Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Gabe Pressman's View: The Forgotten Genocide

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

  • Gabe Pressman's View: The Forgotten Genocide

    GABE PRESSMAN'S VIEW: THE FORGOTTEN GENOCIDE

    WNBC, NY
    April 18 2007

    When Adolf Hitler was trying to persuade his aides that a Jewish
    holocaust would be tolerated by the west, he said, "Who, after all,
    speaks today of the annihilation of the Armenians?"

    In 1915, the Turks began a systematic slaughter of the Armenian
    people -- an estimated 1.5 million were killed. The Turkish government
    still denies it ever happened, despite convincing evidence, including
    photographs and the testimony of respected scholars.

    Systematically, the Turks rounded up Armenian men, women and
    children. Some were executed outright. Many were tortured first, with
    implements modeled after the fiendish devices used in the Spanish
    Inquisition. There were death marches in which tens of thousands of
    Armenians were forced to walk hundreds of miles into the deserts of
    Syria. Many perished on the way.

    There were massacres delivered, historians say, with great cruelty.

    One bizarre feature of this period was that, while torturing was
    taking place at night, people would gather outside, beating drums
    and blowing whistles, trying to drown out the screams of the tortured.

    Henry Morgenthau Sr., the grandfather of Manhattan's district attorney,
    was American ambassador to the Ottoman Empire, and did much to inform
    the world of the genocide taking place.

    This is the month in which the world remembers the Holocaust, in
    which 6 million Jewish people perished. April 24 has been set aside
    for remembering the Armenian genocide. In many ways, the Armenian
    genocide was a precursor of what would happen to 6 million European
    Jews three decades later.

    You can't blame the Armenian people, those who've settled in the
    states and those in Europe, for feeling neglected. The world seems
    to have virtually forgotten their ordeal. But it is still remembered
    with great pain by the descendants of those who suffered or died.

    An editorial in the New York Times points out that the Armenian killing
    was the 20th century's first genocide, setting an example that later
    emboldened Hitler, the Hutu leaders of Rwanda and the Sudanese in
    the present day. The New York Times deplores as a "cover-up" the
    fact that the United Nations has blocked a scheduled exhibit at
    United Nations headquarters commemorating the 13th anniversary of
    the Rwandan genocide.

    The reason: because this exhibit mentions the mass murder of Armenians
    and Turkey objected.

    We need to remember this shameful episode in world history. If the
    United Nations and the Turks turn their backs on the Armenians,
    they demean us all. The Armenians should not be ignored or forgotten.

    Their ordeal should be honored -- at the United Nations. There should
    be a ceremony and the hard-nosed Turkish diplomats should lay a wreath.

    http://www.wnbc.com/politics/12268974/det ail.html
Working...
X