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The 'forgotten' Armenian genocide also is a crime against humanity

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  • The 'forgotten' Armenian genocide also is a crime against humanity

    Albany Times Union, NY
    Jan 13 2007

    The 'forgotten' Armenian genocide also is a crime against humanity



    First published: Saturday, January 13, 2007

    This writer was drawn to a Dec. 31 article in the Times Union by John
    Rodden and Michael D. Kerlin, "Human rights crimes keep escalating."

    The article details the "crimes against humanity" that were
    perpetrated during 2006 against -- but not exclusive to -- the people
    of Chile, the former Yugoslavia, Iraq, Liberia, Ethiopia, Sudan,
    Colombia and the Congo. The article points out that, while some of
    the perpetrators of these injustices, e.g., Pinochet, Milosevic and
    Hussein, have "all met their fates," the process of bringing the
    remaining "criminals" to justice is more difficult to define and
    implement.


    It is the final paragraph of this article that this writer wishes to
    address: "Matters have grown more complicated in the 60 years since
    Nuremberg. 2006 was indeed a successful year. Let's hope the world
    doesn't have to wait another 60 years for its next big leap forward
    against war criminals and human rights abuses."

    The world must be made aware that there was another tragic crime
    against humanity that preceded the Holocaust, namely the Armenian
    genocide, also known as "the forgotten genocide." The final sentence
    of Rodden and Kerlin's article underscores why the Armenian genocide
    continues to be ignored by authors who write on the topic of "crimes
    against humanity." To complicate matters, the modern Turkish
    government continues to deny that a "genocide" took place. The
    Turkish position is that a "civil uprising" had to be quelled, and
    during the process, Armenian as well as Turkish peoples died.

    This writer has visited schools and colleges in the Capital Region
    (including Albany Academy for Girls, Canajoharie, Schoharie,
    Scotia-Glenville, Shaker, Shenendehowa high schools, and Siena
    College), speaking on the topic of the "Armenian genocide." Most of
    our young people know about the Holocaust. At least, they have heard
    of it.

    On the other hand, most people of today's generation -- young and old
    alike -- have no idea what the Armenian genocide was. They don't even
    know where Armenia is located. I would continue to urge the world to
    recognize that the history of genocide in the 20th century did not
    begin with the Holocaust. Rather, it began with the planned and
    systematic extermination of an ethnic race, a plan that left my
    parents as orphans, and my generation without grandparents, aunts,
    uncles and cousins.

    RALPH ENOKIAN
    Albany
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