Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Honor Armenian Survival

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Honor Armenian Survival

    HONOR ARMENIAN SURVIVAL
    By Shamoneh Ayazjoo
    Michael Nicolayeff / Daily Nexus

    Daily Nexus, CA
    Univ. of California, Santa Barbara
    April 25 2006

    Genocide Victims Should Be Recognized With Adoration

    This article is dedicated to the memory of the 1,500,000 Armenians
    who were martyred during the Turkish massacres, which culminated on
    April 24, 1915.

    "Fear not Them which kill the body, but are not able to kill the soul:
    But rather fear Him which is able to destroy both body and soul in
    hell," Matthew X, 28.

    The Armenian Genocide was a crime that exterminated an entire nation
    from infants up through elders; a crime whose criminals starved and
    burned children; brutally raped pure, angelic women; beheaded young
    men and forced a Christian people to abandon their faith.

    Such a horrible and barbaric crime was committed by the genocidal
    government of Turkish emperors against the Armenian people during the
    span of three terrible years - the bloodiest day of which occurred
    on April 24, 1915 when more than half of the Armenian population was
    massacred. But history has yet to report this crime, and this world,
    which is so accustomed to atrocity, has yet to recognize what is known
    to those that suffered as the first genocide of the 20th century. How
    can it be that such a violent crime committed against the nation
    of Armenia - a nation so vital to the history of mankind - has gone
    unpunished and unrecognized? After all, Armenia was the first nation
    to adopt Christianity in 301 A.D., and it is the country that bears the
    historical Mount Ararat, which is where the biblical Noah's Ark landed.

    Perhaps it is due to the Turkish government's blatant refusal to
    acknowledge and take responsibility for the crime of massacring more
    than one and a half million people, their intellectuals, clergymen,
    scholars, musicians and other men of art, without mercy even for
    those Armenian architects who had built and decorated the mosques
    for their religious worship.

    This year marks the 91st anniversary of the inhuman mass-murder which
    was perpetrated against the Armenian people during the bitter and
    disastrous days of World War I. Ninety-one years after the great
    massacre, the Armenian people, both in Armenia and throughout the
    world, reverently bow before the unknown graves of the valiant victims
    and pray in remembrance of that dark and awful day when death and
    destruction filled their eyes.

    In fact, an entire nation was martyred but the Armenians did not die
    forever. Against this deadly attempt, the Armenian people rose up
    with all the might and instinct necessary for survival. And today,
    the pages of history testify that the nation itself was the conqueror,
    and that the enemy had devoured only the body of the Armenian, but he
    had never been able to consume the Armenian soul which is invincible
    and imperishable. This is the reason why, on the occasion of the 91st
    anniversary, the Armenian people must take a new stand. April 24 is
    no longer a day of tears and mourning. For the sake of the glorious
    victims Armenians must proclaim April 24 as a day of victory and dispel
    once and forever from the hearts and minds of the Armenian people the
    sense of defeat and lamentation. The victims of the Armenian Genocide
    died with the hope of living; therefore, April 24 is no longer a
    day stained with a sense of defeat, but rather a day overcome with
    exaltation for survival.

    Shamoneh Ayazjoo is a junior English major.
    From: Baghdasarian
Working...
X