Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ANCC, Canadian Centre for Genocide Ed Hold 4th Natl Genocide Ed Inst

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

  • ANCC, Canadian Centre for Genocide Ed Hold 4th Natl Genocide Ed Inst

    Armenian National Committee of Canada

    Comité National Arménien du Canada

    130 Albert St., Suite/Bureau 1007

    Ottawa, ON

    KIP 5G4

    Tel./Tél. (613) 235-2622 Fax/Téléc. (613) 238-2622

    E-mail/courriel:national.office@anc-cana da.com

    www.anccanada.org

    Press Release



    July 31, 2007
    Contact: Kevork Manguelian



    ANCC and the Canadian Centre for Genocide Education Hold
    4th National Genocide Education Institute

    Toronto--The Armenian National Committee of Canada (ANCC) and the Canadian
    Centre for Genocide Education held the 4th national teachers' summer
    institute at the Armenian Community Centre of Toronto from July 23 to 27.

    The five-day training session was an overwhelming success with teachers
    travelling from all over Canada to attend the educational gathering. 40
    teachers attended the Institute.

    The Genocide Institute is designed to encourage teachers to instruct
    students the lessons of genocide--the importance of tolerance, upholding
    human rights, helping others in need--and to help prepare them to
    effectively communicate these lessons to their students.

    The institute's morning portion was designed to introduce teachers to the
    history of four case studies of Genocide. In the afternoon segment teachers
    participated in classroom implementation, resources, multimedia
    presentation, and group activity.

    On the opening day Dr. Gerry Caplan and educator Dr. Barabra Coloroso talked
    about the overall theme of genocide, the history of the UN Charter on
    Genocide, the causes of genocide, its devastating effects on victims, its
    social, religious, and political implications, its denial, and the
    complicity of some governments, the perpetrators' bully mentality, and
    finally, the confidence of genocide perpetrators that you would be granted
    impunity.

    On Tuesday July 24, the main topic was the Armenian Genocide. Prof. Alan
    Whitehorn and Dr. Isabel Kaprielian-Churchill presented the various aspects
    of the Armenian Genocide. A number of teachers said that they were baffled
    by the Turkish government's denial of the Armenian Genocide against such
    overwhelming documentation, evidence, and the verdicts of historians.

    On Wednesday, Prof. Roman Serbyn and Valentina Kuryliw instructed the
    gathering on the Ukrainian Famine-Genocide of 1932-1933.

    Thursday was allocated to the Holocaust. Prof. Gerald Tulchinsky and Sylvia
    Bereskin brought to the attention of the teachers new details about the
    horrors of the Holocaust. That evening Prof. Abdulkerim Ousman talked about
    the latest developments in Darfur.

    The genocide studies gathering came to a close on Friday with discussions on
    the Rwandan Genocide. Major Brent Beardsley, Shyrna Gilbert and Leo Kabalisa
    took the teachers on a painful journey of discovery about the latest
    genocide of our times.

    During the Monday July 23 banquet, the lead speakers were Drs. Caplan and
    Coloroso. The latter observed that it is only a short walk from hate to
    genocide. Representatives of partner communities also delivered messages
    from their groups and expressed their confidence in the continued success of
    the institute.

    Aris Babikian, executive director of ANCC, saluted the "teachers' dedication
    and commitment to this noble cause." He added: "Your sense of mission and
    duty to make Canada and the world a better place through education and by
    sensitizing future generations and our country's future leaders is greatly
    appreciate not only by Genocide and Holocaust victim nations but everyone
    around the globe."

    The ANCC representative acknowledged "it is incumbent upon us [victim
    nations and teachers] to work together to educate and to empower the next
    generation of Canadians and world leaders with moral values which will guide
    them to eradicate the plague of genocide and prevent other races and nations
    from experiencing what we have suffered from."

    Rich Hitchens, founder and president of the Canadian Centre for Genocide
    Education, observed "it is a straight walk from the Armenian Genocide to
    Darfur today. Each successive genocidal regime had learned from its
    predecessors that the world would do little to nothing to intervene, to
    prevent, to stop, or punish genocide. No one cared about the Armenians, as
    Hitler observed, and so, in turn, no one cared about those to follow,
    including Ukrainians, Jews, Cambodians, Bosnians, and Rwandans. What other
    lesson could the regime in Sudan have learned other than that it was free to
    pursue genocide with impunity."

    Orest Steciw from the League of Ukrainian Canadians, Prof. Wsevolod W.
    Isajiw of the Ukrainian Canadian Research & Documentation Centre, and MP
    Peggy Nash also addressed the Monday evening gathering.

    A silent auction featuring cultural pieces from the homelands of various
    partners was held at the banquet.

    The Genocide Institute was offered for the first time in London, Ont., in
    2004, with the sole participation of teachers from the London area. In 2005,
    teachers from across Southwestern Ontario participated in the second annual
    Genocide Institute. Because of the success of the Genocide Institute, the
    program was expanded in 2006 to include teachers from across the country.

    One of the attributes that makes the Genocide Institute special is that it
    is a partnership of a number of organizations representing victim groups of
    genocide. Armenians, Jews, Rwandans, and Ukrainians have joined together in
    common cause to encourage teachers to teach about the lessons of genocide.

    The ANCC became a partner in the Genocide Institute in 2006. Meanwhile, the
    Armenian Community Centre graciously donated its facilities and hosted the
    Institute.

    -30-


    The ANCC is the largest and the most influential Canadian-Armenian
    grassroots political organization. Working in coordination with a network of
    offices, chapters, and supporters throughout Canada and affiliated
    organizations around the world, the ANCC actively advances the concerns of
    the Canadian-Armenian community on a broad range of issues.



    Regional Chapters/Sections régionales

    Montréal - Laval - Ottawa - Toronto - Hamilton - Cambridge - St.
    Catharines - Windsor - Vancouver
Working...
X