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EDITORIALS It Won't Go Away When History Can'T Be Evaded

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  • EDITORIALS It Won't Go Away When History Can'T Be Evaded

    EDITORIALS IT WON'T GO AWAY WHEN HISTORY CAN'T BE EVADED

    Arkansas Democrat-Gazette (Little Rock)
    October 16, 2007 Tuesday

    "When the Turkish authorities gave the orders for these deportations
    [of the Armenians], they were merely giving the death warrant to a
    whole race; they understood this well, and, in their conversations
    with me, they made no particular attempt to conceal the fact. . . .

    Practically all of them were atheists, with no more respect for
    Mohammedanism than for Christianity, and with them the one motive
    was cold-blooded, calculating state policy."

    -Henry Morgenthau, U.S. Ambassador to the Ottoman Empire, 1913-1916.

    "For nothing is lost, nothing is ever lost."

    -Robert Penn Warren, All the King's Men

    WHAT WAS it Mr. Faulkner said? The past is never dead. It's not even
    past. The man was on to something. Because his words keep coming
    to mind whenever somebody tries to ignore the darker episodes of
    man's history.

    Who's the latest to put on the blinders? Once again, it's Turkey,
    whose leaders have been trying for nigh unto a century to minimize
    the massacre of Armenians there during the First World War. This
    time, the Turkish denial threatens to turn into an international
    incident. With the United States on the other side.

    It's always sad when man cannot or dare not face his past-whether
    it's a person who can't admit the harm he's done or a whole country
    that avoids owning up. In either case, the one who suffers most is
    the denier. Without an admission of responsibility, there can be
    no selfforgiveness. Instead, those in denial embark on an endless
    series of explanations that don't explain, excuses that don't excuse,
    or even outright falsehoods, which are soon enough exposed.

    In the case of Turkey and the Armenians, by now most of the world
    has recognized the terrible thing that happened there: As many as
    1,500,000 Armenians, who found themselves an ethnic and religious
    minority in the old Ottoman Empire, were systematically led to their
    deaths under Turkish rule. Hundreds of thousands more were forcibly
    deported. The massacres peaked in 1915-1917. In the pitiless glare
    of history, the massacre of the Armenians is rightly regarded as the
    first genocide of the 20th Century. Or at least one of the first. (It
    wasn't exactly a bloodless century.) What the world knows, however,
    and even knew at the time, the Turkish government has always denied.

    Ankara insists that what was done to the Armenians was not genocide.

    In the usual tradition of deniers, the Turks say the number of
    Armenians who died has been inflated, that the deaths were the result
    of civil war and unrest, that there was no deliberate government
    policy behind the slaughter and degradation of the Armenians, that
    it just happened . . . . Uh-huh. History says otherwise.

    A FEW MONTHS ago, the French parliament voted to recognize what was
    done to the Armenians as a genocide. France was only the latest
    in a long series of countries to do so. Turkey took offense. In
    a demonstration of how past events still affect the present, the
    French vote raised tensions between Turkey and the European Union,
    which Turkey wants to join.

    In this country, a committee of the House of Representatives has
    approved a bill labeling the Turkish actions against the Armenians
    a genocide, sending it on to the full House. In response, Turkey has
    recalled its ambassador to Washington for consultations.

    The delicate relationship between our two countries is crucial to
    the joint war on terror. Turkey is a vital shipping point through
    which we supply our troops in Iraq. The Turks' anger over the truth's
    finally being recognized threatens to complicate our position in Iraq
    even further.

    William Faulkner wouldn't have been surprised at Turkey's reaction.

    But its intensity might cause those who know little about the Armenian
    massacres to wonder what all the fuss is about at this late date. Does
    a vote by outsiders have any relevance today? Modern Turkey isn't
    responsible for what happened 100 years ago, is it? Why burden an
    important ally with the presumed guilt of long-ago crimes?

    Who cares?

    In the midst of his own genocidal career, Adolf Hitler cynically asked
    who remembered the Armenians. The German dictator was wrong about a
    lot of things. It's no surprise he was wrong about the Armenians,
    too. Long after Adolf Hitler met his end, the world does remember
    the Armenians. With good cause: justice. It demands that what was
    done to them be recognized, not covered up.

    When the injustice is on such an historic scale, the need to
    recognize it is all the greater. The crimes against the Armenians
    aren't forgotten because they cannot be forgotten. Truth is its
    own justification, and until the truth is recognized, justice isn't
    possible.

    Some in Congress and the administration would buckle to Turkey's
    huffing-andpuffing. Mere truth, they seem to be saying, isn't worth
    harming "our national interest," as if this republic's deepest
    interest could ever be served by denying the truth. It's instructive
    that those in Congress who oppose this congressional resolution,
    this long delayed act of simple decency, don't deny the truth of the
    Armenian massacres. They prefer to say that now is not the right time
    to do the right thing, which is what they've been saying for decades.

    The nature of the world is such that there will never be a time
    when recognizing this truth is convenient, not as long as Turkey is
    determined to deny its responsibility for this monumental crime. As
    usual, there is no better time than now to do the right thing. Why?

    Because recognizing injustice cleanses the soul. It restores peace.

    It makes reconciliation possible. That's what happened in South
    Africa, where truth-and-reconciliation committees heard the stories
    of the atrocities that were committed during the dark reign of
    apartheid. The hearings allowed the guilty and their victims to find
    some peace. Notice the connection: Truth and reconciliation. They go
    together. Just as justice is thwarted by denial, so reconciliation is
    impossible without a full accounting of the wrongs committed.COMING
    to terms with the past isn't always agreeable work. Against all the
    evidence, Iran's fiery president still questions the truth of the
    Holocaust. Japan has yet to fully accept its responsibility for the
    brutalities carried out by the Japanese empire in the Thirties and
    Forties. Did modern Japan commit those war crimes? No. But by refusing
    to acknowledge them, the descendants of the criminals take on part of
    the guilt that should have been laid to rest with their ancestors. And
    so the sins of the fathers are visited on later generations.

    All of this remains relevant today. Genocide isn't just some artifact
    of the 20th Century. A genocide is happening right now in Darfur,
    where the Sudanese government is as touchy about that damning word
    as Turkey remains.

    History is one thing, facts are another. History is the way we
    arrange the facts, and our perspective constantly changes. As time
    goes by, our sense of the past shifts. Each generation interprets it
    differently. What doesn't change are the facts. We may learn more
    of them over the years, for our knowledge of the past can never be
    complete. The past is too complicated for that. But to attempt to
    change the facts themselves is not just another interpretation of
    history. It is a crime against human memory.

    When we try to deny the plain facts, we cheat ourselves. Because,
    let us have faith, the facts will always have the final say. There
    will always be someone, some historian or memoirist or survivor or
    just plain conscientious observer, who will speak out-and the force
    of the facts will make the world listen.

    In the end, nations need to work through their history, not evade it,
    even for political reasons that seem so important at the moment. What
    we ignore in our past will come back to haunt us, as Americans should
    well know by now. We're still working on our own past. And until we
    acknowledge what's been done, the ghosts will linger. Forget the fate
    of the Armenians? Impossible. The wound remains raw. It needs to be
    recognized, and allowed to heal. Ignored, it festers.
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