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For Rep. Markey, Armenian genocide issue hits close to home

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  • For Rep. Markey, Armenian genocide issue hits close to home

    For Rep. Markey, Armenian genocide issue hits close to home

    By Associated Press | Saturday, October 13, 2007 |
    http://www.bostonherald.com | Around the World

    WASHINGTON - For Edward Markey, the debate raging in Congress over a
    resolution declaring the World War I-era killings of Armenians a
    genocide strikes close to home.

    The Massachusetts Democrat's suburban Boston congressional district
    has a large Armenian-American population, centered in Watertown, that
    has long been passionate about the issue.

    The Armenian genocide debate has a human face for Markey, who has
    forged close ties to the Armenian-American community he represents.
    Markey has been a leading advocate for the resolution on Capitol Hill.

    "He understands the issue broadly and deeply and he's been a terrific
    advocate," said state Rep. Rachel Kaprielian, D-Watertown, an
    Armenian-American. "He knows many Armenians in his life."

    Roughly one in five residents of Watertown, with a population of about
    33,000, can claim Armenian descent, Kaprielian said.

    "It's deeply meaningful to us," she said. "In order to truly grieve
    and move on, there needs to be acknowledgment and finality."

    At issue is the killing of up to 1.5 million Armenians by Ottoman
    Turks around the time of World War I, an event widely viewed by
    genocide scholars as the first genocide of the 20th century. Turkey
    denies that the deaths constituted genocide, saying the toll has been
    inflated, and those killed were victims of civil war and unrest that
    killed Muslims as well as the overwhelmingly Christian Armenians.

    Though the resolution would have no binding effect on U.S. foreign
    policy, critics say it could hurt an already strained relationship
    with Turkey, a key ally in the terror war.

    Markey, who first heard about the issue as a freshman state
    representative in 1973, speaks at annual rememberance ceremonies for
    Armenian victims held at the Statehouse in Boston. The thinning ranks
    of survivors of the mass killings is honored at the event.

    "The survivors are the eyewitnesses to history," Markey said in a
    recent telephone interview with The Associated Press. "They force the
    living to deal with what happened to 1.5 million people who were
    killed. Just seeing them is something that, like the Holocaust
    survivors, forces you to deal with the reality of what happened to
    their relatives."

    As dean of the Massachusetts congressional delegation, Markey has
    worked to unite his Bay State House colleagues on the issue.

    Sharistan Melkonian, chairperson of the Armenian National Committee of
    Eastern Massachusetts, praised Markey, saying he was instrumental in
    calling on House Speaker Nancy Pelosi to put the resolution to a floor
    vote.

    "He has in various ways led efforts to push Congress to take the
    principled position that it should," Melkonian said.

    Markey is a close political ally of Pelosi, who represents a
    California district with a large Armenian population.

    On Wednesday, the House Foreign Affairs panel approved the resolution,
    setting the stage for a House vote that backers hope will be this
    year. Armenian-American interest groups have lobbied Congress for
    decades to pass a resolution.

    The Bush administration, which is lobbying hard to persuade Congress
    to reject the resolution, has stressed the need for good relations
    with Turkey.

    Defense Secretary Robert Gates has said the measure is damaging
    relations at a time when U.S. forces in Iraq rely heavily on Turkish
    permission to use their airspace for cargo flights. Several former
    secretaries of state have also warned the resolution could harm U.S.
    national security interests.

    The congressional debate comes on the heels of recent controversy over
    the issue in Massachusetts.

    In August, the New York-based Anti-Defamation League, a Jewish group
    known for combatting anti-Semitism, reversed its position and labeled
    the killings as "tantamount to genocide." That change came days after
    the ADL fired its local director in Massachusetts for taking the same
    stance. He was soon rehired.

    Markey was among those who publicly urged the ADL to change course.

    Despite changing its stance in August, the ADL has said it is opposed
    to the House resolution because it would not help improve relations
    between Turks and Armenians.

    "We don't think Congress is the appropriate place to resolve this
    historical debate," ADL national director Abraham Foxman said.

    A panel of historians from both sides would be a better way to resolve
    the issue, Foxman said.

    Source: http://www.bostonherald.com/news/international/gen eral/view.bg?articleid=1037891
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