Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Kindred groups urging fight against genocide

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

  • Kindred groups urging fight against genocide

    Los Angeles Daily News, CA
    Jan 24 2007

    Kindred groups urging fight against genocide
    BY BRAD A. GREENBERG, Staff Writer
    Article Last Updated: 01/23/2007 10:48:21 PM PST


    Before Adolph Hitler began to wipe out Europe's Jews, gays and
    Gypsies, he argued that Nazi Germany's brutality would escape global
    condemnation.

    "Who still talks nowadays of the extermination of the Armenians?"
    Hitler asked his commanding generals in 1939, The New York Times
    reported at the end of World War II.

    The first genocide of the 20th century - the killing of 1 million to
    1.5 million Armenians by the Ottoman Turks in 1915 - is viewed by
    scholars as a precursor to the Holocaust that erased 6 million Jews.

    In Los Angeles, which has among the world's largest Armenian and
    Jewish populations, members of the two communities gathered in Encino
    late Monday to share their kinship of suffering and motivate their
    youths to fight the forces that lead to genocide.

    "The question is: Can we teach our young persons something true so
    there will be no genocide in their generation?" said Rabbi Ed
    Feinstein of Valley Beth Shalom. "Can we acknowledge that there is
    something evil in human nature?"

    His audience was the 700 who filled his synagogue to watch
    "Screamers," a documentary that will open nationwide Friday about
    System of a Down and the band's campaign to have the Armenian
    Genocide recognized by the U.S. and British governments.
    Director Carla Garapedian, a North Hollywood High School graduate,
    and System bassist Shavo Odadjian spoke after the screening.

    "A screamer is somebody whose defenses and whose alibis somehow melt
    away, and they actually process what a genocide is without defense,
    without guile," Samantha Power, a professor at Harvard's John F.
    Kennedy School of Government and author of the Pulitzer-Prize winning
    book "A Problem from Hell: America and the Age of Genocide," says in
    an opening scene.

    "And when you do that, when you actually allow it all in, there is no
    other alternative but to go up to people and to scream and say, `You
    know, the sky is falling! The sky is falling! People are being
    systematically butchered! We can stop it!"'

    Ethnic victims of genocide, humanitarian activists and scholars say
    the continued refusal by some countries to use the "g" word when
    referring to the Armenian massacre is a reason why genocides occurred
    with increasing frequency at the end of the 20th century and the
    early part of this century - in Cambodia, Rwanda, Kosovo, Darfur.

    Genocide recognition

    Turkey has branded the killing of Armenians by the collapsing Ottoman
    Empire a consequence of war between ethnic groups; monuments in
    Turkey memorialize Turks killed by Armenians. But the European Union
    has stated that Turkey must acknowledge that the act was genocide
    before it can join.

    There have been U.S. efforts to recognize the genocide - resolutions
    passed the House in 1974 and 1985 - but each has failed because the
    government fears offending a military ally.

    "Jews have held onto this phrase, `never again.' I remind people that
    `never again' first appeared in the book of Genesis when God says to
    Noah that he will never again flood the Earth," Stephen Feinstein,
    director of the Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies at the
    University of Minnesota, said in an interview.

    "When God speaks, we can believe it. When men speak, it's a little
    harder. `Never again' is just a clich . Intervention always depends
    on national interest. That is as simple as it is."

    Band makes you ask

    In "Screamers," the four members of System of a Down, who are
    Armenian and grew up in Hollywood and the San Fernando Valley, talk
    about their missing family trees and protest outside the Illinois
    office of former House Speaker Dennis J. Hastert, who has opposed
    genocide resolutions.

    Wherever the band appears, their fans speak of what happened to the
    Armenians - something barely taught in American public schools.

    "This band didn't start to change the world. This band didn't start
    to change your mind," singer Serj Tankian says in a performance at
    the Greek Theatre. "This band started to make you ask questions."

    Adam Braun, who is Jewish and a freshman at Harvard-Westlake School,
    said the band's music taught him about a genocide he'd never heard
    of. "The next step is having the courage to stand against these
    things."

    Interwoven with concert performances are expert interviews, including
    one with Armenian-Turkish journalist Hrant Dink, who was assassinated
    in Istanbul last week and whose funeral took place Tuesday; Turkish
    protest footage; and photos and footage of genocides from Armenia to
    Sudan.

    "Why do genocides continue to occur in the 21st century?" says Salih
    Booker, executive director of Global Rights. "Because those that
    committed it in the 20th century got away with it."
Working...
X