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Armenian Genocide Resolution: Turkey's Chutzpah

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  • Armenian Genocide Resolution: Turkey's Chutzpah

    ARMENIAN GENOCIDE RESOLUTION: TURKEY'S CHUTZPAH

    Assyrian International News Agency, CA
    Feb 28 2007

    We are certainly not insensitive to the significance of Turkey's
    support of Israel. But the Turkish government's attempt to capitalize
    on that support by pressing the American Jewish community to oppose a
    Congressional resolution that condemns as "genocide" Turkey's murder
    of a million and a half Armenians during World War I strikes us as
    being the height of chutzpah.

    As The New York Sun reported, on February 5 the Turkish foreign
    minister met with representatives of several major Jewish groups
    and "made a hard sell" against House Resolution 106, which now has
    176 co-sponsors. The Turkish official reportedly appealed to the
    participants by noting -- outrageously, we think -- the uniqueness
    of the German genocide against the Jews. The Turks do not deny that
    between 1915 and 1917 they conducted a devastating military campaign
    against the Armenians and that thousands of Armenians were killed on
    forced marches. They claim, however, that the hapless Armenians were
    a fifth column, often armed and working on behalf of the Russian army
    in World War I.

    But the American ambassador to the Ottoman Empire at the time, Henry
    Morgenthau, wrote in his memoir, "I am confident that the whole
    history of the human race contains no such horrible episode as this."

    The orders for the deportations of the Armenian families in 1915
    "were merely giving a death warrant to a whole race," he wrote.

    Anyone who seriously and objectively considers those events cannot
    but conclude that there was a calculated and purposeful effort to
    exterminate the Armenians. After all, approximately 1.5 million
    perished.

    That said, we understand that opposition to House Resolution 106 does
    not necessarily signify lack of sympathy with the victims, or, indeed,
    sentiment against the concept itself. Not buying into an initiative
    on someone else's schedule is not always an indicator of nefarious
    motives at play.

    We also have no doubt that some would argue the Jewish community should
    oppose the resolution if only to preserve the aura of uniqueness
    surrounding the destruction of European Jewry in the Holocaust. And
    this, perhaps, was the point the Turkish foreign minister was trying
    to make in his presentation to Jewish leaders.

    But acknowledging as genocide the systematic murder of a million and a
    half human beings of a particular ethnic heritage in no way detracts
    from recognition of the Holocaust as a uniquely monumental evil in
    the blood-soaked annals of human history.

    source www.jewishpress.com
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