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Gendercide

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Gendercide is a neologism that refers to the systematic killing of members of a specific sex, either males or females.[1]

Contents

[edit] Femicide

Femicide is defined as the systematic killing of women for various reasons, usually cultural. Femicide is seen as a gender crime. The word is attested from the 1820s.[2]

The most widespread form of femicide is in the form of sex-selective infanticide in cultures with strong preferences for male offspring.

There have been reports of femicide in Guatemala City, Guatemala, and in Ciudad Juárez, Chihuahua, Mexico[3]. The murders in Juarez, also known as las muertas de Juárez ("The dead women of Juárez"), and Guatemala were reportedly not investigated by the local authorities. Most of the women were raped before being murdered and some were mutilated, tortured and dismembered. In Guatemala City about 20% of the over 500 women murdered in 2004 and 2005 were killed in pairs, due to an (lesbian) "intimate relationship", according to Claudia Acevedo of Lesbiradas.[citation needed]

[edit] Viricide

Viricide is the systematic killing of men for various reasons, usually cultural. Viricide is seen as a gender crime. Viricide may happen during war to reduce an enemy's potential pool of soldiers.

Perhaps one of the earliest examples of viricide in recorded history occurred some time during the 600s BCE when Ionian pirates massacred the men of Miletus, forced the Milesian women into marriage with them, and settled the city of Miletus in the Milesian men's stead.[4] It has been written that forever afterward the Milesian women would neither eat with their husbands nor address them by name.[5][6]

The most famed example of viricide in Western literature is recounted in the Book of Matthew in the New Testament of the Bible. If modern scholars are correct in establishing the birth of Jesus as around the year 3 BCE, the slaughter would have taken shortly thereafter. Matthew 2:16 states that Herod ordered what is known as the Massacre of the Innocents, which modern scholars note may be apocryphal[7] rather than an actual historical event:

Then when Herod saw that he had been tricked by the magi, he became very enraged, and sent and slew all the male children who were in Bethlehem and all its vicinity, from two years old and under, according to the time which he had determined from the magi.

—Matthew 2:16, New American Standard Bible

Pakistan targeted male intellectuals for extermination in the erstwhile province of East Pakistan (present day Bangladesh) during the 1971 Bangladesh atrocities[8] Male Gendercide was also carried out by Pol pot in Cambodia, resulting in a large percentage of Cambodia's population afterwards being women.[9] During the 1984 Anti-Sikh riots men were targeted overwhelmingly on account of them being breadwinners of the family.[9] More recent examples include the 1988 Anfal campaign against Kurdish men and boys[10][11][12] in Iraq and the Srebrenica massacre of Bosniak men and boys on July 12, 1995.[13][14]

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ Coined by Mary Anne Warren in her 1985 book Gendercide: The Implications of Sex Selection[1]
  2. ^ 2006 Random House Unabridged Dictionary
  3. ^ Femicide and Gender Violence in Mexico, retrieved on May 28, 2007.
  4. ^ 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica
  5. ^ A History of Greece by Connop Thirlwall, footnote at page 197. Accessed November 12, 2008 via Google Books.
  6. ^ The Cartoon History of the Universe by Larry Gonick Pg. 238
  7. ^ Robert Eisenman, James The Brother of Jesus, 1997, I.3 "Romans, Herodians and Jewish sects" discusses Mariamne, the last representative of the Maccabean line, by whom Herod had two sons, whom he put to death. "Here Herod really did kill all the Jewish children who sought to replace him, as Matthew 2:17 would have it, but these were rather his own children with Maccabean blood!" (p. 49); see also E. P. Sanders, The Historical Figure of Jesus, 87-88
  8. ^ Rounaq Jahan, "Genocide in Bangladesh", in Samuel Totten et al., eds., Century of Genocide, p298. R.J. Rummel writes: "By November [1971], the rebel guerrillas ... had wrested from the army control over 25 percent of East Pakistan, a success that led the Pakistan army to seek out those especially likely to join the resistance -- young boys. Sweeps were conducted of young men who were never seen again. Bodies of youths would be found in fields, floating down rivers, or near army camps. As can be imagined, this terrorized all young men and their families within reach of the army. Most between the ages of fifteen and twenty-five began to flee from one village to another and toward India. Many of those reluctant to leave their homes were forced to flee by mothers and sisters concerned for their safety." Rummel, Death By Government (New Brunswick, USA: Transaction Publishers, 1994), p329.
  9. ^ a b Jones, Adam (June 2000). "Gendercide and Genocide". Journal of Genocide Research 2 (2): 185 - 211. 
  10. ^ The Crimes of Saddam Hussein
  11. ^ Koreme Before The Anfal Campaign
  12. ^ Gendercide Watch: The Anfal Campaign (Iraqi Kurdistan), 1988
  13. ^ Srebrenica Timeline
  14. ^ Serbians Still Divided Over Srebrenica Massacre

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