06 January, 2020

Omnicide: Who is responsible for the gravest of all crimes?

As the full extent of the devastation of the Holocaust became apparent, a Polish Jew whose entire family had been killed, Raphael Lemkin, came to realise that there was no word for the distinctive crime that had been committed: the murder of a people. His life work became finding a word to name the crime and then convincing the world to use it and condemn it: genocide. Today, not only has genocide become a dreadful part of our lexicon. We recognise it as perhaps the gravest of all crimes.
Image result for Omnicide: Who is responsible for the gravest of all crimes?
All of us have conspired to create conditions in which
 this mass killing of humans, animals, trees, insects fungi,
ecosystems, forest, rivers - this 'omicide'.
During these first days of the third decade of the twenty-first century, as we watch humans, animals, trees, insects, fungi, ecosystems, forests, rivers (and on and on) being killed, we find ourselves without a word to name what is happening. True, in recent years, environmentalists have coined the term ecocide, the killing of ecosystems — but this is something more. This is the killing of everything. Omnicide.

Read the story from ABC Religion and Ethics by Danielle Celermajer - “Omnicide: Who is responsible for the gravest of all crimes?” 

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