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  • Genocide resolution sends vital message

    Tracy Press, CA
    Oct 14 2007


    Genocide resolution sends vital message

    Tracy Press / Saturday, 13 October 2007

    An op-ed by Assemblymen Greg Aghazarian and Paul Krekorian


    This week, members of the House Foreign Relations Committee sent a
    powerful message heard around the world that brutality and inhumane
    acts will never be tolerated by the land of the free and the home of
    the brave.

    Members of the committee stood together and courageously voted to
    pass House Resolution 106, important human rights legislation
    authored by Congressman Adam Schiff, D-Pasadena, and co-sponsored by
    members from both parties.

    HR 106 will put the U.S. government on record once and for all in
    recognizing the atrocities committed by the Ottoman Empire following
    the onset of World War I for what they were - a mass genocide
    conducted against an innocent people in an act of ethnic cleansing.
    Those who voted to support the resolution courageously ignored a
    vocal and intense opposition, and some not-so-idle threats from the
    Turkish government, to do the right thing for our country.

    What occurred during that dark period in world history is without
    question. Between 1915 and 1923, the Ottoman Turks expelled nearly 2
    million Armenians from what had been their homeland for more than
    2,500 years. More than 1.5 million men, women and children were
    brutally murdered, targeted for no other reason than who they were as
    a people.

    Another 500,000 Armenians were sent fleeing from their homes and
    lives into exile around the world. Many of these exiles eventually
    settled in the U.S., and we're proud that so many eventually called
    California their home.

    At the time, the leaders of the Allied Powers - England, France and
    Russia - called the actions by the Ottoman Turks `a crime against
    humanity.' The U.S. ambassador at the time, Henry Morgenthau,
    described it as a `campaign of race extermination.' Even the post-war
    Turkish government took action against the Ottoman leaders involved
    in the acts of barbarism against the Armenians, trying and convicting
    them for these massacres.

    We are pleased to see Democrats and Republicans in Congress finally
    stand with us in California in honoring the steely resolve of the
    Armenian people and remembering this tremendous atrocity that
    needlessly claimed the lives of so many innocent people. For years,
    the state of California has gone on record in condemning this
    barbaric act of genocide by the Ottoman Turks. This year, we were
    pleased to jointly author Assembly Joint Resolution 15, which called
    upon Congress to join the California Legislature in recognizing the
    Armenian genocide.

    Standing up for human rights and defending freedom at home and around
    the world is not a partisan issue. Every year, lawmakers from both
    parties in the California Legislature set aside our differences and
    join together in a solemn ceremony in solidarity with the survivors
    of this horrible atrocity. Two years ago, the Legislature unanimously
    passed Senate Bill 424 by former Sen. Chuck Poochigian, R-Fresno, to
    declare in state law that, in California, April 24 each year will be
    officially designated as a day of remembrance for the Armenian
    genocide.

    We commend our colleagues in Washington, D.C., for taking this
    historic vote, and encourage the entire House to quickly follow their
    purposeful example. Not only will this allow the few remaining
    survivors to finally heal the emotional wounds that they have carried
    with them for a lifetime, but it also reinforces the moral authority
    of the U.S. as a beacon of freedom and democracy.

    It is shocking to think that such inhumane acts could have occurred
    less than 100 years ago. That's why passing legislation like HR 106
    is so important. Going forward, it is up to us - the survivors, their
    descendants and freedom-loving people around the world - to ensure
    that never again will innocent people be persecuted because of their
    ethnic background, country of origin or religion.

    - Greg Aghazarian, R-Stockton, represents the 26th Assembly District
    and Paul Krekorian, D-Burbank, represents the 43rd Assembly District.
    They are of Armenian descent.

    http://tracypress.com/content/view/11709/2244/

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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