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Responsibility is forgivable while guilt persists over generations

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  • Responsibility is forgivable while guilt persists over generations

    PanARMENIAN.Net

    Responsibility is forgivable while guilt persists over generations
    12.04.2008 16:29 GMT+04:00

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ Guilt in history - we speak about guilt of genocide
    and war when we can ascribe it to certain political elites, says a
    statement PanARMENIAN.Net received from the Armenian community of
    Berlin.

    The statement reads as follows, `When considering the difficult
    question of guilt, it helps to replace "guilt" with the notion of
    "responsibility". For when we speak about "responsibility", then it's
    a matter of conditions, perhaps even being forced to make a
    decision. That is not the case with the difficult concept of
    guilt. Guilt bears evidence to the direct intention of the individual
    and his will. Responsibility is "forgivable". "Guilt" persists over
    generations.

    Today in Germany, studying characteristics of the perpetrators is the
    focus point of the endeavors to come to terms with the past. Yet the
    historical research in South Africa or in Rwanda is also conducted in
    the hope of being able to name those responsible. In this pursuit of
    the examination of one's own perpetrator history, it's also a matter
    of shaping a new Germany, a South Africa, a Rwanda, which specifically
    commits itself to tolerance. Lastly, it is also a matter of not
    remaining in the depths of guilt; of lessening the burden of guilt.

    On April 24, when we commemorate worldwide the 1.5 million victims of
    the genocide caused by the regime of the Young Turks in 1915-16, we
    are confronted with the unprecedented position of Turkey, which
    vehemently prevents discussion about guilt in history, attempts to
    accuse the genocide victims for having provoked the "escalation of
    violence", and replaces examination of the genocide with
    denegation. This not only calls for an awareness of the continuity of
    national narratives in Turkey, but also leads us more to a discussion
    of the specific form of guilt in genocide.

    Genocide is a crime that effects all levels of society, touches all
    generations, and excludes no one. Those who are not perpetrators are
    bystanders. But can one really speak of bystanders when such a
    large-scale deportation occurred of which everyone was a witness? The
    perpetrators of a genocide are certain that they have the consent of
    the bystanders. Their ideological goals - a co-existence of old
    prejudices against the "Christian infidels " with a new hate of modern
    Armenians and a nationalistic ideology of the creation of a new
    Turkey- knowingly include the bystanders as an active, consenting
    populace. The perpetrator of genocide doesn't fear the resistance of
    his victims; he fears only the intervention of bystanders. Hence the
    attitude of the bystander bears the blame for the absoluteness and
    radicalism of the act of genocide.

    This is why coming to terms with a genocide is so important. That's
    why such an examination in Turkey is so vehemently and systematically
    contested: because it affects not only a chapter of elapsed history,
    but also every individual today: his prejudices, his national images
    and his national identification.

    The day of remembrance on April 24 commemorates a day on which the
    deportations reached the capital, Constantinople. On this day, public
    figures were arrested and murdered, among them politicians, writers
    and lawyers.

    The day of remembrance commemorates not only the deep rupture that the
    genocide created in Armenian life in its homeland. It commemorates
    first and foremost the suffering of those deported and the barbarity
    with which they were murdered.

    "Like Jeremiah, I became like a rotten cloth, and, as the preacher
    said, my name is erased from the book of mankind", wrote the Armenian
    Monk St. Grigor Narekatsi (951-1003) in his Book of Prayers. But the
    medieval tale of suffering, oppression and violence still knew the
    hope of God.

    The philosopher Hans Jonas described the withdrawal of God from the
    modern world in his work, "The Imperative of Responsibility". And
    while Hans Jonas deduced from the experience of the Holocaust the
    necessity of an ethics of responsibility, April 24 calls upon us to
    reflect on guilt in history. This broader question looks not only at
    the perpetrator, but also identifies the role of the bystander and
    therefore us and our actions - as actors and responsible individuals
    in modern societies and with modern policies. Such examined
    responsibility inquires after the perspective of today's states with
    regard to denegation, oppression and violence and insists that we face
    up to the blameworthy consequences of being a bystander.'
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