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    LETTER
    Garen Megerditchian Toronto, Ontario

    The Columbian, WA
    http://www.columbian.com/opinion/news/2007/10/102 32007_Our-readers-views.cfm
    Oct 23 2007

    Cavalier attitude resented

    Amid all her brouhaha about the risks the Armenian genocide
    resolution would pose to U.S. foreign relations, glaringly absent
    in Ellen Putman's Oct. 19 letter ("List of past abuses is long")
    is any discussion about the moral imperative to speak out against
    genocide denial.

    Raphael Lemkin, the Polish-Jewish legal scholar who coined the
    word "genocide," invented the concept partly on the basis of the
    extermination of the Armenians in 1915. Lemkin, who lost 49 members
    of his family during the Holocaust, said the following in an 1949
    interview with CBS on the UN Convention on Genocide:

    "I became interested in genocide because it happened to the Armenians;
    and afterwards the Armenians got a very rough deal at the Versailles
    Conference because their criminals were guilty of genocide and were
    not punished."

    This month the Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs presented UNESCO
    with a draft resolution for the preservation of the memory of the
    Holocaust and prevention of its denial. Approval of this resolution is
    all the more pressing given Ahmadinejad's remarks denying the veracity
    of the Holocaust. But according to Putman, there would be no need to
    "revisit" this 60-year-old crime against humanity that surely did
    not involve most UNESCO member countries.

    I am a Canadian of Armenian origin. It sickens me to see people like
    Putman take so cavalier an attitude vis a vis such a serious matter
    as genocide denial.
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