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  • Armenia's Jewish Hero

    Armenia's Jewish Hero

    The Jewish Week, NY
    April 20 2005

    Jewish ambassador to the Ottoman Empire urged the U.S. government to
    stop the Genocide.
    Steve Lipman - Staff Writer

    The recent $20 million settlement between a major American insurance
    firm and the heirs of Armenian policyholders killed in the Armenian
    Genocide had its genesis, indirectly, in the memoirs written nearly
    90 years ago by a Jewish-American diplomat.

    Henry Morgenthau Sr., the German native who served as U.S. ambassador
    to the Ottoman Empire during World War I, wrote in 1918 in "Ambassador
    Morgenthau's Story" about an exchange with Talaat Pasha, Turkey's
    Interior Minister and an architect of the Genocide.

    "The New York Life Insurance Company and the Equitable Life of New
    York had for years done considerable business among the Armenians,"
    Morgenthau wrote. "One day Talaat made what was perhaps the most
    astonishing request I had ever heard. 'I wish,' Talaat now said,
    'that you would get the American life insurance companies to send us
    a complete list of their Armenian policyholders.'

    "They are practically all dead now," victims of the Genocide,
    the Turkish official told the ambassador, "and have left no heirs
    to collect the money. It of course all escheats to the State. The
    government is the beneficiary now."

    Morgenthau lost his temper.

    " 'You will get no such list from me,' I said, and I got up and
    left him."

    Vartkes Yeghiayan, an Armenian-American attorney in California,
    read this story in Morgenthau's book in 1988 and decided to bring a
    class-action suit against New York Life.

    The result was the settlement, announced earlier this year at the
    New York office of the Armenian General Benevolent Union.

    New York Life, acknowledging some 2,400 unpaid policies sold to
    Armenians before the Genocide, agreed on a $20 million payment to
    nine Armenian organizations, including the AGBU, and descendants of
    policyholders who filed claims by last month's deadline.

    Participants in the AGBU ceremony said the settlement, the first known
    one to kin of people who were killed in the Genocide, was inspired by
    the reparations and insurance payments received over the last several
    decades by survivors of the Holocaust.

    Morgenthau was given due credit at the event.

    The ambassador, who died in 1946, is considered a hero in Armenia,
    where a tree in his honor stands on the Walk of Righteous
    Non-Armenians. His grandson, Manhattan District Attorney Robert
    Morgenthau, was granted honorary Armenian citizenship.

    "I was very aware of his involvement," Morgenthau said of his
    grandfather. "He had a lot of friends in the Armenian community."

    After returning to the United States from his posting in
    Constantinople, Morgenthau Sr., who was active in Jewish affairs and
    was a founder of the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee,
    took up the cause of the Armenians.

    While in Turkey, he had helped rescue an unknown number of Armenians.


    "I've had people walk up to me and say, 'Your grandfather saved my
    life,' " Morgenthau said. "He did a lot of things he never talked
    about."

    In a 1915 dispatch to the State Department, the ambassador wrote that
    "a campaign of race extermination is in progress." He continued
    to press the then-neutral United States to take actions against
    the Genocide.

    "When the Turkish authorities gave the orders for these deportations
    [that constituted the main form of the Genocide], they were merely
    giving the death warrant to a whole race; they understood this well,"
    Morgenthau Sr. wrote in his memoirs. "Perhaps the one event in history
    that most resembles the Armenian deportations was the expulsion of
    the Jews from Spain by Ferdinand and Isabella."

    One time a prominent member of the German Jewish community -
    Germany and Turkey were wartime allies - approached Morgenthau Sr.,
    appealing to the envoy "as one Jew to another" to stop lobbying for the
    Armenians. Turkey and Germany might seek to have Morgenthau recalled,
    jeopardizing his career, the visitor said.

    "Then you go back to the German Embassy, and ... say ... go ahead
    and have me recalled," Morgenthau Sr. answered. "If I am to suffer
    martyrdom, I can think of no better cause in which to be sacrificed.
    In fact, I would welcome it, for I can think of no greater honor than
    to be recalled because I, a Jew, have been exerting all my powers to
    save the lives of hundreds of thousands of Christians."

    Morgenthau said he heard such stories about his grandfather over
    the years.

    "He certainly had an influence on me and my father," he said.

    Morgenthau has been active in the pro-Armenian cause. And his father,
    Henry Morgenthau Jr., secretary of the Treasury under President
    Franklin D. Roosevelt, used his influence with the president to
    establish the War Refugee Board, which late in World War II saved
    more than 200,000 Jews from the Holocaust.
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