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  • Facing Up To The Past

    FACING UP TO THE PAST

    AZG Armenian Daily #158
    Jerusalem Post
    01/09/2007

    Armenian Genocide

    Anything from several hundred thousand to 1.5 million Armenians are
    estimated by historians to have been killed by Muslim Ottoman Turks
    between 1915 and 1923, in what is widely viewed as one of the first
    modern instances of systematic genocide. Turkey, however, denies that
    the episode should be regarded as genocide, arguing that the death
    toll has been greatly exaggerated and that the deaths occurred in
    the context of civil war and unrest.

    The dispute has erupted afresh in recent days and weeks, in part
    because of controversy within the Anti-Defamation League over how to
    address the issue.

    The ADL has recently recognized the massacre as "tantamount to
    genocide," and reinstated a regional director who had been fired for
    opposing its previous reluctance to do so. While Israel is acutely
    and understandably sensitive to its relationship with the current
    Turkish government, a key ally, the Jewish state, which rightly
    protests Holocaust denial wherever it occurs, cannot possibly be
    complicit in the denial of genocide elsewhere.

    To that end, Yad Vashem, Israel's official Holocaust memorial, has
    always included the massacre of the Armenians in its educational
    activities on "other instances of genocide, ethnic cleansing and
    mass murder."

    Similar stances have always been taken by other organizations dedicated
    to Holocaust education, such as the Simon Wiesenthal Center. Dating
    back to its first museum in 1979, the Wiesenthal Center has taken pains
    to include presentational material relating to the Armenian Genocide.

    How could it be otherwise?

    The Jewish nation, the overwhelming victim of the Nazi Holocaust,
    is centrally committed to learning and promulgating the lessons of
    the Holocaust - to highlighting man's capacity for inhumanity toward
    his fellow man and to seeking to curb it, stressing the dangers in
    order to prevent recurrences of genocide.

    Unthinkably, genocide has recurred, and continues to recur, because
    such lessons are not sufficiently internalized. "Never again" has
    been exposed as an empty mantra, most recently in Rwanda and Darfur.

    The open, good-conscience examination by affected nations of dark
    episodes in their history is a key element in trying to change that
    dire reality. Israel is scarcely in a position to force Turkey
    to confront its dark episode, but neither can Israel signal any
    acquiescence in overlooking it.

    To denounce the Armenian Genocide is not to denounce Turkey and its
    current government; it did not perpetrate these killings. But its
    responsibilities are those of a successor government, and must not
    be ducked.

    Our global tragedy is that what the former Canadian justice
    minister Irwin Cotler has described as a "genocide in the making"
    is being perpetrated, right now, in Darfur, in an era of globalized
    communication where no nation can claim to be unaware of what is
    unfolding.

    And the next potential tragedy is developing before our eyes as well,
    similarly unobstructed by the international community. President
    Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and the Iranian regime openly call for Israel's
    destruction and are seeking the means to achieve it - in open breach of
    the UN's post-World War II "Never Again" convention. Yet the Iranian
    president, far from being indicted by the global body established
    precisely to counter such outrages, is instead afforded a platform
    by it, and his country is allowed to retain its membership in the
    family of civilized nations even as it threatens the very existence
    of another sovereign member. To quote comments made by Cotler to this
    newspaper several months ago: "Ahmadinejad's genocidal criminality is
    as clear and compelling as any I've ever seen... This is advocacy of
    the most horrific of crimes, Genocide; embedded in the most virulent
    of hatreds, anti-Semitism; propelled by a publicly avowed intent
    to acquire nuclear weapons for that purpose; and dramatized by the
    parading in the streets of Teheran of Shihab-3 missiles draped in the
    emblem 'Wipe Israel Off the Map.'" What is required in facing down
    those who would commit genocide, of course, is an alliance of all
    enlightened nations, taking concerted action to thwart such ambitions
    long before they are implemented.

    Striving for a better future, however, also requires acknowledging
    and internalizing the crimes of the past.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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