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Carrying The Torch For The "Genocide Olympic

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  • Carrying The Torch For The "Genocide Olympic

    CARRYING THE TORCH FOR THE "GENOCIDE OLYMPICS"

    Blogger News Network
    by The Stiletto
    September 14th, 2007

    On September 9th, actress and U.N. Goodwill Ambassador Mia Farrow
    kicked off a symbolic torch relay on behalf of Olympic Dream for Darfur
    from Dag Hammerskjold Plaza across the street from the Sudanese Mission
    to the United Nations. Genocide and holocaust survivors from Darfur,
    Armenia, Auschwitz, Berlin, Cambodia and Rwanda passed the torch to
    each other until the relay reached the Chinese Mission to the U.N. for
    a candle lighting ceremony.

    The torch relay will travel through more than 30 U.S. states "to raise
    awareness about the atrocities in Darfur and to urge China, as the
    next Olympic host, to use its influence to end the ongoing suffering,"
    according to press materials issued by Dream for Darfur. The route
    includes sites of memorials for victims of crimes against humanity.

    The U.S. torch relay is organized in solidarity with an international
    relay launched by Farrow on August 15th - one year before the Beijing
    Olympic Games begin - from western Sudan at the Darfur-Chad border
    "to carry the Olympic spirit and a message of ending the violence in
    Darfur all the way to China," reports Voice of America. The torch
    has passed through Chad and Rwanda, and will travel through every
    other country whose people have suffered genocide in modern times -
    Armenia, Bosnia, Cambodia, Germany and Poland - before arriving in
    Hong Kong in December.

    Since 2003, more than 200,000 people have died and 2.5 million have
    been driven from their villages in Darfur. Thanks in part to Farrow's
    efforts, the government of Sudan finally relented and will allow a
    joint U.N.-African Union peacekeeping force in Darfur, which should
    be in place by the end of the year. The operation will consist of
    20,000 peacekeepers and 6,000 civilian police, as well as a 7,000
    African peacekeeping force already in Darfur.

    "China is hosting the 2008 Olympic Games and their slogan for the
    games is `One world, One dream' but there is one nightmare - that
    China is not allowed to sweep under the rug - and that nightmare is
    Darfur," Farrow told reporters at the start of the international
    torch relay. She explains that China's oil interest in Sudan is
    funding the ongoing attacks on the people of Darfur.

    In other news concerning the Armenian Genocide, The Stiletto has been
    following the controversy over the Anti-Defamation League's No Place
    For Hate program for schoolchildren, because the organization refuses
    to recognize the Armenian Genocide. Armenians in MA want schools in
    their state to reject the program. On September 8th, at a meeting
    of the Belmont Human Rights Commission, Lenna Garibian - a mother
    of two daughters, one 7 years-old and the other 5 - gave a speech
    (video link) about how Armenian Genocide denial affects the families
    of survivors and victims. Here is some of what Garibian had to say:

    Over the past few months, as this No Place for Hate issue has gone
    on, Armenians have become more and more frustrated and angered by
    the insensitivity of the Anti- Defamation League - and also with the
    individual towns and politicians that host No Place for Hate programs.

    A number of suggestions have been made to Armenians:

    ~F It has been suggested that Armenians sit down with Turkish
    historians to "uncover the truth" about the events of 1915.

    ~F It has been suggested that Armenians withdraw the Congressional
    resolution, already supported by a majority of U.S. Congressmen,
    that calls for the U.S. Congress to set aside April 24 as a day to
    commemorate the victims of the Armenian genocide.

    ~F It has also been suggested that Armenians reconcile with Turkey
    and put away the bad feelings of almost 100 years ago.

    ~F And finally, it's been suggested that Armenians give Mr. Foxman
    and the ADL more time, perhaps until November, to decide on what the
    ADL's policy regarding the Armenian Genocide should be.

    I am here to tell you that we Armenians are fed up with the callous
    and insensitive suggestions that have been proposed to us. We are the
    sons and daughters of a generation who were driven from their lands,
    raped, tortured and slaughtered in the deserts of Turkey. ...

    My grandmother was five years old when she was taken from her home
    and told to start walking. Her father had been taken by the Turkish
    police weeks before.

    When the same police returned, they told her family that their village
    was no longer safe, and that they would be escorted to safety. She
    left with her mother and three year-old brother, Edward.

    In time, her mother weakened and died before her eyes.

    My grandmother vividly remembered watching her mother's body buried
    in the Syrian Desert. But what she remembered most was being told
    by her mother before she died to take care of her three year-old
    brother. The two of them continued alone, and she held her brother's
    hand, walking through the desert for weeks, until one day she found
    that she had lost him.

    Somewhere along the way, she became too weak or too tired or too
    delirious to keep hold of a three year-old boy's hand, and he was
    lost forever.

    Lost forever, except in my grandmother's mind. Because for the rest
    of her life [she] lived with the guilt of letting her little brother
    die alone in the desert.

    Until the last weeks of her life - when she was most confused - she was
    tearing around the nursing home still trying to find Edward. ... She
    could never forget the horror of letting him wander alone in the
    desert, presumably to die. She never forgave herself for that.

    ...

    When I think of my grandmother's guilt, and her pain, and I think of
    these suggestions that have been made to Armenians, I am outraged. And
    when I read of the statements between Mr. Foxman and Turkish officials
    - referring to this crisis as an uncomfortable episode that Turks
    must endure, I am incensed. Having grown up with countless stories
    like the ones you have heard this evening, I have lost the ability
    to be patient - with the politicians and people who want me to wait
    a bit while they think things over.
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