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  • Genocide denied

    Paly Voice, CA -
    June 10 2007


    Genocide denied


    Posted Fri June 8, 11:54:02 PDT 2007
    By Web staff of the Paly Voice


    This column was submitted by Nanor Balabanian

    "Armenian? What's that?!" I've heard this often ever since I've moved
    to the so-called "melting-pot" of the United States.

    I don't blame students for not knowing what an Armenian is. Most
    students have never even learned about what happened to the Armenians
    in 1915. They've been taught about the Holocaust, and the genocides
    in Cambodia, Bosnia, Rwanda and Sudan. But not about Armenia.

    Being the only full Armenian in a school of 1800 students makes me
    think about where all the Armenians have gone today. Wouldn't
    millions more Armenians be alive today if it were not for the
    genocide?

    Two months ago, President George W. Bush had to think hard whether he
    could use the word "genocide" for the 92-year-old Armenian Genocide
    Memorial Day. Of course he refused to say it and instead called it a
    "National day of remembrance of man's inhumanity to man."

    Since when is genocide a simple act of inhumanity? Why is it that we
    do not characterize the genocide in Darfur as a simple war?

    My great grandmother's survival stories often come to my mind as I
    read about my government's denial of the genocide. She never got the
    chance to live freely, speak out for her rights, or praise her own
    God without facing threats of persecution. America would probably
    have been a haven for her at the time. Yet, little did she know that
    the America she had dreamed about would not believe what had happened
    to her in 1915.

    Living today in a democratic "haven", I feel ashamed to see that my
    country, which strongly advocates for justice and righteousness,
    denies that the genocide ever occurred.

    April 24, 1915, was a mournful day for many Armenians. Because of
    their Christian religion, 200,000 Armenian intellectuals were
    purposely slaughtered by the Turks. Following that day, a mass
    deportation of Armenians occurred during which 1.5 million Armenians
    were brutally massacred because of their faith.

    To deny that such a horrific massacre ever happened is to erase a
    chunk of reality from our history. Imagine taking out World War II
    stories from our history books, or imagine never suggesting that the
    Holocaust happened. That's how Armenians feel today. Betrayed,
    killed, massacred, and still they do not receive the recognition they
    deserve neither by the Turkish officials nor by the American
    government.

    What are the consequences of denial? If we deny that a genocide once
    happened, we are very likely to do it again. Hitler once said, "Who,
    after all, speaks today of the annihilation of the Armenians?"
    justifying himself that if he kills the Jews nobody will remember
    them, just as Armenians are not remembered. If the Armenian genocide
    had gotten the recognition it deserved, Hitler would not have likely
    killed all 6 million Jews. Denying the genocide today is in a way
    agreeing with Hitler as well because America to this day does not
    "speak ... of the annihilation of Armenians".

    Today, we fight to stop the 21st century's first genocide. Imagine
    one day that our children could be banned from learning about Darfur.
    The government will call it a "National day of remembrance of man's
    inhumanity to man" but refuse to call it a genocide because of
    political interests with the Sudanese government.

    If America chooses to delete history and deny historical events
    because of politics, then American politics is corrupt. It is a
    moral, and not political, duty of the United States to look at the
    historical evidence, listen to the plea of the Armenian people, and
    put an end to this 92-year-old lie that genocide never occurred. It
    is our responsibility as students to fight for what is right and
    true.

    I am an Armenian, and want to be heard. I have a right to be heard
    because my ancestors were massacred to do so. I want to take time and
    enjoy the rights I am given by the Constitution of this country, and
    fight for the truth that must be recognized.

    Maybe one day instead of hearing "Armenian? What's that?" I'd hear,
    "Armenian? A genocide survivor."

    This story originally appeared exclusively online on June 8, 2007.

    http://voice.paly.net/view_story.php?id=5590
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