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Armenians Urge Jews To Take Moral High Ground

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  • Armenians Urge Jews To Take Moral High Ground

    ARMENIANS URGE JEWS TO TAKE MORAL HIGH GROUND
    By Etgar Lefkovits, The Jerusalem Post

    AZG Armenian Daily
    28/08/2007

    The State of Israel and Jewish organizations around the world
    should take the moral high ground and recognize the World War
    I-era killing of Armenians by Turks as genocide regardless of the
    political ramifications with Turkey, Armenian residents of Jerusalem
    said Wednesday.

    The Armenian Orthodox Patriarch of Jerusalem, Torkom Manoogian, lays
    a wreath in the city last year, marking the anniversary of the mass
    killing of Armenians in Turkey.

    "Israel understands the issue better than anyone else... [but] her
    judgment is impaired by the politicizing of the issue," said Father
    Samuel Aghoyan, 66, a priest at the Armenian Patriarchate in the Old
    City of Jerusalem and a superior at the Church of the Holy epulchre.

    He noted that politics alone has prevented Israel from recognizing
    the killing as a genocide.

    "When you politicize the issue, you kill the spirit upon which both
    the US and Israel were founded," Aghoyan said.

    "If you don't want to recognize it openly at least say that it
    happened," he added.

    His remarks come one day after the New York-based Anti Defamation
    League reversed itself and called a World War I-era massacre of
    Armenians a genocide after previously firing an organization official
    who said the same thing.

    The director of the Armenian school and library in the Armenian Quarter
    of the Old City of Jerusalem said that Armenians were pleased over
    the about-face taken by the ADL.

    "The Jewish lobby should make their minds up as representatives of the
    Jewish people - as people who suffered the Holocaust - to take a more
    moral stand in fully and unconditionally recognizing the killing of
    the Armenians as a genocide, regardless of politics," Father Norayr
    Kazazian, 30, said.

    He added that Israel and the Jewish world should not be overly fearful
    of the repercussions such a move could have on the Jewish community
    living in Turkey, noting that hundreds of thousands of Armenians
    are also living in Turkey, and citing Turkey's good relations with
    both France and Belgium even though both countries have defined the
    killings as a massacre.

    Historians estimate that as many as 1.5 million Armenian Christians
    were killed by Muslim Ottoman Turks between 1915 and 1923, an event
    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.

    Armenian residents of the small Armenian Quarter in the Old City said
    Wednesday that they sensed an unquestionable difference between the
    views of Jewish people, who recognized the mass killing as genocides,
    and the political leadership who were concerned with the political
    ramifications of such a move with Israel's warm relationship with
    Turkey.

    "I know the Jewish people are with us and recognize the killing as
    a genocide but it is political interests which prevent the Knesset
    and Jewish groups from doing so," said Hagop Antressain, 63, an Old
    City shopkeeper who expressed mixed feelings about the ADL reversal.

    The son of a survivor of the massacre, Antressain said that the Jewish
    and Armenian people shared a common tragedy.

    He noted that when he watches Holocaust movies on Holocaust Remembrance
    Days he sees not Jewish children but Armenian children.

    "It is my father's eyes when he was seven-years-old," Antressain said.

    He opined that passage of a pending US Congressional resolution, which
    would term the killings a genocide, was "only a matter of time," adding
    that the legislation was brought about as a result of pressure by
    Armenian and Jewish intellectuals, and not by American Jewish groups.

    Antressain lambasted recent remarks by the Executive Director of
    the American Jewish Committee David Harris that Armenian and Turkish
    historians should sit down together and discuss the genocide.

    "Should we ask Jewish and Nazi historians to discuss the Holocaust?" he
    asked. As a native of Jerusalem, Antressain said that it was important
    for him that Israel would not be the last country to recognize the
    killing as genocide.

    "I know the feelings of the Jewish people and I do not want the Jewish
    State to be the last to recognize the genocide," he said.

    The Armenian residents of Jerusalem opined that eventually all
    countries would come to recognize the killing as a genocide.

    "Sooner or later the right time will come," Aghoyan concluded.
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