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  • Keep the memory of genocide alive

    Keep the memory of genocide alive

    Troy Record, NY
    April 23 2006

    On April 24, 1915, Turkey - then ruled as the Ottoman Empire -
    arrested more than 200 young Armenians in Constantinople without any
    legal grounds to do so. That single act triggered one of the greatest
    atrocities of all time - the Armenian genocide.

    The country's rulers had decided that the large number of Armenians
    in Turkey were an obstacle to achieving a homogenous Turkish Empire,
    so with swift brutality, they slaughtered men, women and children for
    no reason but political expediency and drove survivors out of their
    homes and across borders far from their roots.

    By the time the relentless genocide was over, in 1923, more than 1.5
    million people were killed because of their nationality. Less than
    two decades later, the Third Reich slaughtered more than 6,000,000
    Jews, along with thousands of gypsies and homosexuals, to preserve
    the "purity of Aryan blood."

    The scope of that genocide pushed aside the world's memory of the
    equally barbaric brutality of the Armenian genocide, and much to the
    relief of the Turkish government, it got lost in history.

    Lost, that is, until survivors, fellow Armenians and people with a
    taste for justice founded grassroots organizations to observe this
    somber anniversary annually.

    Locally, there will be several programs to educate people about the
    horrific events, culminating in Troy's Monument Square from 6:30-8
    p.m. Monday, where there will be a memorial service and the reading
    of proclamations.

    The groups that sponsor these events nationally have one simple goal:
    closure. All these volunteer organizations want is an acknowledgment
    that a crime against humanity occurred.

    But Turkey refuses to acknowledge the Armenian massacre.

    Several years ago, the United Nations asked the Turks to publicly
    accept this brutal past, but Turkey never has.

    In Congress, a resolution was passed by a wide margin that requested
    the Turkish government to accept what happened and both apologize and
    swear such an atrocity would never occur again. Turkey ignored the
    resolution.

    So it is only groups such as the Capital District Armenian Genocide
    Committee that keep the memory of the dead alive, and bravo to them.

    Remember, a crime like this is not just a crime against Armenians, it
    is a crime against all humanity.
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