Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

'We have an obligation to tell the truth'

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

  • 'We have an obligation to tell the truth'

    The Jerusalem Post
    Aug 23, 2007 23:49 | Updated Aug 23, 2007 23:49
    Zuroff: 'We have an obligation to tell the truth'
    By ETGAR LEFKOVITS

    The World War I-era massacre of Armenians by the Turks should be
    recognized as genocide despite the political ramifications such a move
    would have with Turkey, the chief Nazi hunter of the Los Angeles-based
    Simon Wiesenthal Center said Thursday.

    "I think it is very important that it be recognized as a case of
    genocide," the director of the the organization's Israel office
    Dr. Efraim Zuroff said in an interview with The Jerusalem Post.

    "With all the sensitivities we have regarding Israeli-Turkish
    relations and the well-being of the Turkish Jewish community, we have
    an obligation to tell the truth about historical events - even if they
    sometimes create certain problems for us," Zuroff said.

    His remarks come two days after the New York-based Anti Defamation
    League, in a dramatic about-face, called the World War I-era massacre
    of Armenians a genocide, after previously firing an organization
    official who said the same thing.

    In contrast to the ADL, the Wiesenthal Center has always included some
    presentation of the Armenian Genocide in its museums, dating back to
    its first museum in 1979, officials in the organization said.

    "Our position on this issue has always been very straightforward; we
    view it as an educational, not a political issue," said associate dean
    Rabbi Abraham Cooper.

    Cooper noted that when the organization's Museum of Tolerance in Los
    Angeles opened in 1993 there was pressure by the Turkish government
    not to include mention of the Armenian genocide in the museum, while
    others were upset that an exhibition on the killing was not slated for
    permanent exhibition. "This is a piece of history," Cooper said.

    Historians estimate that as many as 1.5 million Armenian Christians
    were killed by Muslim Ottoman Turks between 1915 and 1923, in what is
    widely viewed by scholars as the first genocide of the 20th century.

    Turkey, however, denies the deaths constituted genocide, saying that
    the toll has been grossly inflated and that those killed were victims
    of civil war and unrest.

    Meanwhile, Yad Vashem, which has recently referred to the mass
    killings in Darfur as genocide, said Thursday that the massacre of the
    Armenians was part of the Holocaust center's educational activities on
    "other instances of genocide, ethnic cleansing and mass murder."

    "Yad Vashem, as an educational and research center, is dedicated to
    the historical truth, and to educating, researching, studying and
    memorializing the Shoah," a Yad Vashem spokesperson said.

    "In the course of our educational activities, other instances of
    genocide, ethnic cleansing and mass murder are dealt with as well,
    including that of Armenia." The issue is especially sensitive for
    Israel on a political level due to the country's close relations with
    Turkey.

    Separately, the US Holocaust Museum declined comment Thursday on
    pending legislation before the US Congress which would recognize the
    Armenian massacre as genocide due to the Museum's status as a federal
    entity, museum spokesman Andrew Hollinger said.
Working...
X