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Speech by Ambassador Vahe Gabrielyan at Wales Memorial unveiling

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  • Speech by Ambassador Vahe Gabrielyan at Wales Memorial unveiling

    PRESS RELEASE
    Wales-Armenia Solidarity
    Contact: E. Williams
    Cardiff, Wales
    Tel: 07870267447
    Email: [email protected]

    Speech by His Excellency Vahe Gabrielian, Ambassador, at the
    Unveiling of the Memorial to the Victims of the Armenian Genocide
    at the Temple of Peace, Cardiff, 3rd November 2007

    Your Graces,
    My Lord,
    Reverend fathers,
    Ladies and Gentlemen


    This is a very special day for us. This is a very special day for the
    British Armenian Community, for the people of Armenia, Armenians in many
    other countries and a special day for the Welsh people. I am not the one to
    speak on behalf of the Welsh, our hosts have already spoken and others will
    still speak later on, but I am sure that making this day special for us,
    they have made it special for themselves as well.

    When one thinks about the meaning of this day, there are some obvious things
    to say that come to mind immediately. It is very important that the Genocide
    of Armenians be internationally recognized and condemned, that ultimately
    Turkey recognizes the hideous crime against humanity and apologies,
    establishes relations with Armenia and pledges to build its relations
    pursuant to international standards and values of contemporary,
    progressive and democratic family of nations. It is, of course, a fact that
    on the British Isles the Welsh authorities are in the vanguard of standard
    bearers of human values and the Welsh people should be thanked and commended
    for their solidarity with a just cause. These have been already said and
    will, I believe, be said in the coming addresses and many more times in the
    future.

    One may ask, however, why in Wales of all places on these isles? Of course,
    the lobbyists have spared no effort or energy. Nevertheless, I would think
    that the real reason why this happens here is the depth of similarities
    between our peoples. It is because of the values that we share. And
    certainly there is more common between us that meet the eye. We look at the
    Welsh and see a nation of arts and talents, heroes and thinkers, of
    difficult history, yet proud sons and we realise that this is what we at
    least think of ourselves too. From the 12th century to our days Wales has
    been celebrating the National Eisteddfod of Wales, the oldest and largest
    festival of culture in Europe. We, Armenians, have been celebrating the Day
    of Interpreters since the 5th, being probably the only ones to do that, at
    least for that long. Our national hero, the hero of our Epic Poem is David
    of Sassun, who shares a name with your patron saint, St. David. However
    similarities like this are too many to list and much more will emerge once
    we get to know each other better. THAT, we certainly want to do. Forgive me
    the pun, but who would not like to be equal partners and friend with a
    nation one of whose talented sons (Robert Recorde) invented the equals sign?

    Some people may see these words as sheer politics and a formal paying of
    tribute. It is not, because what is happening today in Cardiff is truly a
    groundbreaking event. A groundbreaking event not only because it breaks
    through the coldness of official shyness for recognition, the concern to
    upset a strategic ally by calling the things by their names; it breaks
    through cold-minded reasoning and calculation as what should be offset with
    what; and gives way to what comes from the heart. And today's most important
    lesson is that today we announced that the hearts of the Welsh and Armenian
    peoples beat on the same frequency and accelerate to express their feelings
    at the same impulses. This particular instance of historical injustice has
    made our hearts react the same way. And this is the most important part. It
    is important because from now on every Welshman or guest of your capital
    city passing by the consecrated cross-stone in the grounds of the Temple of
    Peace will think of Armenians and of the special links between our nations
    and thin and appreciate why this monument is here. The media in Armenia
    today already spoke of this event. They have been mentioning it for some
    time and the ripples that this event has created will travel a long distance
    through the Armenian and other media throughout the world to the heart of
    every Armenian and every person who feels they should do right in their
    lives. In an interview of mine to one of leading national newspapers in
    Armenia, published today, I have already thanked Wales-Armenia Solidarity,
    John Torossyan and Elian Williams for their dedication and resolve to see
    this wonderful initiative to the end. I have thanked the authorities of
    Cardiff for the permission and unswerving support to erect the cross-stone
    on a piece of public land and the entire Welsh nation for their assistance
    and understanding. It is with greatest pleasure and humbleness that I do it
    again here. Thank you. Thank you to the Welsh Assembly, President Lord
    Dafydd and to the Church of Wales. Special thanks to Stephen Thomas of the
    Welsh International Centre and the Temple of Peace trustees for their
    continuing cooperation and help. And I would also like to thank everyone who
    takes part in today's ceremony, from organizers to performers and the
    audience and supporters.


    Ladies and Gentlemen,


    I am not going to lecture you about the Genocide of Armenians. Much has been
    said about it. Also, here and today there is no need to preach the
    converted. I would, however, like to state the following. The insistence of
    Armenians all over the globe and the consistent policies of the Republic of
    Armenia that the massacres of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire be recognized
    as Genocide are not a sign of hostility or of refusal to talk. On the
    contrary, given Turkey's vehement yet fruitless denial campaign, they are
    the only ways to reconciliation.

    We are trying hard to understand Turkey's logic of exerting so much effort
    to abort the increasingly unstoppable recognition process. It cannot. It is
    dependent neither on Turkey, nor Armenia or the Armenian Diaspora. It is
    time the opponents realized two things: 1.People throughout the world
    support the recognition efforts of Armenians not because of lobbying but
    because they believe it is the right thing to do and 2. The international
    recognition is a momentum-gathering process of its own that will only stop
    when it reaches its culmination, its ultimate logical objective - the
    recognition. Following the recent approval by the US Congressional Committee
    on Foreign Affairs of the Genocide Bill, House Resolution 106, we have seen
    an unprecedented campaign of misinformation, outright threats and
    blackmailing by the Turkish authorities and use of force and uncivilized
    behaviour by Turkish mobs. The result has been that in places where they
    previously shunned the issue, they now talk about it, people who did not
    know, now ask questions, papers that refused to publish a paragraph on the
    subject now allocate pages, all possible TV and radio stations discussed the
    event or at least reported it.

    The stronger the Turkish denial Campaign grows, the more people condemn it.
    This is a guaranteed way to recognition. Had Turkey recognized it itself,
    before many others did, it would have saved itself a lot of embarrassment
    and paved an easier route to reconciliation.

    There is one last thing I would like to mention. Every day I come across
    statements by Turkish officials of various calibre that the Turkish Prime
    Minister proposed in a letter to the Armenian President to set up a
    commission of historians to discuss the issue and allegedly, still awaits an
    answer. Apart from the well observed trick that any Turkish initiative to
    demonstrate some goodwill comes in a moment when a Genocide Resolution is
    ripe either at the US Congress or some other important institution, with the
    sole aim of derailing it, I must declare, that all these statements are,
    most often knowingly, intended to mislead the public, including the Turkish
    one. The truth is that the answer to that letter was sent soon after it was
    received. President Kocharyan said that we do not think that
    inter-governmental relations and issues of paramount importance like this
    could or should be left to historians.

    Once politicians and diplomats establish formal relations and formal grounds
    for a dialogue, then we are ready to talk about anything. We do not of
    course question the fact of the Genocide but we are prepared to talk about
    the ways of overcoming its consequences. Could one expect us to discuss
    anything, if have no diplomatic relations, if the border is closed and if
    no-one in Turkey can even utter the word Genocide without being punished?
    How then can this offer be seen as a serious step towards reconciliation,
    moreover, be advocated as such? For expressing a dissenting from the
    official position opinion people in that country are either prosecuted under
    the infamous article 301 of their Penal Code or simply shot dead on their
    doorstep when they speak about reconciliation.

    But once again, today's event is not about Turkey. It is about respecting
    the memory of the million and a half innocent people who perished suffering
    terrible tortures because of their religion and nationality. The event is
    about the strengthening of understanding, cooperation and friendship between
    the Welsh and Armenian peoples.


    To both notions I bow my head.

    Thank you.
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