Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Solving the genocides of today more useful than looking back

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

  • Solving the genocides of today more useful than looking back

    San Antonio Express, TX
    Oct 12 2007


    Solving the genocides of today more useful than looking back

    Mansour El-Kikhia:

    Web Posted: 10/11/2007 07:00 PM CDT
    San Antonio Express-News

    I am intrigued by this week's vote in the Foreign Affairs Committee
    of the House of Representatives. The committee voted 27-21 to
    classify the death of Armenians under Turkish occupation at the
    beginning of the previous century as genocide.
    President Bush warned that Turkey would not be pleased by the vote
    and might be so offended that it would suspend all American traffic
    to northern Iraq. However, Bush's major fear is a Turkish invasion of
    Kurdish-controlled areas of Iraq in search of Kurdistan Workers Party
    terrorists who have been conducting operations in Turkey and
    withdrawing to Kurdish Iraq.


    I first learned of the Armenian version of events and the claims of
    genocide many years ago when I lived in Lebanon with its sizable
    Armenian minority. I was even more surprised to find so many
    Armenians learning and speaking Turkish as though they were keeping
    the memory alive.

    While I sympathize with the Armenians, I also feel sorry for the
    Turks, who were severed from their history and culture in the early
    1920s by the founder of modern Turkey, Mustafa Kemal Ataturk. In the
    minds of many Turks, pre-Ataturk Turkey did not exist and they
    certainly don't want to be held accountable for it.

    The Turks will not take responsibility for events not in their memory
    banks and, as expected, many young Turks will respond with hostility
    to the United States, Armenia and Armenians in and outside Turkey.

    I am not surprised at the perseverance of Armenians to rectify what
    they perceive as an injustice committed by the Turks, but I am a
    little surprised at the congressional pandering. What do the
    Armenians and Congress hope to achieve by this action, short of
    alienating a U.S. ally at a time when America needs every one it can
    get?

    Additionally, if Congress wants to play this role, it also needs to
    pass a slew of resolutions classifying other historical atrocities as
    genocide. The first can be in support of the other 3.9 million people
    who died in the ovens of Nazi Germany but whom we rarely hear about;
    these included Gypsies, Poles, Czechs, Germans and other people of
    occupied lands.

    Italy needs to be held accountable for the death of 1.8 million
    Libyans in concentration camps from 1926-1933. France has to be held
    accountable for the murder of more than 1 million Algerians from
    1954-1962. How about a resolution slamming Stalin-era Russia for what
    it did to the Chechnyans and other occupied peoples? Or maybe a
    resolution faulting the Japanese for what they did to China or Korea?


    I hate to say this, but few areas of the world did not suffer at
    human hands, and the time has come to stop holding the children
    responsible for the sins of parents. Only then will humanity be able
    to start fresh.

    Does anyone think that Turkish future policies toward Armenians will
    not be influenced by this vote? Germans resent being reminded every
    day how awful their parents, their grandparents and their culture
    have been, and might still be, for the atrocities committed by Nazi
    thugs. What is preventing closer relations between Asian countries
    except ancient hostilities and claims of genocide?

    I suppose age modifies one's view of the world and provides a point
    of reference. However, I do know that the massacres and genocides we
    experienced during the past decade or two have their roots in history
    because one group or another blames the children for the sins of the
    parents or grandparents. In these we can include Bosnia, Rwanda,
    Liberia, Ivory Coast and a host of others.

    A wise Japanese once said, why worry about your beard if your head is
    going to be cut off? The time has come to solve the current
    genocides, such as the one in Darfur and potential ones in Palestine,
    Western China, Tibet and the former Soviet Republics of Kazakhstan
    and Chechnya, rather than dwell on the past, which certainly has not
    proven to be a lesson for the future.

    http://www.mysanantonio.com/opinion/stories/MYSA 101207.02O.mansour.243aa90.html
Working...
X