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Dr. Roger W. Smith Elected Academic Chair of Zoryan Institute

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  • Dr. Roger W. Smith Elected Academic Chair of Zoryan Institute

    ZORYAN INSTITUTE OF CANADA, INC.
    255 Duncan Mill Rd., Suite 310
    Toronto, ON, Canada M3B 3H9
    Tel: 416-250-9807 Fax: 416-512-1736 E-mail:
    [email protected]
    www.zoryaninstitute.org

    PRESS RELEASE
    CONTACT:
    George Shirinian
    DATE: January 11, 2004
    Tel:416-250-9807


    Dr. Roger W. Smith Elected Academic Chair of Zoryan Institute

    Dr. Roger W. Smith, internationally renowned genocide scholar, has
    been elected chairman of the Zoryan Institute's Academic Board of
    Directors, namely, Professors Stephan Astourian, Yair Auron, Levon
    Chorbajian, Vahakn Dadrian, Eliz Sanasarian, Lisa Siraganian, and
    Khachig Tölölyan. Their responsibility is to recommend and approve
    new scholarly projects, and to oversee and ensure the overall quality
    of academic programs undertaken by the Zoryan Institute and its
    subsidiary, the International Institute for Genocide and Human Rights
    Studies.

    New Chairman's Vision

    Regarding his election as chairman, Smith says, "I have very much
    enjoyed working with the outstanding scholars on the Zoryan Board over
    the years. It is a challenge and honor to assume the responsibilities
    of Chair of the Academic Board of Directors. In the term ahead, I hope
    to continue to encourage activities that Zoryan has excelled at for
    many years -- sponsorship of conferences and lectures on the Armenian
    Genocide, support for research and publication on the Armenian
    Genocide and Diaspora Studies, and, above all, the Genocide and Human
    Rights University Program (GHRUP). But I also see Zoryan
    collaborating more with our colleagues at universities in Europe and
    North America to offer courses based on the GHRUP model, as we have
    already done with the University of Minnesota. I wish to encourage
    students of all nationalities to engage in the study of other
    genocides in comparison with the Armenian Genocide as a point of
    reference. In this respect, Zoryan is initiating in 2005 a program
    providing dissertation fellowships to Ph.D candidates. I think it is
    also very important that Zoryan continue to reach out to the Armenian
    community at many levels with lectures and educational programs, and
    also encourage all Armenian and non-Armenian organizations and
    individuals to support the Zoryan Institute, morally and financially,
    in its endeavors to fulfill its mission."

    Background

    A pioneer and major authority on the subject of genocide, Smith has
    written widely on its nature, history, and prevention, and, in
    particular, on denial of the Armenian Genocide. Educated at Harvard
    and the University of California, Berkeley, Roger W. Smith is
    Professor Emeritus of Government at the College of William and Mary in
    Virginia. There he taught political philosophy and the comparative
    study of genocide for twenty years. Dr. Smith taught his first course
    on genocide, entitled "Human Destructiveness and Politics" in 1982. To
    his dismay, he found that material on the Armenian Genocide was
    extremely scarce, and due to the Turkish government's tremendous
    efforts to deny the event, few people outside the Armenian community
    had even heard of the Genocide.

    Describing how he came to his field of specialization, he stated, "My
    interest in genocide, the ultimate denial of equality, is rooted in my
    childhood. A moral commitment to equality was entrenched in me while
    growing up in Birmingham, Alabama. It came partly out of a love for my
    parents, who were strong and inspiring, despite the hierarchies and
    valuations imposed on them by society, and partly from witnessing the
    various socially sanctioned indignities inflicted on black people in a
    deeply segregated south."

    Early Involvement with Zoryan

    Recalling how he first got involved with Zoryan, Smith related that he
    had been invited to attend its one-day conference on "Genocide and
    Denial" in May 1986. He gave a very well received talk on the
    psychological roots of denial, which he subsequently expanded and
    published in 1990 as "Genocide and Denial: The Armenian Case and its
    Implications." As a result, he was invited to participate in many
    scholarly and memorial forums thereafter. He began to focus his
    research and teaching on Turkey's denial of the Armenian Genocide. A
    groundbreaking 1995 article co-authored by Smith, Robert Jay Lifton
    and Eric Markusen, entitled "Professional Ethics and the Denial of the
    Armenian Genocide," exposed the secretive process by which the Turkish
    government funds academics to discredit scholarship on the Armenian
    Genocide. The article fueled a major protest by over one hundred
    prominent scholars and intellectuals against the corruption of
    American universities by the Turkish government.

    Dr. Smith joined the Zoryan Board of Directors in 1988. "I was aware
    of the institute's Open University Program, Oral History Program,
    research projects, and publications, including Hitler and the Armenian
    Genocide, A Crime of Silence: The Armenian Genocide, and The Karabagh
    File. As a non-Armenian, my understanding from the beginning was that
    the Armenian Genocide was a crime committed not only against the
    Armenian people, but also against all of humanity. I found the work on
    the board that first year exciting, and my understanding of the
    Armenian Genocide was confirmed, as the experience deepened my
    knowledge, and perhaps made me even more of an activist on issues of
    human rights and genocide."

    GHRUP

    One of the experiences at Zoryan that has become exceptionally
    engaging for Smith is the Genocide and Human Rights University
    Program, run annually by the International Institute for Genocide and
    Human Rights Studies (A Division of the Zoryan Institute). He believes
    strongly that the form of education necessary to prevent further
    occurrences of genocide is one that promotes "tolerance, respect for
    individuals, and a more humanistic view of the world." His vision made
    him an ideal choice in 2003 for Director of the GHRUP, which explores
    the major genocides of the 20th century from historical, political,
    sociological, legal, and human rights perspectives.

    Many graduates of the program cite Dr. Smith as an inspiring teacher
    and mentor. Smith is equally impressed with the students' drive and
    motivation to make a difference in the world. "Twenty years ago, there
    were only a handful of us interested in the subject," he recalls. "The
    success of the GHRUP has made me feel overwhelmingly optimistic for
    the future of genocide studies. The course plants a seed of knowledge
    in every student who attends. Whether they use this knowledge to
    become a human rights activist, a genocide scholar, or simply a person
    who can influence others through informed dialogue, each and every one
    of them now has the tools needed to spread awareness about genocide,
    the world's worst violation of human rights."

    The Zoryan Institute is the first international center in the Diaspora
    devoted to the research and documentation of contemporary issues
    related to the history, politics, society, and culture of Armenia,
    Armenians around the world, and the Armenian Genocide, and in
    conceptualizing Armenia's place within a universal context. It
    maintains offices in Cambridge, Massachusetts and Toronto, Canada.
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