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Toronto: Turks Protest Genocide Course

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  • Toronto: Turks Protest Genocide Course

    TURKS PROTEST GENOCIDE COURSE
    By Brian Gray, Sun Media

    Toronto Sun, Canada
    Jan 16 2007

    School board committee hears from both sides

    Passions are expected to be on display today as a committee of the
    Toronto District School Board hears both sides of the controversial
    genocide issue.

    The board has already received the go -ahead from the province
    to implement an optional Grade 11 history course in some schools
    concentrating on three examples of state-sponsored murder based on
    race, religion or nationality, said trustee Gerri Gershon, who brought
    the idea to the board.

    "I'm not sure there are going to be any final decisions made,"
    Gershon said.

    Genocides on the curriculum are the slaughter of six million Jews
    by the Nazis in World War II and the death of one million Hutus and
    Tutsis in Rwanda in the 1990s.

    The most controversial genocide -- that of an estimated 1.5 million
    Armenians by the Turkish Ottoman Empire between 1915 and 1923 --
    has tempers flaring.

    The Council of Turkish Canadians has almost 5,000 signatures on an
    online petition demanding the removal of the Armenian genocide from
    the course outline.

    "Numerous respected scholars with expertise in Ottoman history
    refute such claims as one-sided narrative completely ignorant of
    Turkish suffering," the petition reads. "Therefore with respect to
    TDSB's Grade 11 history course Genocide: Historical and Contemporary
    Implications, we demand that any references to the Armenian claim of
    genocide be removed."

    Board spokesman David Tomczak said a large turnout is expected at the
    meeting at TDSB's 5050 Yonge St. offices, where the Program and School
    Services Committee is slated to hear from six groups representing
    both sides of the issue.

    Gershon said the intent is not to point fingers at people.

    "We want to look at the roles of bystanders and heroes and heroines
    and villains and expose the dark side of human behaviour," Gershon
    said, adding the idea behind education is to ensure these things
    don't happen again.

    http://torontosun.com/News/TorontoAndGTA/2 008/01/16/4775762-sun.html
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