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JERUSALEM: Armenia Optimistic Israel Will Recognize 'Genocide'

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  • JERUSALEM: Armenia Optimistic Israel Will Recognize 'Genocide'

    ARMENIA OPTIMISTIC ISRAEL WILL RECOGNIZE 'GENOCIDE'
    By Michael Freund

    Jerusalem Post
    http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=11 96847413051&pagename=JPost%2FJPArticle%2FShowF ull
    Dec 23 2007

    The government of Armenia is "very hopeful" that Israel will soon
    recognize the World War I-era massacre of Armenians by Turks as an
    "act of genocide," a senior Armenian official told The Jerusalem Post
    last week.

    "The Armenian and Israeli people are united in the suffering that
    each endured, and no one but the Jewish people can better understand
    our situation," Sergo Yeritsyan, a former education minister who now
    serves as a senior adviser to President Robert Kocharian, said.

    "The world has recognized and accepted the Holocaust as an historical
    event, and the world is now acknowledging the genocide of Armenians,"
    Yeritsyan said in an interview in his office in the Armenian capital
    of Yerevan.

    "I am very hopeful that Israel, step by step, will recognize it as
    well... We are very hopeful and we are waiting for it," Yeritsyan said.

    Contacted by the Post, a spokesman for Israel's Foreign Ministry
    declined to comment.

    Historians estimate that as many as 1.5 million Armenian Christians
    were killed by Ottoman Turks in a massacre that began in 1915, in
    what some scholars have declared to be the first systematic act of
    genocide in the 20th century.

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

    Israel has thus far tried to distance itself from the issue, not
    wanting to offend Ankara and souring relations.

    Yeritsyan insisted that the killings constituted genocide and stressed
    that it was essential for the international community to recognize
    it as such.

    "One must be honest about history," the former professor, who holds a
    PhD in philology, said, adding that "failure to do so only increases
    the chances of such a thing happening again."

    Yeritsyan welcomed the recent decision by American Jewish organizations
    such as the Anti-Defamation League, which in August reversed its
    traditional position and declared the killing of the Armenians was
    "tantamount to genocide," saying this was "of course a positive
    development."

    "We, the Armenians, are very emotionally connected with this issue,
    as you can understand," Yeritsyan said. "But I believe that Jews all
    over the world can help us to cure the pain."

    "We must work together towards greater respect and cooperation between
    Armenia and Jewish people all over the world," Yeritsyan said. "It
    is our responsibility to history."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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