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From the Margins: Recognition is the right thing to do

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  • From the Margins: Recognition is the right thing to do

    Glendale News Press, CA
    Oct 27 2007


    FROM THE MARGINS:
    Recognition is the right thing to do


    By PATRICK AZADIAN


    A couple of weeks ago City Council members put their differences
    aside and voted unanimously to pass a symbolic resolution to urge the
    U.S. House of Representatives to pass a bill to recognize the
    Armenian Genocide.

    Gloomy Gus may argue that with a large segment of the residents
    tracing their roots to the Armenian highlands, the act was an
    expedient move to avoid political isolation. I briefly chatted with a
    couple of council members; I got a different vibe.

    Council members genuinely believed this was the right thing to do.

    Why? Let's look beyond historic evidence to understand this
    well-timed gesture. Living in a city with so many of the descendants
    of the survivors of the genocide, it has become second nature for
    some to realize this is the right thing to do.

    Council members understood how much this meant to many of the
    residents.

    Yet, I am often asked why can't Armenians just move on. After all,
    it's argued, Poles and Jews have suffered in Europe and have `gotten
    over it.' African-Americans are dealing with the tragic chapters of
    their history. History has not dealt a much better hand to the Native
    Americans. The Irish have certainly recovered from the Potato Famine.
    And Darfur still bleeds today.

    The assumption is that every one of these groups is now healed and
    has recovered. I don't think that's the case.

    Genocide has left a scar on the Armenian people. If Turkey does not
    give acknowledgment, the offspring of the genocide generation will
    not heal. If the scars do not heal, it is difficult to look to the
    future. There seems to be no escape from this paradox but
    acknowledgment. advertisement


    Why is it important for Turkey to admit, I am asked.

    The obvious answer is: It's the right thing to do.

    Fortunately, Turkey can't just say `it wasn't us' and get away with
    it. Actually it can say, it wasn't modern Turkey, it was the
    Ottomans, but we're sorry. But by working so hard to deny the
    genocide, Turkey has become the inheritor and an accomplice to the
    crime.

    Denial is not an easy task. For the denial to make mathematical
    sense, Turkey has to argue that not too many Armenians actually
    existed before the 1915. The disappearance of 1.5 million people is
    not easy to cover up.

    To put things into perspective, exterminating 1.5 million people is
    the equivalent to filling the Rose Bowl to seating capacity with men,
    women and children, murdering everyone, getting rid of the corpses,
    and repeating it 16 1/2 times.

    Let's take a minute to have that sink in.

    How do you deny such a crime? One could argue they all left the
    stadium willingly. But then the question is, where are they now? One
    could also argue that all the 1.5 million willingly converted to
    Islam.

    `Modern' Turkey's approach is to deny the existence of the Armenians
    on those lands. To do this, Turkey needs to toy with history to show
    that the Armenian civilization was not a major presence before World
    War I. And to do this, monuments and churches need to be
    re-categorized and history books need to be revised.

    The denial of the genocide is a denial of the existence of a
    civilization.

    It may be a tough task for Turks to come to terms with their history,
    but they also need to move forward and heal. The time will come when
    the Turkish state has to put its denial policies aside and live with
    the consequences of the crime.

    This issue is not going away. Unless of course, Turkey executes yet
    another scheme to eliminate what's left of the Armenian civilization
    to the east. As long as the world has not unanimously condemned the
    first genocide of the 20th century, given the right opportunity and
    Turkey's history of aggression in Cyprus, such a possibility
    shouldn't be discounted.

    It would have been the right thing for the U.S. House of
    Representatives to pass the resolution reaffirming the Armenian
    Genocide. Despite Turkey's threats to turn its back on America, it
    would not dare refuse our tax dollars. Besides, where is Turkey going
    to go - into the bed of radical Islam or into the arms of the newly
    refurbished Russian empire?

    City Council members had the right spirit. Thank you, council
    members, for acknowledging the pain of my grandparents. Thank you for
    reaffirming that their sufferings were real.

    Sometimes, even in politics, doing the right thing is the right
    thing.

     PATRICK AZADIAN is a writer and the creative director of a
    local marketing and graphic design studio living in Glendale. He may
    be reached at respond@ fromthemargins.net.

    http://www.glendalenewspress.com/articles/2007/1 0/27/columns/gnp-margins27.txt
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