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  • Armenian Martyrs' Day

    ARMENIAN MARTYRS' DAY

    Jawa Report, TX
    April 24 2007

    April 24th is the day we remember the victims of a forgotten genocide.

    On April 24, 1915, turkish soldiers arrested 250 Armenians in the
    first of hundreds of raids designed to wipe out the Armenian population
    of turkey.

    Armenian villages were rousted one by one, and the men ordered to
    leave at once and serve the turkish army. Boys as young as 9 or 10,
    and men as old as 70. Many never made that far, as turkish soldiers
    often took these "new recruits" not to the army camps but out to
    the woods, where they were summarily executed. The women and girls,
    thus undefended, were easy prey for the turkish soldiers.

    Those who remained behind were forced from their lands, homes, and
    belongings, and force-marched to "settlement camps" in remote areas.

    Many died along the way from exhaustion, starvation, and exposure
    to the elements. According to French scholars Joel Kotek and Pierre
    Rigoulot, there were up to 25 such camps.

    But the Armenian's plight was nowhere near as unknown, even in that
    day, as it is now. Despite the lack of internet, video cameras,
    and TV screens, in 1915 the plight of the Armenians was a worldwide
    topic of discussion. US Consular officials, as early as July of 1915,
    were concerned enough to beg the US government to step in.

    No less than Winston Churchill, then Britain's First Lord of the
    Admiralty noted, "the clearance of race from Asia Minor was about as
    complete as such an act could be...There is no reason to doubt that
    that this crime was planned and executed for political reasons. The
    opportunity presented itself for clearing Turkish soil of a Christian
    race opposed to all Turkish ambitions." And he was then in the midst
    of the "war to end all wars" against Germany!

    During 1915, the New York Times paper published 145 articles about
    the mass murder of the Armenian people, describing the massacre as
    "systematic, "authorized" and "organized by the government." In 1918,
    Theodore Roosevelt called it "the greatest crime of the war."

    But today, no one even knows it happened

    Denialists of all stripes, from US and EU officials who find turkey's
    past "annoying", to the turks themselves who believe such raids were
    justified to "pick up deserters" (yeah, little old men, deserters.

    right.) have managed to decrease the general public's awareness
    of these atrocities. But they happened. There was no Photoshop in
    1915. All of the horrible pictures you see here are real.

    Despite missions from the US and UK, Austria, France, and others,
    the plight of the Armenians faded off the radar screen as war in
    Europe intensified.

    Looks a lot like Germany around 1942, huh?

    In fact, Adolf Hitler said of the Armenian Genocide: "Who, after all,
    speaks today of the annihilation of the Armenians?"as his justification
    for the atrocities carried out on the Jews and others during the
    Nazi's reign over Germany.

    We did not forget. We do not forget. We will always remember.

    My previous remembrances here. This stays on top all day.

    For photos: http://caltechgirlsworld.mu.nu/archives/223931.php

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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