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Why Study Genocide? Here's Why

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  • Why Study Genocide? Here's Why

    WHY STUDY GENOCIDE? HERE'S WHY
    Susan Smylie and Laura McCarthy

    San Antonio Express
    http://www.mysanantonio.com/opinion/570403 32.html
    Sept 3 2009

    The Texas Holocaust and Genocide Commission came into effect this week,
    thanks to action taken by the Legislature last spring. Texans should
    be proud our state is taking a leadership role in this area.

    The commission will provide advice and assistance to educators from
    primary schools through universities regarding implementation of
    Holocaust and genocide courses of study and awareness programs.

    The commission also will identify resources educators may use and
    will help connect people with great knowledge or experiences of
    genocide with those who wish to learn more. Its scope goes beyond
    public schools and will be a resource to all educators.

    Why study genocide? Some say it "just happens." While the planning
    that went into the Holocaust is obvious, other such mass murders are
    often viewed as cultural problems among people who "have always been
    fighting each other."

    Our study shows genocide is carefully planned by perpetrators who
    are fueled by a desire for power. Thus, it is preventable. Every 20th
    century genocide has had warnings that were ignored.

    Believing humans really will carry out such horrors on other humans
    is hard to grasp, but we have seen it happen -- in Armenia, Germany,
    Cambodia, Rwanda and now, in the first genocide of the 21st century,
    Darfur, Sudan.

    Understanding that genocide is preventable can empower us to take
    action.

    Local retired teacher Kathy Kardon and teachers at Bush Middle
    School set a great example of how genocide education can be used to
    tie past atrocities to current action. They used the NEISD Holocaust
    curriculum to start a discussion about genocide that led to students
    raising some $6,000 for Darfur refugee relief.

    At its outset, the commission should survey how much genocide education
    is happening in Texas and develop relationships with inspired educators
    in the process. That will enable the commission to make recommendations
    and provide resources to all Texas educators. With tools and resources,
    communities across Texas will be better prepared to learn about
    genocide, and empowered to use that knowledge to take action.

    The commission is crucial to teaching children that no one is a lesser
    person, and to reawakening in adults lessons of the past and how they
    connect to the future. It isn't enough to say that something bad
    happened to a group of people in the past. By being aware of early
    warning signs, we can avert future tragedies.

    We hope you who are reading this will join us in supporting the Texas
    Holocaust and Genocide Commission's work.

    Susan Smylie of San Antonio and Laura McCarthy of Dallas are 2009
    Genocide Intervention Network Carl Wilkens Fellows.
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