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CR: Commemorating the Armenian Genocide - Rep. Dooley

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  • CR: Commemorating the Armenian Genocide - Rep. Dooley

    COMMEMORATING THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

    ______


    HON. CALVIN M. DOOLEY

    of california

    in the house of representatives

    Monday, April 26, 2004

    Mr. DOOLEY of California. Mr. Speaker, I rise today to join my
    colleagues in remembrance of the Armenian Genocide.

    [[Page E646]]

    This terrible human tragedy must not be forgotten. Like the
    Holocaust, the Armenian Genocide stands as a tragic example of the
    human suffering that results from hatred and intolerance. The Ottoman
    Turkish Empire between 1915 and 1923 massacred one and a half million
    Armenian people. More than 500,000 Armenians were exiled from a
    homeland that their ancestors had occupied for more than 3,000
    years. A race of people was nearly eliminated. It would be an even
    greater tragedy to forget that the Armenian Genocide ever happened. To
    not recognize the horror of such events almost assures their
    repetition in the future. Adolf Hitler, in preparing his genocide
    plans for the Jews, predicted that no one would remember the
    atrocities he was about to unleash. After all, he asked, ``Who
    remembers the Armenians?'' Our statements today are intended to
    preserve the memory of the Armenian loss, and to remind the world that
    the Turkish government--to this day--refuses to acknowledge the
    Armenian Genocide. The truth of this tragedy can never and should
    never be denied. And we must also be mindful of the current suffering
    of the Armenian, where the Armenian people are still immersed in
    tragedy and violence. The unrest between Armenia and Azerbaijan
    continues in Nagorno- Karabakh. Thousands of innocent people have
    already perished in this dispute, and many more have been displaced
    and are homeless. In the face of this difficult situation we have an
    opportunity for reconciliation. Now is the time for Armenia and its
    neighbors to come together and work toward building relationships that
    will assure lasting peace. Meanwhile, in America, the
    Armenian-American community continues to thrive and to provide
    assistance and solidarity to its countrymen and women abroad. The
    Armenian-American community is bound together by strong generational
    and family ties, an enduring work ethic and a proud sense of ethnic
    heritage. Today we recall the tragedy of their past, not to replace
    blame, but to answer a fundamental question, ``Who remembers the
    Armenians?'' Our commemoration of the Armenian Genocide speaks
    directly to that, and I answer, we do.
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