I checked out videos of Hotel Rwanda and Schindler’s List from the library for the weekend.
Yeah, it’s not something I would recommend…pretty depressing.
I go round and round about what pushes people to treat another human being as “cockroaches” (Rwanda) or “vermin” (Nazi Germany).
I used to think of it like psychiatry has promoted–these folks were abused as children, therefore, they acted out their anger. But then I realized that there are many people who are abused who do not go on to hurt others–they go on to be good parents, wives/husbands, citizens, etc.
So, then I go back to the start and ask again why some folks grow up to be bullies and others don’t?
I mean, in Schindler’s List, Goeth, a high raking officer, was clearly mentally ill by being torn between loving his Jewish maid, whom he said he wanted to grow old with, but beating her because she was a Jewish “bitch”. He randomly would shoot people for no reason at all. He had a Jewish woman engineer shot because she was telling him that the concrete foundation they had poured for a building was not level and it needed to be re-poured. After she was shot, he told them to tear up the foundation and redo it like she said. Just craziness.
But none of what happened in Rwanda and Nazi Germany could have been possible without people going along with it. People who fed their hatred and jealousy and fear. People who loved having power over others.
I’m reminded of the Native American story of the Grandfather and the grandson. The grandson had told his grandfather that he had two wolves inside him: one was dark that was mean, hateful, selfish, greedy; and the other was Light that was kind, loving, compassionate, and generous. He asked his grandfather which wolf would win, and the grandfather replied, “Whichever one you feed.”