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Toronto Armenians Commemorate 93rd Anniversary of The Genocide

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  • Toronto Armenians Commemorate 93rd Anniversary of The Genocide

    INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTE FOR GENOCIDE AND HUMAN RIGHTS STUDIES
    (A Division of the Zoryan Institute)
    255 Duncan Mill Rd., Suite 310
    Toronto, ON, Canada M3B 3H9
    Tel: 416-250-9807
    Fax: 416-512-1736
    E-mail: [email protected]
    Web: www.genocidestudies.org
    * * * * *

    The 93rd anniversary of the Armenian Genocide was commemorated in
    Toronto on April 20 this year with a special program under the auspices
    of the S.D. Hnchagian Party Paramaz Chapter, the A.R.F. Soghomon
    Tehlirian Gomide, and the A.D.L. (Ramgavar) Yesayi Yaghoubian Chapter.

    The program consisted of opening remarks by Master of Ceremonies Natalie
    Macleod, a dramatization on freedom of expression by the Armenian Youth
    Organization, and strong statements of affirmation and support from a
    number of distinguished federal, provincial and municipal politicians.

    The keynote speech was delivered by George Shirinian, Executive Director
    of the Zoryan Institute. He spoke on the theme of Genocide Education and
    Awareness. The speech was so well received, we wanted to share it with
    you. The full text of the speech appears below, along with a brief
    biographical statement.



    Brief Introduction for George Shirinian


    George Shirinian is the Executive Director of the International
    Institute for Genocide and Human Rights Studies (A Division of the
    Zoryan Institute), which is devoted to research, publication and
    education in the fields of Genocide Studies, Diaspora Studies and
    Armenia Studies.

    He is the co-editor of Studies in Comparative Genocide, the author of
    articles and reviews relating to Armenian Studies and the Armenian
    Genocide, an official of Genocide Studies and Prevention: An
    International Journal, and one of the organizers of the annual Genocide
    and Human Rights University Program.

    * * * * *


    Genocide Education and Awareness: Remarks on the 93rd Commemoration of
    the Armenian Genocide
    Armenian Community Centre, Toronto, April 20, 2008


    Ladies and Gentleman,

    For 93 years we have been gathering on this day to commemorate the
    Genocide of 1915. This day is particularly emotional for us because we
    not only remember those who were victimized then, but also the fact that
    people are still being victimized today, by the ongoing denial of this
    crime by the perpetrator and its allies, some of whom dare to call
    themselves custodians of Human Rights. It has been said that of all the
    aspects of genocide, denial is the last stage. Having said this, what I
    want to focus on today is the phenomenon of genocide, promoting its
    awareness and its prevention.

    April, which ironically means "to live" in Armenian, is the month of
    commemoration of some of the major genocides of our recent history. I
    can not help but observe that Jews and Rwandans also commemorate their
    own genocides this month. April 19 marks the day in 1943 when the Nazis
    began to liquidate the Warsaw Ghetto. April 7 marks the day in 1994 when
    extremist Hutus began the slaughter of their Tutsi and moderate Hutu
    neighbours.

    It would be only fitting, therefore, as we commemorate one horrendous
    act of genocide, that we also reflect on the many genocidal acts that
    have occurred during the past 100 years-starting with the Hereros in
    Southwest Africa at the start of the 20th century, the Armenians,
    Assyrians and Greeks during and after World War I, the forced famine in
    the Ukraine in the 1930s, the Nazi destruction of the Jews, Roma, Poles
    and others during World War II, the Aché of Paraguay beginning in the
    1960s, the people of Bangladesh in 1971, the Cambodians in 1975, the
    Maya of Guatemala from the 1960s, the Bosnians in 1991, the Kosovars and
    East Timorese in 1999, and, as we speak, the people of Darfur today.
    This is only a partial list of genocides in the past 100 years, a
    political act that has caused the death of over 60 million people around
    the world.

    So, today we are commemorating something that is not just part of
    history, and not just affecting one group, but is ongoing, and
    monumental in its enormity. Raphael Lemkin, the man who coined the word
    genocide based on the Armenian and Jewish experiences wrote, "The
    function of memory is not to register past events but to simulate human
    conscience." How can we begin to stimulate the human conscience; how do
    we provoke it to action except by teaching history and learning from
    our past?

    The concept of the value of history is deeply ingrained in our thought.
    As early as the 5th century BC, the Greek historian Thucydides wrote of
    his conviction that historical events would, at some point in the
    future, and in more or less the same ways, recur. The Spanish-American
    Philosopher, George Santayana in 1905 made a now very famous statement,
    "Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it." Jean
    Bodin, the 16th century French jurist, said that "The study of history
    is the beginning of political wisdom."

    Bureaucrats, policy-makers and government officials shy away from
    addressing genocide. They find it controversial, because it is a
    political act, and politics between the perpetrator and the victim and
    the perpetrator and themselves cloud the understanding of these events.
    They remain ignorant of the lessons of history, and the result is
    further chaos and repeated destruction.

    Unfortunately, it is only after the loss of some 60 million lives that
    the study of this kind of history, the study of human rights and their
    gross violation, is barely beginning in our school systems. It is a
    difficult and challenging subject at the best of times, with a lot of
    sensitivities, as sometimes there are groups who do not want this
    history taught. After all, it is difficult for certain people to accept
    being collectively labeled as perpetrators of genocide.

    As Canadians, especially since our current government has officially
    acknowledged the Armenian Genocide, we need a comprehensive educational
    program devoted to the study of genocidal acts of the past and present,
    the prevention of genocide, and the promotion of human rights. Such a
    program should begin in high school and continue through university,
    with courses that would create awareness, engage students, and allow
    them to study genocide, war crimes and crimes against humanity in a
    systematic and thoughtful way. Given the multi-cultural and ethnic
    diversity of Canadians, it is essential that students born within and
    outside Canada have the opportunity to explore in depth the causes and
    consequences of genocide and the lived realities of the aggressors, the
    victims, the bystanders, and the resisters to these horrific acts of
    violence. A study of these experiences would help foster a sense of
    empathy for the targets of these violent acts and hopefully encourage
    students to understand the connections they have to their fellow human
    beings. As a result, students would begin to think critically about the
    world they have inherited and in which they currently live. They would
    have the opportunity to understand their rights and responsibilities as
    global citizens, and be challenged to take action, to ensure that human
    rights are protected and that genocide is confronted. Democracy,
    justice, and the rule of law must be understood, claimed, and defended
    by each generation of citizens, if we are to confront this scourge, this
    manifestation of human evil.

    The need for advanced genocide education is equally crucial. We need to
    provide the opportunity for the next generation of genocide scholars,
    activists, policy-makers, and civil society at large to become
    motivated, inspired, and trained in why genocide occurs, how it takes
    place, and how it can be prevented. This is why, at the Zoryan
    Institute, where research and analysis are ongoing processes, we have
    put emphasis on running university courses and seminars in human rights
    and comparative genocide, with the involvement of some of the most
    renowned experts, attracting hundreds of international students from
    some 15 countries. This is also why we produce Genocide Studies and
    Prevention: An International Journal. This publication is co-founded and
    managed by the distinguished International Association of Genocide
    Scholars and the International Institute of Genocide and Human Rights
    Studies (A Division of the Zoryan Institute) with the collaboration of
    the University of Toronto Press as the publisher. Our mission is to
    understand the phenomenon of genocide, create an awareness of it as an
    ongoing scourge, and promote the idea of the necessity of preventing it.

    Why should we make such an effort? Why should we strive to stimulate
    conscience through an understanding of history? Well, because we all
    want to have a safer future. And the only way to have it for ourselves,
    and for our children, is to make it possible for every national, racial,
    social, and religious group to have it. As the philosopher George E.
    Moore said, "After all, there is but one race, humanity."

    So, education is the key to creating awareness. But what can awareness
    do? Awareness is the mobilizing force that can lead civil society to put
    pressure on government to act and not stand idly by. It is our view at
    the Zoryan Institute that one of the most effective means to end the
    slaughter of so many millions is for governments to expand their concept
    of national interest to include the prevention of genocide. This can
    happen only through the pressure of civil society. The arguments for
    this are both humanitarian and pragmatic. In addition to preventing
    human suffering, from a purely financial point of view, genocide leads
    to destruction of life and property, the outflow of huge numbers of
    refugees, and economic disruption. These costs, which are often
    subsidized by the free world, are far greater than the costs of early
    intervention. Human rights, therefore, are everybody's business, and we
    must all do our part.

    So it is not only the Armenian Genocide, not only the Jewish Holocaust,
    not only the Rwandan Genocide we are dealing with; it is the human
    genocide; it is crime against all of humanity. Therefore it is the
    responsibility of you, me, and everyone, not only to commemorate such
    acts of violence, but to actively prevent these crimes.

    As the son of two orphans of the Armenian Genocide, who were both part
    of the Georgetown Boys group brought to Canada, and whose personal
    experiences have always had a strong influence on my thinking, my
    identity, my relationship to my fellow man, and, above all, the meaning
    of life, I ask, as you leave this hall today, to take away with you not
    only a sense of sorrow for the victims of genocides past, but more
    importantly, a sense of responsibility-be that civic, religious,
    political, or whatever-to fight with everything we've got for human
    rights, and to prevent this heinous crime from ever happening again,
    anywhere in the world, to any people.

    Remember: humanity is our shared value. Human rights for all is our
    shared benefit, manifested in a free, democratic and just world for
    ourselves and others. Standing up and speaking out and doing all we can
    do to protect it is our shared responsibility. Yes, we can make a
    difference. We can help stop genocide through education and by raising
    awareness. Nelson Mandela has said "Education is the most powerful
    weapon you can use to change the world." Yes, we can change the world!

    Therefore, as we commemorate the Armenian Genocide today, let us
    remember the words of the writer James Thurber, "Let us not look back in
    anger, nor forward in fear, but around in awareness."

    Thank you.
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