The Scotsman

Genocides begin with words so we should all be careful with ours

-

The theme of this year’s National Prayer Breakfast for Scotland, held in Edinburgh last week, was reconcilia­tion. An audience of 300, including leaders from the worlds of politics, business, the third sector, and the Church, heard powerful presentati­ons on this theme, with a keynote address by Reverend Lesley Bilinda, now a Church of England vicar, whose Rwandan husband was murdered in the genocide 25 years ago.

Lesley’s message was a powerful, and timely one. “The genocide did not start with clubs and machetes,” she said. “It was many years in the making, and it started with words. It began in subtle ways: discrimina­tion; humiliatio­n and mocking; treating others as less than human; the language of hate.”

She went on to make the point that treating others as less than human leads, in the end, to violence. If we are to avoid future genocide we need to avoid the factors that lead to polarisati­on and division, by treating one another with dignity and respect, particular­ly those with whose ideas we totally disagree.

Over the last few years, we have

witnessed the heat of both the Scottish independen­ce referendum, and then the Brexit vote, with a rise in political discord and division, and a country divided down the middle. The “othering” of political opponents is something to which we have become accustomed in Scotland in the period since 2014. Hardly a day goes by without the use of insults such as “traitor” or “quisling” being thrown around on social media. To their shame, we have seen leading figures in nationalis­t parties like Ukip and the SNP tacitly, or even explicitly, encouragin­g such language, by questionin­g the loyalty of those who take a different view.

Some political issues are by their very nature divisive, but that does not mean that we cannot conduct a political debate on a respectful basis. We need less division, less discord, more compassion, and more reconcilia­tion. We are fortunate that in modern times we have never suffered the horrors seen in a country like Rwanda, but that does not mean that there are not lessons we can learn from the experience there.

 ??  ?? 0 Hundreds of thousands of minority Tutsis and moderate Hutus were killed in Rwanda in 1994
0 Hundreds of thousands of minority Tutsis and moderate Hutus were killed in Rwanda in 1994

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom