Scholars Document Genocide Aftermath
Photo/Jerry Berndt
Instead Donald Miller, professor of religion in the USC College of Letters, Arts and Sciences, has helped the survivors document the tragedy.
Returning for his eighth time to examine how they are coping, Miller has taken along three USC colleagues: Rabbi Susan Laemmle, dean of Religious Life; the Rev. Cecil Murray, holder of the John R. Tansey Chair in Christian Ethics; and Beth Meyerowitz, professor of psychology in USC College.
“I’m moved by what’s happened there and the parallel to other genocides, including the Holocaust,” Laemmle said. “This is not just a personal trip. I know for sure it will influence and affect the things I do in the Office of Religious Life.”
The journey will help Murray provide content for an August exhibition at the California African American Museum of Jerry Berndt photos he shot while in Rwanda recently.
“I felt I could do it better if I personally witnessed the aftermath,” said Murray, a former pastor of Los Angeles’ First African Methodist Episcopal Church.
Meyerowitz believes she will see similarities between the cancer survivors she has studied for 30 years and the emotional toll levied on genocide survivors.
“How does a psychologically normal person adjust” to such abnormal conditions revolving around death, asked Meyerowitz, who is on sabbatical until August. “In a very different way, the same questions might apply.”
But Meyerowitz is not making the trip with a specific thesis to test.
“I am going to try to understand a situation that on the surface is incomprehensible,” she said.
Miller saw the results of killing so many fathers, mothers, brothers and sisters during his seven trips to the impoverished African nation.
Young orphans had no house, no income and no one to care for them. Often the only thing these children were left with were their siblings, whom they now had to raise.
Miller, along with his wife, Lorna Touryan Miller, director of the nonprofit New Vision Partners, first saw the despair, and the hope, when he spoke at an international conference on genocide in Rwanda about three years ago. He was there to talk about his 1993 book “Survivors: An Oral History of the Armenian Genocide.”
During his stay, he learned about the AOCM, which loosely translated, stands for the Association of Orphan Heads of Households, a group started by an orphan for orphans.
Miller secured funding to create an oral history to document their experiences. The survivors, many of whom are now young adults, took part in 100 interviews, which Miller had transcribed and translated into English. He bundled the essays, along with photos by Berndt, into a publication he sent out to government officials, social activists and scholars.
“We just felt there was something we must do,” recalled Miller, who also is the director USC’s Center for Religion and Civic Culture.
That led to his current study of how nongovernmental organizations are assisting genocide survivors in Rwanda.
“It’s a fantastic string of events,” Miller said.
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The Wall Street Journal highlighted the $200 million naming gift from USC Trustee and alumnus David Dornsife and wife Dana Dornsife to the USC Dornsife College, and the $110 million gift from USC Trustee and USC Viterbi School alumnus John Mork and wife Julie to create the USC Mork Family Scholars Program.
KPCC-FM reported that this fall USC will offer Persian language courses for the first time. A $250,000 grant from the Farhang Foundation helped to establish the program. Bruce Zuckerman of the USC Dornsife College said he has many students interested in the Persian language, culture and region. “The Iranian region is one that has great impact on our lives today and has had great impact going back into ancient times,” he said. The story noted that USC and the Farhang Foundation hope to raise more money to create an Iranian studies minor. Payvand also featured the new courses.
American Songwriter ran a Q&A with Christopher Sampson of the USC Thornton School about the school’s Popular Music program, which Sampson founded. He noted that the program has been available as a major in Songwriting since 2009, and has incorporated a diverse range of musical genres. “We have now established a consistent track record of students having professional success to know that the program gets results,” Sampson said. He also highlighted the achievements of Songwriting faculty members Lamont Dozier, Andrea Stolpe and David Poe of the Thornton School.
The Economist featured research by Valter Longo of the USC Davis School finding that short periods of fasting could help cancer patients better tolerate chemotherapy, and may even make treatment more effective. The Globe and Mail (Canada) reported that cancerous tumors are essentially energy hogs. “They need to burn lots of energy just to stay alive,” Longo said. The study was also covered by Irish Independent (Ireland), Magyar Tavirati Iroda (Hungary), Anadolu Ajansi (Turkey), Son Haber (Netherlands), Vietnam+ (Vietnam), Turkish Radio and Television (Turkey) and Romania Libera (Romania).
L.A. Weekly featured research by USC’s Institute for Creative Technologies, which has developed video games based around physical movement for people recovering from strokes or other injuries. The games develop strength in specific body parts. Traditional video games weren’t right for these patients, said the institute’s Belinda Lange. “Often, the fun parts of the game would only be unlocked after a series of other levels, which our patients often couldn’t achieve,” she said. The games are now being tested with physical therapists in three major clinics.
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