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Budapest Workshop Welcomes
Genocide Education Project
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Sara Cohan, Education
Director with The Genocide Education Project
presenting at Minorities of Europe workshop |
May, 2009, BUDAPEST, HUNGARY - The
Genocide Education Project provided European educators a
presentation focusing on guidelines for educational curriculum
on the subject of genocide. The talk was part of a week-long
workshop sponsored by the Council of Europe, and hosted by
Minorities of Europe, a pan-European organization which
facilitates cooperation and exchange among minority communities
and youth.
Sara Cohan presented the session, "Genocide: Catalysts and
Consequences," on behalf of The Genocide Education Project. Held
at the Council of Europe's European Youth Center in Budapest,
the aim of the program was to provide an opportunity for youth
educators within the human rights sphere to share their
experiences and learn new methods for teaching about genocide
and historical memory, particularly to promote awareness among
the most vulnerable sectors of society.
"Working with youth educators representing minority groups from
every corner of Europe was exhilarating and challenging," said
Cohan. "The room was filled with people who had coped with
genocide directly and the history of genocide in their native
countries. Their work was outstanding and inspiring."
Cohan spoke about the fundamentals and guidelines for teaching
about genocide responsibly and constructively, reviewing "best
practices" for guiding discussions with youth. The
presentation’s second segment reviewed educational resources,
including lesson plans, books, articles, videos, and eye-witness
testimony, around which teachers can structure classroom
lessons. Cohan also discussed two case studies regarding the
teaching of genocide, related to the post-conflict zone of
Rwanda and Armenian Genocide curriculum in the United States.
Cohan also participated in other workshop sessions and helped
lead a trip to the Holocaust Memorial Center in Hungary.
Thirty-two participants from 20 countries attended the workshop,
including educators from Albania, Armenia, Austria, Bosnia,
Denmark, England, Georgia, Germany, Russia, Serbia, and others.
The workshop was entirely funded by the Council of Europe, which
is based in France and includes forty-seven member countries.
Founded in 1949, the organization seeks to develop common
democratic principles of human rights across Europe.
The non-governmental organization, Minorities of Europe, which
hosted the genocide education workshop, was established in 1995
as an outgrowth of the Council of Europe's campaign against
racism, anti-Semitism, xenophobia and intolerance in Europe. It
provides educational support for youth and youth educators by
offering training courses, study sessions, seminars, exchanges
and other activities, especially for those from minority
backgrounds.
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The Genocide Education
Project is a nonprofit, tax-exempt 501(c)(3) organization that
assists educators in teaching about human rights and genocide,
particularly the Armenian Genocide, by developing and
distributing instructional materials, providing access to
teaching resources and organizing educational workshops.
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