Posted on 01/08/2020 7:19:56 AM PST by Kaslin
Last year, I had the privilege of taking a private tour of the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museums Americans and the Holocaust exhibit. The purpose of the exhibit is to highlight the role of average Americans and their response to the events of the Holocaust.
As I wandered the halls of the Museum, my eyes were drawn to articles from World War II highlighting Kristallnacht and the concentration camps of Nazi Germany. But nothing was more stunning than the row of miniature suitcases lined up each one representing 5,000 people (mothers, fathers, sons, daughters, grandmothers, grandfathers the vast majority of them Jewish refugees) who sought to escape to the U.S.
The exhibit transitioned quickly from the reality of the needs (hundreds of thousands seeking safe haven) to the U.S. response. American journalists wrote droves of articles; student groups lobbied; and Treasury Secretary Henry Morgenthau, Jr., the lone Jewish member of FDRs cabinet, paved the way for the creation of the War Refugee Board that resulted in tens, if not hundreds of thousands of mostly European Jews being spared during the Holocaust.
Now, instead of witnessing the assault of the German government on Jewish people, the American people are watching history repeat itself, as another government this time, China launches an all-out assault on the Muslim religious minority Uighurs.
The breakneck speed in which the Chinese government has collectivized and interred what is now believed to be 1.8 million Muslims in political reeducation camps is breathtaking.
The facts are now undeniable.
The recent leak of classified data from China by the New York Times confirmed the existence of a vast web of political prison camps that Xinjiang expert Adrian Zenz of the Victims of Communism Memorial Foundation now believes number between 1,300 and 1,400.
The data leak, now termed the Xinjiang Papers, traces the massive repression and internment directly to the very top of the Chinese political system. There can be no doubt that Xi Jinping sold this modern phenomenon in speeches and enabled Xinjiang Party Secretary Chen Quanguo to orchestrate it. The proposal of mass collectivization and arbitrary detention of nearly 2 million people was apparently objected to by some members of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP). The Xinjiang Papers reveals that those who objected were subsequently purged.
There is no shortage of reasons why anyone might object to these camps. Prisoners in the camps are subject to reeducation reminiscent of the Cultural Revolution. Forced to recant their religious beliefs or at least make them conform with the CCPs ends, they are also induced to forsake their native languagei n favor of Mandarin. New reports indicate that individuals in the camps may be subject to forced sterilization and are injected with unknown substances to be experimented on like lab rats.Torture is increasingly reported, and some have even died while in custody.
While Chinese authorities have sought to sell reeducation camps as vocational training centers that Uighurs graduate from and go on to live so-called reformed lives, what that means in practice are countless Uighurs missing, their family members lucky enough to be abroad calling attention to their cases and even starting a Twitter campaign, #StillNoInfo, as they search for those still missing. It also means well-educated Uighurs being forced to trade in their white-collar jobs for work in factories that leave them dependent on the Chinese state for their income.
What sets collectivization of the Uighurs apart from previous periods of collectivization, both in China, but also in other parts of the world, is the rapid pace in which it took place.
The speed at which such a large population of people could be uprooted from their homes and extra-judicially interned was made possible principally through surveillance technology technology that, according toHuman Rights Watch, deems it suspicious to exit out the back door rather than the front door of your home, and sees attendance at mosque as grounds for interrogation or internment. Normal human behavior, to live ones life according to ones closely-held beliefs, is seen as threatening the Chinese Communist Party, to whom the state supersedes all other allegiances.
In the face of such atrocities, it is easy for individuals and governments to feel paralyzed. After all, how does one respond to such distortions of human existence like the Holocaust, genocide in Rwanda, Darfur, or Burma, or the gulags of the Soviet Union?
The Americans and the Holocaust exhibit really was a charge to all Americans.
To the American people who among you will call on your elected leaders to respond? Who will be a good neighbor? Even to your neighbor across the Pacific.
Will you be there for them in their time of need?
To the students who will organize student groups and events to raise awareness?
To civil societyWho will write the articles and document the evidence for future justice? Who will hold prayer meetings? Who will support local Uighurs recently resettled in the U.S. as they mourn lost family members or try to find those still missing?
To the U.S. government who will be the next Henry Morgenthau?
The American people have a beautiful penchant for loving and caring a philanthropic spirit, as it is often described. This is because U.S. leaders such as Ronald Reagan called us to our better selves to be that shining city on a hill in whatever form that looks like in the present.
Persecution of the Uighurs demands a strong U.S. response, but as illustrated in the case of the Holocaust, it took pressure from the American people, from civil society, and leaders in the U.S. government to be willing to lead anddo what it is possiblefor the U.S. to do to serve those in need in the face of such earth-shattering atrocities.
Doing what is possible means advancing freedom and values in Asia.
Doing what is possible means sanctioning Chen Quanguo.
Doing what is possible may involve granting priority refugee resettlement status to Uighurs.
In the face of such severe human-rights violations, the U.S. should not miss this opportunity to demonstrate its commitment to freedom wherever it is challenged. Today, its in China.
China is the rising superpower with nuclear weapons. That limits our options.
Only a fool would consider starting a war with China. And its the most populous country on earth.
No...it doesnt.
They are muzloids and let the other muzloids stand up for them. The USA shouldnt be saying anything
No.
Yeah, no. The uigurs are Moslems and have launched numerous knife and sword attacks. These camps are very uncool but they aren’t Aushwitz. It’s basically city sized forced trade and charm school where they are trained to not be moslem misfits
But its idiotic to look for war with China on behalf of Islamic freedom
We have important concerns to work out with China. We need to focus on Trade and Military matters.
The issues between China and the Muslims is not our affair at all.
Isn’t this type of problem what the UN was organized for? Many countries, mainly the US, pay vast sums of money for the UN to take care of business. If the UN is all hot air, then it’s time to deflate the balloon and pack it in.
My first order response, too.
While it seems like many of them are mild, rural, peasant Muslims, and they are being badly mistreated, it is also why China, after a number of crazed knife attacks from that population, wants to suppress Islam. Especially when it sees what the Islamist movement is doing all over the world.
We’ve armed the Saudis.
Let them take it on.
FREE TIBET!!!
I did not know that Uighur was a US state.
Prior to 911, that was part of Bin Ladin’s mission, to train muslims from central asia including Uighurs, Chechens, and others from the various ‘Stans. The idea was to peel those areas away from Moscow and Beijing. With the Saudis as our guide, we would be the heros of the muslim world.
Since 911 (and Beslan), since the Afghan War, and ISIS, and Al Qaeda, and the Taliban and all that, helping the muslims build a Central Asian caliphate doesn’t seem like such a brilliant idea anymore. We’ll probably sit this one out. I’m sure the Saudis are messing around in Xinjiang, and if there is anything we need to know about it we can just ask them. We should stay out of it.
These articles always neglect to mention that part. China endured plenty of provocation from violent Uyghur separatists before cracking down, even if their typically Communist over-the-top response is worthy of condemnation.
No. No it doesn’t.
More than anybody, the country of Turkey should be making sharp protest to the Chinese for the treatment of their ethnic brethren.
Muslims everywhere should be protesting to the Chinese. After all, isn’t China supposed to submit to the peace of Islam? That is the deal they want for the United States....
Thanks for adding the balance this piece lacked.
Why? Its not our problem. Let their Muslim brothers take up the cause if they wish.
My ass! The Turks are the Uighur's kinsmen and their coreligionists, let the Turks lead the charge against the Chinese.
The recent leak of classified data from China by the New York Times confirmed the existence of a vast web of political prison camps that Xinjiang expert Adrian Zenz of the Victims of Communism Memorial Foundation now believes number between 1,300 and 1,400.
The data leak, now termed the Xinjiang Papers, traces the massive repression and internment directly to the very top of the Chinese political system. There can be no doubt that Xi Jinping sold this modern phenomenon in speeches and enabled Xinjiang Party Secretary Chen Quanguo to orchestrate it. The proposal of mass collectivization and arbitrary detention of nearly 2 million people was apparently objected to by some members of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP). The Xinjiang Papers reveals that those who objected were subsequently purged.
There is no shortage of reasons why anyone might object to these camps. Prisoners in the camps are subject to reeducation reminiscent of the Cultural Revolution. Forced to recant their religious beliefs or at least make them conform with the CCPs ends...
No it doesn’t! We have sensitive trade negotiations with China. If China frees the Uighers, they will stab other Chinese.
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