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History Or Propaganda?: High School Textbook Give One-Source Account

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  • History Or Propaganda?: High School Textbook Give One-Source Account

    HISTORY OR PROPAGANDA?: HIGH SCHOOL TEXTBOOK GIVE ONE-SOURCE ACCOUNT OF 03/01 EVENTS
    By GAYANE ABRAHAMYAN

    ArmeniaNow
    27.11.12 | 15:14

    The new history book for university students has become a target of
    sharp criticism having opened the yet unhealed wounds of the March 1,
    2008 tragedy. Critics claim the events in it are "wickedly distorted",
    presented with "strictly subjective interpretations".

    The university textbook published by the Yerevan State University's
    history chair and authored by its 14 history professors appeared in the
    focus of attention because of its account in Chapter Four describing
    the post-election clashes between the opposition and law-enforcement
    bodies creating an impression as if the opposition is at fault for
    sparking the conflict and the 10 deaths.

    This section, authored by Dean of YSU History Faculty Edik Minasyan,
    reads in part: "Rudely refusing to accept the election results,
    the radical wing of the opposition, with lack of any restraint from
    the authorities, outrageously broke the provisions of the law and on
    February 20 started the sequence of rallies in Yerevan". It further
    says that "during ten days the unauthorized opposition rallies
    ultimately destabilized the situation in the entire country."

    The author describes Armenia's first president Levon Ter-Petrosyan
    and opposition leader as "having adopted radical work style", saying
    "his supporters ignored the appeals" of artists, intellectuals and
    the Catholicos of All-Armenians and "skilfully took advantage of the
    situation". He further gives assessments and comments, claiming that
    "the worst post-election developments" had been pre-planned during
    the campaign.

    Moreover, Minasyan seems to be citing the police statement when he
    moves on to the recount of the tragedy that unfolded early morning of
    March 1 at Liberty Square, describing the police actions as "measures
    to establish public order" to which "the organisers and participants of
    mass disorder responded with violence, using iron bars, wooden sticks,
    stones". He terms the late afternoon and night events in the square
    facing the municipality as "havoc and looting", that "the ralliers
    assaulted the police", and that "both sides resorted to firearms,
    which left two police officers and eight civilians dead".

    The Fact Finding Group (formed to investigate the incident) submitted
    extensive material proving that the looting and the assaults were
    instigated and implemented by sabotage groups placed among the
    protestors, and at Liberty Square it was the demonstrators peacefully
    sleeping in tents who were assaulted by the police and brutally
    beaten. Nonetheless, Minasyan claims the source he used while writing
    that section was the investigation results and report of the National
    Assembly temporary commission studying the events.

    "Whatever is written is fact-based on the Commission's investigation,
    documents, and this improper clamour makes no sense," Minasyan told
    ArmeniaNow.

    What "makes no sense" to the critics is why the pages of history have
    been written and submitted as a high school textbook - often regarded
    as the only truth - using only one source of reference.

    "It's not a history textbook, but direct recreation of Haylur [Armenian
    first public TV news bulletin] coverage of those days. A historian
    simply has no right to write even one fragment of history using only
    one source, and even more so when writing modern history, considering
    the abundance and diversity of available sources," Minas Sargsyan,
    historian and expert in international relations, told ArmeniaNow.

    The book has been approved by the Ministry of Science and Education
    as high school textbook. Deputy director of National Institute of
    Education Anahit Bakhshyan, former Heritage MP who was in the heart of
    March 1-2 events, says the ministry had no right to approve a manual
    with such outstanding shortcomings.

    "This demonstrates that the control commissions aren't functioning,
    but carrying out orders. It is a disgrace, when history books are
    distorted, presenting a one-sided recount as dictated by the current
    authorities. I witnessed it all myself and that text is an apparent
    political order," she told ArmeniaNow.

    Karen Khachatryan, deputy director of History Institute at the National
    Academy of Sciences, told ArmeniaNow that the history of that period
    of time cannot be "presented objectively until archive documents are
    de-classified" and that it is every historian's duty to use various
    sources and present reality "if not objectively, at least positively".

    Co-author of the controversial textbook, content editor Petros
    Hovhannisyan says with irony that the "chapter has been criticised
    also by the authorities, which means it is fairly comprehensive".

    Nonetheless, the publication of this textbook has raised a new wave
    of anger among the parents of the March-1 victims.

    Tigran Khachatryan's mother Alla Honhannisyan says "such distortion
    has to be boycotted and refuted".

    "It is said there that both sides used firearms which led to ten
    deaths. How come there is isn't a single word saying that three
    people got killed by Cheryomukha-7 used by the police - this is a
    fact recorded in the parliamentary commission report, why has it
    been ignored? My daughter will soon be a university student. Should
    she, who has been cherishing the memories of the brother she has
    lost, feel ashamed when the textbook presents him as a robber and
    looter?" says the woman. "Once again they have dishonored the memory
    of our children."

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