The Genocide the U.S. Didn’t See Coming
I read this sort of thing and two thoughts spring to mine:
What kind of animal is homo sapiens anyway, that this sort of thing can happen? How can there be so much evil in the world?
and
Why is the US responsible?
The village of Tula Toli in northern Rakhine state was the scene of some of the worst violence in the days after August 25. Uniformed troops charged the village, shot or hacked the men to death, and raped the women, locked them in houses and set the houses on fire. Children were not spared: Security forces tossed them into the flames or the river bordering the village, several Rohingya who escaped told me. Among the survivors was a young mother, Laila Begum, who ran for the river with her children as the security forces closed in. Begum lost hold of her 3-year-old son in the chaos. Then, as she jumped into the water to get away, an assailant tore her 18-month-old daughter out of her arms. Back on land, Begum stumbled on the body of a woman whose throat had been slashed. Next to the body sat a dazed little girl covered in blood. Begum grabbed the girl and ran, joining other Rohingya in the exodus to Bangladesh. When I met them in Moynarghona, the round-faced girl, who looked around 2 years old, called Begum “ma.” Begum called the girl Yasmeen.
I read this sort of thing and two thoughts spring to mine:
What kind of animal is homo sapiens anyway, that this sort of thing can happen? How can there be so much evil in the world?
and
Why is the US responsible?