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REP: SCHIFF: Recognizing The Armenian Genocide One Hundred Years Lat

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  • REP: SCHIFF: Recognizing The Armenian Genocide One Hundred Years Lat

    REP: SCHIFF: RECOGNIZING THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE ONE HUNDRED YEARS LATER

    Monday, March 30th, 2015
    http://asbarez.com/133488/rep-schiff-recognizing-the-armenian-genocide-one-hundred-years-later/

    Representative Adam Schiff

    BY ADAM SCHIFF

    One hundred years ago, the Ottoman Empire in its dying throws
    undertook a systematic effort to exterminate the Armenian and Assyrian
    people. They did so through a campaign of mass killing and displacement
    which saw 1.5 million Armenians killed and millions more forced to
    flee from their ancestral homes.

    At the time, there was no word to describe an effort to eliminate
    an entire people, though American officials in the region had no
    difficulty describing the horrors they witnessed. The American
    Ambassador to the Ottoman Empire Henry Morgenthau reported that,
    "I am confident that the whole history of the human race contains no
    such horrible episode as this. The great massacres and persecutions of
    the past seem almost insignificant when compared with the sufferings
    of the Armenian race in 1915."

    It wasn't until 1943 when Raphael Lemkin coined the term "genocide"
    that we had a word to describe the magnitude of the crime committed
    against the Armenians. As Lemkin said at the time, he had in mind the
    experience of the Armenians under Ottoman rule when he invented the
    term, which, appallingly, was needed many times in the 20th Century to
    describe the Holocaust, the Cambodian Genocide, the Rwandan Genocide,
    and more.

    The Turkish effort to eliminate the Armenian people failed, as
    evidenced by the proud nation of Armenia and the millions of members
    of the Armenian diaspora in the United States and around the world.

    But there is hardly an Armenian household that does not carry the
    memory of family members who were lost in the carnage. Even today,
    there remain a handful of survivors who lived through the horrors of
    the Genocide as children to make a new life for themselves.

    Particularly while these survivors are still among us, I feel a deep
    obligation to fight against the denial of the Genocide which sadly
    remains the policy of the Turkish government.

    The hundredth anniversary of the Genocide is also a time to recall one
    of the most generous outpourings of compassion and support in American
    history. Hearing of the scale of the humanitarian crisis, the Near
    East Relief Foundation was formed to provide assistance and relief.

    >From an initial goal of providing $5 million, the Foundation
    would ultimately raise over $100 million -- or about $1.7 billion in
    today's dollars. The Foundation's work saved the lives of millions of
    victims of the Genocide, including over 130,000 orphans. Nearly 1,000
    Americans traveled overseas to build orphanages, vocational schools,
    and food distributions centers. The Foundation's success relied on
    the generosity of every day Americans who learned of the plight of
    the Armenian people and other genocide victims thousands of miles away
    and who were moved to contribute. The Near East Relief Foundation was
    a precursor to countless non-governmental humanitarian organizations,
    and its work continues to this day.

    Last month, I joined with over 40 of my colleagues to introduce
    the Armenian Genocide Truth and Justice Resolution, a resolution
    recognizing the Genocide that took place from 1915 to 1923. The
    resolution also calls upon the President to work with the Turkish and
    Armenian governments to bring about reconciliation based upon the full
    acknowledgement of the historic fact of the Armenian Genocide. This
    resolution states in simple and plain language the historic facts of
    the Genocide and the degree to which Genocide denial on the part of
    the Turkish government continues to hamstring the chances for peace
    and stability in the region.

    Sadly today, on the very same lands of Syria that were the killing
    fields for hundreds of thousands of Armenians, ISIL threatens to
    exterminate religious minorities, including Armenians. By recognizing
    the Genocide, the President and the Congress proclaim that our
    government will not forget those lost and we will not stand silent
    in the face of crimes against humanity.

    Ellie Wiesel once wrote that denial of genocide is the last chapter
    of genocide. In this respect, the Armenian Genocide continues to
    traumatize its victims even 100 years later. America must play its
    part in helping to close this still open wound.

    Rep. Adam Schiff represents the 28th Congressional District of
    California, which is the largest Armenian-American constituency in
    the United States.

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