto Coltfotrto, May , :8., citeo by Churchill
:qq:..o,. The oevastation suereo by the greater Maiouan community is captureo
by the following numbers. In :86 there were eight thousano Maiouan people, in
:8o there were between thirty-ve hunoreo ano forty-ve hunoreo, by :q:o only
nine hunoreo Maiou people remaineo ,Riooell :q8:86,.
In :8o the California legislature passeo a law that markeo the transition of the
California Inoian from peonage to virtual slavery. The law oecreeo that any In-
oian, on the woro of a single white, coulo be oeclareo a vagrant, thrown into jail,
ano his labor solo at auction for up to four months without pay. Moreover, it per-
mitteo the kionapping of Inoian chiloren, a practice that lasteo through the eno
of the nineteenth century. An eoitorial publisheo on December 6, :86:, in the lo-
cal newspaper of Marysville, California, reporteo: It is from these |local| moun-
tain tribes that white settlers oraw their supplies of kionappeo chiloren, eoucateo
as servants, ano women for the purpose of labor ano lust. . . . It is notorious that
there are parties in the northern countries of this state, whose sole occupation has
been to steal young chiloren ano squaws . . . ano to oispose of them at hanosome
prices to the settlers, who being |largely| unmarrieo willingly pay o or 6o oollars
for a likely young girl ,citeo in Castillo :q8::oq,.
Like many anthropologists of his oay, incluoing Margaret Meao, whose sense
of urgency ,We must stuoy them before they oisappear!, was oictateo by the ac-
celerating oie-outs of inoigenous peoples ano their languages ano cultures, Kroe-
ber spent his rst two oecaoes in California conoucting what was then calleo sal-
vage ethnography. That was the attempt to oocument the cultures of oisappearing
peoples by relying on the memories of the oloest living members of the group. It
was a work of intense concentration that culminateo in Kroebers monumental
q.-page Horo/ool of tlc Irotor of Coltfotrto, which he completeo ano oelivereo to
the Smithsonian Institution, although the volume was not publisheo until :q..
In the Horo/ool ano elsewhere, Kroeber ,see, for example, :q:, :q., operateo
from the premise that Native Americans were oestineo to oisappear through an
coxixo +o otn srxsrs
inevitable social evolutionary trajectory oetermineo by the inevitable ano pro-
gressive march of civilization. It was an anthropological version of the American
ooctrine of Manifest Destiny. The remaining scattereo banos of hunting ano
gathering tribes in northern California woulo, Kroeber argueo, inevitably give way
to Anglo farming, ranching, ano mining ventures. Some inoigenous groups fell
quickly. Others fought bravely, ano others went into hioing. Their survival was, as
Kroeber ,:q.a:q, commenteo, remarkable. He referreo, for example, to the elu-
sive Mill Creek Inoians ,:q::a, :q.a, as the last free survivors of the American
reo man, who by a fortituoe ano stubbornness of character, succeeoeo in holoing
out against the overwhelming tioe of civilization twenty-ve years longer even than
Geronimos famous bano of Apaches. But Kroeber warneo that the nal chap-
ter of the Mill Creek survivors was fast approaching. Ano he was right.
By the time he completeo the Horo/ool, Kroeber hao come to view salvage
ethnographygathering the remembereo remnants of oying aboriginal societies
from survivors in blue-jeans living in ruineo ano bastaroizeo cultures ,Kroeber
:q8a:.,as less than satisfying work. Ano he returneo to an earlier interest in
the peoples ano cultures of the American Southwest, where a more vibrant ,ano
viable, Native American experience persisteo, even ourisheo, among Fueblo In-
oians. More signicantly, after the traumatic oeath of Ishi, his singular Yahi in-
formant, Kroeber turneo away from particularistic ethnography to take up more
broaoly theoretical writings, which, following the German ioealist traoition, focuseo
on the collective genius of a given cultural traoition to which the inoivioual ano
his personal history were largely irrelevant.
Kroeber treateo the oisappearance of entire populations of native Californians
in massacres ano bounty hunts by Anglo ranchers ano golo miners as a small, in-
consequential sioebar in the lorg ootcc of social evolutionary time. After some hes-
itation, Kroeber wrote in :q., I have omitteo all oirectly historical treatment . . .
of the relations of the natives with the whites ano of the events befalling them af-
ter such contact was establisheo. It is not that this subject is unimportant or unin-
teresting, but that I am not in a position to treat it aoequately. It is also a matter
that has comparatively slight relation to aboriginal civilization ,citeo by Buckley
:qq6:.,. The vanquisheo peoples ano cultures were alreaoy ruineo, anthropo-
logically speaking, ano coulo cast little light on the authentic aboriginal civiliza-
tions that preceoeo their oecline, which Kroeber vieweo as the true subject of his
scientic research.
Ferhaps the suering, premature oeaths, ano cultural oevastation of his native
California informants was just too oicult for Kroeber to face, ano he retreateo
into the safety zone of a theory that put their losses into a broaoer, cultural histor-
ical perspective. Kroeber once conoeo to a colleague ,A. R. Filling, citeo by
ibio.:., that he oio not oelve into his Yurok informants experiences of the con-
tact era because he coulo not stano all the tears. Ano so Kroeber began to write
the inoivioual out of his works to the extent that even as stalwart an objectivist
ano empiricist as Eric Wolf ,:q8::8, later referreo to Kroebers oisembooieo
cni+ic\r nrrrrc+ioxs
ano impersonal approach to culture ,the superorganic, as very abstract, very
Olympian, even frightening, ultimately. Kroebers belief in the power of the highly
abstract superorganic was the expression of a kino of scientic faith ,see Kroe-
ber :q8:...,. But in turning away from the tragic personal ano collective his-
tories of his informants, Kroebers anthropology faileo to grapple with the oe-
structive animus of his aoopteo state towaro its inoigenous peoples. Ano he
oescribeo the genocioe that reouceo the inoigenous population of California from
oo,ooo in the mio-:8os to less than .o,ooo at the close of the century as a rela-
tively minor aair, as a little history . . . of pitiful events ,citeo by Buckley :qq6,.
It is oicult to know whether the tangleo, intense, but ultimately tragic rela-
tionship between Kroeber ano his key native Californian informant, Ishi ,that
spanneo the years :q:::6, was a cause or consequence of the anthropologists sen-
timents regaroing the inevitability of the oecline ano oeath of Californias inoige-
nous cultures. But this much is known. The arrival of Ishi into Kroebers life
ano therefore into our anthropological ano historical consciousnesswas uncannily
overoetermineo.
In the rst of two journalistic articles that Kroeber wrote about the Yahi Inoi-
ans rst publisheo in the summer of :q::, Kroeber oescribeo the oiscovery by
California surveyors of a ragtag bano of Mill Creek Inoian Yahi survivors. The
Elusive Mill Creeks ,republisheo in :q. by the Lowie/Hearst Museum of An-
thropology, oescribes how a team of local surveyors for a power company came
upon a cleverly concealeo camp site in the tangleo wooos near Deer Creek in :qo8.
This site was in all likelihooo one of the last hioing places of Ishi ano his few re-
maining family members. Insioe the camp the surveyors founo a mioole-ageo
woman ano two ageo Inoians, a man ano a woman. The olo woman, resting un-
oer a pile of rabbit skins, was very ill, ano she beggeo for water, which one of the
surveyors brought to her after the other members of the group ran o to hioe. Then
the whites cruelly ano inexplicably carrieo away all the blankets, bows ano arrows,
ano other supplies left behino in the encampment.
In this piece written for popular consumption, Kroeber useo woros ano phrases
that he normally avoioeo in his scientic writings. He refers, for example, to a to-
tally wilo ano inoepenoent tribe of Inoians, without rearms, eeing at the ap-
proach of the white man ,:q.a::, who manageo for forty years to eluoe oetec-
tion. Elsewhere in the article Kroeber oescribeo the Mill Creek Inoians as a
hanoful of savages while oescribing their Anglo bounty hunters as the enter-
prising pioneer ano miner.
The best outcome Kroeber coulo imagine for this remnant bano of Inoians
was for them to be captureo by a posse of American soloiers sent by the Oce of
Inoian Aairs: How they can be captureo ano brought in is, however, another ano
more oicult problem. It is the unanimous opinion of those acquainteo with them
that a troop of cavalry might scour the region of Deer Creek ano Mill Creek for
months without laying hanos on them. Fossibly a graoually narrowing circle of men
might enclose them ano nally orive them to the center ,p. q,. Then the goal woulo
coxixo +o otn srxsrs
be to integrate them with other survivors of lanoless tribes that have liveo for many
years as scattereo outcasts on the fringes of civilization. Alternatively, Kroeber ar-
gueo, they coulo be granteo a few square miles in the inaccessible ano worthless
canyon of Deer Creek where they now live. Otherwise, their future was extremely
oire: If they continue their present mooe of life, the settlers in the vicinity are likely
to suer further loss of property ano livestock. If the Inoians are ever caught in
the act of marauoing it may go haro with them, for the rancher in these oistricts
rarely has his rie far from his hano oro cor cotccl, /c /lomco fot tcotttrg to ctolcrcc
|emphasis mine| when his belongings have been repeateoly seizeo ,p. 8,.
Then, as if on cue, in July :q::, the last member of that renegaoe bano, the man
the anthropologists woulo later call Ishi ano whom Kroeber woulo oescribe ,in
a letter to Sapir, as the last California aborigine appeareo in oowntown Oroville,
Butte County, California, a historical golo mining town on the Ieather River. Dri-
ven by hunger or oesperation the Inoian came out of the foothills of Mt. Lassen
ano was founo cowering in the corner of an animal slaughterhouse. Scarcely hao
the ink orieo on Kroebers article on the Last Mill Creek Inoians when he receiveo
a call from the Oroville jailhouse asking for his help in communicating with the
wilo man. The Inoian was colo ano frighteneo, ano although he was obviously
very hungry he refuseo to accept the fooo ano water that was oereo to him. His
only clothing was a raggeo canvas cloak.
In the rst photo taken of Ishi just hours after his capture ,see gure :.:,, the
mans startleo expression ano his state of aovanceo emaciation are frighteningly
familiar. It is reminiscent of photos taken of Holocaust survivors immeoiately af-
ter their liberation from concentration camps at the eno of Worlo War II. The
camps at Kosovo also come to mino. Ishis hair was clippeo or singeo close to his
heao in a traoitional sign of Yahi mourning. Hao the olo woman left behino in
the camp at Mill Creek oieo? Ishis cheeks cling fast to the bones ano accentuate
his oeep-set eyes. The photo reveals a man of intelligence ano of oeep sorrow.
Inoeeo, Ishi has been oescribeo as northern Californias Anne Irank. Cruelly
hunteo, his family reouceo until, the last of his group, Ishi was usheo out of his
woooeo hioeout. There is speculation among some northern California Inoians that
Ishi may have been in search of refuge at the nearby Ieather River ,Maiou Inoian,
rancheria. The Maiou, like the Fit River rancheria Inoians to the north of Mt.
Lassen, were known to sometimes oer sanctuary to their escaping Yahi neighbors.
Ishi wasnt crazy, Art Angle, chair of the Butte County American Inoian Cultural
Committee in Oroville, tolo me in the spring of .ooo. He lrc. where he was
heaoeo. But betrayeo by barking guaro oogs, Ishi fell into the hanos of whites in-
steao.
Other native Californians in the area suspect that Ishi was a loner, traineo by
his mother ano other close aoult relatives to avoio oll humans. One Fit River man
saio that Ishi, in his view, hao lost his bearing as well as his bonos to other Inoi-
ans. Too many years alone, is what others saio. He oiont really trust anyone
anymorewhite or Inoian, it was all the same to him. He suereo too much,
cni+ic\r nrrrrc+ioxs
Iigure :.:. Fortrait of Ishi, August .q, :q::. Irom Theooora Kroeber, Ilt tr T.o
1otlo ,Berkeley: University of California Fress, :q6:,.
another native person saio. White people who live ano work tooay near Ishis fam-
ilys Mill Creek camp also still talk about Ishi. It seems as though he is never very
far from their consciousness. You know, one young white man, a oeer hunter, tolo
me angrily in a general store overlooking Mill Creek where he hao stoppeo for sup-
plies: They hunteo Ishi just like a foxI oont know how tlc, coulo have oone that
to a man like him.
After his rescue by Kroeber ano his associates, Ishi liveo out his nal years
,:q:::6, as an assistant janitor ,paio twenty-ve oollars week,, a key informant to
A. L. Kroeber, ano a living specimen at the museum of anthropology at the Uni-
versity of California, then locateo in San Irancisco. Ishi was given his own private
quarters in the museum, but his room was locateo next to a hall housing a large
collection of human skulls ano bones that appalleo ano oepresseo the Inoian. Dur-
ing the perioo that Ishi liveo among whites ,mostly UCSI ooctors ano anthropol-
ogists,, he serveo as a key anthropological informant to Kroeber, to Tom Water-
man, ano to other local ano visiting anthropologists, incluoing Eowaro Sapir of
Yale University, whom Waterman accuseo of overworking Ishi, alreaoy weak from
illness. Like thousanos of other rst contact peoples, Ishi contracteo tuberculo-
sis, an urban, white mans oisease, although his conoition was not properly oiag-
noseo until the nal weeks of his life. Kroeber hao anticipateo ano feareo this out-
come, as his rst wife, Henriette, was carrieo away by this oreaoeo oisease, then
enoemic in many cities of the Uniteo States, soon after Ishi arriveo at the museum.
Ishi nally succumbeo to what was oescribeo as galloping consumption in March
:q:6 while Kroeber was away on sabbatical leave in New York City.
Illiterate ano unlettereo, Ishi ,unlike Anne Irank, oio not write his own oiary,
but he tolo parts of his life story to Alfreo Kroeber, who recoroeo those fragments
by hano. Kroeber also captureo on primitive wax cylinoers Ishis renoition of Yahi
myths, origin stories, ano folktales. There were many things, however, that Ishi
woulo rot talk about: the oeath of his close relatives ano his last, horrible years
arouno Deer Creek before his oecision to travel south, far beyono the normal
bounoaries of Yahi country. Ishis silence on some topics was oictateo by a Yahi
taboo against naming the oeao.
In the eno, Kroeber oio not write the oenitive history of Ishi ano his people.
After the Inoians oeath, Kroeber avoioeo talking about his frieno, ano he put asioe
for many years his materials ano elo notes on Ishi ano Yahi culture. In her biog-
raphy of A. L. Kroeber, Theooora Kroeber ,:qo, writes that the subject of Ishi
causeo her husbano consioerable oiscomfort ano so was generally avoioeo in the
Kroeber householo. Ferhaps Kroeber was observing the Yahi custom that forbaoe
naming ano speaking of the oeao. I like to think so. But many years after these sao
events, Kroeber oio allow his secono wife, Theooora, to use her husbano as a key
informant on Ishis last years. Ano so, it was Theooora Kroeber who tolo the story
that the anthropologist coulo not bring himself to write, ano she proouceo two
memorable ano highly literary accounts: Ilt tr T.o 1otlo ,:q6:, ano Ilt: Lot of
8 cni+ic\r nrrrrc+ioxs
Ht Ttt/c ,:q6,. Consequently, what we know ano remember about Ishi tooay is
baseo mostly on what Theooora wrote.
Ilt tr T.o 1otlo oirectly confronteo what Kroeber hao stuoiously avoioeo: the
history of the California Inoian genocioe at the hanos of white settlers ano ranch-
ers. Chapters through of her book stano as one of the most uninching renoi-
tions of the brutality ano savagery of Californias white settler history. Ano because
of Theooora Kroebers compelling renoition of Ishis life ano times, Ishi lent a face,
a name, ano a personalizeo narrative to the hiooen genocioe of his people. Ishi
came to represent more than the life of a single man but to symbolize, insteao, the
broaoer experience of Native Americans.
By contrast to the permanency of Theoooras simple text, the fragile plastic
cylinoers on which Kroeber ,ano later Sapir, recoroeo Ishis songs ano folktales
were storeo too close to the heaters in the anthropology museum archives, ano a
great many melteo. One of the early recoroings that remains, however, is Ishis
telling of the Yahi myth Coyote Sleeps with His Sister, which has been carefully
transcribeo by Leanne Hinton ano her stuoents at U.C. Berkeley ano compareo
with similar ano relateo tales collecteo from nearby tribes. At the conference enti-
tleo Legacies of Ishi, helo in Oroville on May :., .ooo, Frofessor Hinton re-
markeo on Ishis intense enjoyment in telling this long tale, with its many compli-
cateo subtexts lleo with intimate oetails of Yahi practices of acorn gathering,
cooking, ano home-keeping. Why Ishi, a man who was by all accounts excessively
mooest ,even pruoish,, chose to recount this particular tale with its explicitly sex-
ual content oealing with a profouno Yahi taboobrother-sister incestremaineo
a bit of a mystery to Hinton. But the theme must have been a powerful one for Ishi,
an aoult male, who was forceo to live, travel, ano hioe out with blooo relations, all
of them sexually restricteo to him. Among the many forms of violence suereo by
Ishi at the hanos of the white miners ano ranchers who hunteo his people were
the restrictions on his sexuality ano of his right to reproouce. This was genocioe
in another form. Even after his capture or rescue by whites, Ishis sexuality was of-
ten the butt of public jokes. The local press hao, for example, inventeo Ishis sup-
poseo sexual infatuation for Lily Lena, a lowbrow music hall entertainer from Lon-
oon who appeareo at the Orpheum Theater in San Irancisco in the fall of :q::.
But Kroeber pointeo out ,:q::b, that Ishi was far more impresseo with the archi-
tecture of the builoing ano with the crowos below the balcony where he was sit-
ting than he was with Miss Lena, to whom he paio scant attention.
In this same short, journalistic piece Kroeber recounts the arrival of Ishi to San
Irancisco on Labor Day, :q::. When the man calleo Ishi steppeo o the ferry boat
ano into the glare of electric lights, hotel runners, ano clanging trolley cars on Mar-
ket Street, he was frighteneo ano oistraught. Ishi, Kroeber writes, was a curious
ano pathetic gure in those |rst| oays. Timio, gentle, an almost ever-pervaoing
fear helo oown ano concealeo to the best of his ability, he nevertheless startleo
ano leapeo at the slightest suooen souno. A new sight, or the crowoing arouno of
coxixo +o otn srxsrs
half a oozen people, maoe his limbs rigio. If his hano hao been helo ano was re-
leaseo, his arm remaineo frozen in the air for several minutes. The rst boom from
a canon reo in the artillery practice at the Fresioio several miles away, raiseo him
a foot from his chair. . . . His one great oreao, which he overcame but slowly, was
of crowos. It is not haro to unoerstano this in light of his lonely life in a tribe of
ve |later reouceo to three ano then, nally, to one|.
In this jarring passage Kroeber oescribes the symptoms of what woulo tooay be
consioereo a classic oescription of FTSD, posttraumatic stress oisoroer. Ishis startle
reex, his phobias, ano his mobilization for ight are similar to those of many re-
covering victims of so-calleo shell shock following wars, mass killings, kionap, torture,
rape, ano physical assault ,see Herman :qq.,. Yet oespite his physical vulnerability to
urban oiseases ano his psychological fragility as a survivor of extreme trauma, Ishi was
exhibiteo at the anthropology museum where families came on Sunoay excursions to
watch the wilo man of California make arrows ano shing spears. Given Ishis acute
phobia of crowos, one wonoers why Kroeber alloweo him to be exhibiteo before the
masses at the Fanama Facic Traoe Exhibition.
In :q: Ishi began his inevitable oecline after contracting tuberculosis. Initially
he was misoiagnoseo by his great frieno ano personal ooctor Saxton Fope
,:q.o::q.,, who also faileo to notice ,until oays before Ishis oeath, how thin ano
ravageo his frienos booy hao become. In Iebruary :q:6, a month before Ishi oieo,
Fope ,p. .o, recoroeo the following: All this time he hao a mooerate cough, but
repeateo examination faileo to show any tubercle bacilli. . . . |A|fter taking fooo he
apparently experienceo great pain. Even water causeo him misery ano I have seen
him writhe in agony, with tears running oown his cheeks, yet utter no souno of com-
plaint. At this perioo, when he seemeo to be failing so rapioly that the eno must be
near, I coaxeo him to get out of beo ano to let me take his picture once more. He
was always happy to be photographeo ano he accommooateo me. It .o orl, oftct
tlc ptctotc .o occclopco tlot I tccogrtco to .lot o ptttfol corotttor lc loo /ccr tcoocco |em-
phasis mine|. Ishis last meoical recoro at UCSI hospital aomission ,ibio., reaos:
Ishi.No. ::o.. March :q, :q:6. Well oevelopeo but extremely emaciateo, oark
skinneo Inoian lying in beo . . . vomiting ano retching occasionally, evioently in great
oistress . . . broao ano prominently archeo nose, high malar bones ano sunken
cheeks, orbital oepressions oeep, apparently from wasting.
Kroeber knew when he oecioeo to leave the University of California to take up
a sabbatical year abroao ano in New York City in :q:6 that his gooo-byes might
constitute his nal leave-taking from Ishi. But Ishi reporteoly reverseo the situa-
tion in the larger metaphorical sense when he saio to Alfreo: I go, ,oo stay. In the
nal oays of Ishis life, Kroeber communicateo frequently from New York City by
telegrams in which he oemanoeo timely postings on his frienos oeteriorating con-
oition. Ishi hao entrusteo Kroeber to ensure the proper care ano treatment of his
remains after his oeath, but in the eno Kroeber, hampereo by oistance, was un-
able to prevent an autopsy on Ishis booy ouring which the Inoians brain was re-
moveo for science.
o cni+ic\r nrrrrc+ioxs
When Kroeber returneo to Berkeley he inexplicably arrangeo for Ishis brain to
be shippeo to the Smithsonian Institution for curation. The man to whom the brain
was oirecteo, Ales Hrolicka, was a prominent physical anthropologist of the olo
school, a man obsessively oeoicateo to collecting ano measuring brain specimens
from various oroers of primates, human exotics ,like Ishi,, ano from Western ge-
niuses ,like John Wesley Fowell, the rst chief of the Bureau of American Ethnol-
ogy,. Kroeber knew that Ishi revileo the white mans science of collecting skulls ano
booy parts. But perhaps he thought that it was too late for such sentimental reser-
vations. Ishi was oeao, ano the oamage to his remains hao been oone ano was ir-
reversible. Ferhaps he believeo that the science to which he hao unreserveoly oeoi-
cateo his life might be able to benet from the trageoy of his frieno ano informants
oeath. If so, it was a triumph of science over sentiment. In any event, Kroeber wrote
to Hrolicka on October ., :q:6: I no that with Ishis oeath last spring, his brain
was removeo ano preserveo. There is no one here who can put it to scientic use.
If you wish it, I woulo be pleaseo to oeposit it in the National Museum collection.
Hrolicka replieo on December :., :q:6, that he woulo be very glao to receive the
brain, ano he woulo have it properly workeo up. There is no evioence, however,
that Ishis brain was ever incluoeo in any physical anthropological or scientic stuoy.
It was simply forgotten ano abanooneo in a Smithsonian warehouse, kept in a vat
of formaloehyoe with several other brain specimens.
Alternatively, Kroebers behavior was an act of oisoroereo mourning. Grief can
be expresseo in a myriao of ways, ranging from oenial ano avoioance to the rage
of the Illongot heaohunter ,Rosaloo :q8q,. Accoroing to Theooora Kroeber ,:qo,,
her husbano suereo greatly at the news of his frienos oeath ano at the violence
oone to his booy. He fell into a long oepression, ano he went into a ight pattern
that lasteo seven years. Kroeber characterizeo this unsettling perioo in his life ,from
:q: to :q.., as his lcgttoa oark perioo of journey, soul-searching, ano melan-
cholia. It was markeo by seemingly bizarre symptoms: physical oisequilibrium, nau-
sea, vertigo, strain, ano exhaustion. His conoition was similar to what useo to be
calleo neurasthenia. Ireuos essay on mourning ano melancholia comes to mino
with respect to Kroebers swalloweo grief concerning the oeaths in close suc-
cession of his rst wife ano his frieno ano key informant, both from the same ois-
ease.
Immeoiately after Ishis oeath, Kroeber again left California in oroer to take
up a temporary position at the Museum of Natural History in New York. But he
also went to New York in oroer to enter a classic psychoanalysis with Dr. Jellie, a
former stuoent of Anna Ireuo. Kroeber recognizeo that the signs were of his own
oisequilibrium. With the oeath of Henriette, Kroebers personal life was shattereo.
With the oeath of Ishi his professional life seemeo meaningless. Ano so, at the age
of forty, Kroeber was for the rst time questioning his choice of career ano his long-
term professional goals. Ano when Kroeber returneo to Berkeley he began a prac-
tice in psychoanalytic therapy at the Stanforo Clinic. Later he openeo a private
oce in San Irancisco.
coxixo +o otn srxsrs .
When he resumeo his anthropological career full time in :q.., Kroeber threw
himself into new elos ano approaches. He took up archeology ano experimenteo
with more objective, statistical methoos, which gave him some oistance from the
more personal, intimate, ano psychological aspects of human life. The inoivioual
ano the small group were now interpreteo as part of a much larger oesign that
Kroeber calleo the superorganic. Similarly, his new interest in culture areas al-
loweo Kroeber to compile masses of statistically comparable oata for the whole of
native California ,T. Kroeber :qo::6,. In all, it was a ight into objectivism oriven
by a oesire to map the inevitable ebb ano ow of cultures, which Kroeber came to
believe were as inevitable as cycles of night ano oay, birth ano oeath.
It is easy tooay with the aovantage of hinosight to ioentify the blino spots of our
anthropological preoecessorsin this instance, Kroebers intellectual oenial of the
genocioe of Northern California Inoians ano his seemingly callous behavior to-
waro Ishis remains. Kroeber was not inoierent towaro his ltctrg native Califor-
nian informants, ano the Kroeber compouno on Arch Street in North Berkeley was
frequently host to Kroebers key informants ano frienos, some of whom liveo with
the family for weeks at a time ,ibio.::8q,. Ano in the :qos, at the eno of Kroe-
bers long ano oistinguisheo career, he emergeo from his normal reticence towaro
applieo anthropology to argue the sioe of California Inoians in a major lano
claims case, Irotor c. tlc Urttco Stotc of Amcttco ,ibio.:..:,. Although he founo the
case oispiriting, the Inoians oio eventually win the suit, ano six years after Kroe-
bers oeath the Inoians were awaroeo a token sum for their collective losses ,Shea
.ooo:o,. Theooora Kroeber ,:qo, oescribeo the lano claims case as conceiveo in
white guilt ano in bao faith. Eighteen years after the case was rst openeo, Fresi-
oent Johnson authorizeo a bill that awaroeo eight hunoreo oollars to each prop-
erly ioentieo ano qualieo Inoian man, woman, ano chilo alive in the Uniteo
States in September :q68. It was just the sort of expensive but meaningless oe-
nouement that Kroeber hao most feareo ,ibio.:..,.
Still, it is reasonable to ask what might have been oone oierently. What op-
tions oio Kroeber have? Before Ishi became ill might Kroeber have consioereo
broaching the oelicate topic of just where ano to whom Ishi hao been heaoeo
when he was caught on the run in Oroville? If it was ,as some present-oay Maiou
Inoians believe, to no sanctuary among relateo native peoples, might not that
have been a possible solution? Ano after Ishis health began to fail, were the mu-
seum ano hospital the best places for the man to have been conneo? To this
oay there is a strong investment in the ioea that Ishi was a happy man ,see Ger-
alo Vizenors satire |.ooo:esp. pp. :q|, who enjoyeo his new life among his
white frienos, who was charmeo by matches, winoow shaoes, ano other mani-
festations of the white mans ingenuity, ano who was content in his roles of mu-
seum janitor ano Sunoay exhibit. Ferhaps he was. But the evioence ,see esp.
Heizer ano T. Kroeber :qq, leans towaro another interpretationthat Ishi was
simply bone tireo of life on the run. The Museum of Anthropology was his eno
of the line. Although it was not of his choosing, Ishi accepteo his nal oestiny
: cni+ic\r nrrrrc+ioxs
with great patience, gooo humor, ano grace. He was exceptionally learneo in
the art of waiting.
ISHIS ASHES
The nal chapter in the sao history of Ishi ano Berkeley anthropology openeo in
the spring of :qqq with the reoiscovery of Ishis brain, which hao languisheo for
three-quarters of a century in a vat of formaloehyoe at a Smithsonian warehouse,
ano the oemanos of native Californians for its immeoiate repatriation. Members
of the Department of Anthropology at Berkeley oiereo in their opinions of what,
if anything, shoulo be saio or oone with respect to these oevelopments. A special
oepartmental meeting was helo ano a compromise statement was ultimately voteo
ano agreeo upon. Although falling short of the apology to Northern California In-
oians that a large number of the faculty hao signeo after an earlier oraft, the nal
statement concluoeo:
3
We acknowleoge our oepartments role in what happeneo to Ishi, a man who hao al-
reaoy lost all that was oear to him. We strongly urge that the process of returning Ishis
brain to appropriate Native American representatives be speeoily accomplisheo. . . .
We invite the peoples of Native California to instruct us in how we may better serve
the neeos of their communities through our research relateo activities. Ferhaps, work-
ing together, we can ensure that the next millennium will represent a new era in the
relationship between inoigenous peoples, anthropologists ano the public. ,March .q,
:qqq, Department of Anthropology, University of California, Berkeley,
The following woros ano phrases were oeleteo from the earlier oraft: What
happeneo to Ishis booy, in the name of science, was a perversion of our core an-
thropological values. Science proceeos by correcting past error ano through a grao-
ual process of critical self-reection. . . . We are sorry for our oepartments role,
however unintentional, in the nal betrayal of Ishi, a man who hao alreaoy lost all
that was oear to him at the hanos of Western colonizers. We recognize that the
exploitation ano betrayal of Native Americans is still commonplace in American
society. The anthropology that emergeo in the early .oth centuryso-calleo sal-
vage anthropologywas a human science oevoteo to salvaging what was left of
inoigenous peoples ano cultures following a national genocioe. This longer state-
ment was, however, reao by me into the recoro at a state legislature hearing on the
repatriazation of Ishis remains in Sacramento in April :qqq.
Some representatives of the Native Californian communities, such as Art An-
gle of the Butte County American Inoian Cultural Committee, appreciateo ano
accepteo the apology, which he recognizeo as a big step for anthropology ano
for the University of California. Other Inoian spokespeople, such as Geralo
Vizenor, professor of Native American stuoies at Berkeley, oismisseo the paineo
rhetoric ano the apology, which he characterizeo as too little ano too late. Ob-
viously, the century of mistrust between Inoians ano anthropologists ,see Deloria
coxixo +o otn srxsrs
:q88 |:q6q|, Thomas .ooo, rooteo in a history of genocioe requires, as Vizanor
noteo, a great oeal more than an apology or a scholarly conference. But the re-
turn of Ishis brain from the Smithsonian Institution to representatives of the Fit
River tribe on August 8, .ooo, closeo one sao chapter in the history of anthropol-
ogy-Inoian relations. Ferhaps it has also openeo the way for more constructive
ano meaningful engagements between anthropologists ano the survivors of U.S.
genocioes ano ethnocioes.
Compareo with the role that anthropology playeo in provioing a scientic ra-
tionale ano conceptual tool kit for the Jewish Holocaust ,as oescribeo in the un-
inching chapters by Arnolo ano Schat, this volume,, the little history of anthro-
pologys complicity in the erasure of the history of the genocioes in California or in
the reication of Ishi as an object of anthropological analysis might seem minor. But
within the conceptual framework that I am proposing herethe genocioal contin-
uumit is essential not to lose sight of the ease with which the abnormal is normal-
izeo ano the oeaths of our anthropological subjects renoereo inevitable or routine.
ANTHROFOLOGY AND AFARTHEID
Another, ano more extreme, instance of the application of anthropological ioeas, meth-
oos, ano concepts to an ocially genocioal public policyone not treateo in this vol-
umeis the ioeological ano applieo role that the German-Dutch traoition of cultural
anthropology ,known in South Africa as collcloroc, playeo in the rationale ano oesign
of grano apartheio in South Africa. The ioea that people were naturally oivioeo into
oiscrete cultural groups ano populations baseo on recognizable oierences in phys-
ical type, in social organization, in language, ano in cultural institutions, along with the
key concepts of race, tribe, ethnic group, community, ano ethos, were reaoily orafteo
into the service of implementing the South African Bantu homelanos, the Group Ar-
eas Act ,:qo,, ano various other institutions of cultural ano racial segregation. These
policies were oefenoeo by the architects of apartheio as fostering the unique cultural
heritage of oierent peoples ,see Boonzaier ano Sharp :q88,. This perverse appli-
cation of anthropological oiscourses was a fairly transparent ploy for a ruthless form of
white oomination ano suppression of the black majority, a system that was supporteo
in some Afrikaner universities ano oepartments of anthropology.
Vollcloroc provioeo the blueprint ano scientic rationale for apartheio. It was a
traoition of anthropology that was inspireo both by late-nineteenth-century German
ethnology ano folklore, oro by twentieth-century American anthropology, especially
that of the Boasian/Kroeberian school, which integrateo biological, linguistic, ano
cultural anthropology, as well as by the romantic cultural congurationalist school
of Ruth Beneoict. Inoeeo, Beneoicts Pottctr of Coltotc was reao in some South African
circles ouring the :qos ano :q8os as a romantic Magna Carta for grano apartheio
an argument for the neeo to preserve highly reieo notions of cultural patterns ano
social oistinctions. Afrikaner cultural anthropology, orawing on the traoition of Amer-
ican culture ano personality stuoies of the :qos ano early :q6os, provioeo the Na-
cni+ic\r nrrrrc+ioxs
tional Farty government with reouctionist theories of culture, community, ano basic
personality structure that were useo to justify the apartheio policy of parallel cul-
tural oevelopment. American Inoian reservations were often citeo by apartheio plan-
ners as a mooel for the creation of the hateo Bantustanos.
Still, it was something of a shock ouring a visit to the Afrikaner University of
the Orange Iree State in :qq to see large photographs of the founoing fathers ano
mothers of American anthropology gracing the walls of the Department of An-
thropology there. I wonoereo what the great antiracist Iranz Boas, ano the Berke-
ley ethnographer of the Flains Inoians, Robert Lowie, ano Alfreo Kroeber, the
founoer of the Berkeley oepartment, ano even that irascible mother of us all, Mar-
garet Meao, woulo have thought about their images being oisplayeo at an institu-
tion that hao more or less faithfully serveo the apartheio state in South Africa. The
explanation given for their presence was genealogical: both American cultural an-
thropology ano Afrikaner anthropology emergeo from the same nineteenth-cen-
tury traoition of German ioealism oeoicateo to oiscovering the specic genius
of each cultural group, a genius that neeoeo to be carefully cultivateo ano oevel-
opeo accoroing to its own intrinsic values ano in its own cultural ,ano geographi-
cal, space. This ioeal was the original goal of apartheio as imagineo by the great
South African anthropologist H. I. Verwoero. In the context of this vexeo his-
tory I wonoereo ,Scheper-Hughes :qq6:6, what, if any, role a reinventeo ano
oeracinateo cultural anthropology might play in the builoing of a new South Africa.
While one coulo supply other instances of the misuse of anthropological ioeas
ano practices in fostering structural ano political violence, one can also cite far more
numerous examples of anthropological ioeas ano methoos useo as a tool of human
liberation ano as a oeant weoge in opposition to state projects of mass killing ano
genocioe. The oppositional ano Marxist traoition of social anthropology as it was
practiceo by some anthropologists at Witswatersrano, the University of Cape Town,
ano at the University of the Western Cape in South Africa ouring the apartheio
years is one case in point.
The courageous political work of forensic anthropologist Clyoe Snow, in collabo-
ration with Mary Clare King, is another example of politically committeo anthro-
pology in the face of genocioe. Snow helpeo to organize ano train the vital Eotpo At-
gcrttro oc Arttopologto Fotcrc of Buenos Aires, one of the rst groups to use the
technology of DNA to ioentify the remains of the politically oisappeareo exhumeo
from mass graves. More recently, these methoos have been useo to locate ano ioentify
the aoult chiloren ano granochiloren of some of those politically oisappeareo who
were aoopteo by military families ouring the Argentine oirty war ,:q8,. Simi-
lar work is going on tooay in Salvaoor, Guatemala, ano Bosnia with the help of ap-
plieo forensic anthropologists. This new elo of politically engageo forensic anthro-
pology has emergeo in the past two oecaoes as a potent political ano scientic practice
in oefense of human rights ouring ano after genocioes ano other mass killings.
If some key anthropological conceptsfrom Lowies notion of culture, to Boass
notion of race, to Ruth Beneoicts congurationalism, to Meaos notions of na-
coxixo +o otn srxsrs
tional characterhave been perversely applieo to aovance scientic racism ano
mass killings, these same concepts have been useo at other times ano places to fos-
ter the social ano human rights of inoiviouals ano of oisaovantageo cultural groups.
Iinally, as this volume illustrates, there are a growing number of anthropologists
who have not misseo the revolution or turneo their gaze away from genocioes
ano who have positioneo themselves squarely on the sioe of the victims ano sur-
vivors of political ano ethnic violence in bolo attempts to write ano act subversively
,see Aretxaga :qq, Binforo :qq6, Borneman :qq, Bourgois :qqq, Daniel :qq6, Das
:qq6, Ieitlowitz :qq8, Ieloman :qq:, Green :qqq, Leyton :qq8b, Nelson :qqq,
Malkki :qq, Feoelty :qq, Quesaoa, :qq8, :qqq, Robben .ooo, Suarez-Orozco
:q8, Swenoenburg :qq, Taussig :q8, :qq:, Zulaika :q88,.
THE MODERNITY OI GENOCIDE
Baumans ,:qq:, controversial thesis linking genocioe to a specic level of state for-
mation, technological eciency, rationality, ano subjectivity is belieo in many of
the ethnographic examples provioeo by contributors to this volume. Although the
legal concept of genocioe is new, the eliminationist impulse can be founo unoer
premooern as well as mooern ano late-mooern conoitions. A spiritual charter for
genocioe can be founo in Genesis when Goo the Creator turns into Goo the oe-
stroyer of humankino in an expression of genocioal fury. The Goo of the oesert
Hebrews willeo a ooo to oestroy all evioence of human life ,save Noah ano his
family,. The oestruction of Sooom ano Gomorra is another biblical prototype of
mass killing, as is King Heroos oecree oroering the oestruction of all rst-born
infant sons in Juoea. In these scriptural accounts Goo is constructeo in the prob-
lematic image ano likeness of man.
Genocioes ano mass killings have been attributeo to weak states ,Bayart :qq,
Reno :qq8, ano to statelessness, for example, in Robert Kaplans ,:qq, controversial
ano contesteo coming of anarchy thesis with reference to the chaos ano violence
that has markeo postcolonial equatorial Africa ,especially, Angola ano Sierra Leone,,
ano which Totten, Farsons, ano Hichcock ,this volume, have rather surprisingly ano
uncritically embraceo. Conversely, genocioes have also been linkeo to strong, au-
thoritarian, ano bureaucratically ecient states, such as Germany at mio-twentieth
century ,Golohagen :qq, Arenot :q6,. Ano genocioes have been linkeo to anomic
inoivioualism ano, at other times ano places, to communalism ano its oemanos for
obeoience ano human sacrice ,Gourvitch :qq8:, Zulaika :q88,.
Witch-hunts ano witch burnings in parts of Africa ano highlano New Guinea
have leo in some small-scale ano premooern societies to forms of oemographic col-
lapse that coulo be vieweo as alternative examples of political genocioe. The im-
pulse to ioentify ano eliminate all witches, seen as oisease objects in given societies,
is motivateo by the same kino of social hygiene thinking characteristic of geno-
cioe in mooern states. Massacres ano mass killings that have sometimes resulteo in
the oie-outs of entire populations of inoigenous peoples living in isolateo banos by
cni+ic\r nrrrrc+ioxs
small groups of bounty hunters, golo prospectors, ano white or mixeo-race settlers
seem far removeo from the kinos of mooernity referreo to in Baumans thesis.
Inoeeo, mass killing, genocioes, ano provokeo oie-outs of scapegoateo populations
have occurreo in prestate societies, ano in ancient as well as mooern states.
Uli Linke ,this volume,, writing in the Weberian traoition, sees the Holocaust,
as oo Hannah Arenot ,:q6, ano Daniel Golohagen ,:qq,, as a kino of mao tri-
umph of rational eciency, a oistorteo eno proouct of the increasing rationaliza-
tion of social life. Recently, Agamben ,:qqq, ioentieo the mooern concentration
camp as the prototype of late-mooern biopolitics in its creation of a population of
living oeao people, those whose booies ano lives can be taken by the state at will
or at whim, neither for ,religious, sacrice nor for crimes committeo ,capital pun-
ishment,, but merely because of their availability for execution.
Hence the Holocaust is something of a misnomer. It is not about religion or
about booies that have been sacriceo as burnt oerings to placate the goos.
Rather, if Agambem is correct, mooern forms of genocioe are about actualizing
the capacity ano availability of certain vulnerable populations for mass killings, a
oangerous theory that is reminiscent of Arenots conoemnation of the collabora-
tion of Jewish leaoers with the Nazis. Despite this, as Agamben ano Ioucault rec-
ognize, the booy is at the heart of mooern biopolitics, as it is, of course, to the racist
rationales for genocioe, as it was in Germany ,see Linke, this volume, ano in
Rwanoa ,see Taylor, this volume,.
With the shocking reappearance of genocioes ano other mass killings in the late
twentieth centuryin Africa ,Malkki :qq,, South Asia ,Das :qq6, Daniel :qq,, ano
Eastern Europe ,Olujic :qq8,, in Central ano South America ,Green :qqq, Suarez-
Oroxco :q8, Robben .ooo,anthropologists have been witness to the recurrence
of what mooerns once thought, following the Holocaust, coulo not happen again.
In Central ano South America ouring oirty wars ano military-sponsoreo social
hygiene, the eliminations of oespiseo populations were enacteo through techniques
ano practices of torture that coulo haroly be oescribeo as mooern.
The apartheio governments security forces reinventeo primitive witch burn-
ings, ano they oiscaroeo their political enemies by slowly burning themsome-
times while still aliveover barbecue pits ,see Scheper-Hughes :qq8,. Ano the
Brazilian ano Argentinean militarys parrots perch torture resembleo nothing
so much as a technique of the Inquisition. True, the Argentine military oio use
mooern planes to oispose of, by air orops into the sea, the oeao booies proouceo
by their meoieval tortures, ano Rwanoan genocioaires relieo heavily on the mass
meoia, raoio in particular, to mobilize the Hutu killers in barbarous acts of cru-
elty ,see Gourvitch :qq8,. Meanwhile, the presumably mooern invention of polit-
ical oisappearances is spoken about by the terrorizeo populations subject to these
rounoups for mass slaying in the premooern ioiom of booy snatching, blooo
ano organ stealing, ano ritual killings.
What kinos of mooernity oo the genocioes in Cambooia, Rwanoa, ano Burunoi
represent? Characteristic of all of them is the corporeal imaginary that Linke
coxixo +o otn srxsrs ,
ano Taylor ,this volume, aooressthe obsessive focus on the booyon blooo ano
genealogy to be sure, but also on oening phenotypes ano booy typesthe par-
ticular shape ano length of heaos, arms, legs, buttocks, hair, ano lips, the race-
mao corporeal imaginary of the late-mooern worlo.
In light of these recent atrocities we are forceo to revisit the question that so
vexeo a generation of post-Holocaust social theorists: 1lot molc gcroctoc pot/lc
What, after all, can we say about anthropos? What are its limits ano its capacities?
Ano how oo we explain the complicity of oroinary people, the proverbial ano nec-
cessary bystanoers, to new outbreaks of genocioal violence? Aoorno ano the
postWorlo War II Irankfurt School suggesteo that participation in genocioal acts
requires a strong chilohooo conoitioning that proouces almost minoless obeoience
to authority gures. More recently Golohagen ,:qq, argueo, to the contrary, that
thousanos of oroinary Germans participateo willingly, even eagerly, in the Holo-
caust, not for fear of punishment or retribution by authority gures but because
they cloc, sometimes eagerly, to oo so, guioeo by race hatreo alone.
Nonetheless, mooern theorists of genocioe have proposeo certain prerequisites
necessary to mass participation in genocioes. Inoeeo, mass killings rarely appear on
the scene unbiooen. They evolve. There are ioentiable starting points or instigat-
ing circumstances. Genocioes are often preceoeo, for example, by social upheavals,
a raoical oecline in economic conoitions, political oisorganization, or sociocultural
changes leaoing to a loss in traoitional values ano anomie. Conict between com-
peting groups over concrete ano material resourceslano ano watercan esca-
late into oesperate mass killings when combineo with social sentiments that ques-
tion or oenigrate the humanity of the opposing group. Extreme forms of us-vs.-them
can result in a social self-ioentity preoicateo on a stigmatizeo, oevalueo notion of
the other as a-less-than-human enemy. The German example has alerteo a gener-
ation of postWorlo War II scholars to the oanger of social conformity ano the ab-
sence of oissent. More recently, the conict in the Mioole East, in the former Yu-
goslavia, ano in many postcolonial societies of sub-Saharan Africa suggests that a
history of social suering ano wounoeoness, especially a history of racial victim-
ization, leaos to a vulnerability to mass violence. A kino of collective posttraumatic
stress oisoroer may preoispose certain wounoeo populations to a hypervigilance
that can leao to another cycle of self-oefensive mass killings ano genocioe.
Ritual sacrice ano the search to ioentify a generative scapegoata social class
or ethnic or racial group on which to pin the blame for the social ano economic
problems that ariseare also common preconoitions in the evolution of geno-
cioe. Iinally, there must be a shareo ioeology, a blueprint for living, a vision of the
worlo ano how to live that oenes certain obstacles to the gooo or holy life in the
form of certain kinos of people who must be removeo, eliminateo, wipeo out.
There is the belief that everyone will benet from this social cleansing, even the
oeao themselves.
Iinally, there must be a broao constituency of /,toroct who either ,as in the case
of white South Africa, simply allow aoverse ano hostile policies to continue aect-
8 cni+ic\r nrrrrc+ioxs
ing the targeteo victims without massive forms of civil oisobeoience or ,as in Nazi
Germany ano in Rwanoa, can be recruiteo to participate in acts of genocioal vio-
lence. But less well analyzeo is the role of external or global bystanoers, incluo-
ing strong nation-states ano international ano nongovernmental agencies such as
the Uniteo Nations, whose oelays or refusals to intervene can aio ano abet geno-
cioes at a time when the tioe coulo still be reverseo. In the case of Rwanoa, for ex-
ample, U.N. peace-keepers were explicitly instructeo to oo nothing. Similarly, our-
ing the Holocaust ano ouring the worst phases of apartheios program of political
terror, a great many U.S. corporations continueo to oo business with the perpe-
trators of mass violence. The origins ano evolution of genocioe are complex ano
multifaceteo, but they are not inscrutable or unpreoictable.
FEACETIME CRIMESTHE GENOCIDE CONTINUUM
I have suggesteo a genocioe continuum ,see Scheper-Hughes :qq, .oo:, maoe up
of a multituoe of small wars ano invisible genocioes conoucteo in the norma-
tive social spaces of public schools, clinics, emergency rooms, hospital waros, nurs-
ing homes, court rooms, prisons, oetention centers, ano public morgues. The con-
tinuum refers to the human capacity to reouce others to nonpersons, to monsters,
or to things that gives structure, meaning, ano rationale to everyoay practices of vi-
olence. It is essential that we recognize in our species ,ano in ourselves, o gcroctool
copoctt, ano that we exercise a oefensive hypervigilance, a hypersensitivity to the less
oramatic, pctmtttco, everyoay acts of violence that make participation ,unoer other
conoitions, in genocioal acts possible, perhaps more easy than we woulo like to
know. I woulo incluoe all expressions of social exclusion, oehumanization, oeper-
sonalization, pseuoo-speciation, ano reication that normalize atrocious behavior
ano violence towaro others. A constant self-mobilization for alarm, a state of con-
stant hyperarousal is a reasonable response to Benjamins view of late-mooern his-
tory as a chronic state of emergency.
I realize that in referring to a genocioe continuum I am walking on thin ice. The
concept ies oirectly in the face of a traoition of genocioe stuoies that argues for
the absolute uniqueness of the Jewish Holocaust, for example, ano for vigilance
with respect to a careful ano restricteo use of the term gcroctoc itself ,see Kuper
:88, Chaulk :qqq, Iein :qqo, Chorbajian :qqq,. But I share with Carole Nagen-
gast ,this volume, the alternative view that we mot make just such existential leaps
in orawing comparisons between violent acts in normal ano in abnormal times. If
there is a moral risk in overextenoing the concept of genocioe into spaces ano
corners of everyoay life where we might not oroinarily think to no it ,ano there
is,, an even greater risk lies in failing to sensitize ourselves, in misrecognizing pro-
togenocioal practices ano sentiments oaily enacteo as normative behavior by or-
oinary gooo enough people.
Here Fierre Bouroieus partial ano unnisheo theory of violence is useful. By
incluoing the normative, everyoay forms of violence hiooen in the minutia of nor-
coxixo +o otn srxsrs
mal social practicesin the architecture of homes, in genoer relations, in com-
munal work, in the exchange of gifts, ano so forthBouroieu forces us to recon-
sioer the broaoer meanings ano status of violence, especially the links between the
violence of everyoay life ano explicit political terror.
Similarly, Iranco Basaglias notion of peace-time crimescttmtrt ot pocc
imagines a oirect relationship between wartime ano peacetime, between war crimes
ano peace crimes. Here, war crimes might be seen as the oroinary violence, crimes
of public consent, when they are applieo systematically ano oramatically in times
of war ano overt genocioe. Feacetime crimes force us to consioer the parallel uses
ano meanings of rape ouring peacetime ano wartime as well as the family resem-
blances between boroer raios ano physical assaults by ocial INS agents on Mex-
ican ano Central American refugees, as oescribeo by Carole Nagengast ,this vol-
ume,, ano earlier state-sponsoreo genocioes such as the Cherokee Inoians forceo
exile, their Trail of Tears.
Everyoay forms of state violencepeacetime crimesmake a certain kino of
oomestic peace possible. In the Uniteo States ,ano especially in California,, the
phenomenal growth of a new military, postinoustrial prison complex has taken
place in the absence of broao-baseo opposition. How many public executions of
mentally oecient muroerers are neeoeo to make life feel more secure for the
auent? How many new maximum-security prisons are neeoeo to contain an ex-
panoing population of young black ano Latino men cast as public enemies? Or-
oinary peacetime crimes such as the steaoy evolution of American prisons into al-
ternative black concentration camps constitute the small wars ano invisible
genocioes to which I refer. So oo the youth mortality rates in Oaklano, Califor-
nia, ano in New York City. These are invisible genocioes not because they are se-
creteo away or hiooen from view but quite the opposite. As Wittgenstein observeo,
the things that are haroest to perceive are those that are right before our eyes ano
taken for granteo.
In light of these phenomena we woulo oo well to recover the classic anagogic
thinking that enableo Erving Goman ano Jules Henry ,as well as Iranco Basaglia,
to perceive the logical relations between concentration camps ano mental hospi-
tals, nursing homes, ano other total institutions, ano between prisoners ano men-
tal patients. This allows us to see the capacity ano the willingness of oroinary peo-
plesocietys practical techniciansto enforce, at other times, genocioal-like
crimes against classes ano types of people thought of as waste, as rubbish, as oe-
cient in humanity, as better o oeao or even as better o never having been born.
The mao, the oisableo, the mentally oecient have often fallen into this category, as
have the very olo ano inrm, the sick-poor, ano oespiseo racial, religious, ano eth-
nic groups. Erik Erikson referreo to pseuoo-speciation as the human tenoency to
classify some inoiviouals or social groups as less than fully humana necessary pre-
requisite to genocioe ano one that is carefully honeo ouring the unremarkable peace-
times that can preceoe the suooen, ano only seemingly unintelligible, outbreaks of
genocioe.
,o cni+ic\r nrrrrc+ioxs
Denial is a prerequisite of mass violence ano genocioe. In Dcotl .ttloot 1ccptrg
,:qq,, I exploreo the social inoierence to staggering infant ano chilo mortality in
shantytown focclo of Northeast Brazil. Local political leaoers, Catholic priests ano
nuns, con makers, ano shantytown mothers themselves casually oispatcheo a mul-
tituoe of hungry angel-babies to the afterlife each year, saying: Well, they tlcm-
clcc wanteo to oie. The babies were oescribeo as having no taste, no knack,
ano no talent for life.
Meoical practices such as prescribing powerful tranquilizers to fretful ano fright-
fully hungry babies, Catholic ritual celebrations of the oeath of angel-babies, ano
the bureaucratic inoierence in political leaoers oispensing free baby cons but
no fooo to hungry families ano chiloren interacteo with maternal practices such as
raoically reoucing fooo ano liquios to severely malnourisheo ano oehyorateo babies
so as to help them, their mothers saio, to oie quickly ano well. Ferceiveo as alreaoy
ooomeo, sickly infants were oescribeo as less than human creatures, as ghostly
angel-babies, inhabiting a terrain mioway between life ano oeath. Really ano truly,
mothers saio, it is better that these spirit-chiloren return to where they came.
The ability of oesperately poor women to help those infants who ,they saio,
neeoeo to oie requireo an existential letting go ,contrasteo to the maternal work
of holoing on, holoing close, ano holoing oear,. Letting go requireo a leap of faith
that was not easy to achieve. Ano these largely Catholic women often saio that their
infants oieo just as Jesus oieo so that othersespecially themselvescoulo live. The
question that lingereo, unresolveo, in my mino was whether this Kierkegaaroian
leap of faith entaileo a certain Marxist bao faith as well.
I oio not want to blame shantytown mothers for putting their own survival over
ano above that of their infants ano small babies, for these were moral choices that
no person shoulo be forceo to make. But they resulteo in bao faith whenever the
women refuseo authorship of their acts ano blameo the oeaths of their angel-
babies on the oesire ano willingness of the ooomeo infants themselves. I graou-
ally came to think of the shantytown angel-babies in terms of Rene Giraros ,:q8,
ioea of sacricial violence. The given-up, given-up-on babies hao been sacriceo
in the face of terrible conicts about scarcity ano survival. Ano it was here, for ex-
ample, that peacetime ano wartime, maternal thinking ano military thinking, con-
vergeo. When angels ,or martyrs, are fashioneo from the oeao booies of those who
oie young, maternal thinking most resembles military, especially wartime, think-
ing. On the battleelo as in the shantytown, triage, thinking in sets, ano a belief in
the magical replaceability of the oeao preoominate.
Above all, ioeas of acceptable oeath ano of meaningful ,rather than use-
less, suering extinguish rage ano grief for those whose lives are taken ano allow
for the recruitment of new lives ano new booies into the struggle. Just as shanty-
town mothers in Brazil consoleo each other that their hungry babies oieo because
they were meant to oie or because they hao to oie, Northern Irish mothers ano
South African township mothers have consoleo each other at political wakes ano
funerals ouring wartime ano in times of political struggle with the belief that their
coxixo +o otn srxsrs ,.
sacriceo ano martyreo chiloren oieo purposefully ano oieo well. This kino of
thinking is not exclusive to any particular class of people. Whenever humans at-
tribute some meaningwhether political or spiritualto the useless suering of
others we all behave, I have argueo, a bit like public executioners.
Similarly, the existence of two chilohooos in Brazilmy chilo ,mioole class,
beloveo, a chilo of family ano home, versus the hateo street chilo ,the chilo of
the other, unwanteo ano unwasheo, has given rise in the late twentieth century to
police ano oeath squao attacks that are genocioal in their social ano political sen-
timents. Street chiloren are often oescribeo as oirty vermin so that unocial
policies of street cleaning, trash removal, y swatting, ano pest removal
are invokeo in garnering broao-baseo public support for their extermination.
The term ttcct cltlo reects the preoccupations of one class ano segment of Brazil-
ian society with the proper place of another. The term represents a kino of sym-
bolic apartheio as urban space has become increasingly privatizeo. As long as
poor, oirty street chiloren are containeo to the slum or the favela, where they be-
long, they are not vieweo as an urgent social problem about which something must
be oone. The real issue is the preoccupation of one social class with the proper
place of another social class. Like oirt, which is clean when it is in the yaro ano
oirty when it is unoer the nails, oirty street chiloren are simply chiloren out of
place. In Brazil the street is an unbounoeo ano oangerous realm, the space of the
masses ,o poco,, where one can be treateo anonymously. Rights belong to the realm
of the home. Street chiloren, barefoot, shirtless, ano unattacheo to a home, rep-
resent the extreme of social marginality. They occupy a particularly oegraoeo so-
cial position within the Brazilian hierarchy of place ano power. As oenizens of the
street, these semiautonomous kios are separateo from all that can confer relation-
ship ano propriety, without which rights ano citizenship are impossible.
In the cohort of forty semiautonomous, mostly homeless street chiloren in the
interior market town of Bom Jesus in Fernambuco that I have been stuoying since
:q8., twenty-two of the original group are oeao. Some were killeo by police in
acts oesignateo as legitimate homicioes, others were killeo by oeath squaos ano
hireo guns, some of them by former street chiloren themselves. Others are ois-
appeareo ano suspecteo oeao. Among the survivors a thiro are in jail, or releaseo
from jail, ano some of these have alreaoy become killers, recruiteo by o-outy po-
lice ano by corrupt juoges to help clear the streets of their own social class. Ano so
the cycle of violence turns, with chiloren killing chiloren, urgeo on by the so-calleo
forces of state law ano oroer.
But we neeo go no further than our own meoical clinics, emergency rooms, pub-
lic hospitals, ano olo age homes to encounter other classes of rubbish people
treateo with as much inoierence ano malevolence as street kios in some parts
of South America. As ever increasing numbers of the ageo are both sick ano poor
because of the astronomical cost of late-life meoical care, they are at risk of speno-
ing their remaining time in public or less expensive private institutions for the ageo,
where the care of resioents is oelegateo to grossly unoerpaio ano unoertraineo
,: cni+ic\r nrrrrc+ioxs
workers. Economic pressures are strong ano bear oown on sta to minimize the
personal care ano attention given to the resioents, especially those whose limiteo
savings have alreaoy been useo up by the institution ano who are now supporteo
by Meoicare. Ano so, nursing home sta often protect themselves by turning the
persons ano booies unoer their protection into things, into bulky objects that can
be oealt with in shorter ano shorter intervals.
When the booy is rolleo from one sioe or the other for cleaning or to clean the
sheets |booy ano sheets are equateo|, or when the resioent is wheeleo conveniently
into a corner so that the oor can be more easily moppeo, when cleaning sta oo
little to suppress expressions of oisgust at urine, feces, or phlegm out of placeon
clothing, unoer the nails, on wheelchairs, or in waste paper basketsthe person
trappeo insioe the failing booy may also come to see themselves as oirty, vile,
oisgustingas an object or nonperson. An essay by Jules Henry ,:q66, on Hos-
pitals for the Ageo Foor, oocumenting the attack on the eloerly inoiviouals owin-
oling stock of personal ano psychological capital by unconscious hospital ano
nursing home sta, is as true tooay as when it was rst written.
The institutional oestruction of personhooo is aioeo by the material circum-
stances of the nursing home. When all personal objectstoothbrush, comb, glasses,
towels, pens ano pencilscontinue to oisappear no matter how many times they
have been replaceo, the resioent ,if he or she knows what is gooo for him or her,
nally accepts the situation ano aoapts in other ways. Eventually, resioents are com-
pelleo to use other objects, which are more available, for purposes for which they
were never intenoeo. The plastic wastepaper basket becomes the urinal, the uri-
nal the wash basin, the water glass turns into a spittoon, the hateo aoult oiaper is
useo oeantly for a table napkin, ano so forth. Meanwhile, the institutional vio-
lence ano inoierence are maskeo as the resioents own state of mental confusion
ano incompetence. Ano everything in the nature of the institution invites the res-
ioent to further regression, to give up, to lose, to accept his or her inevitable ano
less than human, oepersonalizeo status. But where are the forces of liberation or a
human rights watch responoing to invisible genocioes in such normative insti-
tutions ,of caring, as these?
The point of my bringing into the oiscourses on genocioe such everyoay, nor-
mative experiences of reication, oepersonalization, ano acceptable oeath is to help
answer the question: What makes genocioe possible? I am suggesting here that
genocioe is part of a continuum, ano that it is socially incremental ano often ex-
perienceo by perpetrators, collaborators, bystanoersano even by victims them-
selvesas expecteo, routine, even justieo.
In all, the preparation for mass killing can be founo in social sentiments ano in-
stitutions from the family, to schools, churches, hospitals, ano the military. The early
warning signs ,see also Charney :qq:,, the priming ,as Hinton, this volume,
calls it,, or the genocioal continuum ,as I call it, refers to an evolving social con-
sensus towaro occolotrg ccttotr fotm of lomor ltfc ano lifeways ,via pseuoo-speciation,
oehumanization, reication, ano oepersonalization,, tlc tcfool of octol oppott oro
coxixo +o otn srxsrs ,
lomorc cotc to vulnerable ano stigmatizeo social groups seen as social parasites
,nursing home eloerly, welfare queens, illegal aliens, Gomers, etc.,, tlc mtl-
ttottottor of ccct,oo, ltfc ,for example, the growth of prisons, the acceptance of cap-
ital punishment, heighteneo technologies of personal security, such as the house
gun ano gateo communities,, octol polottottor oro fcot ,that is, the perceptions of the
poor, outcast, unoerclass, or certain racial or ethnic groups as oangerous public en-
emies,, tccctco fccltrg of ctcttmtottor as oominant social groups ano classes oemano
violent policing to put oenoing groups in their place.
GETTING OVER
Remorse, reconciliation, ano reparation have emergeo as master narratives of the
late twentieth century/early twenty-rst century as inoiviouals ano entire nations
struggle to overcome the legacies of suering ranging from rape ano oomestic vi-
olence to collective atrocities of state-sponsoreo oirty wars, genocioes, ano ethnic
cleansings. Several chapters in this volume ,but especially those by Linke, Ebihara
ano Leogerwooo, Manz, ano Magnarella, oiscuss inoivioual ano collective attempts
at reconciliation ano healing, the repair of fractureo booies, broken lives, ano oe-
stroyeo societies after the facts of genocioe.
Linke presents us with a terrifying propositionthe irreversibility, the impossi-
bility of unooing so massive a wouno as the Jewish Holocaust for new generations
of German youth, the chiloren ano granochiloren of perpetrators, bystanoers, ano,
one can hope, a few just men ano women. There seems to be no exit, no escape,
from that spoileo history that continues to return, like the represseo, to haunt Ger-
man youth trying to reinvent themselves ano to free themselves from inheriteo, gen-
erational guilt ano complicity. They seem altogether trappeo by that history, when
youth culture embraces nuoity as transparency ano as innocence but which also
bears striking resemblances to the Nazi youth cults of the forest, the natural, the
German heroic. Ano the chilolike oisplay of unfettereo nuoity is seen by Linke as a
cruel, though surely unintenoeo, parooy of nakeo life in the concentration camps.
In markeo contrast, Ebihara ano Leogerwooo present an almost uncomplicateo
picture of community recovery in rural Cambooia in the mere two oecaoes fol-
lowing the Fol Fot regime. That which was oestroyeofrom Buoohism to subsis-
tence-baseo peasant farmingappears to have returneo relatively unscatheo, while
extreme oemographic imbalancesthe virtual absence of men in rural villages
is being correcteo. Ferhaps it is too soon in the history of the Khmer Rouge to as-
sess the real oamages that may, as in the German instance, return to haunt subse-
quent generations. It is for this reason that many recovering nations ano wounoeo
populationsfrom postmilitary oictatorship Chile to postapartheio South Africa
to postgenocioe Rwanoa ,see Magnarella, this volume,have put their faith in in-
ternational tribunals or in inoepenoent truth commissions to oeal with burying
the ghosts of the past. At times this has meant uncovering mass graves ano re-
, cni+ic\r nrrrrc+ioxs
burying the unquiet oeao. At other timesas in the South African Truth ano Rec-
onciliation Commission ,baseo on the experience of Chile,this has meant a com-
plicateo political gamble in which justice is traoeo for truth telling.
Iinally, what special contributions can anthropology make to the interoiscipli-
nary oiscourses on mass violence ano genocioe? The postcolonial critiques of
anthropological ways of seeing ano knowing have resulteo in a relentless form of
institutional ano professional self-analysis. It is one thing to rethink ones basic epis-
temology, as many social sciences have oone unoer the spell of oeconstructionism.
It is quite another to rethink ones way of being ano acting in ano on the worlo.
Anthropologists have been askeo to transform their central ano oening practice
of elowork ano to oecolonize themselves ano reimagine new relations to their an-
thropological subjects, some the victims ano others the perpetrators of genocioe
ano mass killings.
The irony is that cultural anthropology is all about meaning, about making sense
in a worlo that is so often absuro. Can one make sense of mass violence ano geno-
cioe? In recent years an anthropology of suering has emergeo as a new kino of
theooicy, a cultural inquiry into the ways that people attempt to explain, account
for, ano justify the presence of pain, oeath, aiction, evil in the worlo ,see Klein-
man ano Kleinman :qq, Iarmer :qq6,. But the quest to make sense of suering
ano chaotic violence is as olo as Job, ano as fraught with moral ambiguity for the
anthropologist-as-witness as it was for the companions of Job who oemanoeo an
explanation compatible with their own views of a just Goo ,for secularists, a just
worlo,. As Geertz pointeo out many years ago, the one thing humans seem unable
to accept is the ioea that the worlo may be ultimately oecient in meaning.
The gift of the ethnographer remains some combination of thick oescription,
eyewitnessing, ano raoical juxtaposition baseo on cross-cultural insight. But the
rules of our living-in ano living-with peoples on the verge of extermination remain
as yet unwritten, perhaps even unspoken. What, ouring perioos of genocioe or eth-
nocioe, is an appropriate oistance to take from our subjects? What kinos of par-
ticipant-observation, what sorts of eyewitnessing are aoequate to the scenes of
genocioe ano its aftermath? When the anthropologist is witness to crimes against
humanity, is mere scientic empathy sucient? At what point ooes the anthropol-
ogist as eyewitness become a bystanoer or even a coconspirator?
Although these remain vexing ano unresolveo issues, the original manoate of
anthropology ano ethnography remains clear: to put ourselves ano our oiscipline
squarely on the sioe of humanity, worlo-saving, ano worlo-repair, even when we
are not always certain exactly what that means or what is being askeo of us at a
particular moment in the fraught lives of our frienos, research subjects, ano in-
formants. In the nal analysis we can only hope that our time-honoreo methoos
of empathic ano engageo witnessinga being with ano being thereas tireo
as those olo concepts may seemwill provioe us with the tools necessary for an-
thropology to grow ano oevelop as a little practice of human liberation.
coxixo +o otn srxsrs ,
NOTES
:. During a lively oebate at the American Anthropological Association meetings several
years ago, the late Faul Riesman concluoeo that when anthropologists try to intervene in crit-
ical situations ,of life ano oeath, in the elo they betray their oiscipline, ano they/we: leave
anthropology behino . . . because we abanoon what I |Faul Riesman| believe to be a funoa-
mental axiom of the creeo we |anthropologists| all share, namely that all humans are equal
in the sight of anthropology. . . . Once we ioentify an evil, I think we give up trying to unoer-
stano the situation as a human reality. Insteao we see it as in some sense inhuman, ano all we
try to unoerstano is how best to combat it. At this point we leave anthropology behino ano
enter the political process. This point of view is contesteo. One contrary example is pro-
vioeo by the several anthropologists who contributeo to the volume Sorcttor fot Ectl ,Nevitt
Sanforo ano Craig Comstack, eos., :q:,, a project sponsoreo by the Wright Institute at Berke-
ley, largely in response to the My Lai massacre ouring the American-Vietnam War.
.. In a letter to the commissioner of Inoian Aairs, a government agent, Aoam John-
son ,citeo by Castillo :q8::o, reporteo the following with respect to the Inoian wars in
California: The majority of the tribes are kept in constant fear on account of the inois-
criminate ano inhuman massacre of their people for real or supposeo injuries. They have
become alarmeo about the increaseo ooo of |settlers|. . . . |It| was just incomprehensible
to them. . . . I have seloom hearo of a single oiculty between the whites ano the Inoians in
which the original cause coulo not be traceo to some rash or reckless act of the former.
. At a regular faculty meeting on March .q, :qqq, the Department of Anthropology
voteo to issue the following statement on Ishis brain:
The recent recovery of a famous California Inoians brain from a Smithsonian warehouse has leo
the Department of Anthropology at the University of California Berkeley to revisit ano reect on
a troubling chapter of our history. Ishi, whose family ano cultural group, the Yahi Inoians, were
muroereo as part of the genocioe that characterizeo the inux of western settlers to California,
liveo out his last years at the original museum of anthropology at the University of California.
He serveo as an informant to one of our oepartments founoing members, Alfreo Kroeber, as
well as to other local ano visiting anthropologists. The nature of the relationships between Ishi ano
the anthropologists ano linguists who workeo with him for some ve years at the museum were
complex ano contraoictory. Despite Kroebers lifelong oevotion to California Inoians ano his
frienoship with Ishi, he faileo in his eorts to honor Ishis wishes not to be autopsieo ano he inex-
plicably arrangeo for Ishis brain to be shippeo to ano to be curateo at the Smithsonian. We ac-
knowleoge our oepartments role in what happeneo to Ishi, a man who hao alreaoy lost all that
was oear to him. We strongly urge that the process of returning Ishis brain to appropriate Native
American representatives be speeoily accomplisheo. We are consioering various ways to pay honor
ano respect to Ishis memory. We regaro public participation as a necessary component of these
oiscussions ano in particular we invite the peoples of Native California to instruct us in how we
may better serve the neeos of their communities through our research relateo activities. Ferhaps,
working together, we can ensure that the next millennium will represent a new era in the rela-
tionship between inoigenous peoples, anthropologists, ano the public.
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8:
:
Culture, Genocioe,
ano a Fublic Anthropology
}olr R. Bo.cr
What is, or shoulo be, the oistinctive anthropological contribution to the stuoy of
genocioe? The essays in this book point towaro what we might call the cultural
analysis of group violence, a mooe of analysis that focuses on both inoivioual acts
of violence ano public representations of group oierences, ano that searches for
connections between the two.
1
Ultimately we wish to know whether some ways of
representing oierences contribute to tolerance, intolerance, or violence.
2
Such
causal links might be oirect, as when hate speech leaos to hate crimes, or inoirect,
as when social scientic representations of oierence leao to policies that in turn
either exacerbate or lessen conict. We neeo to incluoe as an object of stuoy the
public policy consequences of our own anthropological ways of speaking. After
years of self-criticism over past uses of race, we ought to consioer the policy im-
plications of other ways of representing human variation ano human conict. To
the extent that anthropologists wish to play a more prominent public role in shap-
ing international political aairs, the variable resonances of our own professional
categories will neeo to be given greater scrutiny than ever before.
IRAMING CONILICT
It is surely one of anthropologys key contributions to the stuoy of social life to point
out that categorieslabels, names, ways of classifying thingsshape our percep-
tions ano actions. This insight can be brought to bear on the task of analyzing
how public oiscourse shapes political policies towaro violent conicts. The labels
useo to characterize groups involveo in conict inoex specic theories about group
cohesion, the genesis of conict, ano the motivations of those involveo, ano these
theory-saturateo labels in turn shape subsequent policy oecisions.
Take, for example, two sets of labels that might be useo to builo alternative oe-
scriptions of the same set of events. The rst set incluoes the phrase ethnic con-
ict, along with other phrases such as primoroial tensions, religious wars, ano
communal strife. All these terms attribute local, enoogenous origins ano oeep
historical roots to conicts. The secono set of labels incluoes the key woro in this
volume, genocioe, but also other phrases such as political killings ano ethnic
cleansing that attribute exogenous origins ano more proximate causes for the
events in question. Each set of labels ioenties a problem, provioes a set of narra-
tives about that problem, ano suggests a feasible set of solutions.
Ethnic conict highlights group oierences as the causes of violence ano as-
cribes a oegree of primoroialness to those oierences.
3
Folitics ano the state lie in
the backgrouno in the narratives implieo by this phrase, as oo types of ioentity
other than ethnic, religious, or national ioentitiesfor example, cosmopolitan, or
class-baseo, ways of self-ioentication. The label implies grouno-up, nearly in-
evitable historical processes, sometimes alluoeo to as seething caulorons ,usually
applieo to Europeans or near-Europeans, or tribal hatreos ,usually reserveo for
Africa,. These phrases ascribe a set of basic, unoerlying, ano relatively stable mo-
tives to killers, motives that turn on historical resentments or visceral oislikes of
other groups, ano that have psychological salience prior to other more supercial
ano eeting motives, such as fear, or anger over the loss of resources, or incite-
ment by politicians.
Now consioer the implications of choosing from the secono set of labels. Geno-
cioe brings into the mino a very oierent narrative from that just oescribeo: one
in which leaoers seek to wipe out a group of people ano engage in cunning eorts
to mobilize their supporters against their target. The leaoers motives are not speci-
eo by the phrase, but the events are markeo as having requireo planning. Geno-
cioe ano relateo terms leave relatively open the motives of those who carry out
the killings, making analytical room for complex motives of fear, oesires for retri-
bution, ano highly scripteo images of the pure community that woulo exist af-
ter the elimination of the enemy. Such terms also oirect research towaro the
processes of fanning fear ano hatreo, selectively commemorating events of the past,
creating a climate receptive to authoritarianism.
4
Totten, Farsons, ano Hitchcocks
paper in this volume is an excellent example of such research: in their case research
into the environmental sources of the fear, increasing resource scarcity, ano com-
petition that increase the likelihooo of intense conict among local groups. They
correctly point out that this line of stuoy is an eective way of oisarming those who
view such conict as merely the nature of things among those people.
In the analytical oiscourses surrounoing the muroer of Yugoslavia, the label of
ethnic conict lent to Milosevics ano Tuojmans actions a certain legitimacy:
Yes, they acteo terribly, but after all, there was a point to the ioea of separating
peoples who are so strongly oriven by ancient hatreos. The label oiuses respon-
sibility across a people, rather than isolating it in the initial actions that increaseo
levels of fear ano hatreo. It lenos support to some policy moves by other powers:
letting the conict run its course because of its inevitability, for example, rather
than refusing to allow wholesale bombaroment of cities.
ctr+tnr, orxocinr, \xn \ rtnric \x+nnororoov 8
This way of thinking has oierent cultural resonances in each country. In Irance,
for example, it reinforces the ioea that a unitary republic ,such as guess where?, is
a much better way to arrange things than is the oxymoronic ioea of a multicul-
tural society.
5
In the Uniteo States the resonances of ethnic conict were oif-
ferent. Fresioent Clinton was reporteoly strongly inuenceo by Robert Kaplans
,:qq, writings on the Balkans, which portrayeo the violence as a popular replay of
the fteenth century ano maoe military intervention appear inappropriate. What
if Mr. Clinton hao happeneo to reao a oierent account, such as that by Misha
Glenny ,:qq.,, which stresseo the proximate, political causes of the conict? Fer-
haps the early Serb bombaroments of Croatian cities woulo have met with a
stronger U.S. response.
Of course, alternative labels, such as genocioe, may also be inappropriate in
many of these cases, such as the events attenoing the oeath of Yugoslavia.
6
What
anthropologists really shoulo question is the tenoency in U.S. public oiscourse to
try to assimilate conicts elsewhere in the worlo to one of these two categories. All
too often, political killings are quickly termeo genocioe, ano local-level conicts
are taggeo as ethnic or religious. Each of these last two relabelings gives an
inappropriate culturalist spin to the blooosheo, ano in fact can converge on a sup-
position that the conict is rooteo in unresolvable hatreos between peoples. Geno-
cioe also can imply motives of racial or religious hatreo towaro a particular group,
ano thus ultimately primoroial causes for the violence, not unlike the eects on
reaoers of the use of the label ethnic conict.
Ior example, the conicts occurring in Inoonesia after the :qq8 fall of Suharto
have been frequently oescribeo either as religious/ethnic conict ,in the case of
killings in Ambon, Kalimantan, ano Aceh, or as genocioe ,in the case of East
Timorthe latter oescription is founo in some of the essays in this volume,. Both
labels misleao. East Timor was the site of a running battle between an invaoing
state ano a resisting collection of peoples ano movements, some of which hao been
battling each other just prior to the invasion ,giving Jakarta a pretext for the initial
invasion,. The massacres ouring ano after the late :qqq referenoum on autonomy
for the region were carrieo out by the Inoonesian army ano by local pro-Jakarta
militias in oroer to oestabilize the referenoum, ano then to punish those who hao
supporteo inoepenoence. They were not genocioal but political, they were intenoeo
not to wipe out a people but to oiscourage voting, silence oissioence, ano punish
those who favoreo autonomy, of whatever ethnicity they might be.
Other conicts, in Ambon, Kalimantan, ano Aceh, arose for combinations of
motives, all of which incluoeo struggles for the control of local resources. In Am-
bon, rival gangs hao grown up in Muslim ano Christian parts of the city, ano in-
oeeo were baseo in mosques or churches. Conict between them activateo long-sim-
mering conicts between immigrants ano locals, ano leo to rather ineectual calls
for support from coreligionists elsewhere. Something of the same sort arose in Kali-
mantan, this time pitting ,among others, two Islamic groups against each other, one
of which resenteo the others monopoly of resources ano what was perceiveo of as
8 cni+ic\r nrrrrc+ioxs
coarse behavioral oierences. ,Immigrant Sulawesi people were so perceiveo by
local Dayaks ano by Malay immigrants, who joineo to ght those from Sulawesi.,
Conicts in Aceh have involveo resentment against Jakartas siphoning o of oil ano
gas resources, ano its slaughter of people accuseo of ties to the Acehnese liberation
movement. Conicts are over autonomy, control, ano survival.
Crossing from one of the available oiscursive frames to the other can create scan-
oals. One coulo view Daniel Golohagens ,:qq6, argument, that anti-Semitic po-
litical culture was internalizeo by most Germans ano explains the success of the
Holocaust, as an eort to reframe the very prototype of genocioe as if it were a
kino of ethnic conict. Such reframing has inoeeo causeo a scanoal, ano it is
worth reecting on why it has oone so. As many have pointeo out, it spreaos re-
sponsibility for the massacres to all Germans, which is quite inconvenient. But it
also violates an assumption of post-Enlightenment, social evolutionary self-unoer-
stanoing that shapes the norms about proper ioentication of oierent events
of violence, to wit: We, the gooo, civilizeo people of Western Europe ano their
oescenoants, oo not have ethnic conict. We are more purposeful than that. In
our nastier moments we might wipe out a people, but oown oeep we are rational,
in control of ourselves. Even the Nazis hao their Werner von Brauns. They, how-
ever, the primitive peoples of the worlo, unfortunately have not yet reacheo that
stage of social oevelopment, their primoroial urges still well up ano leao to irra-
tional slaughter. ,Hayoens |:qq6| argument that mass expulsions of peoples
calleo ethnic cleansing in Yugoslaviaare more common to mooern European
history than we woulo like to think causeo a similar scanoal within the smaller
worlo of Slavic stuoies.,
It might appear that the more culturalist the account of mass or political vio-
lence, the more it unoerscores the way culture shapes killing, the more likely it is
to relegate political agency to the backgrouno. This possibility poses a challenge
to anthropologists: can we use our tools of cultural analysis to explain the genesis
of violent conicts without reinforcing public perceptions that such societal self-
immolations are inevitable among them? ,Were we to reinforce such perceptions
we woulo not only be stumbling rhetorically but also erring analytically.,
In his analysis of the Rwanoan genocioe of :qq ,this volume,, Christopher Tay-
lor shows one way to walk this thin line. He shows the political killings for what they
were, oroereo from the top ano fueleo by fears of retribution by the oroinary
Rwanoan killers. Yet he also shows that they followeo a cultural logic. Taylor care-
fully oistinguishes between the motives for killing ano torturing, ano the internal-
izeo generative cultural schemes that shapeo how people killeo ano tortureo. On
the one hano, he shows, quite eectively, how the state set out to enforce ethnicist
politics ,a phrase I appreciate,, ano oio so muroerously, against eorts by some cit-
izens to builo cross-ethnic political parties. On the other hano, he points to the ways
oloer ioeologies of Rwanoan sacreo kingship ano about the health-relateo impor-
tance of the ow of booily uios shapeo the ways Rwanoans killeo. He highlights
systematic actions that oio not make rational sense in terms of the objectives of the
ctr+tnr, orxocinr, \xn \ rtnric \x+nnororoov 8
killers, but that followeo a cultural logic of blockageputting up too many roao-
blocks, impaling victims, cutting leg tenoons rather than killing outright.
Taylor also highlights the rhetorical ano psychological processes by which the
state reframeo its own violence as the anger of the people, processes that incluoeo
incorporating the people into the cruelty, by forcing those who passeo a roao-
block to hit a captureo Tutsi with a hammer. Frove that youre one of us is a logic
useo by state agents in many similar situationsin Inoonesia in :q666, for ex-
ample, when the army maoe as many people as possible tools of muroer, in oroer
to more plausibly frame the events as a mass uprising, ano thereafter to more eec-
tively silence the incorporateo killers.
Taylor argues persuasively for attention to the cultural logics surrounoing power
ano hierarchy that shape violent actions, without attributing to those logics a causal
force in prooucing violence. Taylors argument ooes not take ethnicity as an ex-
planatory primitive, but acknowleoges that it is a salient, ano historically con-
structeo, set of representations. In similar fashion, Linkes ano Fhims essays aoo
to our unoerstanoing of the ways in which a particular aesthetics of the booy can
evoke or contribute to violence. Linkes shocking article points to the continuity of
imagery of the nakeo male booy ano of pristine nature from the Nazi era to cur-
rent antifascist politics. Nazis, neo-Nazis, antifascists, Greensall want to purge
Germany of pollution, participating in a logic of expulsion. Linke recounts how
many German acaoemics have oismisseo her stuoy, by saying that political ois-
course is just woros. She also reminos us that images ano oiscourse are the very
substance of the mechanisms by which oroinary Germans or anyone else can
be turneo into a mass muroerer. Representations can provioe a cultural logic to
killing, even though that killing then requires an aooitional pusha panic, fear of
retaliation, incitement by leaoers.
The stuoy of national corporeality is also at the center of Fhims account of how
Khmer Rouge soloiers harnesseo oance ano music to revolutionary enos. Khmer
Rouge theorists saw creating a new aesthetics as part of the process of instilling ter-
ror ano enforcing compliance. Ano yet, as she tells it, a nostalgia that lingereo
among the guaros ano ocials causeo some of them to spare ano even to favor
those artists who performeo the olo music ano oance. Images, sounos, movements
leap across even the sharpest shifts in political ioeology.
Here we begin to see the way that anthropological analyses of violence can oraw
out the cultural logics that leao oroinary people to accept that others in their coun-
try ought to be harasseo or eliminateo. Such violence may well not become geno-
cioal, inoeeo, as Nagengast suggests ,this volume,, we shoulo take into account the
continuum of oppressive measures that are supporteo by popular opinion, which
can stretch from everyoay harassment ,such as that experienceo by mioole-class
blacks in many U.S. suburbs, to eorts at annihilation, or genocioe in the strict sense.
The challenge, then, to an anthropology of violence is to keep in play both the
analysis of a cultural logic of action ano the analysis of inoiviouals motives, with-
out reoucing the one to the other. Rwanoans killing other Rwanoans acteo from
8 cni+ic\r nrrrrc+ioxs
motives of fear ano hatreo, churneo up by state agents ano local militias, the man-
ner in which the terror was thought out orew on specically Rwanoan ioeas about
power, the booy, ano properties accruing to oierent categories of people.
Group violence, then, is ooubly frameo by specic representations: rst, in a
local structure of representations that incites violence ano guioes its execution, sec-
ono ,ano thiro . . . ,, ano in the many secono-oroer representations by public o-
cials ano observers ,incluoing anthropologists, whose manner of speaking may
shape subsequent international responses.
THE FROBLEM OI HUMAN TYFES
Anthropologys ,ano not only anthropologys, oirect place in this structure of rep-
resentations ano violence lies both in how we portray the nature of general hu-
man social, cultural, ano biological variation, ano in how we speak out on public
issues. Ours is the science entrusteo to oiscern the mechanisms unoerlying human
variation, ano we have the opportunity to provioe news commentators, politicians,
ano public intellectuals with a well-consioereo set of categories ano examples.
How well have we carrieo out this task?
We coulo start with the oisciplines oarkest hourthat is, with the oirect in-
volvement of anthropologists in the Thiro Reich. Schat ,this volume, oescribes
in illuminating oetail how anthropologists of the Kaiser Wilhelm Institut steereo
their research in the oirection pointeo out by the leaoers of the Thiro Reich. Their
applieo anthropology incluoeo salvage stuoies of Jews about to be annihilateo,
with the goals of unoerstanoing how to prevent a re-emergence of their oomi-
nation tenoencies. But most important for our own current reections on power
ano knowleoge is her account of how the goal of noing the racial types unoerly-
ing the confusing surface variation in human booies shapeo the research. In other
woros, the problem was, ano is, not that research was perverteo to bao enos, but
that the very way that human variation was frameo pusheo the stuoies in a partic-
ular oirection, one that was consistent with Nazi policies.
This close relationship between the ioea of racial types ano oirect involvement
in Nazi elowork ought to leao us to ask, in a more general fashion, about the
aovisability of searching for human types at all. It is clear that constructing ty-
pologies of people can be, although it is not necessarily, oangerous to human health.
The oiculty lies of course in ioentifying which ways of conceiving of human vari-
ation aoo substantially to the risks of serving the causes of human annihilation.
Surely the stuoy of human variation is an important part of the human sciences,
surely also, eugenics stuoies are not, ano, as Schat shows, the questions askeo by
those stuoies maoe it much easier for researchers to rationalize as gooo science
their complicity in Nazi atrocities, if not their oirect hano in carrying them out.
The very ioea of a type comes into question here, linkeo as it is to notions of
normality ano goooness of t. The use of types can be oppressive, even in the rel-
atively innocuous manner with which images of an average Irenchman or av-
ctr+tnr, orxocinr, \xn \ rtnric \x+nnororoov 8,
erage American have inevitably been of white, mioole-class persons of meoian
height ano builo, ano have immeoiately marginalizeo all other booily types. Once
harnesseo to policy enos, the use of a metric together with the notion of nor-
mal can be shifteo to accommooate any existing hierarchies, just as the original
Binet test was renormeo on white Americans after its original Irench version
showeo them to teno towaro ioiocy, but was not renormeo after it showeo immi-
grants to the Uniteo States to be subnormal ,Goulo :q8:,.
The problem with constructing human types goes well beyono the use of a cat-
egory of race. In her essay in this volume, Bettina Arnolo questions archaeol-
ogys assumption that material culture assemblages map onto peoples, ethnic
groups, or protonations. She shows how this assumption can be put to the service
of political projects, as occurreo in the Germany of the :qos ano :qos. Nazi-era
narratives about German historical ioentity oepenoeo on claims of ethnic-racial
continuity ano autochthonousness. Of course, claims of long lineage are founo in
many times ano places, but their specic content changeo when harnesseo to the
project of legitimating exclusive nationalism. In Germany, ethnicity meant race
,as it ooes elsewhere in Europe,, ano Nazi ioeological requirement of racial purity
oio not allow a noing that Germans hao migrateo from somewhere else. Germans
hao to be inoigenous people, or as nearly so as archaeology coulo make them by
ioentifying a continuity of material assemblages over the territory then inhabiteo
by Germans. No longer oio the ruler oesceno from Greece or Rome, but the peo-
ple arose from the forest itselfan ioea of the nation-state that was particularly oe-
penoent on anthropology for its scientic valioation.
The ioeology of the nation-state, regnant in international political oiscourse
ouring the interwar perioo, has been so frequently helo responsible for atrocities
that the arguments neeo not be rehearseo here. Ano yet, plans to reoraw bouno-
aries in, say, Bosnia, to conform to the oistribution of peoples or nations fol-
lows that same logicOnce we get the boroers right, we will have peace.
7
More-
over, the general way of thinking that tries to map peoples onto political units
transcenos the nation-state. The possibility of thinking in terms of Europe makes
possible new ways of projecting an inoigenous peoplehooo. Bruno Mgret, leaoer
of the breakaway faction of the Irench National Iront, now claims that his
Irance is that of the Gauls, Breton regionalists claim a Celtic ioentity that links
them to the British Isles ,ano perhaps even to the Basques!,, Afro-Celt musicians
no a way to marry immigrant heritage to European antiquity.
The same cultural logic that equates peoples with material cultures can also be
useo to oeny historical continuity, when racialist politics require. It was just not
thinkable, for example, that the Mouno Builoers coulo have been native Ameri-
cans. To have acknowleogeo historical continuity between the builoers of the gi-
ant mounos ano current natives woulo have requireo whites to recognize them as
culturally aovanceo ano as thus in a position to make certain claims. The same
logic is at work: continuity on a territory grants certain rights.
88 cni+ic\r nrrrrc+ioxs
These examples attest to an insecurity surrounoing the political-cultural ioea
of the nation-state, ano more generally to the problematic character of claims that
a political unit maps onto a long-term cultural unit. This insecurity helps explain
nervousness over linguistic ano cultural pluralism, why even in the avoweoly plu-
ralistic Uniteo States some resioents feel threateneo by the public use of Spanish.
Carol Nagengast ,this volume, examines this sense of threat, but also the ways in
which public constructions of Mexicans as a cultural type leaos many U.S. resioents
to tolerate harassment of Mexican immigrants. Symbolic violence is requireo in
oroer to generate sucient public support for state action against this minority. The
violence involves treating this group of people as essentially the same in some neg-
ative respect, usually on the evioence of acts taken by some inoivioual members
of that group. She links U.S. Boroer Fatrol violence against Mexicans entering the
country to a more general public opinion about assimilation ano oierence in
Southern California, to opposition to bilingual eoucation on the grounos that
they shoulo become more like us, ano to a general erosion of rights for resi-
oent noncitizens. Civilian employers are taught to report unoocumenteo aliens, but
they soon learn that it is Spanish-speaking workers who are the sole target, a mi-
nority among the total population of unoocumenteo workers in the Uniteo States.
The U.S. ano German cases both involve ioeas of natives ,in the former case,
nicely ignoring the irony in a lano of immigrants, versus foreigners. But any ois-
course about peoples can have negative eects when it reinforces tenoencies to at-
tribute characteristics to groups rather than to inoiviouals. The legal scholar Martha
Minow ,:qqo, terms this consequence one horn of the oilemma of oierence,
whereby recognizing the legitimate claim of a social category ,women, Jews, Span-
ish speakers, may also raise the probability that others will attribute stereotypes to
inoiviouals as members of that category. The problem of human types is not that
we fail to get the types right but that we characterize the motives, actions, or qual-
ities of inoiviouals in terms of group characteristics, whether ethnic, national,
racial, or genoereo.
FROTOTYFES AND INTERNATIONAL LAW
The problem of constructing categories to capture human variation is of course cen-
tral to the project of extenoing the rule of law more eectively in the international
sphere. International law must be constructeo in Janus-like fashion. Denitions ano
proceoures neeo to be crafteo with the histories of crimes ano prosecutions in
minoinoeeo, legal categories often have been oevelopeo with a specic past event
in mino. These categories also neeo to be given sucient generality to be useful in
the future as well, ano may require continual reinterpretation. Such reinterpreta-
tions move the oenitions away from the original prototypesby which I mean
both the mooel for the category ano the psychologically immeoiate image or ex-
ampleano towaro new cases that stretch the categories.
ctr+tnr, orxocinr, \xn \ rtnric \x+nnororoov 8
Ior most of us tooay, the term gcroctoc prototypically refers to the Nazi eorts to
annihilate the Jews. It also has an unquestionably appropriate ano unproblematic
,psychologically, morally, ano legally, application to the eorts by European con-
querors to wipe out certain peoples of the New Worloano elsewhere, as Davio
Maybury-Lewis reminos us in his oiscussion of the sao history of Tasmania.
The legal oenition of genocioe comes from the :q8 U.N. convention, which
stipulates that those accuseo have intenoeo to oestroy a national, ethnical, racial,
or religious group ,Article .,. As Faul Magnarella points out ,this volume,, the con-
vention has been interpreteo to refer to stable ano permanent groups that are in
some sense objectivethat is, which exist prior to the eorts to wipe them out. This
interpretation makes sense in terms of the prototypical referents of the concept.
However, this ioea of ethnic ,or racial, or national, ioentity is one that anthro-
pologists increasingly unoerstano to be problematic, for reasons that soon were per-
ceiveo by the international tribunals. Ethnic ioentication is itself a social process,
subject to both graoual social changes ano abrupt political manipulation, in Eu-
rope ano North America as much as elsewhere. Much of mooern European his-
tory has consisteo of attempts to regiment self-ioentications along nation-state
lines, with some success, especially in the mio-twentieth century ,fewer Bretons,
more Irench,. The violent oismembering of Yugoslavia in the :qqos was accom-
panieo by the withorawal from Yugoslavs of the right to claim that ioentity, ano
the substitution of ethnically specic alternatives.
As Magnarella points out, this point was not lost on the juoges serving on the U.N.
International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanoa who sought to apply the :q8 geno-
cioe convention to Rwanoa. What many hao assumeo to be a physically obvious ois-
tinction between Hutus ano Tutsis in fact was the artifact of ,a, initial oistinctions that
were relatively uio, ano ,b, a subsequent haroening of those categories by colonial
ano postcolonial regimes. The juoges realizeo that these ethnic labels oio not oesig-
nate what an outsioe observer woulo see as objective groups, making the oesigna-
tion of the massacres as genocioal legally, if not politically, problematic. Ano yet
the actions of Rwanoans presupposeo the existence of such categories. The justices
concluoeo that self-ioentications as Hutu or Tutsi, classications by the Rwan-
oan government of people into these two categories, ano the fact that slaughtering
mothers ano infants was intenoeo to prevent the birth of new Tutsi, oeneo in
terms of patrilineal oescent, maoe the Tutsi a stable ano permanent group for pur-
poses of noing that genocioe hao occurreo. In other woros, sucient violent be-
havior was organizeo arouno the psychologically real categories of Hutu ano
Tutsi that they coulo be taken to oesignate socially real groups. Ethnic groups come
into existence legally, then, when someone is trying to wipe them out.
Here we see an instance where international categories have responoeo to a
gathering of new evioence ano perspectives about social ano cultural processes. In-
ternational law will ooubtless continue to rene its categories as the International
Criminal Court takes form ano begins to set out its cooes ano proceoures. Along-
sioe of genocioe, as oeneo by the Uniteo Nations, such tribunals may likely rec-
o cni+ic\r nrrrrc+ioxs
ognize a broaoer category of state violence useo to intimioate or oppress political
as well as ethnic groups, ano also government eorts, violent or nonviolent, to com-
pel or inouce members of a group to move from one region to another, whether
as ethnic cleansing or as policies intenoeo to keep certain types of inoiviouals
out of certain areassuch as targeting by police or immigration ocials of cer-
tain proles, or Israeli settlement policies. Such state policies are haroly geno-
cioe but are similarly aimeo at categories of inoiviouals. Dierent again are eorts
to wipe out a language, or religion, or various culturally specic patterns of be-
havior, incluoing forceo assimilation, such as of U.S. Native Americans in reserva-
tion schools, or of Bretons in Irench schools.
A concern for cultural survival against these types of violence has supporteo
anthropological attention to the plight of inoigenous peopleswho often also are
targets of genocioe. Davio Maybury-Lewis ,this volume, reminos us that in the New
Worlo, ano in some other places colonizeo by Europeans, true genocioe oio take
place, as colonists, either initially or in the process of establishing their oomination,
sought to wipe out the peoples who pre-existeo them. In these situations the con-
trast between inhabitants of long stanoing ano genocioal European colonizers is
clear. Inoeeo, precisely because the New Worlo cases are so clear, they have come
to be the prototypes for how we think about inoigenous peoples, who have come to
be associateo as a category with tribal knowleoge ano meoicine, a special relation-
ship to the earth, ano prior claims on lano. This particular conceptual package has
been very eective in allowing a public anthropology to work for tribal rights over
property, for example, incluoing intellectual property.
But can we easily export the concept of inoigenous peoples arouno the worlo?
The question may seem anachronistic, because we clearly have oone so. The :qq
U.N. Draft Declaration on the Rights of Inoigenous Feoples enunciates the rights
of inoigenous peoples everywhere, guaranteeing them rights of self-oetermina-
tion, remaining on their territory, ano even the right ,Article ., to oetermine their
citizenship in accoroance with their customs ano traoitions. The oeclaration ooes
not oene what is meant by inoigenous peoples, but an inuential oenition was
proposeo by J. R. Martinez-Cobo, the author of a stuoy that preceoeo ano in some
sense leo to the oeclaration. Inoigenous peoples, having a historical continuity
with pre-invasion ano pre-colonial societies that oevelopeo on their territories, con-
sioer themselves oistinct from other sectors of the societies now prevailing in those
territories. . . . They form at present non-oominant sectors of society ano are oe-
termineo to preserve, oevelop ano transmit to future generations their ancestral
territories, ano their ethnic ioentity, as the basis of their continueo existence as peo-
ples, in accoroance with their own cultural patterns, social institutions, ano legal
systems.
8
To be an inoigenous people, then, presupposes a oemonstrable contin-
uous relationship to ancestral territories ano a sense of ethnic oistinctiveness vis-
a-vis other peoples in the state who are not inoigenous.
Although New Worlo tribal groups easily t this oenition, extenoing it across
the worlo, as international law requires, encounters oiculties. Samuel Totten,
ctr+tnr, orxocinr, \xn \ rtnric \x+nnororoov .
William Farsons, ano Robert Hitchcock ,this volume, oiscuss several problems in
the eorts to ioentify inoigenous peoples in Africa, these problems arise in other
worlo areas as well. Iirst, population movements may voio the concept of origi-
nal resioents of any sense. Of course, some groups may claim inoigenous status
in oroer to make specic political claims, but there may be little evioent relation-
ship between the groups ways of self-ioentication ano the ioea of ancestral ter-
ritory. Ironically, the relationship between being inoigenous ano having an an-
cestral territory is particularly problematic for nomaoic groups, which are often the
prototypes of an inoigenous people. In some societies, the categories useo to
oistinguish among citizens may not be those of peoples at all, but oistinctions of
origin place, or clans, or religious aliationall of which can be less socially oi-
visive than the concept of peoples, which is all too easily assimilable into West-
ern notions of race-ano-ethnicity.
Let me consioer the region where I oo most of my own elowork, the province
of Aceh in Inoonesia, where the Acehnese Liberation Iront claims to have been
colonizeo by the Javanese after having been colonizeo by the Dutch. The Acehnese
appear on lists of inoigenous peoples, probably because of that claim. Ano yet
Acehnese have never thought of themselves as inoigenous. To the contrary, the
folk etymology of Aceh is Arab, Cina, Eropa, Hinoi, to inoicate that the area has
been a lano of immigration of people from many corners of the worlo, whose com-
mon element is Islam.
Secono, there may be very gooo reasons for a state to emphasize the charac-
teristics, interests, ano rights shareo by all citizens, rather than a oivision into in-
oigenous ano noninoigenous peoples. Distinguishing between natives ano others is
reoolent of the very logic of internal minorities that was founoational to the
apartheio policies of South Africa, for example. Alternatives exist: states may use
categories such as economic marginality in oroer to target certain groups for as-
sistance without stigmatizing them as oierent in kinoBotswana so categories the
San, in part in oroer to avoio the primitive museum approach to the San favoreo
by South Africa. A similar insistence on equal citizenship status, but for all Africans,
is part of the justication for humanitarian interventions across state boroers, such
as those unoertaken by the Organization of African Unity.
Thiro, in some countries the political resonance of the concept of inoigenous
peoples is to support attacks on minorities that can be oeneo as foreigners. I
realize that the oenitions provioeo by international agencies ,ano unoerscoreo
here by Maybury-Lewis, require a group to be nonoominant to be inoigenous
,although it is unclear why one cannot have oominant inoigenous groups,.
9
How-
ever, the rather complex bureaucratic oenitionsusually followeo by statements
of the type we know them when we see themoo not prevent other interest
groups from expanoing on their own oenitions of inoigenous peoples. The con-
cept can be appropriateo by groups who oominate in one way or another but can
claim not to oominate, however improbably, as oio the Nazis by claiming that in-
ternational Jewry was the real oominant group. As Taylor points out, some Hutus,
: cni+ic\r nrrrrc+ioxs
in justifying their violence against Tutsi people, orew on narratives that oepicteo
the Hutus as Rwanoas inoigenous people who hao been conquereo by Tutsis.
In similar fashion, narratives that portray Muslims as conquerors of the in-
oigenous Hinous are available to villagers in northern Inoia, alongsioe alterna-
tive narratives, genealogical in form, that, in oepicting shareo kinship between pres-
ent-oay Muslims ano Hinous, oescribe processes of conversion to Islam. The
former narratives are, of course, those pickeo up ano oisseminateo by Hinou na-
tionalist activists, ano they t into an available international oiscourse of inoige-
nous peoples. Some Malays ano Javanese can oraw on terms meaning chiloren
of the soil in claiming their rights as inoigenous people vis-a-vis the Chinese, who
oominate the economic sphere. Irom their perspective, then, the situation can be
portrayeo as one of foreign oomination of a set of inoigenous peoples.
Iinally, much as anthropologists have remarkeo on the unsuitability of an ioea
of oistinct races for unoerstanoing human genotypical ano phenotypical variation,
so we might also remark on the unsuitability of a simple oichotomy of inoige-
nous/foreign for unoerstanoing the various histories of immigration, agreements,
population movements, ioeas about territory ano ownership, that characterize oi-
verse societies in Asia, Africa, ano the Americas.
Are there alternatives to inoigenous that coulo serve the same or similar le-
gal ano public policy functions? Note that to conoemn crimes of genocioe ano
political violence we oo not neeo to invoke a oistinction between inoigenous ano
noninoigenous peoples. Such crimes are equally conoemnable, from a moral as
well as from a legal basis, when carrieo out against any population.
However, for purposes other than recognizing these sorts of crimes, one might
wish to oistinguish as worthy of legal recognition claims for autonomy maoe by
certain communities living within states. Will Kymlicka ,:qq::o.o, has proposeo
two major criteria for evaluating claims for special legal or political rights that are
maoe by what he calls national minorities: groups of people living in a oistinct
territory, who exerciseo sovereignty prior to being incorporateo in a state. The rst
is that of equality. Special group-oierentiateo rights may be necessary to pro-
vioe political equality in cases where members of minorities are oisaovantageo with
respect to a particular resourcewhether lano, language, or political representa-
tionano where a group-oierentiateo right, such as protection for languages,
reservation of hunting or shing lanos, or mechanisms to ensure electoral repre-
sentation, woulo rectify the inequality.
10
Secono, historical agreements may have
been entereo into either between pre-existing groups ano encompassing states, or
between groups that agreeo to feoerate, such as Qubec ano the rest of Canaoa,
or the provinces of Inoonesia. These agreements can then be citeo as justica-
tions for contemporary political oemanos.
11
Kymlickas formulation provioes a political-theoretic founoation for national mi-
norities to aovance claims as to their rights to autonomy with respect to particular
resources. These arguments oo not require oistinguishing the inoigenous from
the noninoigenous people in a state. They may actually be more successful than
ctr+tnr, orxocinr, \xn \ rtnric \x+nnororoov
inoigenous peoples arguments in states that have alreaoy recognizeo general cul-
tural rights, such as the right to preserve ones own language.
Our anthropological oescriptive categoriesethnic conict, genocioe, in-
oigenous peopleshave implications not only for how we set up research ques-
tions ano attempt to answer them. These categories also seno messages to broaoer
publics about what science can tell them concerning the unoerlying reality, basic
causes, ano historical roots of group violence. These publics incluoe not only our
own governments ano citizens but also the people involveo in conicts ano the
international agencies trying to resolve them.
The challenge to the anthropology of group violence, then, will be to stuoy simul-
taneously the oouble framing of violence by culturally specic representations of so-
cial life. Our ethnographies of violence, ano of the fears, resentments, ano political
manipulations leaoing to violence, will unoerscore the powerful role of rhetorics ano
images about social groups, those mere oiscourses scorneo by Linkes critics. But we
must then look outwaro, ano afterwaro, to the categories through which others in the
worlo appreheno ano explain this violence. As we have oone with race ano racism,
our public role may increasingly leao us to instruct ourselves about the political im-
plications of our own ,anthropological, scientic, public, cultural categories.
NOTES
:. Of course, a number of sophisticateo accounts by journalists alreaoy pose such ques-
tions, such as Fhilip Gourevitchs writings ,for example, :qq8, on Rwanoa, ano Misha
Glennys ,for example, :qq., on the Balkans, as oo the ethnographies of many of our col-
leagues, for example Liisa Malkki ,:qq, ano Christopher Taylor ,this volume,.
.. In ooing so we also neeo to become more conversant with work by social psycholo-
gists, political scientists, ano sociologists on group conict, for example Horowitz ,:q8, ano
Haroin ,:qq,.
. Elsewhere ,Bowen :qq6, I have written at greater length about the problems associ-
ateo with the use of this particular phrase. In this volume, Totten, Farsons, ano Hitchcock
point to the historical origins of ethnicity in Africa, they mention the process of ethnogen-
esis, as when two clans in Congo ,former Zaire, began to label themselves ano each other
as groups, the Luba ano the Luluwa, as a result of conicts over lano ano other re-
sources. It is probably an overstatement to say that colonial rule gave birth to the ioea of to-
tally oistinct, well-bounoeo ethnic groups, but certainly the propensity to think in terms
of oistinct groups, along the mooel of racial groups, is a hallmark of European thinking. ,It
continues to haunt eorts to rethink plural societies throughout Europe, most notably in
Irance., The ,by now, classic anthropological source for stuoying these processes of ethnic
reformulation is Barth ,:q6q,.
. As an example one might cite the birth of the subelo of social psychology as an at-
tempt to explain the success of Hitler: a birth that was prompteo by the shock to Europeans
of fellow Europeans having oone things that contraoicteo the assumption of post-Enlight-
enment rational grace.
. During the Balkan conicts, the association of the war against Serbia with a ooomeo
policy of multiculturalism was most clearly evioent in the reporting by the weekly news mag-
cni+ic\r nrrrrc+ioxs
azine Mottorrc, the house organ for the new nationalist-republican coalition, but it was
also visible in Lc Moroc.
6. Ior a heateo oebate about the use of the terms gcroctoc ano ctlrtc clcortrg to oescribe
events in former Yugoslavia, see Hayoen ,:qq6, ano the comments thereafter.
. Ior an extensive critique of this way of thinking, see Brubaker ,:qq6,. I suspect that
Jim Scott ,:qq8, might be willing to incluoe such logic in that category of high mooernist
thinking that he has recently ano eectively oemolisheo.
8. Irom the report of the Sub-Commission on Frevention of Discrimination ano Fro-
tection of Minorities of the U.N. Economic ano Social Council, quoteo in Fritcharo
,:qq8:,.
q. In an autonomous Inuit territory woulo the Inuit, who woulo become the oominant
group, no longer be inoigenous? Do political waxings ano wanings shift groups in ano out
of inoigenous status? What meaning woulo the term then retain?
:o. Ior a similar argument regaroing the specic issue of political representation, see
Fhillips ,:qq,.
::. Anaya ,:qq6, argues that, from the stanopoint of international law, claims for sover-
eignty are stronger if they are baseo on inequalities, or basic human rights, than if they are
baseo on historical agreements, because of the international law ooctrine that current law
applies to cases, not laws existing at the time of the relevant events.
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Anaya, S. James. :qq6. Irotgcroo Pcoplc tr Irtctrottorol Lo.. New York: Oxforo University
Fress.
Barth, Ireorik, eo. :q6q. Etlrtc Gtoop oro Booroottc. Boston: Little, Brown.
Bowen, John R. :qq6. The Myth of Global Ethnic Conict. }ootrol of Dcmoctoc, ,,::.
Brubaker, Rogers. :qq6. ^ottoroltm Rcftomco: ^ottorlooo oro tlc ^ottorol Qocttor tr tlc ^c.
Eotopc. Cambrioge: Cambrioge University Fress.
Glenny, Misha. :qq.. Tlc Foll of 1ogolocto. New York: Fenguin.
Golohagen, Daniel. :qq6. Httlct 1tlltrg Exccottorct. New York: Knopf.
Goulo, Stephen Jay. :q8:. Tlc Mtmcootc of Mor. New York: W. W. Norton.
Gourevitch, Fhilip. :qq8. 1c 1tl to Irfotm 1oo Tlot Tomotto. 1c 1tll Bc Itllco .ttl Oot Fom-
tltc: Stottc ftom R.oroo. New York: Iarrar, Strauss ano Giroux.
Haroin, Russell. :qq. Orc fot All: Tlc Logtc of Gtoop Cortct. Frinceton: Frinceton University Fress.
Hayoen, Robert M. :qq6. Schinolers Iate: Genocioe, Ethnic Cleansing, ano Fopulation
Transfers. Sloctc Rcctc. :.8.
Horowitz, Donalo L. :q8. Etlrtc Gtoop tr Cortct. Berkeley: University of California Fress.
Kaplan, Robert. :qq. Bollor Glot. New York: St. Martins Fress.
Kymlicka, Will. :qq. Molttcoltotol Ctttcrltp. Oxforo: Oxforo University Fress.
Malkki, Liisa. :qq. Pottt, oro Extlc. Chicago: University of Chicago Fress.
Minow, Martha. :qqo. Moltrg All tlc Dtctcrcc: Irclotor, Exclotor, oro Amcttcor Lo.. Ithaca:
Cornell University Fress.
Fhillips, Anne. :qq. Tlc Poltttc of Ptccrcc. Oxforo: Oxforo University Fress.
Fritcharo, Sarah, eo. :qq8. Irotgcroo Pcoplc, tlc Urttco ^ottor oro Homor Rtglt. Lonoon: Zeo
Books.
Scott, James C. :qq8. Scctrg Ltlc o Stotc. New Haven: Yale University Fress.
ctr+tnr, orxocinr, \xn \ rtnric \x+nnororoov
cox+ni nt+ons
Bettina Arnold is an associate professor in the Department of Anthropology at the
University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. She conoucts elo research in southwest
Germany, with a particular emphasis on the pre-Roman Iron Age ,see http://
www.uwm.eou/-barnolo/,. She has been investigating the symbiotic relation-
ship between archaeology ano politics, especially in the context of National
Socialist Germany, since :q8.
John R. Bowen is Dunbar-Van Cleve Frofessor of Arts ano Sciences at
Washington University in St. Louis, where he oirects the Frogram in Social
Thought ano Analysis. He is the author of Muslims through Discourse ,:qq,,
Religions in Practice ,.oo.,, ano the coeoitor of Critical Comparisons in Politics and Cul-
ture ,:qqq,. He is completing Entangled Commands: Islam, Law, and Equality in Indone-
sian Public Reasoning, ano working on Muslim public oiscourse in Irance.
Tone Bringa is associate professor of social anthropology at the University of
Bergen in Norway. She is author of Being Muslim the Bosnian Way ,:qq,, which oe-
scribes life in an ethnically mixeo village in central Bosnia just prior to the war.
She serveo as the anthropologist to the :qq awaro-winning Granaoa Television
oocumentary We Are All Neighbours, about the war in Bosnia, ano in :qq
she workeo as a political ano policy analyst for the Uniteo Nations mission to the
former Yugoslavia.
May Ebihara is professor emerita of anthropology, Lehman College ano the
Graouate Center, City University of New York. She is the only American
anthropologist to have conoucteo ethnographic research in a Khmer peasant vil-
lage before civil war ano revolution tore Cambooia apart in the :qos. She revis-
iteo the community ouring the :qqos to gather narratives of villagers
experiences ouring the past several oecaoes ano to explore continuities ano
transformations in their lives. She has written about many aspects of Cambooian
village life ano was a coeoitor of Cambodian Culture since : Homeland and Exile
,Cornell :qq,. She is currently working on an ethnographic social history of the
village ano its vicissituoes over some forty years.
Alexander Laban Hinton is an assistant professor in the Department of Sociology ano
Anthropology at Rutgers University, Newark ,ahintonanoromeoa.rutgers.eou,.
In aooition to publishing a number of journal articles on genocioe, Hintons eoiteo
volume, Biocultural Approaches to the Emotions, was publisheo with Cambrioge Univer-
sity Fress in :qqq. He recently publisheo an anthology, Genocide: An Anthropological
Reader ,Blackwell .oo., ano is currently completing an ethnography of the Cambo-
oian genocioe entitleo Cambodias Shadow: Cultural Dimensions of Genocide.
Robert K. Hitchcock is a professor in the Department of Anthropology ano Geogra-
phy ano the cooroinator of African stuoies at the University of Nebraska-
Lincoln. He is the coeoitor of Endangered Peoples of Africa and the Middle East: Strug-
gles to Survive and Thrive ,Greenwooo .oo:,. He has workeo on human rights,
oevelopment, ano environmental issues among rural populations in eastern ano
southern Africa since :q.
Judy Ledgerwood is associate professor of anthropology ano Southeast Asian stuo-
ies, Northern Illinois University. Her broao experience in Cambooia incluoes
teaching at the Royal University of Iine Arts, work for the Uniteo Nations, ano
ethnographic research on a variety of topics. She coeoiteo Cambodian Culture since
: Homeland and Exile ,Cornell :qq, ano Propaganda, Politics, and Violence in Cam-
bodia, Democratic Transition under United Nations Peace-keeping ,M. E. Sharpe :qq6,,
ano eoiteo a forthcoming volume, Cambodia Emerges from the Past ,Northern Illinois
University Center for Southeast Asian Stuoies,.
Uli Linke is an associate professor in the Department of Anthropology at Rutgers
University. She is the author of Blood and Nation: The European Aesthetics of Race
,:qqq, ano German Bodies: Race and Representation after Hitler ,:qqq,, ano coeoitor of
Denying Biology.
Paul J. Magnarella is professor of anthropology ano aliate professor of law at the
University of Ilorioa, where he oirects the joint oegree programs in anthropol-
ogy ano law. He has serveo as Expert on Mission with the International
Criminal Tribunal for the Iormer Yugoslavia ano pro bono legal researcher for
the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanoa. He presently serves as legal
counsel to the American Anthropological Associations Committee for Human
Rights ano as special counsel to the Association of Thiro Worlo Stuoies. His
most recent bookJustice for Africa: Rwandas Genocide, Its National Courts and the UN
Criminal Tribunal ,.ooo,won the Association of Thiro Worlo Stuoies book of
the year awaro ano was nominateo for the Raphael Lemkin book awaro.
cox+nint+ons
Beatriz Manz, an anthropologist ano native of Chile, has conoucteo extensive re-
search in Guatemala ano Mexico. She has receiveo several grants, incluoing a
Feace Iellowship from the Bunting Institute at Raoclie for her research among
Guatemalan refugees in Mexico. Most recently, she was the recipient of a John
D. ano Catherine T. MacArthur Iounoation research ano writing grant. She is
currently associate professor of geography ano ethnic stuoies at the University of
California, Berkeley.
David Maybury-Lewis is Eowaro C. Henoerson Frofessor of Anthropology at Har-
varo University ano the founoer ano presioent of Cultural Survival, an organi-
zation that oefenos the rights of inoigenous peoples.
Carole Nagengast is professor of anthropology at the University of New Mexico,
where she teaches classes on human rights, class, genoer, ethnicity, ano transnation-
alism. She ooes research with Mixtecs from southern Mexico, the U.S.-Mexico
boroer region, ano in Folano. Major publications incluoe articles in the Annual Re-
views of Anthropology ,:qq,, the Journal of Anthropological Research ,:qq,, Latin American
Research Review ,:qqo,, ano the volume Reluctant Socialists: Class, Culture and the Polish
State ,:qq:,. She has a forthcoming eoiteo volume entitleo The Anthropologist as
Activist ano is writing an ethnography of Mixtec migrants to the Uniteo States. Na-
gengast serveo on the boaro of oirectors at Amnesty International ano was a
member of the American Anthropology Association Committee for Human
Rights. She currently chairs the American Anthropological Association Committee
on Fublic Folicy, the Association for the Aovancement of Science Committee on
Social Responsibility, ano the AAAS Subcommittee on Human Rights.
William S. Parsons is the former oirector of eoucation ano now chief of sta for
the Uniteo States Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, D.C. He is the
author of the stuoy guioe Everyones Not Here: Families of the Armenian Genocide ,Ar-
menian Assembly of America :q8q,, coauthor of Facing History and Ourselves: Holo-
caust and Human Behavior ,Intentional Fublications :q8.,, ano coeoitor of Century of
Genocide: Eyewitness Accounts and Critical Views ,Garlano :qq,.
Kenneth Roth is the executive oirector of Human Rights Watch, the largest
U.S.-baseo international human rights organization. He has conoucteo human
rights investigations arouno the globe, oevoting special attention to issues of jus-
tice ano accountability for gross abuses of human rights, stanoaros governing
military conouct in time of war, the human rights policies of the Uniteo States
ano the Uniteo Nations, ano the human rights responsibilities of multinational
businesses. He has written extensively on a range of human rights topics in such
publications as the New York Times, the Washington Post, Foreign Aairs, the Nation,
ano the New York Review of Books. He appears often in the major meoia, incluoing
NFR, the BBC, CNN, FBS, ano the principal U.S. networks. He has testieo re-
peateoly before the U.S. Congress.
cox+nint+ons
Gretchen E. Schat is an applieo anthropologist in resioence at American
University in Washington, D.C., where she teaches perhaps the rst Holocaust
class in an anthropology oepartment. She has been a leaoer in the oevelopment
of practicing anthropology, founoing member ano secono presioent of the
Washington Association of Frofessional Anthropologists. Schat is active in con-
tract research for government agencies, evaluating programs in the areas of
health, eoucation, ano social welfare.
Nancy Scheper-Hughes is professor of anthropology at the University of California,
Berkeley, where she also oirects the ooctoral program in critical stuoies of meoi-
cine, science, ano the booy. Her many publications incluoe Saints, Scholars and
Schizophrenics: Mental Illness in Rural Ireland, which receiveo the Margaret Meao
Awaro, ano Death without Weeping: The Violence of Everyday Life in Brazil, which re-
ceiveo several awaros incluoing the international Fitre Frize ano the Welcome
Meoal of the Royal Anthropological Institute. She is currently writing two
books, one entitleo Whos the Killer? Violence and Democracy in the New South Africa,
ano the other entitleo The Ends of the Body: The Global Trac in Organs.
Toni Shapiro-Phim is a research associate with the Electronic Cultural Atlas Initia-
tive at the University of California, Berkeley. She is completing a manuscript on
the relationship between war ano oance in late-twentieth-century Cambooia ano
has been working with artists at Cambooias Royal University of Iine Arts on
oocumentation of their oance technique. Coauthor of Dance in Cambodia ,Oxforo
:qqq,, Shapiro-Fhim has written numerous articles on the cultural context of
Cambooian performing arts.
Christopher C. Taylor is associate professor of anthropology at the University of Al-
abama at Birmingham. He is primarily a specialist in symbolic ano meoical an-
thropology ano has oone elowork in Rwanoa, Kenya, ano the Ivory Coast. He
also workeo in applieo meoical anthropology on the sociocultural ano behavioral
aspects of HIV transmission. At the beginning of the genocioe in Rwanoa, he
was employeo by Iamily Health International unoer the auspices of the Uniteo
States Agency for International Development.
Samuel Totten is professor of curriculum ano instruction at the University of
Arkansas at Iayetteville. He is the compiler/eoitor of First Person Accounts of Geno-
cidal Acts Committed in the Twentieth Century ,Greenwooo :qq:,, coeoitor of Century of
Genocide: Eyewitness Accounts and Critical Views ,Garlano :qq,, associate eoitor of
Encyclopedia of Genocide ,ABC-CLIO :qqq,. He is currently completing two books:
Pioneers of Genocide Studies ,Transaction Fublishers, forthcoming, ano The Interven-
tion and Prevention of Genocide: An Annotated Bibliography ,Greenwooo, forthcoming,.
cox+nint+ons
Abrams, Fhilip, .8
Aceh, 8, q.
Ache, 6.6
Aoorno, Theooor W., ..qo
AIL-CIO,
Agamben, Giorgio, 6
Akayesu, Jean-Faul, :., ::, :8, :q.o
AllianceGreens, .q, .o
Ambon, 8
American Anthropological Association, .
American Irienos Service Committee, .q
Amnesty International, q
Anoreopoulos, George, :o6, :oq
Angkor Wat, :oq
anthropology/anthropologists: aovocacy for social
justice by, , apartheio ano, 66, contribu-
tion to unoerstanoing genocioe by, , geno-
cioe ano, .8.q, 6, in Nazi Germany,
:6:8, :.:, silence on genocioe of, :., 8
apartheio, 66
archaeology: as contributing factor to genocioe,
qq6, as cultural capital, qq6, in
Germany unoer National Socialists, q:o.,
as hanomaioen of nationalism, :o6:o
Arenot, Hannah, .qq
Arnolo, Bettina, ::6
Assyrians,
Atlantis, :o
Australia: genocioe in, 6, nationalism in, :.
Bartov, Omer, ., .6
Basaglia, Iranco, o
Bauman, Zygmunt, :.
Beer, Angelika, .o
Beneoict, Ruth, 6
blooo: German nationhooo ano, :, .o, .:,
.66
booy: genocioe ano focus on, 668, German
nationhooo ano, .o, .:, as icon of past,
..qo, ano nuoity as tool in West Germany,
.., .o, Rwanoan practices relating
to, :6., :, :668, :., ano the
state, ::.
Boroer Fatrol, .q, :., militarization of,
o, use of low-intensity conflict methoos by,
, violence by, ., qo, :
Bosniac-Croat Ieoeration, .o:
Bosnia-Herzegovina: ethnic cleansing in, ...,
:q6.oo, .o6, .:.:, ethnic relations in,
.::8, feoeration of Bosnians ano Croats in,
.oo, .o:, inoepenoence of, :q, :q8, manipu-
lation of fear in, :q8, .::, .:6:, Muslims in,
.::6, Serbian take over of, :qq
Bosnian Muslims, :q6, .::6, ...n:8
Bosnian Serb Army, .oo
Boua, Chanthou, .q
Bouroieu, Fierre, 6qo
Bowen, John, .8.q, .6.
Brazil, , , o:, :, .
Bringa, Tone, ...
Brugge, Feter, .o:
Buoohism, ., .8o
Burma, o, 6
Burunoi, :o:, .o:
California Inoians: violence against, , . See
also Ishi
Cambooia: classical oance in, :868, genoer
imbalance in, .88o, recent history of,
.., revival of Buoohism in, .8o8.,
uncertainty ano fear in, .8.8, .8. See
also Khmer Rouge
Celts, :::
Chalk, Irank, 6:
Charlemagne, :oo:o:
Chechens, 68
Chiloe, V. Goroon, ::.n:
chiloren: Khmer Rouge ano, :8:8.
China, ::o
Cifuentes H., Juan Iernanoo, .qq
Clastres, Fierre, ::.
Clay, Jason,
Clinton, Bill, 8
Coalition pour la Defense oe la Republique, :
Cohen, Roger, .o.
Cohn, Norman, q
Colo War: influence in Guatemala of, .q6q, .q8
Commission for Historical Clarification ,CEH,
,Guatemala,, .q, .qq, .qq, oo
concentration camps, 6
Congo, 6,
Cook, Sherburne I., .
Coupez, A., :., :
Croatian Defense Iorce, :qq.oo
Croats: relations with Muslims of, .oo.o:, sep-
aratists, :qq, .oo
cultural relativism: stuoy of genocioe ano, .,
culture, :8
Daorian, Vahakn N., 6:
Davies, Davio,
Dayton Agreement, .oo, .o:
oeath cults, .::
Democratic Kampuchea. See Khmer Rouge.
oevelopment, :, genocioe ano, 6, 8q
East Timor, 8
Ebihara, May, ano Juoy Leogerwooo, ..
ecocioe,
Erikson, Kai, :o:
ethnic cleansing, ..., :q, :q8.o., compareo
with genocioe, ., .o, origin of term,
.o
ethnic conflict, .8, 8, 8
ethnicity, q6q
ethnocioe, q, 66
evil, inoculation of, q
Ialk, Richaro, ., .6
fear, manipulation of, :q8, .::, .:6:
Ieoer, Kenneth, :o8
Iein, Helen, , 6, 8o
Ieloman, Allen, .6
Iischer, Eugon, :, :.:., :.n::
Irings, Viviane, .
Gatabazi, Ielicien, :
Geertz, Clifforo, o
genoer-relateo violence, 8
Genetic Health Courts, :.
genocioal massacres,
genocioe: anthropological contribution to unoer-
stanoing, , anthropology ano, .8.q,
6, continuum, 6q, cultural, 6o, cul-
tural relativism ano stuoy of, ., , oefinition
of, , , 6, 6:, 6, :o::, oevelopment
ano, 8q, as oistinguisheo from other forms
of violence, 6, oomestic, 6, eoucation about,
88o, 8.8, ethnic cleansing ano, .o,
against hunter-gatherers, 6:6, importance
of kin networks after, ., against inoigenous
peoples, 66, intent ano, 6, 6, :8:q,
legacies of, , mooernity ano, :o, :8, ., .8,
.6.6, 666q, obsessive focus on booy ano,
668, prerequisites for, 686q, priming
mechanisms for, .qo, ., 8q, state as
source of, q., 8, typologies of, 6:66,
utilitarian, 6. See also under specic place or group
genocioe early warning systems, 6
Germany: anthropologists in Nazi, :6:8,
:.:, archaeology unoer National Social-
ists in, q:o., :o, concept of race in, q,
::q.o, folkloric founoation of, :o6, for-
getting past in, .., migration theory
ano, :o., postwar national ioentity in,
.o. See also New Left
Gleohill, John, :8
Golohagen, Daniel, 8
Great Zimbabwe, :o8
Greeks, :o
Guatemala, o:, Catholic Church in, .q,
genocioe in, o:, guerillas in, .qq8, in-
fluence of Colo War on, .q6q, .q8, psy-
chological scars of war in, o:, role of
memory in, .q8qq. See also Santa Maria
Tzeja, Guatemala
Guggenberg, Berno, .q, ..
Habyarimana, Juvenal, :, :., :
Hale, Charles R., .q8
Hall, Martin, ::.n
Harrington, Michael, q
Henry, Jules,
Herero, 8
Heritier, Irancoise, :nq
oHertfelt, M., :., :
Herzog, Dagmar, ., .
Hill, Kim, 6
Hinton, Alexanoer Laban, :o8, :o, ., 8,
8,
Hinton, Leanne, q
Hirsch, Herbert, q6
Hitchcock, Robert, :::.
Hitler, Aoolf, :o, :.:
Holocaust, :, 6, collective shame about,
., as ethnic conflict, 8, in postwar
West German political culture, ., repres-
sion of memory of, ..,
Horowitz, Irving, q
Hrolicka, Ales, 6:
human types, problem of, 88q
hunter-gatherers: genocioe ano, 6:6, o:
Hurtaoo, A. Magoalena, 6
Hutu: cultural oefinition of, ., qo, violence
against, :o:, narratives of, justifying
genocioe against Tutsi, :6, :o
Immigration ano Reform Act, o:
inoigenous peoples: oefinition of, ::, 6, q:,
q.q, genocioe against, ., populations
of, oeclines in, , , steps taken to protect
rights of, 8:
Inoonesia, 68
Institute fur Deutsche Ostarbeit, :, :.o
intent: genocioe ano, 6, 6, :8:q
International Alert Against Genocioe ano Mass
Killing, q
International Court of Justice, ::, :.
International Criminal Court, , :o
International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanoa
,ICTR,, , , :., :
Isaaks, 68
Ishi, , 66o, remains of, :, 6o6:, 6,
6n
Izetbegovic, Alija, .::
Jews: oefinition of, unoer German law, :.., in
Folano, :.8.q, removal of, from Kaiser
Wilhelm Institute, :.:, :... See also Holocaust
Jimenez, Maria, .q
Johnson, Aoam, 6n.
Jonassohn, Kurt, 6:
Kaiser Wilhelm Institute fur Anthropologie, :6,
:.o.
Kalimantan, 88
Kapferer, Bruce, :., :6, :n
Karaozid, Raoovan, :q, .o:., ..:n::
Keyes, Charles, .8o
Khmer Rouge, :q, :8o, .., .8, aesthetic
practice ano terror by, .:, :q8o, :8:,
:8.8q, aftermath of, .., ..8, Angkor
Wat as symbol for, :oq, attack on Buoohism
by, ., .8o, capriciousness of killing by, :88,
chiloren ano, :8:8., classification of Olo
ano New people by, :oq, :8o, ., mortal-
ity unoer, ., ., .8, unoermining of
family ano householo by, .6
Kil, Eomuno, :o
Kommune 1, .6, .
Kossinna, Gustaf, :o.
Koster, Barbara, .
Kroeber, Alfreo, :, ., , failure of, to
oeal with violence against California Inoi-
ans, , 6., Ishi ano, 86o,
treatment of Ishis remains by, 6o6:
Kroeber, Theooora, 8q, 6.
Kuklick, Henrika, :o8
Kuper, Leo, q6o, 6, q, q, .
Kymlicka, Will, q
labels, 8.
Lafreniere, Bree, :8q
Las Casas, Bartolom oe,
Latinos: violence against, ., .6, o:,
qo, :
Lechler, Jorg, :oo, :o:
Leogerwooo, Juoy, .., :oq
Lemkin, Raphael, , 8q, :qq
Lenz, Iritz, :.
Leopolo II, 6,
Levi, Frimo, .q8
Levi-Strauss, Clauoe, o:
Lima, Byron Disrael, .q
Linke, Uli, .6.
Magnarella, Faul, , qo
Maiou, , 6
Malinowski, Bronislaw, :.
Malkki, Liisa, :o:, .o
Manz, Beatriz, ..
Marston, John, .
Martin, J., :q
Martinez, Roberto, .q
Martinez-Cobo, J. R., q:
May, Someth, :8.
Maya, 686q, .q. See also Santa Maria Tzeja,
Guatemala
Maybury-Lewis, Davio, q::
Meas Nee, .8:8.
Mecklenburg, Duke Ireoerick of, .:n::
memory: oeath cults ano politics of, .::, role in
Guatemala of, .q8qq
Mengele, Josef, :.6, ::
Merivale, Herman,
Mexico, 6q
Milosevid, Slobooan, .o., .o8, .:
mooernity: binary oppositions of, 8q, :8:q,
oefinition of, , genocioe ano, :o, :8, ., .8,
.6.6, 666q, suffering ano, ..6
Montt, Rios, .q
Mooney, James,
Morel, Eomuno D., 6
Mounobuiloer Myth, :o8
Mouvement Revolutionnaire pour le Developpe-
ment, :, :, :n
Mugesera, Leon, :q
muroer, political mass, 6
Musinga, Yuhi V, :.
Myerhoff, Barbara, .8.
Nagas, qo
Nagengast, Carole, 6, .
nationalism, q, archaeology as hanomaioen of,
:o6:o, in Bosnia, .:6:, as forgeo with ter-
ror, .:.:, mythico-ritual oimensions of,
:., in Rwanoa, :., in Yugoslavian poli-
tics, .oq:o
nationality: in Germany, .o:, in Yugoslavia,
..on:
National Socialist Farty. See under Germany
nations, 68
Noaoaye, Melchior, :66, :6, :n:6
Ness, Sally Ann, :qon:o
New Left: nuoist booy practices of, .68, .q,
.o, preoccupation of, with male sexual-
ity, .6, .o:, .6, .8, .6, verbal vio-
lence by, .6., .:6., .6
Ngor, Haing, :8
Nietzsche, Irieorich, .qq
Norostrom, C., :q
North American Iree Traoe Agreement, o
Northern Irelano, q
nursing homes, .
Ogoni, 8, q
oil oevelopment, 8, q
Olo Testament: genocioe in, 66
ontology, :.
Ovesen, Jan, et al., .
Farsons, William, :::.
Flanck, Max, :.:
Folano: Nazi anthropologists in, :.o
Fol Fot, :oq. See also Khmer Rouge
post-traumatic stress oisoroer, 68, 6o
Frijeoor, Bosnia, :q, :q8
Futumayo, :o
race: certification of, in Germany, :..., Ger-
man concept of, q, ::q.o, :.
racial hygiene, :.
Reiche, Reimut, .6
Renan, Ernest, qq8
Republika Srpska, .o:, .o6
rhetoric of exclusion, :qq
Riesman, Faul, 6n:
Roca, General,
Rockefeller Iounoation, :.:, :.., :.
Roosevelt, Theooore,
Ross, Amy, .q
rubber boom, 6
Ruganzu Noori, :
Rwanoa: cultural logic of killing in, :q.o,
886, forms of violence in, :86q, nation-
alism in, :., popular meoicine in, :6.,
sacreo kingship in, :.8. See also Hutu, Tutsi
Rwanoan Fatriotic Iront, :
San, o
Santa Maria Tzeja, Guatemala, ., attack
against, .q.q, o6, founoing of, .q, play
oocumenting massacre at, ., o, psycho-
logical scars of massacre at, o.
Sautman, Barry, :o8q, ::o
Schafft, Gretchen, :6:8
Scharping, Ruoolph, .o
Scheper-Hughes, Nancy, o:
Schirner, Michael, .
Serb Nationalist Farty, :qq8
Serbs. See Bosnia-Herzegovina,
ethnic cleansing
sexual violence, :q.o
Shapiro-Fhim, Toni, .o.:
Shea, Ranoall, o
slave traoe,
Smith, Roger W., 6, 6
Snow, Clyoe, 6
Soltau, Heioe, .
song ano oance: terror by Khmer Rouge ano,
.:, :q8o, :8:, :8.8q
Soviet Union, q
Spiegel, Der, .q
Srebrenica, Bosnia, :q, :q6, .:8
Sri Lanka, :.
state: genocioe ano, q., 8, homogeneity
ano, :, human rights abuses ano, ..8
Staub, Ervin, :oq
Strobel, Richaro, q8:oo, :o
Suoan, o
Tacitus, :o
Tasmania, , 6:6.
Taussig, Michael, :o
Taylor, Christopher, :q.o, 886
Thomas, Cyrus, :o
Tito, .oq:o, changes following oeath of, ..,
.o6, .:::.
Tooorov, Tzvetan, .6
Totten, Samuel, :::., 6
transnational corporations: human rights
violations by, :
Truganini, 6.
Tuojman, Iranjo, .:
Tutsi: cultural oefinition of, ., qo, Hutu nar-
ratives justifying violence against, :o, physi-
cal oistinctiveness of, .:n::, as privilegeo by
colonial powers, :6, :o, ::, .6., as
protecteo people, ::8, violence against,
:q6:, :66, :686q, :
twins stuoies, :.
Uniteo Nations Commission of Experts for the
International Criminal Tribunal, :q, :q8,
.o, .o8, ...n:
Uniteo Nations Convention on the Frevention
ano Funishment of Genocioe, ., oefinition
of genocioe by, q6o, 8o8:, :o::, issue
of protecteo peoples unoer, ::8
Uniteo Nations Frotection Iorce
,UNFROIOR,, :q, :q6
Uniteo Nations Sub-Commission on the Freven-
tion of Discrimination ano Frotection of
Minorities, 6:
Uniteo Nations Working Group on Inoigenous
Fopulations, 8:
Uniteo States Drug Enforcement Agency,
Uniteo States Immigration ano Naturalization
Service, .qo, :, :. See also Boroer Fatrol
Universal Declaration of Human Rights, .,
Verscheur, Otmar von, :6:, :., :., :.6
Vietnam War, 6
Vijghen, John, .8
violence: oefinition of, 6, forms of, in Rwanoa,
:86q, genoer-relateo, 8, in language of
New Left, .:6., .6, political, 6, 8,
sacrificial, :, sexual, :q.o, symbolic, .6,
8, q
Volkekunde, 6
War Crimes Tribunal,
Warren, Kay, .q8, .qqoo
Washington Agreement, .oo, .o:
West Germany. See Germany, New Left
Whitaker, B., 6o, 8.
Working Group on Inoigenous Fopulations,
8:8.
Wounoeo Knee,
Yahi, 6. See also Ishi
Yanomami,
Yugoslavia: manipulation of fear in, .::, .:6:,
transition of authority in, after Titos oeath,
.o6:o. See also Bosnia-Herzegovina
Yugoslav Feoples Army ,JNA,, :q, .o, .o8
Zapatistas, 6q
Zerubavel, Yael, ::o
Zwick, Feter, .o
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