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In My View: April 24, 2007, Marks The 92nd Anniversary Of The Armeni

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  • In My View: April 24, 2007, Marks The 92nd Anniversary Of The Armeni

    IN MY VIEW: APRIL 24, 2007, MARKS THE 92ND ANNIVERSARY OF THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE
    By Armen Vartanian, The Journal

    THE JOURNAL (Newcastle, UK)
    April 11, 2007 Wednesday
    Edition 1

    Armenians worldwide will be commemorating the first genocide of the
    20th Century with solemn religious and civil ceremonies. Along with
    the Armenian people, prominent celebrities and statesmen will be
    participating in this day of remembrance.

    Since April of 2003, GenocideEvents.com has undertaken the task of
    informing the general public, as a community service, of the events
    commemorating the Armenian Genocide. The public is encouraged to
    reflect upon the horrors which fell upon the Armenian nation and
    Armenian people in the beginning of the last century.

    During the First World War, The Young Turk political faction of the
    Ottoman Empire sought the creation of a new Turkish state extending
    into Central Asia. Those promoting the ideology called "pan Turkism"
    (creating a homogenous Turkish state) now saw its Armenian minority
    population as an obstacle to the realisation of that goal.

    On April 24, 1915, several hundred Armenian community leaders and
    intellectuals in Constantinople (modern day Istanbul) were arrested,
    sent east, and put to death. In May, after mass deportations had
    already begun, Minister of the Interior Talaat Pasha ordered their
    deportation into the Syrian Desert.

    The adult and teenage males were separated from the deportation
    caravans and killed under the direction of Young Turk functionaries.

    Women and children were driven for months over mountains and desert,
    often raped, tortured, and mutilated.

    Deprived of food and water and often stripped of clothing, they fell
    by the hundreds and thousands along the routes to the desert.

    Ultimately, more than half the Armenian population, 1,500,000 people
    were annihilated. In this manner the Armenian people were eliminated
    from their homeland of several millennia.

    On April 29, 1915, Henry Morgenthau, Senior, United States Ambassador
    to the Ottoman Empire, had stated that "I am confident that the whole
    history of human race contains no such terrible episode as this. The
    great massacres and persecutions of the past seem almost insignificant
    when compared to the sufferings of the Armenian race in 1915."

    In 1915, 33 years before the United Nations Genocide Convention was
    adopted, the Armenian Genocide was condemned by the international
    community as a crime against humanity.

    Armen Vartanian works for GenocideEvents.com in California, USA. Its
    email address is [email protected] while its website is
    located at www.GenocideEvents.com
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