Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Dallaire Institute: Teaching Teachers About Genocide

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Dallaire Institute: Teaching Teachers About Genocide

    DALLAIRE INSTITUTE: TEACHING TEACHERS ABOUT GENOCIDE
    By Bob Klanac

    Western News, Canada
    Aug. 10, 2006

    They say those who forget history are doomed to repeat it. Those words
    are doubtless first and foremost in the minds of the organizers of
    the annual General Romeo Dallaire Genocide Institute, taking place
    at Western, August 14 - 18.

    The Dallaire Institute hosts 40 teachers and focuses on teaching
    them the lessons of the Holocaust, Armenian and Rwandan genocides,
    as well as how to teach the stories in the classrooms.

    "We want to teach them how to teach those lessons in such a way that
    it isn't a lesson about history but a lesson of history," notes Rich
    Hitchens an Associate Scholar of the Holocaust Literature Research
    Institute in Western's Faculty of Arts & Humanities. "We want them to
    go back and use what happened to teach students moral lessons. It's
    character education."

    True to the issue of character, the institute was named after General
    Romeo Dallaire for his heroism and idealism.

    "We wanted to recognize what General Dallaire accomplished in Rwanda in
    trying to prevent and stop the genocide there in 1994 which included
    saving tens of thousands of people," Hitchens explains. "His actions
    are representative of the messages that we wanted to convey through
    teacher to students: tolerance, human rights and helping others in
    needed. His actions in Rwanda, and since, embody those messages. It
    just made perfect sense that we would try and honour him in this way."

    Although one could be forgiven for considering that Holocaust education
    is currently at an appropriately high level, Hitchens notes that it's
    an incorrect perception.

    "Around the world, genocide education, especially the Holocaust, is
    very much the vanguard of teaching about tolerance and human rights
    but Canada is very far behind on that. The Dallaire Institute is the
    only annual institute for teachers. And it's quite unique in that
    it's focused on genocide in general, and not just the Holocaust.

    "This has become very much the beacon of genocide education in Canada,"
    says Hitchens.

    The institute uses material about the Holocaust and the genocides in
    Armenia and Rwanda. Because of the currency of the latter two examples,
    living witnesses to these genocides are a featured component of the
    Institute's curriculum.

    "On Wednesday night we have a survivor of the Rwandan genocide
    coming. He is a graduate of the French PhD program at Western who now
    teaches at Queens," notes Hitchens. "This guy was saved by the guy who
    ran Hotel Rwanda and he's one of the people saved by General Dallaire."

    Hitchens adds that Dallaire will be teaching Monday night and is very
    involved in the Institute, coming every year to teach.

    "Frank Chalk from Concordia University in Montreal is widely considered
    the pioneer of genocide studies in the world," Hitchens says. "The
    teachers will actually get to study with Frank Chalk.

    That's like a physicist studying with Newton."

    Although the institute's 2004 inaugural year included local teachers
    only, this year the invitation was extended to instructors in many
    major cities throughout the country. Despite the national reach,
    the Dallaire Institute still only accepts 40 teachers for the summer
    session.

    "We haven't increased the numbers because we don't want it to be so
    large that teachers don't get the interaction," Hitchens explains.

    "But teachers in coming years will return to do advanced seminars
    on the Holocaust, Armenia and Rwanda. This introductory institute is
    like first year at university."

    http://communications.uwo.ca/we stern_news/story.html?listing_id=21709
Working...
X