Darwinism and the Rwandan Genocide
Imagine if you will that you had a good relationship with a neighboring group of people, and things were fine for many years. Some people from your group even married people from their group. Things changed. They are now considered inferior and should be killed. Folks in your group accepted those racist views and the reasoning behind them.
Obviously, this describes Nazi Germany. It also describes other places. A common factor is evolutionary thinking, which influences many areas in societies, such as law. It may be surprising to learn that Darwinism was instrumental in the Rwandan Genocide of 1994.
Ntrama church altar, site of one massacre, Flickr / Scott Chacon (CC BY 2.0) |
The Rwandan genocide of April–July 1994 shows how a single group of people living next door to each other, speaking one language and sharing the same culture, even often intermarrying, were artificially divided into two races by colonial rulers infused with Darwinism. The race judged superior was the Tutsi race, and that judged inferior was the Hutu race. In the end, in one of the worst genocides of the last century, over 800,000 Rwandans were murdered, mostly the Tutsi murdered by the Hutus.
Continue reading at "The Rwandan Genocide Inspired by Darwinism: Another Tragic Result Due to Belief in Darwinism." You may also be interested in "Evolutionism and the Vietnam War."