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  • Genocide course sparks controversy in Toronto

    Genocide course sparks controversy in Toronto

    Curriculum to cover Holocaust, Armenia and Rwanda

    Natalie Alcoba, National Post
    Published: Friday, June 13, 2008


    TORONTO - The Toronto public school board approved last night a
    controversial new highschool course about genocide, one of the first
    of its kind in Canada to explore the topic of mass killing around the
    world.

    Genocide and Crimes Against Humanity will be an optional Grade 11
    course in Toronto schools come September. It will focus on three case
    studies from the 20th and 21st centuries: the Holocaust, Armenia and
    Rwanda.

    The government-approved course description says students will "examine
    identity formation and how "in groups" and "out groups" are created,
    including an analysis of how "bias, stereotypes, prejudice and
    discrimination impact on various groups." They will also learn about
    the roles of perpetrators, victims, bystanders, rescuers, opportunists
    and resisters.

    But it is the inclusion and exclusion of certain mass killings that
    has generated considerable public debate among different ethnic
    communities. The Ukrainians have agitated for a fourth module on the
    famine of the 1930s, and members of the Turkish community have lobbied
    for a change because they, like their national government, dispute
    that the killing of an estimated 1.5 million Armenians between 1915
    and 1923 amounts to a genocide.

    School officials said yesterday there simply are not enough hours in
    the year to branch beyond three core case studies, but assured that
    the Ukrainian famine, and other atrocities such as Darfur, will be
    studied in the genocide course. It will be offered at first in 12 of
    110 high schools.

    The committee of Toronto District School Board officials and
    university academics that reviewed the complaints insists that
    politics has no place in this debate. "Disagreeing about the
    appropriateness of the label of genocide is not the same as denying
    that the killings occurred," committee members said in a report that
    was submitted to Toronto school trustees. "Genuine historical
    controversies do belong in a highschool curriculum and can be
    beneficial in giving students an in-depth understanding of complex
    events and in teaching students critical thinking."

    Academics contend that history, by its very nature, is controversial
    terrain, but certainly among the most fraught aspects of any history
    are those that involve conflicts between and within nations. It was on
    display last night at the Toronto school board, as local Turks waived
    their homeland's red flag and decried "hate propaganda" -- all part of
    a campaign that Armenians claim was "orchestrated overseas." Twenty
    years ago, a similar course proposal -- which never received the
    endorsement of the Education Ministry -- was shelved in Ottawa after
    the federal government intervened and asked the school board not to
    proceed.

    In the United States, the Armenian genocide is taught in a number of
    states, including California, Massachusetts and New Jersey, but also
    not without controversy. A lawsuit was filed against the Massachusetts
    Department of Education

    in 2005 after it removed from the lesson plan the dissenting views of
    historians and Turkish groups. Education officials said at the time
    that it would be wrong to dispute the genocide in the classroom when
    the state law acknowledged it. The outcome of the lawsuit was not
    known.

    The Turkish government contends that the deaths were a result of
    war-time fighting, and has reacted with frosty condemnation at any
    acknowledgment of a genocide by any government, including Canada.

    The Toronto school board review committee sided with "the vast
    majority of scholars" who concur that what happened to the Armenians
    was a genocide. But it said teachers should also include analysis of
    the works of reputable scholars who disagree, such as U. S. historians
    Guenter Lewy and Bernard Lewis -- a move that was lamented by one
    respected Canadian academic.

    "In every single case of genocide, the perpetrators have denied they
    intended to commit a genocide," said Frank Chalk, a Concordia
    University history professor who is director of the Montreal Institute
    for Genocide and Human Rights Studies. "Including the deniers on the
    reading list is not something that I would have counseled."

    But it was done, in part, to show concerned Turks that voices of
    dissent will be seen and heard, said Nadine Segal, system
    superintendent of programs at the TDSB.

    Still, Lale Eskicioglu worried about how the "vilification and
    slander" of her homeland will affect young Turkish students.

    "They are trying to make the events of 1915 look as if it was the same
    thing as the Holocaust, the worst thing that has ever happened on this
    Earth," said Ms. Eskicioglu, an Ottawa engineer who is now the
    executive director of the Council of Turkish Canadians. "We want
    debate, we want this to be talked about it."

    Aris Babikian, head of the Armenian National Committee of Canada, said
    that opposition comes from a small group of "nationalists," while
    support of a course on the Armenian genocide stretches from city
    councillors to Stephen Lewis to respected historians.

    "It's not the intention of the course to villainize or create any
    hatred of any community," said Mr. Babikian, who said his grandfather
    survived the genocide thanks to the goodwill of a Turkish neighbour.

    [email protected]

    Copyright © 2007 CanWest Interactive, a division of CanWest MediaWorks
    Publications, Inc.. All rights reserved.

    http://www.nationalpost.com/news/canada /story.html?id=583150
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