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Holocaust Museum To Open Exhibit On Syrian Genocide

Mansour Omari was working as a Syrian human rights activist documenting the Assad regime’s incarceration and killing of civilians and opposition figures when he was arrested in 2012 and taken to a secret prison.

During nearly a year in prison and under routine torture, Omari and his cellmates embarked on a new mission: Using ink made of their own blood mixed with rust from the cell bars and with a chicken bone as a pen, they wrote on pieces of cloth the names of every prisoners being held with them. When Omari was released, he smuggled the names in his shirt and went on to inform the families of the detainees about their loved ones’ whereabouts.

Now, these pieces of cloth are at the center of the exhibition “Syria: Please Don’t Forget Us” opening at the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington.

“All humanity suffering is one…No matter if you were Jew or Christian or Muslim or Rohinga or Cambodian,” Omari, who is now in the United States, told the Forward during a preview of the exhibit. “If you are a victim, you are a victim. If you are a perpetrator, you are a perpetrator.”

In addition to documenting Nazi crimes, the Holocaust Museum, on Washington’s National Mall, is also tasked with alerting against modern-day genocides. As such, the Syrian civil war is on the museum’s watchlist as one of the most serious ongoing mass atrocities.

“We want people to leave our permanent exhibition on the Holocaust, where they might ask themselves ‘What would I have done had I been in Germany in the 1930s?’” said Cameron Hudson, director of the museum’s center for prevention of genocide. “And then walk into this room on Syria and they can ask themselves, ‘What am I going to do now, what am I going to do today?’”

Contact Nathan Guttman at guttman@forward.com or on Twitter @nathanguttman

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