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ANCC Participates in Gen. Romeo Dallaire Genocide Institute Sessions

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  • ANCC Participates in Gen. Romeo Dallaire Genocide Institute Sessions

    Armenian National Committee of Canada
    130 Albert St., Suite 1007
    Ottawa, ON
    KIP 5G4
    Tel. (613) 235-2622 Fax (613) 238-2622
    E-mail:[email protected]

    PR ESS RELEASE
    August 18, 2006



    Contact: Roupen Kouyoumjian

    (613) 235-2622


    ANCC Participates in Gen. Romeo Dallaire Genocide Institute Sessions


    Ottawa, August 18-The Armenian National Committee of Canada (ANCC)
    participated in Gen. Romeo Dallaire Genocide Institute's 2006 teachers
    genocide training sessions held between August 14 to 18 at the University of
    Western Ontario in London, Ont.

    The aim of the institute's annual sessions is to train teachers about the
    moral lessons learned from the Holocaust, the Armenian, and the Rwandan
    Genocides. This year the institute hosted 40 teachers from various Canadian
    provinces.

    On the first day of the weeklong sessions, Prof. Frank Chalk of Concordia
    University of Montreal, Que., one of the pioneers on genocide studies,
    looked at genocides from a historical perspective and addressed their
    social, political and economic roots. During his presentation, Prof. Chalk
    screened a documentary of which 20 minutes were devoted to the Armenian
    Genocide of 1915 to 1921.

    The rest of the week was devoted to the Armenian Genocide, the Holocaust,
    and the Rwandan Genocide. Morning sessions focused on building historical
    framework of genocides while afternoon gatherings stressed classroom
    application. There were four special sessions: genocide intervention, which
    was facilitated by Gen. Romeo Dallaire; a session with a survivor of the
    Holocaust; a session with a survivor of the Rwandan Genocide; and a session
    on the Darfur calamity.

    On Tuesday, August 15, Prof. Lorne Shirinian from the Royal Military College
    in Kingston, Ont. presented the historical background of the Armenian Cause
    and the Armenian Genocide, starting at the Congress of Berlin (1878), the
    Hamidian Massacres of Armenians (1894 to 1896), the reform movement, the
    Young Turks' coup d'etat, the Genocide of 1915, the Allied Powers' promises
    and betrayal, and finally the Turkish Government's denial policy.

    In the afternoon Dr. Sima Aprahamian, also from Concordia, lectured on the
    pedagogy of teaching the Armenian Genocide and the applicability of its
    lessons to today's genocides. Dr. Aprahamian screened a documentary on the
    Georgetown Boys, a state of California prepared classroom documentary on the
    Armenian Genocide and finally, Araz Artinian's "The Genocide in Me"
    documentary which address the psychological effect of the genocide denial on
    Canadian-born Armenians.




    Pamphlets and literature related to the Armenian Genocide, among them a
    special resources book prepared by "Facing History and Ourselves" were
    distributed to the teachers.

    During a reception on August 13, Aris Babikian of the ANCC (a partner of the
    institute), welcomed the teachers and emphasized the importance of their
    "noble mission to carry out the lessons learned from various genocides and
    to spread the message of hope, tolerance and respect to human being,
    regardless of their religion, race, or colour." Babikian, ANCC's executive
    director, said that he was confident that the teachers would be the torch
    carriers who would stamp out future genocides and "help avert other nations
    from suffering racism, hatred, and xenophobia that the Armenians, Jews, and
    Rwandans experienced."

    In addressing the other partners of the institute, Babikian said ANCC was
    delighted to "see so many genocide victim organizations joining together and
    cooperating to make Gen. Romeo Dallaire Institute such a success." He said
    that it is "imperative that various victims of genocides stand together in
    solidarity, to support each other and to send a clear message to the rest of
    the world that the victim nations are standing on guard, and that they will
    not stand by and let other nations fall victim to mankind's most heinous
    crime."

    It is vital that victim nations stand together and fight against the last
    act of all genocides: the denial aspect, said Babikian. "Victim nations
    should also be alert to notions of dividing the victims and of creating a
    hierarchy of suffering among them thus shattering the solidarity of the
    victims," the ANCC representative concluded.

    -30-



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