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"Unveiling the Dark Chapters: A Glimpse into Humanity's Genocidal Past" In a haunting collection of portraits, Nicola Martin Petite captures the harrowing reality that has stained our history. Amongst these chilling depictions, we encounter Couriaga, a man with a tattooed shoulder, and Paraberi, draped in an animal-skin cloak. These Tasmanian aborigines were tragically exterminated by relentless colonists on Van Diemen's Land. The Tasmanian natives' plight echoes across continents as we witness Grou Aagara adorned with scarification on his chest and an animal-skin cape. Beside him stands Arra-Maida, her child nestled in a kangaroo papoose. The same fate befell them at the hands of merciless colonizers who erased their existence from Cambodia to Armenia. Phnom Penh's Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum bears witness to the horrors endured within its prison cells—a stark reminder of Cambodia's tragic past. Echmiadzin's Armenian genocide Monument stands tall as a solemn tribute to those lost in one of history's most devastating atrocities. Kigali mourns at the Kigali Genocide Memorial Centre where 250, 000 innocent lives were brutally taken away during Rwanda's dark days. Turkish massacres against Armenians during World War I resurface through vivid lithographs that depict unimaginable suffering and loss. Even further back in time, Alexander Ramsey remains shrouded in mystery between 1860 and 1875—an enigmatic figure whose actions may have contributed to untold pain and destruction. Puck Magazine portrays John Bull grappling with his moral dilemma amidst genocidal acts occurring around him—forcing us to confront complicity. History reveals more grim chapters as Charles Lahure illustrates the Black Death unleashing its wrath upon Jews in 1348—a horrifying massacre etched forever into memory.