Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Survivors protest at Israel's stance on Armenian genocide

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

  • Survivors protest at Israel's stance on Armenian genocide

    http://news.independent.co.uk/world/middle_east/ar ticle3101947.ece

    The Independent, UK
    Survivors protest at Israel's stance on Armenian genocide
    By Donald Macintyre in Jerusalem
    Published: 27 October 2007

    She has no memory of her father or mother. She was abandoned as an
    infant -it almost certainly saved her life because she was found on
    the side of the road by an American missionary - on one of the death
    marches in 1915 from Gurun, in central Anatolia. Even her name was
    given to her by the Near East Relief orphanage in Lebanon where she
    grew up. Sadly, she says, most of her fellow survivors in Jerusalem of
    the Armenian genocide have died.

    But Mary Kevorkian, a sprightly widow of 93, is proud of the
    independent life she leads - including the daily shopping and cleaning
    of her home in Jerusalem's Old City. "I do all my own work," she says
    cheerfully. "I don't need anybody."

    This week she joined more than 100 other, rather younger,
    demonstrators -about 10 per cent of a once much larger Jerusalem
    Armenian community dating back to Roman times - outside the Foreign
    Ministry. They were protesting against what they believe is the
    Israeli government's use of its considerable lobbying influence on
    Capitol Hill to try to thwart the bill which would mean US recognition
    of the genocide in which 1.5 million Armenians, including Mrs
    Kevorkian's parents, died.

    Turkey, which is infuriated by the Democrat-sponsored bill and which
    enjoys better relations with Israel than any other Muslim country, has
    made it clear it expects its ally to help halt its progress. Israel,
    like Britain, has in the past expressed sympathy for what it accepts
    were massacres but stopped short of calling them genocide.

    Mrs Kevorkian, who has lived in Jerusalem since 1939, came to the
    protest on a hot October day even though she dislikes thinking about
    the subject. She says that when she sees banners commemorating the
    terrible events between 1915 and 1923, "I remember why I did not have
    my father and mother. When I read about the genocide I start to cry."

    This week, however, the banners were focused on Turkey's concerted
    efforts to ensure the bill, having been approved this month by the US
    Congress Foreign Affairs Committee, is not passed by the full House of
    Representatives. As protesters, including a choir of uniformed
    schoolgirls, sang the Armenian national anthem and the Lord's Prayer
    in Armenian they brandished placards aimed at the Israeli public,
    including: "Today's denial is tomorrow's genocide/holocaust".

    On Thursday, the bill's sponsors, led by the California congressman
    Adam Schiff, agreed to postpone the debate, bowing to fears that it
    could precipitate a full-blown crisis in US-Turkish relations at
    exactly the time when the US is trying to persuade Turkey not to
    launch an invasion of northern Iraq against the Kurdish PKK.

    Turkey, a main conduit of supplies to American forces in Iraq, has
    also warned passage of the bill could hamper the US war effort. But Mr
    Schiff, who is Jewish and has a significant Armenian constituency, and
    his co-sponsors have made it clear they will bring it back for debate
    in the coming months.

    The organisers of this week's demonstration here accuse the Israeli
    government of having already twice - in 1989 and 2000 - "openly
    interfered" in similar Congressional votes despite opinion polls
    suggesting that most Israelis favour the recognition sought in the
    bill. In urging it not to do so again, the demonstrators were joined
    by two prominent Israeli politicians, the Meretz Party Knesset member
    Haim Oron and a former minister in the government of Yizthak Rabin,
    Yair Tsaban.

    Mr Oron said there was a natural Knesset majority for recognition,
    including the right-wing Likud, but it needed to overcome pressure
    from a government determined to maintain close ties with Turkey.

    Mr Tsaban said he was supporting the protest "as a member of humanity
    born in the 20th century which witnessed all kinds of genocides, of
    which the worst was the Holocaust, and of course as a Jew". Mr Tsaban,
    two of whose grandparents were exterminated in Auschwitz, added: "I
    feel that is their will that I should support this campaign against
    denial of the genocide."

    George Hintlian, an Armenian community spokesman, said the refusal of
    a modern country such as Turkey to take responsibility for the
    genocide was unique, as it was that a "nation that has gone through
    the Holocaust should be helping the denial".

    Mark Regev, the Foreign Ministry spokesman, said the Congressional
    bill was an "internal US affair" and the Israeli view of the "tragic
    events" that engulfed the Armenians at the end of the Ottoman Empire
    was well known.
Working...
X