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  • Iannazzi would ensure history studies don't ignore the ugly side

    The Providence Journal (Rhode Island)
    March 16, 2005 Wednesday


    Iannazzi would ensure history studies don't ignore the ugly side

    by DANIEL BARBARISI, Journal Staff Writer


    CRANSTON - It is said that those who do not remember the past are
    doomed to repeat it. A School Committee member wants to ensure that
    the city's public schools aren't part of that equation.

    When it comes to teaching about some of the uglier episodes in world
    history, Cranston's two high schools don't flinch. They are among the
    relatively few in Rhode Island where students learn about such low
    points as the Holocaust, the 1915 Armenian genocide carried out by
    the Ottomon Turks, and South Africa's era of apartheid.

    But treating these subjects is discretionary; they are not a formal
    part of the schools' history curriculum. School Commmittee member
    Andrea Iannazzi wants to change that.

    Iannazzi has introduced a resolution, to be taken up at Monday's
    board meeting, that would require that the high school history
    curriculum formally include the Holocaust, the Armenian genocide and
    apartheid, as well as the Irish potato famine of the 1840s and
    atrocities committed under the fascist regime of Italy's Benito
    Mussolini.

    Students should not have to wait for college, as she did, to learn
    about such episodes, Iannazzi said.

    "History curriculum often overlooks key issues that still impact
    today's society. Introducing a human rights component to Cranston's
    secondary history curriculum will affect our students' decision
    making. Whether it is racism, homophobia, prejudice or some other
    cause, hatred and lack of respect for one's basic human rights are
    too often ignored," she said.

    Iannazzi's resolution has the support of City Council President Aram
    Garabedian -- who sponsored a similar, failed resolution during his
    time in the state House of Representatives -- and Mayor Stephen P.
    Laffey.

    Laffey and Iannazzi said that outside of areas with a significant
    Armenian-American population -- such as Cranston -- the Armenian
    genocide in particular is a little-known event.

    "I want every child who graduates from the Cranston School Department
    to know what happened to the Armenians, and School Committee member
    Iannazzi's resolution is a tremendous step toward making this
    happen," Laffey said in a statement.

    Iannazzi said that she expects there may be some opposition to her
    proposal, out of concern that it could necessitate new textbooks or
    teaching materials. Similar opposition killed Garabedian's measure in
    the House, she said.

    She said that the curriculum amendment would cost the city nothing
    because the topics are already covered in the schools. She said her
    resolution, if approved, might lead to treating the topics in greater
    depth but that she has identified activist organizations willing to
    provide supplemental teaching materials at no cost.
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