O 'rnon Indeed, Never Again T he hotel manager from Rwanda who became a hero by managing to save 1,268 people in the 1994 Rwandan massacre came to Farmington Hills on the final day of February 2007. Paul Rusesabagina began his day by speaking to the North Farmington High School students who had watched two nights earlier the movie, Hotel Rwanda, inspired by his life. He was the keynote speaker of their 2006-07 Interdisciplinary Study of "Humanity in Crisis: Genocide." The students were stuck in their class- rooms, locked down, watching him on monitors. As Rick Jones, the principal, said on the loud speakers, "A threat from an outside organization on Mr. Rusesabagina's life" forced police outside and inside the building. High security became his high priority. Rusesabagina, author of the 2006 auto- biography, An Ordinary Man, told the extraordinary story of his 100-day night- mare from April through July 1994 when he and 1,268 others managed to avoid the genocide that swept Rwanda, killing more than 800,000 people, five murders every minute, 8,000 every day. Emotional Tug On the last night of February in Metro Detroit, Rusesabagina made his way past the policemen stationed at Adat Shalom Synagogue in Farmington Hills to tell his story to hundreds of adults and teenag- ers in the sanctuary. We listened intently, trying to understand his English as he explained that he never used weapons. He has written that "words are the most effec- tive weapons of death...but they are also powerful tools of life." He told how he watched the horror overcome his country, how "my job did not change in the genocide, even though I was thrust in a sea of fire. I only spoke the words that seemed normal and sane to me. I did what I believed to be ordinary things that an ordinary man would do. I said no to outrageous actions the way I thought that anybody would, and it still mystifies me that so many others could say yes." I was mystified also, hearing how the majority Hutus traveled the countryside hacking and slaughtering the minority Tutsis they called "cockroaches." What's the difference? Tutsis were perceived as taller with shorter noses. What did the international community do? We had pulled out our tourists and U.N. work- ers and let it happen. The U.S. press was caught up in the '94 mid-term election featuring the anti- Clinton backlash, which led to a Republican sweep of Congress. We had all been swept away with the politics of silence. We did nothing. Rusesabagina said the words, "never again," are the world's words of "fiction:' Genocide, he said, "has happened again and again and " again. "It's still happening now at this moment," he said. Coincidentally, the International Criminal Court announced the day before that their 20-month inquiry "found evi- dence of direct ties between the Sudanese government and the militias known as the janjaweed," which are blamed for most of the carnage in Darfur, with the murders of more than 450,000 Sudanese. Student Support The subject of the night was unbearably grim, but the passion of the students was anything but. Nineforpeace, a group of nine North students, passed around a petition urging sponsorship of legisla- tion calling for "targeted divestment" of Sudan. And students and artists from North showed a remarkable book, entitled, The Commemorative Edition of the Northern Star: Recognizing and Honoring Victims of Genocide. This beautifully constructed and horrifying book (sold for a small fee of $5) details the Jewish Holocaust, and the Armenian, Rwandan and Darfur genocides. It shows other genocides of the 21st century. It also lists 50 ways we can help fight genocide right now, today. The high school students who have given so much love and passion to this study have created a phenomenal landmark book that gives hope that it's still possible to make a difference. Rusesabagina wrote that "Our time on earth is short and our chance to make a difference is tiny." The audience rose to its feet three times for this amazing man who saved so many lives, who continues to speak the truth as he sees it without the fear of his death. He faced death so often in 1994 and has faced many death threats since, including one on Dec. 20 and now on Feb. 28 at our neighborhood high school in suburban Detroit. Fearlessly, Paul Rusesabagina's mission is to educate humanity on the horrors of Welfare State Of 'Palestine' Jerusalem A ccording to the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA), tens of billions of dollars (one-third from U.S. taxpayers, the rest mostly from Canada and European countries) have been spent over the last 50 years providing for "Palestinian refugees" and their descendants. An estimated half million people 60 years ago, that number is now over 4 million. UNRWAs purpose: to ensure the "Palestinian Right of Return" — the destruction of Israel. No Arab country except Jordan — where they constitute more than two-thirds of the population — accepts the Palestinians as citizens. Saudi Arabia, for example, recently passed a law allowing all foreign workers in the country to apply for Saudi citizenship next year — except Palestinians. More than 400,000 "Palestinian refugees" living in UNRWA-supported "camps" in Lebanon cannot work or even go to school outside their designated areas. Ditto for Syria. 30 March 8 2007 Most "Palestinian refugees" listed by UNRWA (which includes Jordan, Lebanon, Syria, the West Bank and Gaza) in 2002 don't even live in the camps, but in nearby villages and towns. All receive free services for the rest of their life, including their children, their grandchildren, ad infinitum. According to UNRWAs rules, anyone who applied for relief, claiming they lived in Palestine for at least two years prior to 1948 (when Israel was attacked) and claimed to have lost property and livelihood, was enti- tled to assistance, regardless of where they came from or where they live today. Once a "Palestinian refugee," always a "Palestinian refugee:' That explains why the number of "Palestinian refugees" who receive aid has grown from a few hundred thousand to 4.5 million (although no one really knows the exact numbers because of UNRWAs faulty records). That could double in a generation — along with UNRWAs nearly $1.5 billion annual budget. UNRWA is supposed to verify that those who receive assistance don't work. Not sur- prisingly, however, no one checks. No one confirms the validity of those who receive UNRWA benefits. After death, certificates of eligibility are passed on to others. No one checks bank accounts, automobile registra- tions or property own- ership. With multiple wives, families can comprise scores of children — all "refugees." And, according to UNRWA rules, even if one parent is "Palestinian:' the entire family is eligible for assistance and "refugee" status. UNRWA openly admits that they don't monitor programs that support terrorism or payments to families of terrorists by the Palestinian Authority, Hamas, Hezbollah and (until recently) Iraq's Sadaam Hussein. In fact, nearly all teachers employed by UNRWA are members of terrorist-controlled unions. Funding these teachers and the cur- riculum of hatred and bigotry, which they teach, supports terrorism and terrorist orga- nizations. This may explain why so many children are willing to blow themselves up, carry weapons and explosives and place themselves as shields for terrorists. Although responsible for what goes on in the areas it administers, UNRWA ignores the fact that terrorists are being trained there, including the next generation of homicide bombers, that bomb-making factories flour- ish inside the camps and that arms and ammunition are stockpiled there. UNRWA ignores the launching of thou- sands of rocket attacks against Israel from within territories under its responsibility. And most outrageous, UNRWA is accountable only to the U.N. General Assembly, dominated by the 56-member Organization of Islamic Conference, which is also part of the 115-member Non-Aligned Movement — a majority in the 191-mem- ber U.N. UNRWA violates its own U.N. mandate (Resolution 302), which states (Paragraph 5): "Constructive measures should be undertaken at an early date with a view to the termination of international assistance for relief"