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  • Wonder Woman Challenges Genocide Denial

    WONDER WOMAN CHALLENGES GENOCIDE DENIAL
    by Tom Vartabedian

    http://www.reporter.am/go/article/2012-11-02-wonder-woman-challenges-genocide-denial-
    Published: Friday November 02, 2012

    Wilmington High senior Kim O'Dea.

    Wilmington, Mass. - Life is full of super heroes in their quest
    for justice.

    You have your Batmans and Supermans, your Captain Americas and your
    Incredible Hulks. On the female side, there's none quite so impregnable
    as the mighty Wonder Woman.

    You'll find her these days roaming the corridors of Wilmington High
    School, looking to give Armenians their rightful due as victims of
    Turkish brutality during the 1915 Genocide.

    Okay, so it's Spirit Day at the school and students did arrive in
    costume. And, yes, the 17-year-old coed did choose to portray the
    role of Wonder Woman.

    But her peers must have done a double take when they passed her by
    sitting in the corridor before a stoic display of Armenian Genocide
    signs.

    Imagine walking through an American high school and seeing Armenian
    Tricolors gracing your walls with Genocide notices blatantly exposed
    for all to see.

    It's all part of a world history curriculum at this school on human
    rights being taught by Lisa Joy Desberg and Maura Tucker. Armenian
    Genocide recognition --- or lack of it --- is one of history's most
    tainted observations.

    With book in hand from Facing History and Ourselves, O'Dea struck a
    conspicuous pose of a vigilante before these signs. They served as
    a rather poignant backdrop of Armenian history with striking artwork
    showing genocide victims and words of remorse.

    One poster showed two Nazi gendarmes addressing a distraught family
    with Hitler's words: "Who, after all, talks now-a-days of the
    annihilation of the Armenians."

    Another was a call for affirmative action with the words "Mobilize
    and Coordinate," capturing a more unified approach.

    Others bore the words "Stripping the Armenians of their moral rights,"
    showing families being violated. And "Genocide --- a systematic,
    deliberate extermination of a specific group."

    It's not all classroom orientation, either. The two instructors have
    taken their students to Armenian lectures in Boston, attended Joyce
    Van Dyke's production of "Deported --- A Dream Play." In the works is
    a visit to the Armenian Heritage Memorial on the Rose Kennedy Greenway,
    in conjunction with a visit to the Holocaust Museum in Boston.

    They've beseeched the Postmaster General to issue a postage stamp
    commemorating the Armenian Genocide and have attended other genocide
    programs within proximity to better acquaint themselves with Armenian
    issues.

    In a sense, they've turned into activists for the Armenian Cause.

    Through the genocide, perhaps they will all become ambassadors for
    our martyred nation and accomplish what we've been unable to do ---
    get proper legislation in Washington that will bring some closure to
    a 98-year-old debate against recognition.

    The idea of a woman escaping turmoil with a bundled child through
    the desert was purely visionary for students like O'Dea who never
    had an inkling as to the genocide. The Jewish Holocaust remained in
    the forefront. So have recent tribulations like Darfur.

    But until the Armenian Genocide was introduced as a tangible component
    of this curriculum, it never happened in their minds because little
    or nothing is portrayed in our world history texts. O'Dea and others
    are looking to change the perception, whether it takes a fictitious
    costume to gain attention or more of a hands-on approach.

    What really sets off an avalanche is when a neighboring school like
    Peabody High plans to host a panel discussion on genocide and leaves
    out the Armenians. Other beleaguered countries like Cambodia, Rwanda,
    Bosnia and the Jews are represented but not us.

    Intentional or an oversight one may ask? For decades, Peabody was
    among the Merrimack Valley communities hosting regular genocide
    commemorations at City Hall. And the late Mayor Peter Torigian was
    often taken to task by the local Turkish community for using municipal
    grounds to condemn his constituents.

    Back and forth they would go in the local press until the matter
    passed to the following year. Peter always stuck to his guns when it
    came to defending his honor.

    We could all turn out and demonstrate as conscientious Armenians. Or
    send Wonder Woman to our defense. I can just see O'Dea jump up from the
    audience in her red, white and blue costume and fight for our right.

    "We'll be there with our students," said Desberg. "And when the
    opportunity comes, we will mention the Armenians. Students should be
    taught true events in history. Everyone should be given the right to
    be educated about a defining moment in history that has affected a
    world's population."

    Content-Type: MESSAGE/RFC822; CHARSET=US-ASCII
    Content-Description:

    MIME-Version: 1.0
    Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
    From: Mihran Keheyian
    Subject: Wonder Woman challenges genocide denial

    Wonder Woman challenges genocide denial
    by Tom Vartabedian

    http://www.reporter.am/go/article/2012-11-02-wonder-woman-challenges-genocide-denial-
    Published: Friday November 02, 2012


    Wilmington High senior Kim O'Dea.

    Wilmington, Mass. - Life is full of super heroes in their quest for justice.

    You have your Batmans and Supermans, your Captain Americas and your
    Incredible Hulks. On the female side, there's none quite so
    impregnable as the mighty Wonder Woman.

    You'll find her these days roaming the corridors of Wilmington High
    School, looking to give Armenians their rightful due as victims of
    Turkish brutality during the 1915 Genocide.

    Okay, so it's Spirit Day at the school and students did arrive in
    costume. And, yes, the 17-year-old coed did choose to portray the role
    of Wonder Woman.

    But her peers must have done a double take when they passed her by
    sitting in the corridor before a stoic display of Armenian Genocide
    signs.

    Imagine walking through an American high school and seeing Armenian
    Tricolors gracing your walls with Genocide notices blatantly exposed
    for all to see.

    It's all part of a world history curriculum at this school on human
    rights being taught by Lisa Joy Desberg and Maura Tucker. Armenian
    Genocide recognition --- or lack of it --- is one of history's most
    tainted observations.

    With book in hand from Facing History and Ourselves, O'Dea struck a
    conspicuous pose of a vigilante before these signs. They served as a
    rather poignant backdrop of Armenian history with striking artwork
    showing genocide victims and words of remorse.

    One poster showed two Nazi gendarmes addressing a distraught family
    with Hitler's words: "Who, after all, talks now-a-days of the
    annihilation of the Armenians."

    Another was a call for affirmative action with the words "Mobilize and
    Coordinate," capturing a more unified approach.

    Others bore the words "Stripping the Armenians of their moral rights,"
    showing families being violated. And "Genocide --- a systematic,
    deliberate extermination of a specific group."

    It's not all classroom orientation, either. The two instructors have
    taken their students to Armenian lectures in Boston, attended Joyce
    Van Dyke's production of "Deported --- A Dream Play." In the works is
    a visit to the Armenian Heritage Memorial on the Rose Kennedy
    Greenway, in conjunction with a visit to the Holocaust Museum in
    Boston.

    They've beseeched the Postmaster General to issue a postage stamp
    commemorating the Armenian Genocide and have attended other genocide
    programs within proximity to better acquaint themselves with Armenian
    issues.

    In a sense, they've turned into activists for the Armenian Cause.
    Through the genocide, perhaps they will all become ambassadors for our
    martyred nation and accomplish what we've been unable to do --- get
    proper legislation in Washington that will bring some closure to a
    98-year-old debate against recognition.

    The idea of a woman escaping turmoil with a bundled child through the
    desert was purely visionary for students like O'Dea who never had an
    inkling as to the genocide. The Jewish Holocaust remained in the
    forefront. So have recent tribulations like Darfur.

    But until the Armenian Genocide was introduced as a tangible component
    of this curriculum, it never happened in their minds because little or
    nothing is portrayed in our world history texts. O'Dea and others are
    looking to change the perception, whether it takes a fictitious
    costume to gain attention or more of a hands-on approach.

    What really sets off an avalanche is when a neighboring school like
    Peabody High plans to host a panel discussion on genocide and leaves
    out the Armenians. Other beleaguered countries like Cambodia, Rwanda,
    Bosnia and the Jews are represented but not us.

    Intentional or an oversight one may ask? For decades, Peabody was
    among the Merrimack Valley communities hosting regular genocide
    commemorations at City Hall. And the late Mayor Peter Torigian was
    often taken to task by the local Turkish community for using municipal
    grounds to condemn his constituents.

    Back and forth they would go in the local press until the matter
    passed to the following year. Peter always stuck to his guns when it
    came to defending his honor.

    We could all turn out and demonstrate as conscientious Armenians. Or
    send Wonder Woman to our defense. I can just see O'Dea jump up from
    the audience in her red, white and blue costume and fight for our
    right.

    "We'll be there with our students," said Desberg. "And when the
    opportunity comes, we will mention the Armenians. Students should be
    taught true events in history. Everyone should be given the right to
    be educated about a defining moment in history that has affected a
    world's population."

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