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Lessons Learned From Genocide

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  • Lessons Learned From Genocide

    LESSONS LEARNED FROM GENOCIDE
    By Naush Boghossian, Staff writer

    Long Beach Press-Telegram, CA
    April 4 2006

    The Armenian Genocide once observed primarily by Armenian-Americans
    and marked by events in parochial schools and annual protests at
    the Turkish Embassy is taking on a greater role in the culture of
    Los Angeles.

    The Los Angeles Unified School District has launched a genocide
    curriculum that more effectively teaches students about the killing
    of 1.5 million Armenians in 1915 considered the first large-scale
    genocide of the 20th century.

    And Los Angeles City Attorney Rocky Delgadillo hosted the first in
    a series of training workshops Monday, with more than 300 teachers
    reading witness testimonials and looking at survivors' photographs
    in the "Witness" exhibit on display at his office.

    "I run an office where every day truth is powerful. It leads us to
    justice, and I think the images out there speak truth and justice,"
    Delgadillo said. The Genocide Education Project developed the
    curriculum. It focuses on the 1915 genocide by the Ottoman Empire
    against its Armenian citizens, but it also includes materials on
    other genocides of the 20th century the Holocaust, Rwanda, Cambodia,
    Bosnia and Darfur. California schools are required to discuss the
    Armenian genocide in their 10th-grade modern world history classes.

    An El Camino Real High School history teacher said "Witness" with its
    stark portraits and poignant stories of victims brought to life for
    him horrors from nearly 100 years ago. "We have a world history book
    and it's an excellent one but it only has two or three paragraphs
    devoted to this time," said James DeLarme, a 10th-grade teacher.

    "This really opens your eyes and makes it real as to what happened.

    It will help when I teach students about what happened."

    The Turkish government blames the deaths of Armenians on civil war
    rather than an orchestrated massacre, and the U.S. government has
    not yet formally recognized the killings as a genocide.
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