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Facts Of Armenian Genocide Ignored For Too Long

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  • Facts Of Armenian Genocide Ignored For Too Long

    FACTS OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE IGNORED FOR TOO LONG
    Armen Rostami

    Daily Sundial, CA
    California State University, Northridge
    April 26 2007

    PrintEmail Article Tools Page 1 of 2 next > On a hot bloody day in
    April, when the sun was causing red oasis in the sandy deserts of
    Turkey and Syria, many Armenian intellectuals disappeared and never
    came back. As it turned out later, they were among the one and a
    half million that were slaughtered in the first genocide of the
    20th century, "The Armenian Genocide." Although this massacre was
    preplanned and derived by predetermined motives, it was not referred
    to as genocide until the Turks started denying this clear historical
    fact. Armenian genocide should be recognized because denying it
    ignores the historical reality and outweighs the benefits for the
    Turkish government.

    Genocide is a misanthropic act that is intended to accomplish certain
    incentives of a group of people through mass killing and extermination
    of a race. The word itself stems from two Latin words, "gens" meaning
    race or people and "cid" meaning "to destroy."

    Genocides are generally composed of eight stages, and the last stage
    is typically Denial. The eight stages of genocides are classification,
    symbolization, dehumanization, organization, polarization, preparation,
    extermination, and denial. Armenian Genocide of 1915 was preplanned
    by the Nationalist Ottoman Empire and organized by Talaat Pasha. The
    major incentive of the Armenian Genocide was to create a uniform
    Turkish speaking Muslim territory by cleansing all the non-Turkish
    minorities and conquering their lands and possessions. Such a
    utopian territory was neither Turkey nor Turkistan. It was called
    "Turan." Mehemd Ziya, the most influential thinker of the Turkish
    government, who from 1909 to 1918 was a member of the secretive party
    that ruled the Ottoman Empire for most of the period, the Central
    Committee of the Union and Progress, said, "The land of the enemy
    shall be devastated, Turkey shall be enlarged and become Turan." The
    only way the Turkish Government could create their desired dreamland
    "Turan" was by exterminating all the Armenians who were the Christian
    minority in that region and deporting them to foreign lands. Today,
    this sad reality has become incredibly hard and disrespectful for
    the Turkish government to accept. After all, who would want to admit
    a mass murder of two thirds of a nation?

    Despite the Turkish Government's constant crusade to destroy evidence
    of the Genocide, there is still tons of evidence remaining to prove
    it. When I physically went down to Ani, a holy Armenian city which
    Turkey devastated and killed all its Armenian inhabitants during the
    genocide, I observed how a government can kill history. All the burnt
    churches that were evidence of the Genocide were being torn down,
    or they were reconstructed and represented as Turkish mosques. If a
    country is not ashamed of her past why would it change her history? A
    simple answer to this question is that it is always easier to say
    something did not exist rather than denying an actual fact. There is
    also unbiased evidence compiled by world famous historians such as
    Arnold Toynbee and James Bryce. In February 1916, these historians
    began compiling information and evidence for a publication about
    recent events in Armenia.

    Resistance itself is the most valuable psychological evidence that can
    lead to the unraveling of the untold and denied truth. If Turkey is
    confident that the Armenian genocide did not happen and keeps denying
    this historical fact, then why do they resist those who attempt to
    produce documents about this fact? "The Forty Days of Musa Dagh"
    (Mount of Moses), is literature that narrates the story of Armenians
    inhabiting villages around Mount Moses during World War I.

    Although, this story is mainly an artwork, it is yet based on true
    facts, evidence, personal experiences and observations of the author
    from the genocide. When MGM was trying to produce a movie based on
    this book, Turkish government called the American authorities to
    forbid MGM from producing such a movie. This clear resistance shows
    the fear of the Turks from the popularity and fast transmittance of
    the truth. If the world finds out about such an inhumane reality in
    history, it will be a lot harder for Turkey to deny the genocide.

    Like all the other genocides, racism is an inevitable factor of the
    Armenian genocide. The Turks could not stand the Armenians advancements
    in economy, and their involvement in the political system. Looking back
    at history we find out that every murder has a murderer, especially
    if the murders happen in a large amount and at a specific time
    period. Armenians have been deprived of any meaningful and official
    recognition of this bloody series of murders. Indeed, the world has
    not taken the time to listen to the survivors, but this has not kept
    them from speaking up and narrating bitter stories about the genocide.

    Although the Turkish Government has been denying the Armenian
    Genocide for 92 years, the world is getting more informed about this
    genocide. Clearly, Turkey will be the last nation to acknowledge the
    Armenian Genocide, because denying this historical reality outweighs
    the benefits for the Turkish Government. Naturally, Armenians all
    around the world will not sit silently. They will protest and fight
    until they get the genocide recognized by the whole world. It is
    definitely a possible thing to do, because similar cases such as the
    Jewish Holocaust have been already tested and have successfully passed
    this bloody test of recognition. His eminence, Ignatius Peter XVI
    Batanian once said: "A million and a half Armenian victims horribly
    massacred, all the Armenian people, shaken but not discouraged,
    await an answer."
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