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Feinstein Cosponsors Resolution to Recognize Armenian Resolution

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  • Feinstein Cosponsors Resolution to Recognize Armenian Resolution

    PRESS RELEASE:
    Contact: Scott Gerber 202/224-9629

    Wednesday, March 14, 2007
    http://feinstein.senate.gov/


    Senator Feinstein Cosponsors Senate Resolution Calling on
    President Bush to Recognize the Armenian Genocide


    Washington, DC - U.S. Senator Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) today
    announced that she would cosponsor a Senate resolution offered by
    Senator Richard Durbin (D-Ill.), calling on the President to recognize
    the Armenian Genocide.

    The following statement by Senator Feinstein was submitted today to the
    Congressional Record:

    "Mr. President, as we approach the 92nd anniversary of the Armenian
    Genocide, I rise today in support of a resolution introduced by Senator
    Richard Durbin, calling on the President to recognize the Armenian
    Genocide.

    Specifically, this resolution would:

    * Encourage the President to incorporate the memory and lessons
    of the Armenian Genocide into the foreign policies of the United States,
    and;

    * Urge the President to accurately portray this terrible episode
    as 'genocide' in his annual statement.

    Between 1915 and 1923, as many as 1.5 million Armenians perished and
    500,000 were exiled by the Ottoman government in a systematic campaign
    of murder, deportation, and forced starvation.

    92 years later, nearly all of the survivors are no longer with us. Yet
    their solemn voices still echo, urging us to remember them and work to
    ensure that their suffering was not in vain.

    In my 15 years in the United States Senate, I have received thousands of
    letters from members of the Armenian-American community in my home state
    of California, encouraging our government to recognize the Armenian
    Genocide. Many of them are descendants of the genocide's survivors, who
    immigrated to the United States and, over the course of a few decades,
    built a strong and vibrant community in California and elsewhere.

    For the genocide's victims, there can be no justice. But by preserving
    and cherishing their memory, we can begin healing the wounds that still
    linger.

    The recent murder of Hrant Dink, a Turkish-Armenian journalist who
    championed human rights and advocated Turkish recognition of the
    Armenian Genocide, serves as a chilling reminder of the dangers that
    loom in our silence. An open, informed, and tolerant discussion of the
    genocide is necessary for true and lasting reconciliation between
    present-day Turkey and the Armenian people.

    Equally important, recalling the Armenian Genocide is essential to the
    prevention of ongoing and future atrocities, including the genocide in
    Darfur. By taking an unequivocal stance against genocide-regardless of
    where or when it occurs-we and other members of the international
    community will send a strong message that such atrocities will not be
    tolerated. Let us remember Adolf Hitler's ominous words on the eve of
    the 1939 Nazi invasion of Poland: 'Who, after all, speaks today of the
    annihilation of the Armenians?'

    So today, let us speak loudly. Let us join the hundreds of thousands of
    Armenian-Americans in my home state of California and across the United
    States, as well as millions of people around the world, in acknowledging
    and commemorating the Armenian Genocide. Let us ensure that the legacy
    of these atrocities is one of reconciliation and hope.

    And let us fulfill the promises our parents made us, and we made to our
    children: never again."

    ###

    ____________________________
    Sc ott Gerber
    Director of Communications
    Office of Senator Dianne Feinstein
    [email protected]
    202-22 4-9629
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