Close X
Saturday, January 11, 2025
ADVT 
National

Group Wants Better Education About Genocide For Canadian High-School Students

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 17 Apr, 2016 12:15 PM
    MONTREAL — There's a very personal driving force behind Heidi Berger's quest to get provinces to introduce compulsory genocide education for high-school students.
     
    Her late mother, Ann Kazimirski, was a Holocaust survivor who championed the cause until her death 10 years ago.
     
    "Her mission in her life became going to schools all over North America and telling her story and talking about genocide," Berger said. "She realized children of survivors have to carry on the story."
     
    Berger is starting with her home province of Quebec and says the teachings take on even more importance against the backdrop of several Quebec youths having travelled to the Middle East in recent years to join jihadist groups.
     
    "It's very topical: we're talking about 17-year-olds and 16-year-olds being lured into ISIS," said Berger. "The question is, if these students were educated about genocide, that would certainly help to a large degree."
     
    Kyle Matthews of the Montreal Institute for Genocide and Human Rights Studies is supporting Berger's initiative.
     
    "It struck me that we're not teaching our youth enough about genocide when we have Canadian and Quebec youth leaving to commit genocide overseas," said Matthews.
     
    "Something is missing in our core education when not just a couple of a bad apples but a significant number are embracing an ideology that encourages slaughter (and) extinction.
     
    Matthews says it is important to preserve the memory of such massacres: there are no survivors left of the Armenian genocide and Holocaust survivors are elderly and dying.
     
    Genocide education is sporadically available around the country. The Toronto District School Board has offered a course since 2007 that investigates examples of genocide in the 20th and 21st centuries, including Armenia, the Holocaust and Rwanda.
     
    Berger, a filmmaker and university lecturer, carries on her mother's message in her own school presentations on the Holocaust — one in which Kazimirski still figures prominently through a posthumous video testimonial about the harrowing experiences she endured.
     
    In her school visits, Berger learned that teachers are afraid to teach it and don't have the tools.
     
    "An ethics teacher came up and told me that kids are graduating from Grade 11 without knowing what the word genocide means," Berger recounted.
     
    About 18 months ago, she founded The Foundation for the Compulsory Study of Genocide in Schools. In Quebec, Berger is lobbying for changes to a textbook for a course called "Contemporary World" to include a full chapter on genocide instead of the current few paragraphs. She also wants help for teachers.
     
    Berger says a meeting with Education Minister Sebastien Proulx is scheduled for early May and that a previous petition as well as meetings with provincial legislators and teachers' unions have been positive.
     
    David Birnbaum, the legislative assistant to Proulx, has helped Berger navigate Quebec bureaucracy and bring the matter to the attention of the national assembly.
     
    Birnbaum said academic studies suggest a relatively high level of ignorance about the Holocaust and genocide in general, but adds the matter is tackled in the current Quebec curriculum.
     
    "There are a range of places...where the Holocaust and the concept of genocide are mentioned and it's always a challenge to make changes to the program," Birnbaum said.
     
    "But my own priority is to make sure that Heidi Berger gets to make her case as clearly and directly as she can."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    'We Can't Let Those People Die In Vain:' Chief Says Fire Should Spur Action

    'We Can't Let Those People Die In Vain:' Chief Says Fire Should Spur Action
    A First Nations chief says the deaths of nine people in a house fire on a remote northern Ontario reserve should spur the federal government to improve what he says are third-world conditions on dozens of reserves.

    'We Can't Let Those People Die In Vain:' Chief Says Fire Should Spur Action

    Montreal Looks To The Public To Give A Second Life To Retiring Subway Cars

    Montreal Looks To The Public To Give A Second Life To Retiring Subway Cars
    Montreal's original subway cars are set to retire after 50 years of service — and the city's transport agency is looking to members of the public to give them a second life.

    Montreal Looks To The Public To Give A Second Life To Retiring Subway Cars

    Newfoundland Man To Seek Province's First Court-Approved Assisted Death: Lawyer

    Newfoundland Man To Seek Province's First Court-Approved Assisted Death: Lawyer
    ST. JOHN'S, N.L. — A Newfoundland man who wants to end his life after years of battling cancer is searching for a doctor to sign off on the province's first court-approved assisted death. 

    Newfoundland Man To Seek Province's First Court-Approved Assisted Death: Lawyer

    RCMP Investigating Surrey's Gun Violence Problem, Making Arrests, Seizing Drugs

    RCMP Investigating Surrey's Gun Violence Problem, Making Arrests, Seizing Drugs
    $4.5 million drug bust 'one of largest in Surrey's history', RCMP now say 28 confirmed shots fired in 2016

    RCMP Investigating Surrey's Gun Violence Problem, Making Arrests, Seizing Drugs

    Judge Grants B.C. Woman Permission For Physician Assisted Death

    A British Columbia woman living with multiple sclerosis has become the first in the province to be granted a court exemption to have a doctor help her die.

    Judge Grants B.C. Woman Permission For Physician Assisted Death

    Nunavut MLA And Companions Rescued From Tundra After Missing More Than A Week

    Nunavut MLA And Companions Rescued From Tundra After Missing More Than A Week
    Searchers have rescued a missing member of the Nunavut legislature and his two companions, who hadn't been seen in more than a week after setting out on the tundra of Baffin Island.

    Nunavut MLA And Companions Rescued From Tundra After Missing More Than A Week