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TORONTO: Genocide Course Irks Turks

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  • TORONTO: Genocide Course Irks Turks

    GENOCIDE COURSE IRKS TURKS
    By Bryn Weese, Sun Media

    Toronto Sun, Ontario, Canada
    Jan 17 2008

    It wasn't even on last night's agenda, but a Toronto District School
    Board committee spent more than an hour getting public input on a
    proposed Grade 11 history course about genocide.

    The education ministry has already approved the course, Genocide:
    Historical and Contemporary Implications.

    But the course is causing an uproar among local Turks because it also
    deals with the killing of hundreds of thousands of Armenians during
    the fall of the Ottoman Empire in 1915 in modern-day Turkey.

    Lale Eskicioglu, executive director of the Council of Turkish Canadians
    (CTC), believes too many people dispute the idea of Armenian genocide
    to include it under that title and is upset the community wasn't
    consulted during the course's development.

    "We cannot have the Armenian tragedy under that title (genocide),
    but we want debate on this topic," she said, noting the CTC believes
    university is a better place to teach the subject.

    Eskicioglu was one of about 200 people -- divided equally on whether
    to include the subject or not -- at a program and school services
    committee last night.

    Prof. Frank Chalk, director of genocide and human rights studies
    at Concordia University in Montreal, said the facts of the centrally
    planned extermination of Armenians are "incontestable," but some people
    in the Turkish community might object because they feel it is a "blot"
    on their community and reputation.

    "Nobody here is accusing the Turkish people of genocide," he told
    the crowd.

    Board spokesman Nadine Segal said that although the course wasn't on
    last night's agenda, the committee didn't think it would be right to
    ask interested parties to return at a later date.

    "The program and school services committee wanted to honour the
    community concerns by allowing them to present tonight," she said,
    noting the board expected a high level of interest in the course.

    A special committee is being struck to discuss the course further,
    but the director of education will ultimately decide where, if at all,
    the course should be offered.

    http://torontosun.com/News/TorontoAndGTA /2008/01/17/4777773-sun.html
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