Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Students Urge The World To Stop Genocide

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Students Urge The World To Stop Genocide

    STUDENTS URGE THE WORLD TO STOP GENOCIDE
    By Tony Kim
    Star-Banner

    Ocala.com, FL
    Central Florida Community College
    April 26 2007

    Class learns firsthand from families touched by 1915 slaughter of
    Armenians.

    OCALA - On the 92nd anniversary of the beginning of the Armenian
    genocide, two words resonated through the minds of 150 sophomores at
    Forest High School: Stop genocide.

    Students in Lela Kerley's 10th-grade world history class spent the
    past five weeks studying various cases of genocide and prejudice in
    the 20th and 21st centuries.

    The section culminated Tuesday when students - many of them wearing
    homemade "Stop Genocide" T-shirts - heard the testimonies of two
    Armenian men whose parents escaped the massacre.

    "They still have to learn from people like me to learn what went on
    over there," said Azad Merian, one of the founders of the Armenian
    American Cultural Society in Ocala. "When one brings one form of harm,
    someone tries for better, and that's how genocide starts."

    The Turkish government still refuses to call the massacre an act of
    genocide or issue an apology to the Armenians, he said.

    "You shouldn't go away with the impression that Turkish people are
    bad," Merian told the students. "It's the position of the government
    that we are protesting."

    Merian and Richard Balian, vice president of the Armenian American
    Cultural Society, told the students about how their parents escaped
    from Turkey to America, and how they continue to have nightmares of
    the horrors they saw.

    Merian praised the students for their T-shirts, with messages such
    as, "Say Nay 2 Genocide," and encouraged them to be active against
    prejudice and violence.

    "You want freedom?" he asked. "Then you need to stop genocide."

    Many students said that prior to the talk and their history class,
    they did not know about the atrocities suffered by the Armenian people.

    "I just heard about the Holocaust and Hitler," said Justin Larkin,
    16. "I never knew about the Armenian genocide. I feel sorry for it."

    In addition to discussions, reading materials and video presentations,
    the students reflected on the prejudices they have experienced -
    and have had - in their own lives, Kerley said.

    "We've been writing in journals about times we've been stereotyped
    or dealt with people that don't think the same way we do," she said.

    "They've also been watching video on the Armenian genocide, one of
    the first genocidal acts in the 20th century."

    Students also learned about crises that have occurred or are still
    occurring in other parts of the world, such as Cambodia and Rwanda,
    she said.

    "We hear things on the media and sound bites, and [the students] know
    that Brad Pitt is involved with Sudan, but they don't know what's
    going on in Sudan," she said.

    After studying genocide in class, student Brandy Juliana said she
    feels she can help raise awareness about the crisis happening today
    in Sudan's Darfur region.

    "We talked about it, and we learned about it," she said.

    "Now we're taking action," she added, referring to the T-shirts
    calling attention to the issue. "It takes more than a person. It's
    an entire nation that needs to step up and do something about it."

    Photo: Forest High School sophomores Heather Buss, left, 16, and
    Chelsey Moore, 16, react Tuesday to a story of atrocities against
    Armenians.

    ERICA BROUGH/STAR-BANNER

    http://www.ocala.com/apps/pbcs .dll/article?AID=/20070425/NEWS/204250340/1001/NEW S01
Working...
X