Zoryan’s Genocide and Human Rights University Program Graduates 175th Student

Toronto, Canada— Upon the conclusion of the sixth annual of the Genocide and Human Rights University Program (GHRUP), Prof. Roger W. Smith, Director of the program, stated that “encouraging the development of the next generation of genocide scholars is crucial for creating the capability to recognize impending genocides and the will to prevent them.” The GHRUP, run by the International Institute for Genocide and Human Rights Studies (A Division of the Zoryan Institute) (IIGHRS) in partnership with the University of Minnesota, has now graduated over 175 students from this comparative genocide studies program. “Currently, there is also much work that needs to be done regarding the aftermath of genocides, in terms of justice, reconciliation and reconstruction,” Prof. Smith continued. “It is this generation, properly prepared, spread out through our global society, which will serve as the enduring force of human rights protection.”
When asked about his experience at the GHRUP, Dr. Alex Hinton, Prof. of
Anthropology and Global Affairs at Rutgers University, exclaimed “what a great
group of students!” Sentiments shared by Dr. Herbert Hirsch, Editor of Genocide
Studies and Prevention: An International Journal and Prof. of Government and
Public Affairs at Virginia Commonwealth University, who said that “the
program is, by far, the best of its kind and the students were tremendous.” Dr.
Joyce A. Apsel, historian, attorney and Master Teacher at New York University,
is “compelled to teach at the GHRUP because education is fundamental to
preventing genocide and the GHRUP successfully brings together those who will
work to raise awareness of the tragedy of genocide.” Dr. William A. Schabas,
Director of the Irish Centre for Human Rights and Chair in Human Rights Law at
the National University of Ireland, travels all the way to Toronto each year to
teach in the program, because he “would not want to miss such a special
opportunity with this unique course.” Dr. Maureen Hiebert, Research Fellow at
the Centre for Military and Strategic Studies at the University of Calgary,
added that “what makes the GHRUP so worth while for me as a genocide scholar is
the sense of genuine camaraderie that evolves every year during the course.
Despite the fact that we study such a pressing and depressing subject, the
participants' common concern for the plight of humanity and our common sense of
purpose to end genocide seems to generate a bond among the students and faculty
unlike anything I have experienced in a typical university setting.”
Twenty-six advanced international students, working with eleven renowned
scholars and dynamic teachers in the fields of anthropology, education, history,
international law, philosophy, political science, and sociology, completed an
intense, two-week, graduate-level seminar on genocide, the challenges of its
prevention and reconciliation. “This year was a very strong class, with seven
doctoral candidates, seven MA students, two senior undergraduates, two NGO
employees, two anti-denial activists, two teachers, a lawyer, a Human Rights
Archivist, a theatre director, and a documentary filmmaker,” reflected Torrey
Swan, Coordinator of the program. “These committed students came from Argentina,
Armenia, Austria, Canada, the Czech Republic, Italy, Turkey, the United Kingdom,
and the United States.”
“Beyond the strong academic composition of the program, I was pleased to see
the various ways students are engaged in addressing human rights violations,”
stated George Shirinian, Executive Director of the IIGHRS. “For example,” he
continued, “there were two representatives from the Luisa Hairabedian Foundation
in Buenos Aires. One is developing an Armenian Genocide curriculum for the
school system there. The other has launched a case for a truth trial (a formal
means of addressing past injustices) in the Argentinean legal system regarding
the Genocide. There was also a legal activist against Armenian Genocide denial
from Vienna.”
Students discuss the genocide in Darfur, Sudan with Dr. Scott Straus, Prof. of Political Science at the University of Wisconsin
Many of the students gave feedback at the end of the program. One student felt
that “this course is very comprehensive and has definitely increased my
knowledge of the field. It was structurally well put together and had an
excellent curriculum, containing numerous relevant concepts and methodological
approaches.” Describing their motivation for attending the GHRUP, another
student “came to figure-out what path (they) wanted to take and how (they) could
go about following it. This program really facilitated that.” One spoke for many
by saying that “this is my passion and I want to make a difference.” Another
student concluded that “The course not only met, but surpassed my expectations.
The interdisciplinary nature of its approach, the well qualified professors, the
organization and the opportunity for exchange and the impressively insightful
and diverse student body made this last two weeks an excellent learning and
thinking experience for me.”
Aren Sarkiyan, the Fundraising Coordinator, during a presentation at graduation,
expressed his sincere gratitude to the sponsors of the program: Varouj Aivazian,
Diran Avedian, Ara Boyajian, Sara Chitjian, the Daughters of Vartan (Toronto),
Shant and Nayri Gueyikian, Dicran and Diane Hadjetian, Edgar Hagopian, Mig and
Ani Migirdicyan, the National Association for Armenian Studies and
Research, André and Seza Nazarian, Pauline Ngirumpatse, Rosalind Raddatz,
Alan Whitehorn, and Joe Yalkezian, by saying, “it was because of their donations
that we were able to raise $20,000 towards this year’s education program. This
is very helpful to the Institute, however, there is a lot to be done, and
hopefully people will be more responsive to our fundraising efforts, as the cost
of holding a two week graduate course with eleven professors and international
students— travel, accommodation, course material, classroom facilities, etc. —
is over $100,000.”
The mission of the Genocide and Human Rights University Program is to help
develop a new generation of scholars to engage in research and publication in
the field of genocide and human rights studies. This goal is achieved through
the comparative and interdisciplinary analysis of such cases of genocide as the
Jewish Holocaust, the Cambodian Genocide, the Rwandan Genocide, and the
Darfurian Genocide, among others, using the Armenian Genocide, the archetypal
genocide of the 20th Century, as a point of reference.