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Rights Fight Brewing: Controversy Dogs Museum

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  • Rights Fight Brewing: Controversy Dogs Museum

    RIGHTS FIGHT BREWING: CONTROVERSY DOGS MUSEUM
    ALTHIA RAJ

    Winnipeg Sun
    April 17, 2009 Friday
    The Toronto Sun

    The Canadian Museum for Human Rights is set to tackle the thorny
    issue of whose story to include and whose to leave out -- a process
    that is causing controversy before it's even begun.

    Construction of the $265-million project in Winnipeg is now underway
    and the museum will soon announce a cross-country "story gathering
    process."

    "We will be talking to community groups, individuals, academics and
    researchers, to really start identifying what the stories are, and who
    the storytellers are as well," said museum spokeswoman Angela Cassie.

    But some groups are already raising concerns their stories will
    be excluded.

    Helen Kennedy, executive director of Egale Canada, was worried gay
    and lesbian human rights would be ignored because the group was
    "totally omitted" from the museum's promotional materials.

    "To have that totally erased was really disconcerting and alarming,"
    said Kennedy.

    After meeting with the museum's chief operating officer, she hopes
    the situation will be corrected.

    Others such as James Kafieh worry the museum's tour will be "a public
    relations exercise" and will give the Jews' experience during the
    Holocaust disproportionate attention compared to other cases of human
    rights abuses.

    EQUAL TREATMENT

    Kafieh is the executive secretary of Canadians for Genocide Education,
    a coalition of 46 ethno-cultural groups including the Canadian Arab
    Federation, Armenian National Federation and Federation of Canadian
    Turkish Associations.

    "It needs to be inclusive and equitable. If it focuses disproportionate
    attention to some cases over other cases, then what it is actually
    teaching us is that there is a hierarchy of human suffering, and that
    some human suffering is more important than other cases of human
    suffering; and on that basis, the museum would not be teaching us
    anything about human rights, it would be teaching us about racism,"
    Kafieh said.

    The museum, which is a Crown corporation, is funded primarily through
    federal dollars, but has also received provincial, municipal and
    private donations.

    Chief operating officer Patrick O'Reilly is aware of the concerns
    and promised the museum will be independent from its biggest donors,
    such as Winnipeg's prominent Jewish family, the Aspers.

    O'Reilly said the museum will be rigorous in its approach, and he
    expects controversial and conflicting points of view will be shared
    "as long as they are respectful."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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