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CR: Speech of Hon. John Shimkus of Illinois

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  • CR: Speech of Hon. John Shimkus of Illinois

    WAIS Document Retrieval
    [Congressional Record: April 27, 2005 (Extensions)]
    [Page E777]
    >From the Congressional Record Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]
    [DOCID:cr27ap05-9]




    90TH COMMEMORATION OF THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

    ______


    speech of

    HON. JOHN SHIMKUS

    of illinois

    in the house of representatives

    Tuesday, April 26, 2005

    Mr. SHIMKUS. Mr. Speaker, I rise to recognize the anniversary of the
    Armenian Genocide and to place in the Record a portion of an opinion
    article written by Lee Enokian.

    Armenian Genocide Victims Are Not Forgotten

    (By Lee Enokian)

    Today is the 90th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide.
    Between 1915 and 1923, more than 1.5 million Armenians were
    murdered or forcibly exiled because they were the wrong
    religion and ethnicity. The world community memorializes the
    anniversary annually as Armenian Martyrs Day.
    Thousands of Armenians were offered their lives in exchange
    for their conversion to Islam. They refused and died as a
    result. Their steadfast faithfulness to the Christian faith
    is not surprising. Armenia was the first Christian nation and
    remains the only Christian nation in the Middle East.
    Various Turkish people invaded southwest Asia during the
    Middle Ages and carved an empire for themselves from lands
    occupied by the indigenous Semitic and Indo-European
    inhabitants.
    Turkish nationalism grew relentlessly during the following
    centuries. In the years preceding World War I, they actively
    sought to Turkify the Ottoman Empire and strengthen their
    rule by eliminating fractious ethnic minorities.
    The western two-thirds of Anatolia was once inhabited by
    Greeks and other Indo-European peoples. It is now primarily
    occupied by Turks.
    The eastern third of modern Turkey was once Armenian with
    an Assyrian minority, but is now populated by Turks and
    Kurds.
    Modern Armenia survived only because it was the single
    province controlled, and protected, by the Russian Empire.
    The rest of the territory within its historical borders is
    almost wholly devoid of ethnic Armenians.
    The organized depopulation of Christians and non-Turks from
    Anatolia by the Ottoman Empire is one of the worst incidents
    of racism and religious intolerance documented in the world.
    The Genocide was master-minded by the ultra-nationalist
    ``Young Turk'' government of Ottoman Turkey. Mehmet Talaat
    Pasha was the Minister of the Interior and architect of the
    Armenian Genocide. He was rewarded by being elevated to the
    position of Grand Vizier in 1917. Pasha fled to Germany as
    his empire collapsed in 1918. He was convicted of capital
    crimes, including massacring the Armenians. The post-war
    Ottoman government sentenced him to death in absentia.
    Just-minded federal, state and local governments throughout
    the world continue to acknowledge the Armenian Genocide.
    Illinois is no different. Gov. Rod Blagojevich has
    continued the practice of his predecessors by remembering the
    plight of the Armenian people. Part of his annual
    proclamation reads: ``The Armenian community, as well as the
    global community, remembers the Armenian Genocide, which
    occurred 90 years ago; and during this tragic historical
    period between the years of 1915 and 1923, Armenians were
    forced to witness the genocide of their loved ones, and the
    loss of their ancestral homelands; and this extermination and
    forced relocation of over 1.5 million Armenians by the
    Ottoman Turks is recognized every year.''
    Sadly, the modern state of Turkey denies the Genocide ever
    occurred. It restricts the ability of ethnic Armenians, Kurds
    and Assyrians to enter and travel within the country. In
    fact, Turkey has done its best to remove every trace of the
    Armenian people from their ancestral homeland. These efforts
    still don't change history.
    Blagojevich concluded his proclamation with the fact that
    we must remember hateful events like the Genocide to help
    prevent their future institution.
    ``Both recognition and education concerning past atrocities
    such as the Armenian Genocide is crucial in the prevention of
    future crimes against humanity.''
    Evil wins when good men turn a blind eye.
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