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Speakers Help Sharon High Seniors Understand Genocide

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  • Speakers Help Sharon High Seniors Understand Genocide

    Patch.com
    Dec 4 2011


    Speakers Help Sharon High Seniors Understand Genocide

    SEF grant sponsored the talks with the Genocide and Human Nature class.

    By Michael Gelbwasser

    On a screen in a Sharon High School classroom, an elderly woman
    described how her grandmother was shot.

    And she described how her family was tortured and killed "for no
    reason (other than) to be an Armenian."

    Last Wednesday, nearly 100 years after the Armenian Genocide, about 20
    seniors in Sharon High's Genocide and Human Nature - The Horror and
    The Hope class watched a film about it.

    "It's hard to talk after watching this," Roger Hagopian, who made this
    documentary and others about Armenian history, told the students.

    Hagopian and Dr. Pamela Steiner were the latest guest speakers to
    visit the class this fall. Steiner is project director of the Harvard
    Humanitarian Initiative's Intercommunal Violence and Reconciliation
    Project, currently seeking to improve Turkish-Armenian relations. Her
    great-grandfather was Henry Morganthau, the U.S. ambassador to Turkey
    during the Armenian Genocide.

    The Armenian Genocide was "the atrocities committed against the
    Armenian people of the Ottoman Empire" during World War I, according
    to the Armenian National Institute website.

    Sharon High social studies teacher Jennifer Koltov said the speakers
    give "students the sense that these are real issues that are
    relevant."

    A Sharon Education Foundation grant allowed her to bring in not only
    Hagopian and Steiner, but also, earlier this fall, two speakers
    regarding helping the Sudanese Civil War victims: Sarah Rial of My
    Sister's Keeper and Sister Bridget Haase.

    "I think it inspires the kids to see that individuals can make a
    difference," Koltov said.

    "And I think it reflects that these are ongoing issues as well. Just
    because a genocide is technically over, it doesn't mean that the
    societies are done dealing with it."

    http://sharon.patch.com/articles/speakers-help-sharon-high-seniors-understand-genocide

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