Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

TEL AVIV: The Road To Recognition Passes Through Jerusalem

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

  • TEL AVIV: The Road To Recognition Passes Through Jerusalem

    THE ROAD TO RECOGNITION PASSES THROUGH JERUSALEM
    By Anshel Pfeffer

    Ha'aretz, Israel
    Oct 11 2007

    "The Turks are not the only ones who believe the way to Washington
    passes through Jerusalem," says Archbishop Aris Shirvanian, director
    of Ecumenical and Foreign Relations for the Armenian Patriarchate of
    Jerusalem. "We also know that this alliance is very important, and the
    day Israel recognizes the Armenian genocide, the U.S. administration
    will, too."

    The almost mystical belief that Israel and the Jewish lobby have the
    power to sway votes on Capitol Hill is sometimes reminiscent of the
    conspiracy theory in the style of the protocols of the Elders of
    Zion. This is probably the one thing the Turks and Armenians have
    in common in their historic war over the recognition of the Armenian
    holocaust.

    The archbishop was not surprised that Turkish Foreign Minister Ali
    Babacan chose this week to act in Jerusalem against U.S. Congress'
    decision to recognize the genocide.

    "Recent statements in the U.S. led the Turks to suspect that the Jews
    and Armenians were collaborating to pass the law in Congress. They
    know the Jews in the U.S. have close ties with Israel, so they are
    pressing the government here as they have in the past," he says.

    There is no escaping the Armenian holocaust in the narrow streets of
    the Armenian Quarter in Jerusalem's Old City. Posters on every wall
    call on people to remember it and a new monument in the Theological
    Seminary's yard is to be inaugurated on memorial day on April 24.

    The memorial features a large Armenian cross and six smaller ones,
    representing the West Armenian districts where the slaughter took
    place during World War I.

    But Shirvanian and the 20,000 Armenians living in Israel know that the
    way to the recognition of their holocaust is still long and paved with
    disappointment. They also understand that remembering their massacre
    has become a cipher in the complex equation of global politics.

    It includes strategic American and Israeli interests in conflicts with
    Syria and terrorism, Turkish national pride, concern for Istanbul's
    Jews and relations between minority groups in America.

    There is little place for history or justice in such an equation.

    One example is the decision of the Anti-Defamation League of B'nai
    Brith six weeks ago to recognize the Armenian massacre as genocide.

    The statement followed ongoing pressure by Armenian communities that
    argued that an organization that fights racism cannot ignore another
    nation's genocide.

    A few months ago, a controversy erupted in the organization and the
    ADL's New England branch director, who sided with the Armenians on
    this issue, was fired. This led to contributors' pressures on the
    ADL and finally director and chairman Abraham Foxman announced that
    the ADL was changing its position.

    The Turkish rage following the move was not directed at the
    ADL's offices in Washington but toward Jerusalem. Turkish Prime
    Minister Tayyip Erdogan called President Shimon Peres and asked him
    to intervene. Peres contacted Foxman who promised to issue a new
    statement saying that the matter was merely semantic and that the
    ADL objected anyway to a resolution proposal in Congress.

    The Turks knew they could depend on Peres. Five years ago, when then
    education minister Yossi Sarid said at a remembrance ceremony for
    the Armenian massacre that it would be taught as a subject in Israeli
    schools, then foreign minister Peres leaped to disassociate Barak's
    government from the statement. He rushed to Ankara and stated that
    Israel regarded the Armenian affair as "a disaster" but not genocide.

    "We sent him a letter of protest and he didn't reply," says Archbishop
    Aris. "Since then, we haven't had any contact with him."

    http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/91 1630.html
Working...
X