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We Can No Longer Deny History

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  • We Can No Longer Deny History

    Inside Pulse, NY
    Oct 12 2007


    We Can No Longer Deny History

    Posted By Nick Rafter on 10.12.2007

    "Who Remembers the Armenians?"


    Those words were uttered by Adolf Hitler at the dawn of World War II.
    Hitler was asked by his generals what he thought the world would say
    if they killed everyone who got in their way during the 1939 invasion
    of Poland.


    There's a thin line between "atrocity" and "massacre" and what we
    describe as "genocide." Surely we all agree what the Turkish did
    during World War I against the Ottoman Empire's Armenian population
    is indeed an atrocity. It was indeed a massacre, but it also was
    genocide. We can no longer to afford to deny history, for perhaps if
    we did remember the Armenians in 1939, Hitler's genocide may not have
    happened.


    Our relationship with Turkey is a unique and important one. Having
    been to Turkey recently, I can account for how Westernized and modern
    the country really is and how friendly to Americans the Turkish
    people are. Still, good friends do not deny the mistakes their
    friends make, especially if it can prevent those mistakes from
    happening to someone else in the future. Turkey committed genocide 90
    years ago, and the Turley that exists today is a completely different
    one than the Turkey that slaughtered 1.5 million Armenians, but it
    does not erase history. Germany knows this, Turkey must also
    understand this.


    Already, a slew of our allies, including members of NATO, do
    recognize the genocide including; Argentina, Armenia, Austria,
    Belgium, Canada, Cyprus, France, Greece, Italy, Lebanon, Lithuania,
    The Netherlands, Poland, Russia, Slovakia, Sweden, Switzerland,
    Uruguay, Vatican City and Venezuela. Wales in Britain and New South
    Wales in Australia also recognize what happened as a genocide, as do
    39 US States; Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado,
    Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Illinois, Kansas,
    Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota,
    Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New
    Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon,
    Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Tennessee, Utah, Vermont,
    Virginia, Washington and Wisconsin. Even as the genocide was going
    on, in 1916, the United States Ambassador to Turkey, Henry Morgenthau
    Sr. described the acts against the Armenians as "race extermination."



    If the United States truly wants to keep its moral authority in the
    world. If the United States truly wants to be the beacon of freedom
    and the advocate for human rights, then we have to call out our
    friends and allies when they are wrong. We cannot continue to be the
    world's advocate for freedom and human rights when we only advocate
    when it's convenient for us, and ignore history when it's not. We
    would not rescind our beliefs that the Holocaust was genocide if
    Germany threatens to close Rammstein unless we do. Turkey sought to
    eliminate the Armenians from Turkish territory, either by deporting
    them or by killing them, just as Hitler sought to rid Germany of
    Jews. All the Armenians were guilty of was having the gall to ask for
    independence, something we know all too dear. No amount o resistance
    from the Armenians gave the Turkish the right to do what they did.


    Also, when did we start to suddenly care about what NATO allies think
    about us? George W. Bush didn't take Turkey into consideration when
    he invaded Iraq and because of the Kurdish issue, Turkey had a huge
    stake in what would happen in Iraq, and our administration barely
    took them into account. Now, suddenly, we're concerned?


    The United States Congress is not out to destroy Turkey, or even make
    our friend look bad. Rather, they are seeking to remember the
    Armenians, so another madman like Adolf Hitler doesn't turn around
    and throw our denial in our face and use it to justify their
    genocide.

    http://moodspins.insidepulse.com/articles/71154/ 2007/10/12/we-can-no-longer-deny-history.html
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