Dictionary of Genocide - D Ank Unlimited
Dictionary of Genocide - D Ank Unlimited
Dictionary of Genocide - D Ank Unlimited
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INDEX<br />
526<br />
Reserve Police Battalion 101, 364<br />
Resettlement, 364. See also Forcible relocation; Safe<br />
havens<br />
Resettlement country, 365<br />
Resistance movements during the Holocaust, 365;<br />
Scholl, Hans and Sophie, 389–90; White<br />
Rose (Weisse Rose), 389–90<br />
Retributive genocide, 365–66<br />
Revolution and genocide, 366<br />
Revolution and <strong>Genocide</strong>: On the Origins <strong>of</strong> the Armenian<br />
<strong>Genocide</strong> and the Holocaust (Melson), 366<br />
“Rhineland Bastards,” 367. See also Mischlinge<br />
Rhodesia, role in Mozambique genocide, 293<br />
Ribbentrop-Molotov Pact, 367. See also Molotov,<br />
Vyacheslav Mikhailovich; Operation<br />
Barbarossa: ended Operation Barbarossa<br />
Riegner, Gerhard, 367–68<br />
Righteous Among the Nations, 368. See also Righteous<br />
Gentile<br />
Righteous Gentile, 368; ended church in Le Chambon-sur-Lignon,<br />
255; Schindler, Oskar,<br />
388–89; Wallenberg, Raoul, 364, 464–65<br />
Ringelblum, Emanuel, 369<br />
Ringelblum’s Archive, 369<br />
Risk Assessments, 369<br />
Risk factors, 369<br />
Ritter, Dr. Robert, 369–70<br />
Road blocks, Rwandan <strong>Genocide</strong>, 370<br />
Role <strong>of</strong> Physicians during the Holocaust, 370–71<br />
Roma. See also Gypsies; and Croat-Nazi collaborators,<br />
480; in Dachau, 95; “other victims” <strong>of</strong> the<br />
Third Reich, 325; in Polish death camps,<br />
99–100, 371<br />
Roma and Sinti during the Third Reich, 371. See<br />
also Gypsies<br />
Roman Catholic Church ended Albigensian Crusade,<br />
9; and anti-Semitism, 89–90; Burning Times,<br />
The, and, 54; and conquistadores, 86–87;<br />
Coughlin, Father Charles E. Roman, 89–90;<br />
in Czechoslovakia, 422, discrimination against<br />
Jews, 316; and French Cathars, 281–82; Galen,<br />
Bishop Clemens August Graf von, 155–56;<br />
Holocaust, and the, 62–63, 280; Holocaust,<br />
knowledge <strong>of</strong>, 62–63; Inquisition, 43, 212; objection<br />
to euthanasia <strong>of</strong> handicapped, 279; policy<br />
<strong>of</strong> Nostre Aetate, 309–10; and massacre <strong>of</strong><br />
Huguenots, 194; Mit Brennender Sorge<br />
(German, With Burning Anxiety), 286; priests<br />
and nuns convicted for Rwandan killings, 380;<br />
religious persecution by, 9, 54; Rwanda genocide,<br />
churches’ role, 380; and T-4 (Tiergartenstrasse<br />
4), 418–19; Tiso, Monsignor Jozef,<br />
422; in United States, 89–90; witch hunt response<br />
to Lutheranism, 267<br />
Romantic utopianism, 30. See Utopia<br />
Rome; committed genocide in, 61–62<br />
Rome Conference; nongovernmental organizations<br />
(NGOs), 74<br />
Rome Statute <strong>of</strong> the International Criminal Court,<br />
371–72<br />
Roosevelt, Eleanor, 372–73<br />
Roosevelt, Fraklin Delano, 372–73<br />
Rosenberg, Alfred, 373–74<br />
Rose, Sir Michael, 373<br />
Royal Irish Constabulary (RIC), 42; Auxiliary Division<br />
(“Auxies”), 43<br />
RTS TV or Serbian Television, 374<br />
Rubanda Nyamwinshi, 374<br />
Ruggiu, Georges, 374–75<br />
Rugova, Ibrahim, 375–76<br />
Rules <strong>of</strong> engagement (RoE), 376<br />
Rummel, Rudolph J., 106–7, 107, 376<br />
Rusesabagina, Paul, 376–77<br />
Russell Tribunals, 377–78<br />
Russia, 440; dirty war, 114<br />
Russians, 395<br />
Rutaganda, Georges Anderson Nderbumwe, 378<br />
Rwanda, 32, 33, 35, 441, 442; the Arusha Accords,<br />
24, 236; Bagosora, Colonel Theoneste, 342;<br />
beginning <strong>of</strong> Tutsi genocide, 179–80;<br />
Bushnell, Prudence, and genocide in, 55;<br />
butchery by Rwandan Armed Forces, 379;<br />
Carlsson Report, 60–61; “Clearing the Bush,”<br />
73; Clinton’s apology, Rwandan genocide,<br />
73–74; Coalition for International Justice<br />
(CIJ), 74; Coalition pour la Défense de la<br />
République (CDR) (French, Coalition for the<br />
Defense <strong>of</strong> the Republic), 74–75; Dallaire,<br />
Major General Romeo, 96; death squads in,<br />
100; electronic jamming in, 129; ended<br />
“Akazu” oligarchy and, 7; “ethnic cleaning”<br />
in, 96; Gacaca, 152–53; genocide against the<br />
Tutsi, 7; and “genocide fax,” 165–66; genocide<br />
in, 6; Habyarimana, Juvenal, 24; Hutu in,<br />
199–200; Impuzamegambi (Kinyarwarda,<br />
“Those with a single purpose”), 206–7;<br />
Inkotanyi, 212; Interahamwe, 207, 214–15;<br />
International Criminal Court for Rwanda<br />
(ICTR), 6, 75; Jean-Paul Akayeshu, genocide<br />
trial <strong>of</strong>, 6; Kagame, Paul, 236–37; Kangura,<br />
238–39; Media trial, 277; National Revolutionary<br />
Movement for Development, 7; and<br />
Ngeze, Hassan, 306–7; nonintervention, international<br />
community, 308–9; Presidential<br />
Guard, 341–42; Prime Minister Agathe<br />
Uwilingiyimana, 452–53; Radio-Télévision<br />
Libre des Mille Collines (RTLM), 238, 354–55,<br />
379; reason for U.S. inaction, 288; Shake<br />
Hands with the Devil: The Failure <strong>of</strong> Humanity<br />
in Rwanda, 65; triggering the genocide in, 24<br />
Rwanda genocide, 324, 379; churches’ role, 380; determination<br />
<strong>of</strong>, 96; ended Arusha Accords<br />
and, 24, 379; end <strong>of</strong>, 382–83; French<br />
response to, 380–81; International Criminal<br />
Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR), 222; “Machete<br />
<strong>Genocide</strong>” in, 266; Operation Turquoise,<br />
322–23; racial epithets and, 104; radio jamming,<br />
not done, 353–54; and road blocks,<br />
370; Romeo Dallaire, 392; triggering <strong>of</strong>, 24,<br />
429; Tutsi, 432; Twa, 433; U.S.