FOR RELEASE: April
4, 2013
EDITORIAL CONTACT: Gina
Logue, 615-898-5081, gina.logue@mtsu.edu
MURFREESBORO— MTSU
students will display their documentation of the “Geography of Hate” at two
Nashville locations next week.
Ian Murray and Jordan Brasher will deliver their
presentations at the annual Holocaust Remembrance Day commemoration at 3 p.m.
Monday, April 8, in Room LP12 of Legislative Plaza.
Murray and Charles Hunt Jr. will participate in
videoconferences from 9 to 10 a.m. and from 10:15 to 11:15 a.m. Wednesday,
April 10, at Vanderbilt University Virtual Campus, which is located at 2007
Terrace Place in Nashville.
Dr. Patricia Boda’s cartography class used geographic
information systems and manual mapmaking for the “Geography of Hate” projects.
For the class, each student was required to use maps to
display locations where genocide either has taken place or is taking place.
“I try to do things that will give them personal, actual
real-world experience and do them some good career-wise,” said Boda, an
assistant professor of geosciences.
Some individual presentations focused on Sudan, Rwanda, the
Hopi Nation and hate groups in three Southern U.S. states.
Brasher, a junior geoscience major from Milan, Tenn.,
chronicled the forced exodus of Native Americans from their homelands in the
1830s, a tragedy known as the “Trail of Tears.”
“I wanted to talk about the individual Cherokee removal
routes and how they correlated to the death rates throughout the trip,” said
Brasher, who is president of MTSU’s Geography Club. “My grandmother’s
grandmother was a full-blooded Cherokee.”
Murray, a native of Spring Hill, Tenn., who graduated at the
end of the fall 2012 semester, singled out one Holocaust survivor and traced
his path through Europe during World War II.
Hunt, a geography major from Lebanon, Tenn., juxtaposes the
exodus of Jews from Europe during and after World War II with the current
conflict on the West Bank and Gaza Strip.
“A lot of research is being done using satellite imagery and
mapping to try to identify human rights violations before they occur,” said
Danielle Kahane-Kaminsky, executive director of the Tennessee Holocaust
Commission.
“The research from international lawyers and people who
specialize in genocide … tells us the best way we can handle this politically
is through prevention,” she said.
Kahane-Kaminsky said she hopes MTSU can make a connection
with the Yale University Genocide Studies Program, which she said is at the
forefront of using this type of technology.
For more information, contact Boda at 615-898-2726 or pat.boda@mtsu.edu.
—30—
STUDENT MAPS ARE
AVAILABLE UPON REQUEST.
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