Essays & Articles by Amy Fagin

Bangladesh: The Journey from Genocide to Justice and Prevention

Bangladesh: The Journey from Genocide to Justice and Prevention

At 40,000 feet, flying from Dhaka to Dubai the Himalayan Mountain Range stretches from horizon to horizon, like a row of perfect white teeth in the cosmic mouth of Krishna. This parting vista seems a fitting farewell to my extraordinary journey into the educational aperture of the Second Winter School of the Center for the Study of Genocide and Justice.

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Nyange, Rwanda: A Deeper Reflection

Nyange, Rwanda: A Deeper Reflection

Our driver, Didier, grumbled as we labored our way up to the knoll to where Nyange Church is located, the site of a uniquely grizzly massacre during the ’94 genocide. We took a jumpy turn onto a red dust road and arrived at the quiet, and closed, memorial site.

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Book Review: Native America and the Question of Genocide

Book Review: Native America and the Question of Genocide

In the book’s concluding paragraph, scholar and historian Paul Bartrop is given the last word on the warrant of portraying the accuracy of the complex atrocities perpetrated against the native populations of America. This and future generations are the bearers of this responsibility, and to whom this effort matters most.

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Prisoner Without A Name

Prisoner Without A Name

This past weekend, my husband and I were dining with local and international friends. My local guest looked at me incredulously, asking: “Who is Chelsea Manning?”

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Book Review: War, Genocide and Justice: Cambodian American Memory Work

Book Review: War, Genocide and Justice: Cambodian American Memory Work

For Cambodian Americans, the challenges of identity, as individuals and community, whose recent past embodies the societal fragmentation and the trauma of war, genocide and relocation is the raw material for “memory work” in Cathy J. Schlund-Vial’s publication War, Genocide and Justice: Cambodian American Memory Work.

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Vandalism of Aleppo

Vandalism of Aleppo

As I sit in the comfort of my home office, I have to admit to you that I have not had the opportunity to visit Aleppo. Today, a Google Image search of Aleppo brings up obliterated city blocks and buildings.

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