Exhibit seeks to raise awareness of ongoing genocide in Darfur

Brattleboro Reformer, VT
May 5 2007

Exhibit seeks to raise awareness of ongoing genocide in Darfur

By PATRICK J. CROWLEY, Reformer Staff
Saturday, May 5

BRATTLEBORO — Five canvas tents sat in a semi-circle on the lawn of
the Centre Congregational Church on Main Street on Friday.
Banners hung near each tent gave an idea as to the information
hanging inside each tent.

The first one read "1915, Armenia." Inside the tent, another banner:
"1,500,000 killed." The tent showed maps and articles relating to the
Armenian genocide and acts as a quick, educational opportunity for a
grim historical event.

The tents continued with this theme:

* 1938, Holocaust … 6,000,000 killed.

* 1957, Cambodia … 2,000,000 killed.

* 1994, Rwanda … 800,000 killed.

Now, Darfur … 400,000 killed and counting.

Each tent had written messages covering most of the tan canvas from
various stops the tents have made around the country over the past
year.

Gabriel Stauring, from the Los Angeles area in California, first set
up the "refugee camp" in Los Angeles last April.

At first, Stauring had no intention of carrying the tents around the
country in an effort to increase awareness on the increasingly
gruesome tragedy in Darfur, Sudan. He thought it would be a one-time
event.

But soon, he had more and more invitations to set up camp in another
area. In the past year, Stauring has wound up in places around
California, Las Vegas, New York City, Washington, D.C., Florida,
Delaware, Michigan, Tennessee and now Brattleboro.
He was invited by the School for International Training’s Net Impact
group to set up during their "Race for a Reason" on May 12, but when
Stauring said he couldn’t make it on that date, they set him up to
come on Gallery Walk.

"It wasn’t planned to become a traveling exhibit," Stauring said.

Stauring first got the idea of the exhibit when he was in Chad, just
over the border from the Darfur region of Sudan. Refugees who escaped
the bloodshed in Sudan are put in canvas tents much like the ones
Stauring uses in his exhibit. One family is put up in one small tent,
he said.

"It lets people know the enormity of what’s happening now," he said,
later adding, "there’s still millions of lives we can save."

Stauring said over the past year, he’s been able to see awareness
increase as time goes on and as lives continue to be lost. In
particular, he said, young people like middle and high school
students are paying attention.

"It’s starting to grow," he said.

But still, it’s not enough. Stauring said he was alarmed to find out
in places like Tennessee and even Las Vegas many simply do not know
what is happening in Sudan.

His approach is to try and expose new people to the information on
the current genocide and also past ones, after which the world said
"never again."

"We’re trying to reach one person at a time," he said.

Each tent, a dedication to the lives lost in five genocides in the
past 100 years, often showed horrific images of death associated with
the killing. Most also had a quote from a survivor of the violence,
describing the bloodshed.

"I heard somebody calling my name. He said actually that ‘I have
killed 399 cockroaches,’ and he wanted me to be the 400th," a
survivor of the Rwanda genocide said.

Another powerful quote was hanging from the walls of the Darfur tent.

"There were soldiers from Sudan, janjaweed (militia) and planes and
bombs. I saw the janjaweed take girls and women. The women were
screaming. They seized them, they took them by force. The pretty ones
were taken away. Girls were taken, small girls too, I think five and
seven and 14. Some came back after four or five hours … some we
haven’t seen again," wrote a 13-year-old Darfur survivor.

Stauring said he intends to bring the tents to refugee camps in the
area to provide those in need with shelter, so messages are written
on the tents by people from all over the country in the hopes of
inspiring some optimism.

One quoted the Bible — Psalm 27: verses 1 and 2.

Many said the victims will not be forgotten.

Others kept the message as simple as possible.

"Stop genocide."

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://www.reformer.com/localnews/ci_5824560

Emil Lazarian

“I should like to see any power of the world destroy this race, this small tribe of unimportant people, whose wars have all been fought and lost, whose structures have crumbled, literature is unread, music is unheard, and prayers are no more answered. Go ahead, destroy Armenia . See if you can do it. Send them into the desert without bread or water. Burn their homes and churches. Then see if they will not laugh, sing and pray again. For when two of them meet anywhere in the world, see if they will not create a New Armenia.” - WS