Genocide Still Happens | Facing History & Ourselves
Family photographs of victims of the Rwandan Genocide
Mini-Lesson
Current Event

Genocide Still Happens

Use this mini-lesson to reflect with your students on what we can do to stop ongoing atrocities and prevent future genocides.

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At a Glance

Mini-Lesson

Language

English — US

Subject

  • History
  • Social Studies

Grade

6–12
  • Genocide

Overview

About This Mini-Lesson

Genocide. The word conjures horrifying images, descriptions of incomprehensible violence. Genocide is difficult to think about, difficult to talk about, and yet, it is a vital topic to teach because learning about mass atrocities can help sensitize students to inhumanity and spur them to action to fight injustice. 1 Every April is designated as Genocide Awareness Month, a time to remember past genocides, as well as to reflect on what more we can do to stop ongoing atrocities, such as the persecution of the Rohingya in Myanmar and the Uighurs in China, and to prevent future genocides.

This mini-lesson offers suggestions for how you can discuss the current problem of genocide with your students. You can use the additional resources at the end of the lesson to provide students with historical context or a deeper exploration of contemporary case studies.

  • 1Eva Fleischner, Auschwitz: Beginning of a New Era? Reflections on the Holocaust (New York: Ktav PUblishing Co., 1974), 228. Quoted in "Get Started" from our resource Holocaust and Human Behavior.

This mini-lesson is designed to be adaptable. You can use the activities in sequence or choose a selection best suited to your classroom. It includes:

  • 2 activities 
  • Student-facing slides 
  • Recommended articles for exploring this topic

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Activities

Activities

After the Holocaust, the international community vowed, “never again,” but despite this pledge, genocides and mass killings have continued to happen. The Early Warning Project at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum tracks mass killings occurring today and attempts to predict where they might occur in the future. According to the project, an event is a mass killing “when the deliberate actions of armed groups, including but not limited to state security forces, rebel armies, and other militias, result in the deaths of at least 1,000 noncombatant civilians targeted as part of a specific group over a period of one year or less.” 1 Under international law, a genocide occurs when the perpetrators intend to eradicate the group they are targeting. A mass killing does not require this intent. Thus, mass killing is a broader term than genocide, but acts of genocide also fall within this definition.

Explain to your students that the Early Warning Project determines a country’s risk of having a mass killing by looking at certain “risk factors.” Have your students write down what they think these risk factors could be. Then, show your students the Early Warning Project’s list. Ask them:

  • What factors are the same as or similar to the ones on your list?
  • Do you find any of the factors on the Early Warning Project’s list surprising?
  • What do you think are the benefits of tracking and predicting mass killings? 

Display the Early Warning Project’s Map of Statistical Risk, and explain that it shows both where mass killings are currently happening and where they are most likely to happen in the future. Use the See, Think, Wonder routine to discuss students’ reactions to the map:

  • What do you see when you first look at the map? What details stand out? (At this stage, elicit observations, not interpretations.)
  • What do you think the map shows? What information can you get from the map?
  • What does the map make you wonder? What questions does it raise for you?

Optional Extension: Have your students pick a country that is considered at risk of a mass killing. Students should research some of the country's risk factors, and read news coverage of the country. Students can then present their findings to the rest of the class.

Note: If you click on a country within the Early Warning Project's map, it will give you more information about the country, including a brief summary of that country's risk factors. Since there are numerous risk factors for each country, students could focus on a limited number.

Note: This activity references the genocides that occurred in Rwanda (in 1994) and in the Darfur region of Sudan (beginning in 2003) to explore ideas about how to prevent future genocides. Depending on your students’ background knowledge, you may want to provide them with a few bullet points summarizing these historical events.

Ask your students to write down the following questions in their notebooks, each in its own column, and to write down ideas under each column as they watch the two short videos below about acting to prevent genocide.

  • What are barriers that stop people from acting to prevent or stop a genocide?
  • What are actions that people can take to prevent genocides from occurring?

Play the video Rwanda Genocide Survivors: Speaking Out to Prevent Future Genocides from USC Shoah Foundation. Then, play the video Projections that was created by students in response to the genocide in the Darfur region of Sudan, which began in 2003.

After watching the videos, discuss the different ideas that students wrote down in their tables. For more ideas about actions that people can take, look at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum’s suggestions for action.

End with time for students to reflect individually in their journals. Two possible prompts you can use with your students are:

  • Why do you think it is important to learn about past genocides? Do you think that teaching people about past genocides can help prevent future ones? Why or why not?
  • Different people feel called to take action in different ways. What is an issue that you would like to act on? What types of actions could you take?

Materials and Downloads

Resources from Other Organizations

These are the resources from external sources that we recommend using with students throughout the activities in this mini-lesson.  
Map of Statistical Risk
Early Warning Project
Take Action
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum 

Additional Resources

Resources from Other Organizations

The resources below provide additional guidance for addressing this topic in the classroom.

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