"This manual offers ideas on how to discuss a violent past in an active manner. The manual mostly focuses on methodology: how to make learning about the past interesting for learners. There is less focus on the specific content of the past. To spark learner’s interest in the (violent) past, it is helpful to choose a learner-centered approach. This manual uses the following elements of learner-centered learning: to give learners a voice in what they want to learn about the past based on their own interests, to first let them find out by themselves before information is provided, to foster curiosity, to encourage joint learning and to link local findings with the wider history.
Encouraging discussion: As the title shows, a main aim of this manual is to provide learners – and facilitators – with activities to not only learn about the past, but also to discuss it. The activities let learners practice key elements of discussion, such as active listening (with the attempt to understand the other well), responding to each other’s statements or arguments, not judging others’ opinions, aiming to understand motives and intentions, etc. In this process, it is the facilitator’s task to guide the discussion, to keep it on topic and not let it get personal, ensure that different perspectives are included and that all learners can express themselves." (Introduction, page 1)
Introduction - Discussing Difficult History, 1
Overview of the activities, 3
Past and History: Understanding the difference, A-1
Fact or Opinion? Discussing the difference, A-2
What We Already Know: Using pictures to encourage learning, A-3
What Came First? Making a timeline of events, A-4
How Words Can Hurt: Understanding the abuse of language for power, A-5
What’s Your Argument? Exploring a topic through discussion, A-6
My Image of…: Exploring stereotypes through drawing, A-7
How Much Choice Did They Have? Understanding people as victims, perpetrators or both, A-8
My Family Tree: Finding out how the violent past affected families, A-9
Each Object a Story: The meaning of things that survived a violent past, A-10
Old Paper? Old Photo? Far More! Exploring an event through different sources, A-11
I Was There: Hearing about the past from an eyewitness, A-12
Where Violence Happened: Visiting a memorial site, A-13
It Was Here: Visiting a historical place, A-14
What Did It Look Like? Drawing the present to imagine the past, A-15
Disturbing Images? How to balance respect for dignity with the need for evidence, A-16
History is Where I Live: Making a historical street map, A-17
Ending This Topic With… any creative way to express feelings and thoughts, A-18
Here’s Another One! How to design a new learner-centered activity, G-1
Difficult Past in the Family: How to prepare learners to talk to survivors, G-2