Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Postponement of resolution saddens Bay Area Armenians

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

  • Postponement of resolution saddens Bay Area Armenians

    Mercury-Register, CA
    Nov 3 2007

    Postponement of resolution saddens Bay Area Armenians

    Some Turks relieved as House delays vote on genocide declaration

    By Arya Hebbar, CORRESPONDENT
    Article Launched: 11/03/2007 02:41:57 AM PDT


    Bay Area Armenians are disappointed the House delayed voting on a
    resolution declaring the massacre of Armenians by Ottoman Turks during
    World War I a genocide, but their Turkish counterparts are relieved.
    An international furor caused the bill's Southern California sponsors
    to ask Speaker Nancy Pelosi last week not to bring a vote this year on
    the Armenian Genocide Resolution.
    "It is disappointing that Turkey was shamelessly allowed to interfere
    in the process of a simple resolution," said Roxanne Makasdjian,
    chairwoman of the Bay Area Armenian National Committee. "It is always
    the right time to tell the truth."
    Ilkcan Cokgor, president of the Turkish American Association of
    California, disagreed.
    "All of us Turkish Americans believe very strongly that it is an issue
    between Turkey and Armenia and it is definitely not (the) American
    Congress' business."
    That sentiment was echoed by Oytun Eskiyenenturk, president of Bay
    Area Cultural Connections and a San Francisco resident, who suggested
    "A fact-finding committee with respected historians from both Turkey
    and Armenia should look at evidence and decide if it should be called
    a genocide or not."
    The Armenian-American community had cheered the House
    Committee on Foreign Affairs' passage of the non-binding genocide
    resolution Oct. 10, saying it would bring closure to the thousands of
    Armenians ' estimates range as high as half a million ' who left their
    homeland in search of safety and a better life in the aftermath of
    mass killings of Armenians during World War 1.
    Now, Florence Janjigian, 65, of Saratoga wonders whether the
    resolution will be passed in the lifetime of the remaining genocide
    survivors. Most of them are very old, like her mother, Nevart
    Karagozian, who turned 100 recently.
    "We are kind of small potatoes as far as the United States is
    concerned," said a disheartened Janjigian, reasoning that it was more
    advantageous to America to have Turkey as an ally than express the
    truth about what happened to the Armenian people in World War I.
    But Bay Area residents of Turkish heritage say the resolution would be
    a mark of shame that their children and grandchildren would have to
    carry far into the future. And they argue that the Turkey of today is
    not the same as the Turkey of the Ottoman Empire.
    "I felt like being punished, shamed and isolated. I am a Turkish
    person. I don't want it in my name, in my child's name," said Berna
    Atik-Watson, 41, of Berkeley, who stressed at the same time that no
    human suffering is acceptable.
    Support for the House resolution had dropped from 226 co-sponsors to
    215 in less than two weeks due to pressure from President Bush, senior
    administration officials and Republican congressional leaders who
    opposed the measure because it incensed the Turkish government.
    House critics of the resolution claimed this was not the right time to
    vote on the resolution given Turkey's strategic importance to America
    in the war in Iraq.
    "I am disappointed in the democratic system of the U.S. that it will
    give in to pressure from a foreign government regarding diplomatic
    policy and I am disappointed in our country's leaders," 20-year-old
    Shant Hagopian of Berkeley said of the decision.
    Armenian-Americans say the resolution's passage would validate their
    history, officially acknowledge their suffering, provide proof of
    American solidarity for Armenian-Americans and, perhaps most
    important, bring a sense of closure to the Armenian people. And many
    believe it would improve the relationship between Armenia and Turkey.
    That's a sentiment shared by at least some Turkish people in the Bay
    Area, such as Mia Koknar-Tockey of San Francisco. A member of Opening
    Mountain, a group that brings together Armenian and Turkish people as
    a solution to the 100-year-old conflict, she said that the genocide
    needs to be recognized.
    "We
    e there is a big fear about us Turks, but when they talk to us they
    understand we are not monsters. We have the same food, jokes; we are
    culturally so close," Koknar-Tockey said.
    The group was started by an Armenian who didn't want her fellow
    Armenians to raise their kids with hatred and fear of the Turks.
    "For me it was just a political thing," says Koknar-Tockey. "For them
    (Armenians) it is not (just) political; it is also part of their
    lives. They are still carrying all these memories."
    That's certainly true for 100-year-old Karagozian, who lost many
    family members in the conflict. She is among the hundreds of thousands
    of supporters of the resolution who refer to the written records of
    Henry Morgenthau, the American ambassador to the Ottoman Empire from
    1913 to 1916, as evidence of the genocide, University of San Francisco
    professor Stephen Zunes said.
    Canada, France, Italy, Russia and other nations, as well as 40
    American states including California, have recognized the Armenian
    Genocide, Zunes said.
    The International Association of Genocide Scholars, which declares
    itself a "global, interdisciplinary, non-partisan organ-ization" that
    furthers research about genocide, recognized the genocide and
    supported the resolution.
    The issue is far from settled ' nor should it be, says Khatchig Tazian
    of San Mateo.
    "It's significance for the future is one of deterrence. Though such
    resolutions won't bring back the dead, they might have an effect on
    regimes that contemplate such actions in the future," Tazian said.
    And despite the decision not to go forward with the vote, Tamar
    Sarkissian, 27, of Oakland remains hopeful.
    "The resolution has been shot down before, but we kept moving
    forward," she said. "We got closer this time."
Working...
X