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WCU student recognized for genocide thesis

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  • WCU student recognized for genocide thesis

    WCU student recognized for genocide thesis
    PAMELA BATZEL , Staff Writer

    Daily Local News
    07/15/2004

    Standing in front of a barracks at a former death camp in Poland, with
    a survivor in front of him recalling the horrors he experienced and
    witnessed, a question hit Jonathan Coull.

    Coull, a West Chester University student, wanted to know: "Where did
    the Nazis get their ideas?"


    The question gnawed at him.

    After that two-week trip to Poland and the Czech Republic in the
    summer of 2002, he stayed in Europe to backpack but found himself
    interviewing residents and researching in museums, hoping to learn who
    taught the Germans how to kill millions.

    After he returned to West Chester, Coull abandoned plans to teach high
    school history and enrolled in the university's Holocaust and genocide
    studies master 's of arts program and doggedly pursued an answer to
    his question.

    After two years of research, which included interviews with a local
    survivor of genocide and research of primary documents, Coull had a
    thesis that argued Germany had practice in the science of genocide
    that preceded Adolf Hitler and World War II.

    His efforts were recently recognized by the Pennsylvania Association
    for Graduate Schools. He won "Distinguished Thesis Award" this spring
    from the association representing 45 colleges and universities from
    across the state. Coull was also one of the runner-ups for the
    association's outstanding graduate student of the year.

    Brenda Sanders Dede, co-chairwoman of the committee that selected the
    winner, said that Coull's topic was unique and timely and his
    recommendations from West Chester professors and project directors
    excellent.

    William Hewitt, a professor of history at West Chester who helped
    advise Coull, said the work was "above and beyond the expectations of
    the (Holocaust and genocide) program," which was created five years
    ago.

    A master's level thesis is typically about 100 pages. Coullā=80=99s
    touches 300. And his scholarship, which was strong, calls attention
    to what is little known, Hewitt said.

    Coull's paper argues that the German government nearly exterminated
    the Herero, a tribe in the African nation of Namibia that Germany
    colonized. The Germans used that experience to help the Turks kill
    between 1.5 and 2 million-plus Turkish Armenians in 1915, he argued.

    By the time Hitler came to power, genocide had been institutionalized,
    said Coull, who is 33.

    "When you're going to kill 6 million Jews in a residential complex,it
    takes a lot of know-how," Coull said. "If you practice killing groups
    of people that are pariah -- supposedly inferior groups -- over a
    period of 40 years, you're going to get better at it."

    Coull's work shows that genocide "doesn't happen in a vacuum, there's
    a lineage to these horrors. They're connected," Hewitt said. "That
    connection hadn' t been made by many people."

    Coull acknowledged that some scholars do not agree that the Germans
    played a central or leadership role in the Armenian genocide, but he
    maintains that they did. "The documents I found support direct
    involvement, they were involved in the killing. I found an
    eyewitness." His eyewitness, Charles Mahjoubian, lives in Paoli.

    The Turkish government does not acknowledge the genocide, nor does the
    United States, he said.

    Coull said it is important to acknowledge and understand the
    connection and progression of genocide.

    In Germany, he said, "The whole government was created around the idea
    that foreign policy is conducted by committing genocide."

    In each instance, the country justified the killings by arguing racial
    superiority, Coull said, adding that the effort to wipe people out was
    partof government plans to access resources and land.

    In Turkey, for instance, several nations, including the United States,
    were angling for access to mineral and railway rights as they saw the
    Ottoman Empire crumbling, Coull said. Germany saw it could get closer
    to the Turks by offering to help them kill the Christian Armenians.

    "A lot of so-called inferior groups have been caught in between power
    brokers in the world for a long time," he said.

    The Carter administration backed the Khmer Rouge after the Vietnam War
    because the Khmer Rouge opposed the Vietnam War, Coull said. The Khmer
    Rouge, who were Communists, is reported to have killed nearly 1.9
    million people.

    In 1989, Coull said, the United States backed Saddam Hussein who,
    recent reports indicate, then killed between 600,000 and 1 million
    Kurds. The Kurds were fighting for autonomy.

    "It's a real problem. It keeps happening over and over again. People
    don't even know it," said Coull. "We live in an age of genocide. It's
    happening right now. It's wrong."

    Coull, who hopes to enroll in a doctoral program in the fall of 2005,
    said he wants to conduct research in Sudan.

    A recent report from Reuters said as many as 30,000 black Darfur
    Africans may have been killed by the Janjaweed, the Darfu militia,
    with support from Sudan' s military. Humanitarian officials say the
    violence has made 1.2 million people in Darfur homeless, living in
    barren areas.

    Coull said he is in particular interested in the role missionaries
    play in genocide.

    "They need to be aware of their role and they need to be aware that
    spreading their faith only instigates more killing," he said. "Their
    role needs to be redefined."

    Coull said he is interested in doing human rights work and developing
    a model of intervention.

    Coull said his passion for pursuing truth and humanitarianism has its
    roots in his childhood.

    He said he was about 11 years old when his father took him to see
    "Gandhi," which he described as the first "real" film he ever
    saw. Shortly after he saw "Victor Victoria," another movie with "a
    universalist ideal of what people are," he said. And, around the same
    time, he read "The Rise and Fall of theThird Reich," by William
    Shirer, a well-known American journalist who covered Nazi Germany for
    the American press.

    "Right away there's a system that's being put in my head that's
    humanistic, individualistic and universalist," he said.

    His dad was a dean at the Haverford School and his mom was a reading
    teacher. His stepmother has taught art and special education students
    and several other family members teach.

    In 1993, he joined the Reserve Officer Training Corps, carrying on a
    family tradition of offering service to the armed forces. Coull said
    he was quickly disillusioned.

    He said he went in believing that the United States was the "bearer of
    true, high-minded values" but that his experiences changed that
    perception. He said he saw the Army as abusing its power.

    After college and his service in the Army, Coull went into social
    work. But the work was exhausting and it seemed never to solve the
    underlying causes of incarceration, rape and child abuse.

    "It was a burn-out and I felt I was capable of doing more," he said.

    He decided to go back to school to get a certificate to teach
    history. He said he wanted to relate his humanistic outlook. How
    people understand history defines how they perceive the world today,
    he said.

    But after his first year, he participated in the two-week tour of
    ghettoes and death camps from World War II in Poland and the Czech
    Republic and was confronted with the question that led to his thesis
    and his pursuit of a doctoral degree.

    Dede, of the association for graduate schools, said that another
    reason the committee chose Coull's project over other candidates' was
    because he plans to continue his research in a doctoral program.

    Coull added he hopes as more and more scholars bring attention to the
    problem the public will take more notice -- and interest.

    "This topic is gaining momentum," he said, referring to Anne
    Applebaumā=80=99s "The Gulag" which won a Pulitzer Prize in
    2003. "It's gaining currency."

    "If we (scholars) keep kicking at this door we're going to kick it
    in," he said. "It's going to become an issue."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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