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Memoricide

Memoricide is the destruction of the memory, extermination of the past of targeted people.[1] It also refers to destruction of the traces (such as religious buildings or schools) that might recall the former presence of those considered undesirable.[2]

Memoricide is used in support of ethnic cleansing.[3] Since memoricide refers to intentional attempts to erase human memory about something, it usually takes the form of destruction of physical property.[4] The term was coined by Croatian doctor Mirko Grmek in a text published in Le Figaro on 19 December 1991.[5]

Allegations of memoricide

According to some accounts memoricide was employed by Greece toward Macedonians of Slavic origin.[6]

The dissident[7] historian Ilan Pappe deployed the concept of cultural memoricide as systematic attempt of post-1948 Israel in relation to Palestine.[8]

Grmek used the term to describe activities of the rebel Serb forces in Croatia during the first year of the Croatian independence war.[5]

See also

References

  1. ^ Anić & Goldstein (2007), p. 846: "memoricid m (gen. jd memoricida) pol. uništavanje sjećanja, zatiranje prošlosti nekog naroda"
  2. ^ Jones (2010), p. 1.
  3. ^ Pavlaković, Pauković & Raos (2012), p. 235: "Surely, committing memoricide is a way to contribute to ethnic cleansing."
  4. ^ Porteous & Smith (2001), p. 9.
  5. ^ a b Sémelin & Hoffman (2007), p. 404.
  6. ^ MRGI (1994), p. 94.
  7. ^ Rivera-Pagán (2015), p. 113.
  8. ^ Masalha (2014), p. 148: "In The Ethnic Cleaning of Palestine the concept of cultural memoricide is deployed by historian Ilan Pappe, where he highlights the systematic scholarly, political and military attempt in post-1948 Israel to de-Arabize and "ecologicide" the Palestinian terrain, ...."

Sources