Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Two Standards On 20th-Century Atrocities

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

  • Two Standards On 20th-Century Atrocities

    TWO STANDARDS ON 20TH-CENTURY ATROCITIES

    The Washington Post
    October 16, 2007 Tuesday
    Regional Edition

    Last week, the House Foreign Affairs Committee approved a resolution
    commemorating the Armenian genocide. As the principal author of the
    measure and one of more than 225 sponsors, I was deeply disappointed
    by The Post's editorial in opposition to the bill ["Worse Than
    Irrelevant," Oct. 10].

    Earlier this year, the House passed a resolution calling on Japan to
    accept responsibility for and apologize to the thousands of "comfort
    women" who were forced into sexual slavery by the Japanese army during
    World War II. Despite vociferous Japanese opposition, The Post had
    rightly criticized Tokyo for its failure to accept responsibility
    for the suffering of the "comfort women" ["Shinzo Abe's Double Talk,"
    editorial, March 25].

    That the deliberate murder of 1.5 million Armenians between 1915 and
    1923 constitutes genocide is almost universally accepted by historians
    and is chronicled in great detail in our National Archives. This
    wound festers because Turkey refuses to acknowledge the crimes of
    its Ottoman forebears. As Elie Wiesel has said, genocide denial is a
    "double killing": It murders the dignity of the survivors and seeks
    to destroy remembrance of the crime.

    How can a newspaper argue in March that recognizing the suffering of
    the comfort women is vital but assert now that recognizing the murder
    of 1.5 million is somehow "petty"?

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X