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Assemblymember Paul Krekorian writes to Rep. Jane Harman

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  • Assemblymember Paul Krekorian writes to Rep. Jane Harman

    From the Desk of California State Legislator
    Assemblymember Paul Krekorian
    Office of Assemblymember Paul Krekorian
    Contact: Karo Torossian
    620 N. Brand Blvd. # 403
    Glendale, CA 91203
    Phone: (818) 240-6330
    Fax: (818) 240-4632


    Dear Representative Harman:

    For 92 years, Armenian Americans throughout the world have sought
    justice for one of the most horrendous crimes in the history of mankind
    - the Armenian Genocide by the Turkish government during the waning days
    of the Ottoman Empire. Until this week, your co-authorship of House
    Resolution 106 demonstrated that you understood what has always been
    obvious - that the wholesale slaughter of one and a half million
    innocent Armenians undeniably constituted the first genocide of the
    Twentieth Century.

    Because you have appeared to understand this undeniable historical fact,
    I was stunned to read your recent letter to Representatives Lantos and
    Ros-Lehtinen seeking to avoid a vote on the very resolution you
    co-authored - and promising to oppose it when it comes to a vote.
    Words cannot describe how much you have infuriated the Armenian-American
    community with this outrageous attempt to lobby your colleagues on
    behalf of historical revisionists. Frankly, your letter represents a
    breathtaking degree of hypocrisy that is, to many of us, inexcusable.

    I was sickened to read your assertion that this is the "wrong time" for
    the U.S. to recognize the historical truth of the Genocide, out of fear
    that we may "embarrass or isolate" Turkish leadership. Representative
    Harman, after 92 years of waiting, when exactly will be the right time
    to acknowledge the attempted extermination of an entire nation? How
    much longer should Armenians - and everyone who cares about eliminating
    genocide of all kinds - continue to wait for the "right time" for
    justice?

    And how much more of America's interests - and in fact America's soul -
    should we continue to surrender to avoid embarrassing the Turkish
    government? After you voted to authorize the U.S. invasion of Iraq, for
    example, our Armed Forces sought permission from our "ally" Turkey to
    allow U.S. troops to use Turkish bases to open a northern front. Of
    course, the Turkish government refused those requests by our military -
    and in so doing almost certainly caused a higher rate of American
    casualties. In short, the "ally" that you are concerned about
    embarrassing is responsible for death and injury to courageous Americans
    in the Armed Forces.

    You claim to base your complete reversal in position in part on your
    recent visit to Turkey, in which you met "colleagues of murdered
    journalist Hrant Dink." Hrant Dink was a martyr who was murdered by a
    Turkish extremist precisely because he demanded that Turks accept
    responsibility for the Genocide. The very government that you are
    concerned about embarrassing - what you call the "moderate Islamist
    state" of "modern Turkey" - was criminally prosecuting Hrant Dink at the
    time of his murder for having spoken the truth about the Genocide and
    "insulting Turkishness." Threatening journalists with imprisonment for
    speaking truth is hardly a sign of moderation - and I simply cannot
    imagine that Hrant Dink or his family or his friends would ever support
    your turnabout on this defining moral issue.

    All Americans should be proud and grateful that your father, like so
    many others, was able to find refuge from Nazi Germany in the U.S., a
    fact that illustrates the best of what America stands for. At the same
    time, it is likely that the Holocaust would never have occurred had the
    world immediately meted out appropriate justice for the victims of the
    Armenian Genocide that preceded it. Millions of innocent Jews and
    others died during World War II because the world had looked away from
    the atrocities of World War I. Millions more would later die in
    genocides in Cambodia and Rwanda - and even as I write this letter,
    genocide continues to occur in Darfur. Your reference to your father's
    experience, therefore, is especially shocking in a letter in which you
    choose to side with apologists for the perpetrators of genocide.

    I would like to request that you meet with me and other leaders in the
    Armenian community at your earliest convenience to discuss your change
    in position on House Resolution 106. In light of your letter's
    reference to Nazi Germany, I would also like to include leaders of
    Jewish World Watch in that meeting, as well as representatives of the
    Sudanese and Rwandan communities.

    As Martin Luther King taught us, an injustice anywhere is a threat to
    justice everywhere. In no context is that more true than in the history
    of genocide. House Resolution 106 therefore is not an academic
    exercise. It is a moral step toward demanding, once and for all, that
    genocide will not be tolerated by the American people any time,
    anywhere.

    Please reconsider your misguided reversal on this vitally important
    issue of human rights and justice. I look forward to your immediate
    response.

    Very truly yours,

    PAUL KREKORIAN
    Assemblymember, 43rd District

    cc: The Honorable Tom Lantos
    The Honorable Ileana Ros-Lehtinen
    The Honorable Adam Schiff
    Members of the House Committee on Foreign Affairs
    Rabbi Harold Schulweiss

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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