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The Genocide That Must Not Be Forgotten

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  • The Genocide That Must Not Be Forgotten

    WNBC, NY
    Oct 12 2007


    The Genocide That Must Not Be Forgotten

    POSTED: 9:54 am EDT October 12, 2007
    UPDATED: 10:16 am EDT October 12, 2007


    The Turkish government continues to deny that the Armenians were the
    victims of genocide at the hands of the Turks.

    It happened in the early years of the 20th century -- and historians
    have documented the horrors of that time.

    The tragic events of 1915-1923 are evoked again by the vote of a U.S.
    House committee condemning the mass slaughter of Armenians in World
    War II as an act of genocide. The action by the House so upset Turkey
    it has recalled its ambassador to the United States for
    "consultations." In the language of diplomacy, that's how a nation
    voices displeasure, though it's not as severe as withdrawing an
    ambassador.


    In the years 1915-1918, human rights historians say, the first
    genocide of the 20th century took place when 2 million Armenians
    living in Turkey were driven from their homeland. For 3,000 years, an
    Armenian community had flourished near the Black, Mediterranean and
    Caspian seas. The area was known as Asia Minor.

    In the throes of a violent upheaval in Turkey in World War I, many
    thousands of Armenians were slaughtered by Turkish nationalists.
    Indeed, a decision was made at a high level to annihilate the entire
    Armenian population. An estimated 1.5 million were killed.

    Though the Turkish government still denies it ever happened, there
    are ample eyewitness reports of what occurred. Men, women and
    children were corralled. Some were executed immediately. Others were
    tortured with devices modeled on those used in the Spanish
    Inquisition. There were death marches in which thousands of Armenians
    were forced to walk hundreds of miles into the deserts of Syria and
    many perished on the way.

    Henry Morgenthau Sr., grandfather of Manhattan District Attorney
    Robert Morgenthau, was the American ambassador to the Ottoman Empire
    and helped tell the world what was happening.

    Those atrocities were inflicted by Turkish officials a century ago.
    The current leadership of that nation had nothing to do with it.
    What's strange is that, in the minds of Turkish officials today, it
    remains such a searing issue. It's as though they have a lingering
    guilt complex. President Bush says the vote could harm U.S.-Turkish
    relations. The Turkish president Abdullah Gul said that some American
    politicians "have once again sacrificed important matters to petty
    domestic politics."

    A few survivors of the Armenian genocide, in wheelchairs, were on
    hand when the House committee met. They were bearing witness to a
    tragedy they saw as children. It's easy to understand why members of
    America's Armenian community, of all ages, share this memory. For
    every Armenian family, the genocide is part of their history.

    When Adolf Hitler was trying to persuade his aides that a Jewish
    holocaust was no big deal, he said: "Who, after all, speaks today of
    the annihilation of the Armenians?"

    An editorial in the New York Times said that the slaughter of the
    Armenians was the 20th century's first genocide and that it set an
    example for Hitler, and more recently, the Hutu leaders of Rwanda and
    the Sudanese.

    What's perplexing -- and infuriating -- is that the Turks don't get
    it. Why can't they come to terms with their country's past?

    http://www.wnbc.com/politics/14325746/detai l.html

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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