ANKARA: US Diplomat Backs Proposed Commission On Armenian Issue

US DIPLOMAT BACKS PROPOSED COMMISSION ON ARMENIAN ISSUE

Today’s Zaman
June 18 2009
Turkey

A senior US diplomat has indicated the Obama administration’s
support for Turkey’s almost five-year-old proposal to establish a
joint commission of historians to resolve the question of whether
the killings of Anatolian Armenians during World War I amounted
to genocide.

Remarks by Philip Gordon, assistant secretary of state for Europe
and Eurasian affairs, came on Tuesday at a hearing of the Foreign
Affairs Committee of the US House of Representatives. The hearing,
chaired by Congressman Robert Wexler, was titled "Strengthening the
Transatlantic Alliance: An Overview of the Obama Administration’s
Policies in Europe."

Gordon recalled that he had recently paid visits to Armenia, Azerbaijan
and Georgia since he observed that there are both challenges and
opportunities in this region.

"You have two parallel but separate tracks going on; a Turkey-Armenia
normalization reconciliation process that we do think is quite
potentially historic, where the two countries have agreed on a
framework for normalizing their relations. That would include
opening the border, which has been closed for far too long, which
would establish diplomatic relations and would provide commissions
in key areas, including history," Gordon said. He was apparently
referring to Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s 2005 letter to
then-Armenian President Robert Kocharyan, inviting him to establish
a joint commission of historians and experts from both Turkey and
Armenia to study the events of 1915 using documents from the archives
of Turkey, Armenia and any other country believed to have played a
part in the issue.

At a joint press conference in Ankara during Obama’s landmark visit to
Turkey in early April, President Abdullah Gul recalled the proposal
and said: "If it has a high interest in this issue, any country —
for example, it may be the US, it may be France — can join this joint
commission of historians, and we are ready to [face] the results."

Gordon, meanwhile, also said: "And we encourage that process and
we support it. We have said that it is an independent process and
believe that it should move forward, regardless of whatever else is
happening in Europe or anywhere else, because both countries would
benefit. That said, it is nonetheless the case that at the same
time negotiations on Nagorno-Karabakh are going on between Armenia
and Azerbaijan, and that is part of the context in which the region
moves forward. And we’re encouraging that process as well. So, again,
our view is that these are separate tracks. They’re moving forward
at different speeds. But we are engaged vigorously on both, because
if both were to succeed, it really would be an historic opportunity
for the region, from which all three of those countries would benefit."

Gordon’s remarks found a rapid response from the US-based Armenian
diaspora. In a press release delivered later the same day, the Armenian
National Committee of America (ANCA) said, "The establishment of an
Armenia-Turkey commission of historians, a measure Turkey has long
sought to cast a doubt over the overwhelming historical record of
the Armenian genocide, stands in stark contrast to President Obama’s
statements during his campaign for the White House."

AAA: Key House Panel Approves $48 Million For Armenia $10mil for NK

Armenian Assembly of America
1334 G Street, NW, Suite 200
Washington, DC 20005
Phone: 202-393-3434
Fax: 202-638-4904
Email: [email protected]
Web:

PRESS RELEASE

June 17, 2009
Contact: Michael A Zachariades
Email: [email protected]
Phone: (202) 393-3434

KEY HOUSE PANEL APPROVES $48 MILLION FOR ARMENIA AND $10 MILLION FOR
NAGORNO KARABAKH

Restores Military Parity, Strengthens Section 907

Washington, DC – Today, a key House panel approved the Fiscal Year (FY)
2010 State, Foreign Operations Appropriations Bill. Armenia is slated to
receive $48 million, $3 million in Foreign Military Financing (FMF), and
$450,000 in International Military Education Training (IMET) while
Nagorno Karabakh will receive $10 million, reported the Armenian
Assembly of America (Assembly). Azerbaijan did not receive the funding
increase proposed by the Administration.

"The Assembly commends Chairwoman Nita Lowey (D-NY) and members of the
Subcommittee for ensuring this positive outcome," said Armenian Assembly
Executive Director Bryan Ardouny. "U.S. assistance to Armenia helps to
offset the impact of Turkey’s ongoing blockade of Armenia," continued
Ardouny.

The Administration proposed a sharp reduction in funding to Armenia from
last year’s level of $48 million to $30 million in FY 2010.
Additionally, the budget request also increased aid to Azerbaijan and
overturned long-standing Congressional policy with respect to military
parity between Armenian and Azerbaijan.

"Today’s Subcommittee action sends the right message to the people of
Armenia and Nagorno Karabakh, that America will continue to assist our
friends in the region," added Ardouny. "However, the Assembly remains
concerned about the overall level of assistance to Armenia, especially
the impact of the Millennium Challenge Corporation’s (MCC) recent
decision to hold funding on a rural roads project. The Assembly will
continue to press for increased assistance to benefit the people of
Armenia."

In March of this year, Board of Trustees Member Van Krikorian testified
before the House Appropriations Subcommittee on State Foreign Operations
and Related Programs, outlining the Assembly’s priorities and urging not
less than: $70 million for Armenia, $10 million for Nagorno Karabakh as
well as $4 million in Foreign FMF and $1 million in IMET for Fiscal Year
2010. Armenian Caucus Co-Chairs Frank Pallone, Jr. (D-NJ) and Mark Kirk
(R-IL) also called for the funding levels noted above.

The full Committee is expected to consider the bill next week with a
vote in the House of Representatives anticipated before the August
Congressional recess. As the Bill moves through the legislative process
in the House and Senate, the Assembly will continue its advocacy and
outreach efforts.

Established in 1972, the Armenian Assembly of America is the largest
Washington-based nationwide organization promoting public understanding
and awareness of Armenian issues. The Assembly is a 501(c)(3) tax-exempt
membership organization.

###

NR#2009-054

www.aaainc.org

Police Beat Dozens Of Opposition Protesters In Georgia

POLICE BEAT DOZENS OF OPPOSITION PROTESTERS IN GEORGIA

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
15.06.2009 21:47 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Masked police beat dozens of opposition protesters
in the Georgian capital on Monday in the latest flare-up during a
weeks-long street campaign against President Mikheil Saakashvili,
witnesses said.

Dozens of black-clad police officers armed with truncheons confronted
a protest of about 50 people at Tbilisi’s main police station demanding
the release of six opposition activists detained since Friday.

Police seized cameras from photographers and cameramen, including a
Reuters photographer. The cameras were later returned but the Reuters
photographer’s images had been erased. Other photographers said their
memory cards had been taken.

Tensions are running high in the former Soviet republic, after more
than two months of opposition protests and roadblocks demanding
Saakashvili quit over his record on democracy and last year’s
disastrous war with Russia.

The volatile country of 4.5 million people sits on Russia’s southern
border, at the heart of a transit region for oil and gas to the West.

"This is absolutely unacceptable," protest leader and former
Saakashvili ally Nino Burjanadze said of the violence. "We demand
a response from our Western partners, to give their assessment of
the situation."

Saakashvili said he was tolerating a state of "lawlessness" and
accused his opponents of trying to provoke him.

"They think Saakashvili is hot-headed, they insult (parliament speaker
David) Bakradze and (Prime Minister Nika) Gilauri, and they try to
make us crush them," he told a televised meeting of the parliamentary
majority.

Police firing tear gas and rubber bullets dispersed the last mass
demonstrations against Saakashvili in 2007. Watched closely by the
West, authorities are wary of taking a hard line again, but analysts
question how long the stalemate can continue.

Both sides have traded blame for a spate of violent incidents, vying
for the sympathy of Georgia’s Western allies.

The opposition said that statements by several Western embassies on
Friday, in which they criticized opposition protesters for throwing
rocks and bottles at Bakradze’s official car, had encouraged the
government to take a hard line.

"The statements made by the U.S., French and Czech ambassadors clearly
gave impetus to the authorities to act as criminals and bandits today,"
opposition leader David Gamkrelidze said.

The Interior Ministry said in a statement that protesters were
hampering traffic and resisted police efforts "to unblock the entrance
to the police station and restore traffic movement." It said 39
protesters were detained.

Deputy Interior Minister Eka Zguladze said police had acted
inappropriately toward journalists. "It is our mistake. We admit it
and apologize," she told a news conference.

Pro-opposition television stations Maestro and Kavkasia said they
would temporarily halt broadcasting in protest.

Turnout at the demonstrations has waned, but dozens of mock prison
cells erected around parliament continue to block traffic through
central Tbilisi. Earlier on Monday, men in civilian clothes armed
with knives broke up mock prison cells behind parliament.

The opposition accuse 41-year-old Saakashvili of monopolizing power
since the 2003 "Rose Revolution" that propelled him to the presidency.

He has faced renewed pressure since last August, when Russia crushed
a Georgian assault on the breakaway pro-Russian region of South
Ossetia. But analysts question whether the opposition has the unity
or the numbers to unseat him, Reuters reported.

NKR: Information

NKR Government Information and
Public Relations Department

June 12, 2009

In the first quarter of 2009 250 application-complaints, 15 collective
letters signed by 207 persons inclusive entered the NKR Government
Staff. In comparison with 2006 the quantity of application-complaints
has increased by 144, that of collective letters by 24 and the number
of signatures by 278.

The application-complaints received in the first quarter of 2009 are
the following in the sense of contents: social questions (103),
questions about human rights (2), questions about returning deposits
(2), questions about the activities of the republican authorities (5),
questions about providing flats (68), questions about education (4),
questions about salaries (2), questions about provision of pensions
(3), question about land use (2), questions about the issues of Great
Patriotic and Artsakh War veterans (2), questions about the ways of
property and business development (23), questions about rendering
living services (56).

The most important application-complaints were addressed to the NKR
Prime Minister (223), to the Minister-Chief of the NKR Government Staff
(27), which forms 100 percent of the received application-complaints.

Application-complaints were sent from the NKR Government Staff to
Stepanakert (3), Askeran (4), Martakert (9), Martouni (5), Hadrout (2),
Shoushi (2), Shahoumian (2), Qashatagh (1), Ministries (189), the NKR
Government adjunct bodies (8), Departments of the NKR Government Staff
(22), Artsakh Investment Fund (3).

In the first quarter of 2009 replies to 202 application-complaints
about the results of the works done were received, the rest are
examined by the Municipality, Ministries and regional administrations.
For reception 120 citizens applied to the NKR Prime Minister, 14
citizens to the Minister-Chief of the NKR Government Staff.

Armenian President And Head Of "Russian Railways" Discuss Present Co

ARMENIAN PRESIDENT AND HEAD OF "RUSSIAN RAILWAYS" DISCUSS PRESENT CONDITION OF ARMENIAN RAILWAYS AND PROSPECTS OF DEVELOPMENT

ARMENPRESS
June 12, 2009

YEREVAN, JUNE 12, ARMENPRESS: Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan
received today Vladimir Yakunin, the head of the "Russian Railways"
company which is the concession manager of Armenian railways.

Presidential Press office told Armenpress that stressing the
Armenian-Russian strategic relations the Armenian President
said: "We consider Russia to be our most reliable ally and give
a primary importance to the further development of bilateral
relations." According to the President, in this respect transport on
the whole and the railway transport in particular have a significant
role.

V. Yakunin conveyed Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin’s best
regards to the President Sargsyan stressing that on the eve of his
visit to Armenia he met with V. Putin.

Head of the "Russian Railways" company expressed gratitude to the
Armenian President for right assessment of the importance of the
railroads for the economy of the state and keeping it under his
limelight.

V. Yakunin informed that he has visited an exhibition of products
intended for the needs of railway transport which was organized by the
leadership of South Caucasian railways and the Armenian businessmen.

According to the head of "Russian Railways" company the presented
products are already being used in the South Caucasian railways
as well as in Russia as the price/quality interrelation is quite
attractive. Besides that their main principle is to give preference
to the local producers in any undertakings.

The interlocutors discussed the present situation of Armenian railways,
development prospects as well as the process of implementation of
responsibilities assumed by the sides on the concession management
agreement.

They have particularly referred to the projects connected with the
modernization of the railways, reconstruction of wagons and railroads,
technical rearmament, increase of the speed of the trains as well
as conduction of cargo transportations through the most optimal way,
shortest time and on lowest expenditures.

Vladimir Yakunin said the works conducted during the latest period
on the whole satisfy him; serious steps have been undertaken towards
increasing of the management efficiency.

The Head of "Russian Railways" assured that the got investment
responsibilities will fully be conducted.

Authorities And Opposition Of Armenia Are Preparing For A Rally

AUTHORITIES AND OPPOSITION OF ARMENIA ARE PREPARING FOR A RALLY

ArmInfo
2009-06-12 20:02:00

ArmInfo. The opposition and law-enforcers of Yerevan are preparing
for a rally to take place near Matenadaran at 7:30 pm. According
to the tradition, the rally will be followed by a procession to the
Monument to Myasnikyan.

However, according to an old tradition, the authorities also took
some measures. Police detachments are concentrated in the center of
the city.

Numerous state buildings are being guarded, particularly, there
are several buses with special task forces near the building of
the Central Electoral Commission, and there are several water jet
cannons near Matenadaran. The police also control all the crossroads
adjoining Matenadaran.

To note, the entry to the city is restricted, only few buses and
route minibuses are drive from regions to Yerevan. The vehicles are
being inspected.

Conference Under Title Armenians Of Ukraine: Yesterday, Today, Tomor

CONFERENCE UNDER TITLE ARMENIANS OF UKRAINE: YESTERDAY, TODAY, TOMORROW TO BE HELD IN CRIMEA

Noyan Tapan
June 11, 2009

CRIMEA, JUNE 11, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. The second
international conference titled Armenians of the Ukraine: Yesterday,
Today, Tomorrow will take place on September 5-6 2009 at the
Saint Cross church, the Crimea. The conference will be held by the
Armenology Center attached to the Union of Armenians of the Ukraine,
the Armenian Organization of the Crimea with the assistance of the
Ukrainian Diocese of the Armenian Apostolic Church.

According to Analitika.at.ua, within the framework of the conference
Armenological work will be done on the theme of Armenian-Ukrainian
history from the ancient period up to now.

Alexandra Avakian’s Book – "Windows Of The Soul"

"WINDOWS OF THE SOUL"

AZG Armenian Daily
11/06/2009

Culture

Alexandra Avakian is a photojournalist and a member of the prestigious
Contact Press Images photo agency in New York. She is a contract
photographer with National Geographic and frequently publishes in Time,
The New York Times Magazine, and many other publications.

Her new book "Windows of the Soul" is about her journey in the Muslim
world. She lived and worked for two years in the Gaza strip, often
in Islamic dress, once beaten bloody by Hamas. For several terrifying
days in Somalia she was pinned down by sniper fire on the way to her
hotel. She careened across the snowy Tien-Shen Mountains with Islamic
fundamentalists in an ancient Lada, only to be detained and tossed
out by the Uzbek KGB. All the while, she captured some of the most
important stories of our time-the famine in Sudan, the violence in Gaza
and Somalia, the daily life of Hezbollah. She traveled extensively
with Yasser Arafat as one of the only non-Arab photographers given
such access. She studied her Armenian roots in Iran and the Muslim
culture in America.

Recounted in gripping words and unforgettable images, Avakian’s
remarkable experiences will draw readers into the Muslim world
to meet friends and terrorists, leaders and thieves and everyday
people. Her style is always probing, yet compassionate. Given the
interest in Muslim culture since the events of 9/11, Avakian’s
fascinating photographs and rich personal story will captivate,
educate, and linger with us forever.

Dissolution Of Evidence Collection Group Will Lower President’s Legi

DISSOLUTION OF EVIDENCE COLLECTION GROUP WILL LOWER PRESIDENT’S LEGITIMACY LEVEL

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
10.06.2009 19:56 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ "Evidence Collection Group for March 1, 2008 events
was created in a very serious situation when the society lost its
trust for legislative structures," Heritage Parliamentary Faction
Secretary, Larisa Alaverdyan stated. She also emphasized that in
international practice, such groups are formed when serious issues
arise in the country.

According to Alaverdyan, authorities’ legitimacy is being established
not only during elections, but in the process of their work. Evidence
Collection Group could contribute to population’s trust increase
for acting authorities and their legitimacy level," she said. "We
missed a good chance. If current president found strength to create
an Evidence Collection Group, the Group should have been working till
specific results were achieved."

Larisa Alaverdyan is assured that Dissolution of Evidence Collection
Group will have negative consequences for country’s and society’s
development.

Harwich High Students Testify On Beacon Hill About Genocide Educatio

HARWICH HIGH STUDENTS TESTIFY ON BEACON HILL ABOUT GENOCIDE EDUCATION

Cape Cod Today
2009/06/09/harwich-high-students-testify-on-beacon ?blog=53
June 9 2009

Harwich High School students testified before the Joint Committee on
Education Tuesday in support of H.S 463, an Act concerning genocide
education. MacKenzie Hamilton and Andie Ramirez, members of Harwich
STAND (Students Taking Action Now Darfur), argued why the state needs
to increase its commitment to genocide education, in order to help
prevent future catastrophes.

About a dozen members of STAND traveled to the State House in Boston
to support the cause and to lobby their representatives.

Below are the statements of MacKenzie Hamilton and Andie Ramirez,
and the statement of Emily Cunnigham of Cardinal Spellman, delivered
as a panel before the Joint Committee on Education Tuesday afternoon
at 1 p.m.

* * *

Testimony of MacKenzie Hamilton to the Joint Committee on Education,
June 9, 2009

Good afternoon, my name is MacKenzie Hamilton and I’m a recent graduate
of Harwich High School here to testify in favour of HR 463.

As Elie Wiesel, genocide survivor and author of Night once said,
"Education in the key to preventing the cycle of violence and
hatred that marred the 20th century from repeating itself in the
21st century."

"People do not realize that during the three and a half month
Rwandan genocide that the number 800,000 stands for real people:
333 per hour, 5 per minute slaughtered, tortured, raped, and hacked
apart." – MacKenzie Hamilton Time and time again, we hear quotes like,
"Never Again," but more and more, victims not so much of the Holocaust,
but of Bosnia, Rwanda, and Darfur are being forgotten. People do not
realize that during the three and a half month Rwandan genocide that
the number 800,000 stands for real people: 333 per hour, 5 per minute
slaughtered, tortured, raped, and hacked apart. People do not realize
that 400,000 dead and 2.5 million driven from their homes represents
a majority of the pre-genocide population of Darfur.

In schools, we are neglecting human rights issues to prepare students
for standardized tests. Testing may be important, but the lives of
innocent civilians also need to hold importance in our society. As
Samantha Power stated so eloquently in her book, A Problem from Hell,
"Time and again, decent men and women choose to look away. We have
all been bystanders to genocide." It is time for you to make your
own decision. Will you look away, or will you do what you can for
our mothers, fathers, brothers, and sisters in Darfur?

Children are the most valuable resource we have. The only way we
can end such atrocities is to educate our children, and teach them
to care, and that what they think matters. We need to teach them to
act politically, socially, and stand up for what is right.

Three years ago, my school formed a chapter of Students Taking Action
Now: Darfur, the student-led division of the Genocide Intervention
Network. Dozens of students in my school have worked to raise money
in any way they could. We’ve held numerous concerts to generate
funds for relief, fasted to raise money for refugee protection,
made presentations teaching the conflict in history classes, and
helped start a school for refugee students in Chad. Their students
have something to teach us. They wish to teach us how fortunate we are.

They wish to teach us courage in the face of hardships, starvation, and
sorrow. They wish to teach us that as we sit in these cushioned seats
with our Sunday Best on, and shoes on our feet, that there are millions
out there that are starving and without any semblance of schooling.

With all of our resources, we have our own responsibility. Not only
do we have a responsibility to protect, but we have a responsibility
to teach our own students to think beyond themselves.

We’ve been to Washington, DC, and lobbied our representatives.

We’ve been here in Boston, to lobby our legislators to divest from
Sudan. We’ve organized ourselves to combat genocide. We’ve set our
list of priorities. Human life first. I’ve witnessed children in my
school as young as 14 calling Representative Delahunt to ask for his
help. We’ve done our part, and will continue to do so, but now it
is time for you to act. No bickering over a couple of dollars for
materials for schools, no arguing over whether this atrocity is or
is not genocide, no looking away, because Africa is too far away,
and we don’t think we can help. As I speak, women are being raped,
men are being killed, and children are dying of hunger in Darfur.

This is real, and this must be addressed now.

Ladies and gentlemen, we have done our part, and now it’s time that
you do yours. What you can do as legislators is to pass HR 463.

To date, only 9 out of our 50 states have any semblance of Genocide
Education in their curriculums, and only California and New Jersey
have funded mandates. We cannot let children finished their high
school careers with only a warped view of the Holocaust and blank
stares at the words, "Armenia," "Bosnia," and, "Rwanda." I can think
of few things more important to teach than humanity and ‘good will
to men.’ We need to tell our children the truth–the world is not
a perfect place, and there is so much that we take for granted; we
hate doctor’s appointments, while millions around the world would
do anything for adequate medical care; we won’t eat our mother’s
aparagus, while millions more are malnourished starving around the
world; we cry over a three week relationship, while there are a
hundred thousand women being raped in Sudan.

These children have the capacity and right to learn. We cannot close
their eyes any longer and shelter them from what is truth to hundreds
of millions of people around the world. We also cannot teach just
the Holocaust and leave it at that. We need to give the children the
material and resources with which they can educate themselves and
fight for what is right.

Testimony of Andie Ramirez to the Joint Committee on Education,
June 9, 2009

Hi, my name is Andie Ramirez I’m a junior at Harwich high school. I’ve
been a member of STAND for two years and I became interested in STAND
my sophomore year after hearing two genocide survivors speak. Their
stories made me realize that we need to help, and we need to take
action.

In my remarks I’d like to focus on the amendment we are proposing to
HR 463. We are proposing that In Section 1, paragraph one, to replace
the words "any one such genocide may" with "at least two genocides
should" so that the sentence will read: "Case studies of at least
two genocides should be used to demonstrate the concept of genocide."

"Genocide isn’t just an awful thing that happened once, it’s something
that has happened, and is still continuing to happen to this present
day. Through the education of not one, but multiple genocides, children
will realize that genocide is a current issue, and one that must be
stopped." – Andie Ramirez As the bill stands now, it only requires
that schools teach one instance of genocide, and that is not likely to
change anything. This is because every high school in Massachusetts
most likely teaches about the Holocaust, but that is certainly not
enough. For current and future generations to understand the gravity of
genocide, they must be educated on present day atrocities in Rwanda,
Darfur, Burma, Congo and elsewhere, as well as the Holocaust. The
past and present genocides must be connected, not only will this make
history real, it will create a force against the unlawful extermination
of millions of innocent people. Genocide isn’t just an awful thing
that happened once, it’s something that has happened, and is still
continuing to happen to this present day. Through the education of
not one, but multiple genocides, children will realize that genocide
is a current issue, and one that must be stopped. So please consider
this amended language.

Our bill faces another difficulty because it mandates $50,000 in
spending by the Department of Education. Our numbers come upon the
advice of the legal representatives of the Telling History Project
and the Children’s Fund for Creative Education. Our legislation is
not unprecedented, as other specific education programs are funded
individually, and at a much higher cost. Funding could provide teacher
trainings, more detailed guides and curricular materials, and the
spread of such materials and knowledge to middle and high schools
throughout the Commonwealth. However, if funding is not attainable at
this time, I urge you to move the bill forward without it, to find
another way of giving this bill teeth and substance, or of delaying
the funding until a more economically feasible fiscal year.

Another possible objection might be to an additional mandate on the
Department of Education. This legislation is by no means intended to
infringe upon a teacher’s right to creativity within his classroom,
but to dismiss, glaze over, or provide a one sided perspective on
the deaths of millions of innocent civilians is to create holes in a
child’s history education so great that they distort the very fabric
of the curriculum. We hope you will see the value of this in improving
the education of all our students.

Testimony of Emily Cunningham to the Joint Committee on Education,
June 9, 2009

Regrettably, everything I know about genocide, I did not learn
in school.

My interest in the history of genocide began during my freshman
year of high school when the situation in Darfur started to make
headlines. I was outraged at the atrocities that were being committed
under the complacent eye of the world’s most powerful governments,
at the ignorance and indifference of my friends and family toward the
situation, but mostly at my own ignorance when I began to learn more
about the genocide in Darfur and realized that it was not an isolated
incident, nor was it the first genocide that had taken place since
the Nazi Holocaust. Where had my history teachers failed me?

I began to research and develop an addition to the current curriculum
framework that would integrate genocide education in an effective
way. In my research, I came across a similar effort made over ten years
ago. The Massachusetts Legislature and Governor enacted Chapter 276
of the Acts of 1998, a law directing the Department of Education to
make recommendations on curricular materials and resources related
to teaching about genocide and human rights. The result was The
Massachusetts Guide to Choosing and Using Curricular Materials on
Genocide and Human Rights.

Said Commissioner of Education David Driscoll, "It is important that
students acquire knowledge about genocide and human rights issues to
deepen their understanding of both past and current events."

Why then is this document hidden within the depths of the Department
of Primary and Secondary Education’s website? Why have several high
school teachers I have interviewed with a vested interest in genocide
and human rights education had no idea of its existence? Why do we
continue to inadequately teach our youth about one of the most gravely
important issues facing humanity today? This guide is a first step
in recognizing the need for genocide education in schools, but I am
here from the perspective of a student to tell you that your work is
not done.

I have identified five improvements that could be made to the existing
frameworks which I believe this bill will help to implement.

Curricular materials need to be genocide specific. In the existing
frameworks and supplements, there is no mention of the definition
of genocide, or the Genocide Convention. Slavery, human rights
issues, war casualties, and genocide are lumped into a single
document, but in order to address each topic correctly, they must
be acknowledged, approached, and taught differently. There is no
mention of US involvement or lack of involvement in any curriculum
framework or supplement. There is a strong tendency of teachers to
rely on the chronology, dates, facts, and figures rather than to
address the underlying causes of genocide and the common threads
which connect such atrocities of the past and present. Curricular
recommendations and materials must be kept up to date. There is no
mention of Cambodian genocide, the Kurdish Genocide, the Darfuri
genocide or the slaughter of the Karen people of Burma. Finally,
this bill needs funding. Though it may be difficult in a time of
economic crisis, I urge you to think of the money spent on teacher
trainings, conferences, and outside curricular materials in terms of
an investment in our future. In fact, our request is a drop in bucket
of the Department of Education’s near five billion dollar budget. The
lessons, stories, and common threads among the Holocaust, Cambodia,
Rwanda, Bosnia, Burma, and Sudan should echo from the blackboards and
lecterns of every middle and high school across our Commonwealth. If
not, for what have these millions upon millions of innocent mothers,
fathers, and children died over the past century?

Samantha Power, genocide scholar and advisor to President Obama states

"No US President has ever made genocide prevention a priority, and
no US President has ever suffered politically for his indifference
to its occurrence. It is thus no coincidence that genocide rages on."

Holocaust survivor Elie Wiesel tells us that "the opposite of love
is not hate, but indifference." I urge you as legislators not to be
indifferent to the opportunity to create a place in the curriculum
framework for genocide specific education which shows the connection
between the past and the atrocities that continue to take place in
Congo, Burma, and Darfur today. You have a unique opportunity to breed
a generation of political will in Massachusetts that will continue
to stand up against human rights abuses everywhere.

* * *

The members of STAND raised more than $2,000 in December for genocide
relief. See the stories here, here and here.

http://www.capecodtoday.com/blogs/index.php/