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None Dare Call It Genocide

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  • None Dare Call It Genocide

    NONE DARE CALL IT GENOCIDE
    By Andrew E. Mathis

    Online Journal, FL
    Oct 12 2007

    In case you missed it (and really, unless you live in New England,
    or you're Armenian, or you have some interested in the Anti-Defamation
    League [ADL] of B'nai Brith, you probably did), there's been something
    of a to-do between the ADL and very specifically its leader, Abraham
    Foxman, and the Armenian-American community of Watertown, Mass.

    It seems the ADL recently honored the city as one of its "No Place
    for Hate" cities, only to have the city reject the honor because of
    the ADL's position on the mass killings of Armenians by the Turkish
    governments between 1895 and 1922 (peaking in 1915 under the so-called
    Young Turks).

    Estimates run between 600,000 and 1.5 million Armenians killed during
    this period -- either slaughtered wholesale by Ottoman troops and
    auxiliaries or starved, beaten, and raped on death marches out of
    Anatolia for "relocation in the east" in Syria and elsewhere. The
    Armenians have been living in a diaspora very much like that of the
    Jews for a large portion of their history -- certainly since the
    conquest of their land by the Turks -- and these massacres took a
    serious toll on the Armenian population not already safely domiciled
    in North America, South America, Australia, and other points outside
    Asia Minor and the Caucasus.

    So what is the ADL's position on the Armenian massacres? It's shifted
    in the last month. Originally, the position of the ADL and Foxman
    was that what happened to the Armenians does not constitute genocide.

    I'll go over the U.N. definition of genocide in a few moments and
    show that the Armenian massacres more than meet the criteria set
    forth there, but what Foxman and the ADL were up to (and still are)
    is something much more sinister, and the ideology behind what they're
    doing has two prongs: (1) Insisting on the uniqueness of the Holocaust;
    and (2) Trying to preserve the generally positive relationship between
    Turkey and Israel by denying the genocide against the Armenian people.

    The first issue is a thorny one, because I, personally, would say
    that the Nazi Holocaust against European Jewry was unique in some
    ways and not unique in others. But the uniqueness that Foxman and
    others like him (notably Elie Wiesel) argue for is on a mystical level
    (which is garbage -- the Nazis killed the Jews because they were in
    the way and they were deemed as subhumans, and this is pretty much
    the prerequisite conditions for all genocides), on an historical
    level (the Holocaust was the culmination of 2,000 years of European
    anti-Semitism -- and with this point I can agree to a certain extent),
    and the mechanization of the killing of Europe's Jews (fair enough --
    on this point I agree wholly).

    But am I, a Jewish person and Holocaust educator, willing to say that
    this was the worst genocide in history or that other mass killings
    don't count as genocide? In short, do I harbor that level of chutzpah?

    The answer is no. I am personally of the opinion that the worst
    genocide in history took place on the continent where I am currently
    writing this, and that this genocide is continuing as I write. This
    genocide was/is against the indigenous pre-1492 populations of North
    and South America by European conquerors and was one of the most
    wholly effective genocides in all of history. More than 95 percent
    of the original population of these two continents were either
    decimated by disease or simply murdered, mainly by the Spanish and
    British colonists, and later by the U.S. military and Latin American
    death squads. Entire nations were wiped off the face of the earth,
    and because they were often preliterate cultures, no trace of them
    is left except for the occasional archaeological find.

    That I sit on land right now that used to belong to Lenape Indians,
    and I've never met a Lenape Indian (and I've lived in this part of
    the country my entire life) should speak volumes. I would refer
    the interested reader to David E. Stannard's American Holocaust,
    published 15 years ago but no less relevant today. So, in the sick
    moral calculus to which all of us in Holocaust studies must resort
    to at one time or another, I rank the American genocide as a greater
    crime against humanity than the Nazi Holocaust.

    But I digress. Back to the ADL's uniqueness argument: I deny any
    ontological uniqueness to the Holocaust, and I deny that it was worse
    than other genocides. That's the first prong of the ADL's ideology.

    As noted, the ADL's second prong here involves the "special
    relationship" between Turkey and Israel (not to mention Turkey and
    the U.K. and Turkey and the U.S.). Turkey is the only secular Muslim
    state in the world. It is also one of very few Muslim nations that
    has relations with Israel. The Turkish military and the IDF engage
    in joint training exercises and arms sales, and basically Israel
    counts on Turkey as a regional ally, figuring that in a regional war,
    Turkey might side with Israel, and that, subsequently, any attack on
    Turkey by a hostile party would then be an attack against NATO and
    would then involve European-wide involvement. In short, along with
    nuclear weapons, Turkey is Israel's ace in the hole.

    The issue that remains before us, now, is whether what happened to
    the Armenians constitutes genocide. Recalling the U.N. definition,
    a genocide is characterized by any combination of the following: (1)
    Killing members of the group; (2) Causing serious bodily or mental
    harm to members of the group; (3) Deliberately inflicting on the group
    conditions of life, calculated to bring about its physical destruction
    in whole or in part; (4) Imposing measures intended to prevent births
    within the group; and (5) Forcibly transferring children of the group
    to another group.

    The Armenian genocide meets all five of these critiera. Armenians
    could only save their own lives (and even then it was a stretch)
    if they agreed to abandon the Armenian language and adopt Islam
    as their faith (an action that should, under no circumstances, be
    considered "typical" of Islam as a faith). Armenian children were
    given to Turkish families. Forcible relocation always (not sometimes,
    but always) results in deaths of the "relocated" groups.

    So what was Foxman thinking in this odious example of genocide denial
    (denial being what genocide scholar Gregory Stanton has noted is
    typically the final stage in a genocide)? Well, his "denial" is
    really his opposition to a congressional resolution on the Armenian
    genocide. Asked to explain further, Foxman said this: "This is not
    an issue where we take a position one way or the other . . . This is
    an issue that needs to be resolved by the parties, not by us. We are
    neither historians nor arbiters." I'd take him at his word were it
    not for the ADL's unbending support for similar resolutions regarding
    the Holocaust, not to mention the Stalinist firings of New England
    ADL officers who publicly disagreed with Foxman.

    Outrage against Foxman was not limited to Armenians. Jewish and Israeli
    newspaper columnists commented on the issue and Holocaust denial
    scholar Deborah Lipstadt stated categorically that no reasonable
    person could look at the Armenian massacres and not conclude it was
    genocide. Finally, on August 21, Foxman and the ADL, in their own
    words, "revisited" the Armenian genocide.

    "We have never negated but have always described the painful events of
    1915-1918 perpetrated by the Ottoman Empire against the Armenians as
    massacres and atrocities," Foxman said. "On reflection, we have come
    to share the view of Henry Morgenthau, Sr., that the consequences of
    those actions were indeed tantamount to genocide. If the word genocide
    had existed then, they would have called it genocide."

    Pardon me if I'm a little less than impressed. Fire existed before
    it was called fire, and it should be borne in mind as well that fire
    is not "tantamount" to fire. Fire is, quite simply, fire.

    "Having said that," Foxman said in the same statement, "we continue
    to firmly believe that a congressional resolution on such matters
    is a counterproductive diversion and will not foster reconciliation
    between Turks and Armenians and may put at risk the Turkish Jewish
    community and the important multilateral relationship between Turkey,
    Israel and the United States."

    In the end, Foxman tipped his hand on both prongs of the ADL's
    campaign to sanctify the Holocaust as the sine qua non of Jewish
    existence. There was a time when the work of the ADL was useful and
    productive. Those days, sadly, are gone, as the ADL has sunk to the
    level of spying on private citizens, blindly supporting Israel in
    whatever endeavor she undertakes, however wrongheaded, and "expressing
    outrage" at the slightest provocation. The little boy who cried wolf
    comes to mind.

    Or was that the little boy who cried fox?

    Andrew E. Mathis is a medical editor, Holocaust historian, and adjunct
    professor of English and humanities at Villanova University.

    http://onlinejournal.com/artman/publi sh/article_2525.shtml
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