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Wednesday, July 3, 2024
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No more genocides

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The crudest cases of genocides that have shocked the world in recent times were examined by almost two hundred specialists from all continents, who in more than forty panels met in Los Angeles, California from June 23 to 26.  

At the opening of the event, Kimberley Morales Johnson, indigenous to the Tongva people, revisited the wars of extermination against her people, ancestral owners of the territory on which the current city of Los Angeles was founded.  

Research was presented on the Jewish Holocaust, and the cases of Cambodia, Indonesia, Sri Lanka, with the partition of countries such as: India, Cambodia, Bangladesh, Rwanda, Namibia, Congo, Armenia, the former Yugoslavia, Yanomami indigenous people in Brazil, migrants to the United States, missing people and indigenous people harassed by oil and mining companies in the southern cone of Latin America, among whom are the Yanomami on the Brazil-Venezuela border.  

In her keynote lecture, Marcia Esparza addressed the case of Guatemala and the disastrous consequences of the 1954 intervention from which state terrorism arose.  

The Cakchiquel expert Lolmay Pedro García Matzar and Brigittine French referred to the need to use the mother tongue when collecting testimonies about the genocide in Mayan lands. 

At the closing of the event, Camilla Boisen spoke of the "moral horror" that represents the current genocide against the Palestinian people, and the way in which the Israeli occupation forces use the arguments of ?natural law? and the ?just war? invoked more than 500 years ago by Spanish theologians to legitimize the extermination of the American Indians. 

In the closing lecture, Shibley Telhami lamented that more than 80 percent of American specialists in the history of Palestine-Israel relations have chosen the path of self-censorship.  

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Ramon Gonzalez Ponciano
Ramon Gonzalez Ponciano
Guatemalan-Mexican. PhD in anthropology from the University of Texas at Austin and master's degree in the same discipline from Stanford University, where he has also been Tinker Professor, visiting researcher and affiliated researcher at the Center for Latin American Studies. He was visiting professor of the Education Abroad Program of the University of California in Mexico and collaborates as a guest lecturer in the Spanish Heritage, Continuing Studies programs and in the department of Spanish teaching at Stanford.
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