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  • German-Turkish Racism

    GERMAN-TURKISH RACISM

    PanARMENIAN.Net
    18.04.2007 GMT+04:00

    Traditionally the victims of the Holocaust are considered to be the
    6 million Jews from Europe.

    However no victim name-list exists.

    Whether or not Hitler's phrase on "the forgotten Armenian Genocide"
    really existed has now become a question of paramount importance. If in
    due time the Nation's League condemned slaughter and the deportation
    of the Armenians from the Ottoman Empire, perhaps the world wouldn't
    witness the Holocaust.

    Particularly unclear is the position of the Israeli State, persistently
    denying the Armenian Genocide and recognizing only the Holocaust.

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ Of course, the political consequences of recognizing
    the Armenian Genocide for Israel are much more serious than the
    moral ones.

    Today Turkey is Israel's almost the only ally in the Middle East.

    The persecutions were initiated by the boycott of Jews and their firms,
    functioning in Germany on April 1, 1933, which was later followed
    by a powerful wave of racial laws against Jews working at State
    Institutions or working by certain professions. The "Nuremberg Law"
    put an end to the Jewish equality in Germany and identified Jewry
    as racial term since September 15, 1935. The anti-Jewish hysteria
    in Germany led to massacre in 1938 (night, November 9) recorded
    in history as "Crystal night" (because of the fragments of glass,
    covering the streets of country's cities).

    Traditionally the victims of the Holocaust are considered to be the
    6 million Jews from Europe.

    However, no victim name-list exists. The basic source of the statistic
    data of the Holocaust is the comparison of prewar and postwar
    census. By the end of the war the Nazis covered up all the tracks of
    the concentration camps; only testimonies are alive to this day. In
    the Holocaust Museum Yad Vashem in Jerusalem personal documents about 3
    million victims are kept. The lack of data is explained with the fact
    that often Jewish Communities were exterminated to the last person,
    so that no relatives, friends, or family members were left alive to
    give the names of the dead.

    The US Senate called to make the secret archives available, containing
    documental data on lives and deaths of millions of people who were kept
    at Nazi concentration camps during World War II. In the Resolution
    the Senate called the international commission having control over
    the access to the archive to accelerate the consideration of this
    issue in its next session, which is to be held in Amsterdam in May.

    Till recently the archives in Germany were kept top secret. The
    significance of the documents became particularly great over the
    last several months after the representative of the Associate Press
    gained a noticeable access to Nazi materials, with the condition of
    not disclosing the names of the victims.

    "The archives contain from 30 to 50 million pages of documentations
    telling about individual fates of more than 17 million victims of
    Nazi persecutions," the Resolution states.

    Will the Ottoman archives be available? According to Turkish officials,
    "their archives are open to any kind of investigations". However
    according to a number of historians, including Armenian historians
    the archives are thoroughly mopped. But there are documents, which
    became historical facts with thanks to the diplomats working during
    the years of World War I in Istanbul. Among such historical facts the
    telegrams of the Turkish Minister of Home Affairs can be found. "The
    Armenians' rights to live and work in Turkey are completely out of
    question. The government taking up the whole responsibility orders to
    let no child alive and does not let anyone protect them - September 9,
    1915. Turkish Minister of Home Affairs."

    It's worth mentioning that the Armenian Genocide was committed with the
    unspoken agreement of Germany which was one of Turkey's closest allies.

    "PanARMENIAN.Net" analytical department
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