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Armenian Genocide cannot be denied
May 09, 2004 22:22:45
Daily Targum University Wire April 22, 2004 Thursday
Armenian Genocide cannot be denied
By Avo Youmshakian, Daily Targum; SOURCE: Rutgers U.
NEW BRUNSWICK, N.J.
On April 24, 1915, the Turkish government apprehended, deported and brutally murdered 300 Armenian intellectuals and professionals in Istanbul, Turkey. Later that day, 5,000 of the poorest Armenians were savagely murdered in their communities. This day was the beginning of the tragedy that came to be called the Armenian Genocide -- which is defined as the systematic execution planned and ordered by the Ottoman Turkish government and carried out by the Turkish army -- of 1.5 million Armenians between 1915 and 1923.
The Turks started and nearly achieved the goal of wiping out the entire Armenian population of western Armenia within the borders of the Ottoman Empire, which stretched from Eastern Europe to the Middle East, including what is known today as the country of Turkey. After 89 years, Armenians still possess animosity against members of the Turkish race not only because they murdered the Armenians but also because they still continue to deny the existence of the Armenian Genocide.
The Central Committee of the Young Turk Party, which was controlled by the most racist individuals in the government in 1915, devised the Armenian Genocide. The genocide was directed by a special organization set up by the Committee of Union and Progress, which created special butcher battalions composed of extremely violent Turkish criminals who were released from prison for the sole purpose of exterminating the Armenians from the Ottoman Empire.
As if this inhuman act was not a crime itself, Turkish governments since the fall of the Ottoman Empire have continuously denied the genocide. Some government officials claim Armenians were removed from their homes because they were living in the Eastern War Zone and the Turks feared for the safety of the Armenian people.
This claim is false because fact proves Armenians were massacred in cities in western, central and southwest Turkey as well as on the coast of the Black Sea. Christians were not allowed to carry firearms in the Ottoman Empire, thus defeating another claim the Turks were protecting themselves from Armenian rebellion.
Despite the approval of the Armenian Genocide by the majority of Turks in the Ottoman Empire and the denial of its occurrence, there were a few righteous Ottoman officials such as Celal, governor of Aleppo; Mahzar, governor of Ankara; and Reshid, governor of Kastamonu. These three officials were dismissed from their offices for not complying with the extermination campaign. Any common Turks who protected Armenians during the genocide were also taken on the death marches and slaughtered.
In late 1915, Henry Morgenthau Sr., the neutral American ambassador to the Ottoman Empire, sent a message to the United States State Department. "Deportation of and excesses against peaceful Armenians is increasing, and from reports of eye witnesses, it appears that a campaign of race extermination is in progress under a pretext of reprisal against rebellion."
Even though historic facts, eyewitness reports and especially the stories of surviving victims all prove the Armenian Genocide's existence, Turkish officials struggle to deny it. One questions why. In an interview with a reporter from the French newspaper Le Figaro, Armenian President Robert Kocharian publicly discussed recent developments on the recognition of the Armenian Genocide. He provided an explanation that the recognition of the genocide does not provide legal basis for territorial demands. While most Armenians do not agree with the way the president's remarks were interpreted by Turkish journalists, one fact remains: The Turkish government is actually concerned with Armenian territorial demands. Turkish leadership is well aware of the possibility of redrawing geographical boundaries. Through the elimination of Armenians from the western provinces of Armenia, entire Armenian regions eventually became part of present Turkey.
Armenian people in Armenia and all over the world struggle daily to have the genocide remembered. Every year, on the Sunday before the saddening day of April 24, thousands of Armenians gather in Times Square in New York. They hold a march and a rally to educate the public about the existence of the massacring, the butchering, the genocide the Armenians lived through between 1915 and 1923. Educating the public and having Turkish officials accept the sad reality, Armenians believe, are important to prevent similar crimes against humanity.
Eight days before invading Poland in 1939, Adolf Hitler -- commander of the Nazi forces during World War II -- said, "Go kill without mercy. Who today remembers the extermination of the Armenians?" I remember it.
(C) 2003 Daily Targum via U-WIRE
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submitted by Emil Lazarian
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