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  • Schools join anti-hate campaign

    London Free Press, Canada
    Aug 13 2004

    Schools join anti-hate campaign


    HAILEY EISEN AND CLIFF VANDERLINDEN, Special to the Free Press

    Local high school teachers are preparing to turn their students into
    anti-hate activists. More than 40 teachers are taking part in a
    week-long London conference, the first Gen. Romeo Dallaire Summer
    Institute on Teaching Genocide and the Holocaust. The institute, one
    of the first of its kind in Canada, provides educational tools to
    promote tolerance and uphold human rights.

    Sponsored by the Association for the Elimination of Hate, the
    week-long seminar will arm teachers with ways to educate their
    students in the lessons of the Holocaust and genocide.

    "We don't want the teachers to shock students, because shock wears
    off," program co-ordinator Rich Hitchens said. "What they really have
    to do is provide their students with lasting moral lessons."

    Here, teachers get insight into how to teach some of the most
    horrific genocides of the 20th century: from Armenia to the current
    crisis in Sudan. They hope to convey to students a sense of moral
    justice the youngsters can use in their neighbourhood schoolyards and
    in global activism.

    They will be shown how best to incorporate literature and film
    resources into their lessons.

    The sessions are led by university professors, community members and
    military officials.

    "To play Schindler's List for 3 1/2 hours is going to take most of
    the time teachers have dedicated to the unit, whereas they could show
    a 28-minute documentary film that will generate three hours of
    discussion," said Amanda Grzyb.

    Grzyb is a professor of genocide and Holocaust studies at the
    University of Western Ontario and is giving a seminar on teaching the
    Holocaust through film.

    The institute's namesake, retired Gen. Romeo Dallaire, was in London
    this week to offer his support to teachers who volunteered to take
    part in the program.

    Dallaire led the UN coalition during the 1994 Rwanda operation, where
    he defied direct orders to evacuate his troops from the troubled
    region when violence escalated into full-scale genocide.

    It's estimated one million Tutsi and Hutu moderates were killed
    within 100 days.

    For the past three years Dallaire has been working with Canadian high
    school and university students to promote awareness and action in
    areas of international crises and genocide.

    "My aim in this whole education process is to gel Canadian youth into
    getting into an activist mentality," Dallaire said.

    "So far I'm getting a lot of positive vibes."

    The institute is the result of a co-operative effort between various
    religious and ethnic communities, along with London's Association for
    the Elimination of Hate.

    Organizers expect to run the conference every other year.
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