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Israeli Scholar Is Ashamed Of Israel's Position On Armenian Genocide

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  • Israeli Scholar Is Ashamed Of Israel's Position On Armenian Genocide

    ISRAELI SCHOLAR IS ASHAMED OF ISRAEL'S POSITION ON ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/
    30.06.2009 12:23 GMT+04:00

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ A special conference was held at the British
    Parliament, organized by the British-Armenian All-Party Parliamentary
    Group. Dr. Israel Charny and Harut Sassounian, The California Courier
    Publisher were invited as guest speakers. Harut Sassounian spoke about
    "The Armenian Genocide and Quest for Justice." Dr. Charny could not
    attend due to illness, however, his prepared remarks were read by
    Peter Barker, a former broadcaster of BBC Radio.

    Dr. Charny is an internationally-known authority on the Holocaust
    and the Armenian Genocide. He is the Executive Director of the
    Jerusalem-based Institute on the Holocaust and Genocide, past President
    of International Association of Genocide Scholars, Editor-in-Chief
    of Encyclopedia of Genocide, and author of several scholarly
    books. Dr. Charny's lengthy paper was titled: "Confronting denials
    of the Armenian Genocide is not only honoring history, but a crucial
    policy position for confronting threats in our contemporary world."

    Dr. Charny's remarks referred to the "failure of the State of
    Israel, but not of Israelis, to recognize the Armenian Genocide,"
    expressing his "deep regret and shame" that Israel (where he lives)
    and the United States (where he was born), "have failed seriously
    in their moral responsibility towards the Armenian people." He felt
    "particularly wounded as well as angry at such failures by my Jewish
    people when we too have known the worst horrors of being victims of a
    major genocide, and therefore we should be all the more at your side
    as deeply committed allies in all aspects of preserving and honoring
    the record of the Armenian Genocide."

    Dr. Charny announced "the happy news [that] the battle for recognition
    and genuine respect for the memory of the Armenian Genocide [was
    won] on the level of everyday Israeli culture." In great detail,
    he explained that "throughout the year there are major statements in
    our culture about the Armenian Genocide, including many full-length
    feature stories and interviews in all of our major newspapers and on
    our television. On April 24, there is powerful coverage, for example,
    this year on Roim Olam or Seeing the World, a major TV news magazine;
    there is an annual seminar at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem
    at which this year the keynote speaker was Prof. James Russell of
    Harvard University, and it was my honor to be the keynoter the year
    before together with an influential member of the Knesset who was
    totally knowledgeable about the Genocide and totally clear about
    Israel's error in not recognizing it; and there is of course an annual
    commemoration by the Armenian Community -- it was there that the two
    ministers in the past announced their recognition of the Armenian
    genocide. During a too-brief period, we also had two ministers
    of the Israeli government who officially recognized the Genocide,
    and although the governments in question promptly disavowed these
    ministers' statements as private and not speaking for the country, the
    records of those ministers honoring the Armenian Genocide on behalf
    of the State of Israel cannot be erased. I would say that both the
    everyday Israeli man on the street and the professional scholars of
    the Holocaust, such as Prof. Yehuda Bauer perhaps the ranking scholar
    of the Holocaust at Yad Vashem, are basically sympathetic and committed
    to paying homage to the Armenian Genocide. A few years ago four of us,
    including one of the above former ministers, Yossi Sarid, Prof. Bauer,
    Prof. Yair Auron, an indefatigable scholar of the Armenian Genocide
    and of Israel's denials of same, and myself traveled together to
    Yerevan to lay a wreath at the Armenian Genocide Memorial."

    As he has done many times in the past, Dr. Charny expressed regret that
    "sadly and shamefully the pull of practical government politics still
    leads to official Israel cooperating with Turkey in gross denials of
    the Armenian Genocide.
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