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Guest Commentary: Turks, Americans Leave Genocide By The Wayside

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  • Guest Commentary: Turks, Americans Leave Genocide By The Wayside

    GUEST COMMENTARY: TURKS, AMERICANS LEAVE GENOCIDE BY THE WAYSIDE
    By Lisa Kirazian

    The UCSD Guardian Online
    http://ucsdguardian.org/index.php?option=co m_content&task=view&id=9932&Itemid=5
    A pril 21 2008
    CA

    Imagine being a 93-year-old man who has been ignored and isolated all
    his life. His family and friends are gone. No one looks him in the eye
    as he hobbles down the street. No one knows his name or acknowledges
    that he even exists. Nobody stops to chat. Everyone rushes right past
    him, saying and doing nothing -- for nearly a century.

    The Armenian Genocide is that lonely old man, still aching to have
    his story told, his existence acknowledged, his soul healed and put
    to rest.

    The Armenian Genocide of 1915, commemorated every April 24 by Armenians
    around the world, was the systematic destruction by the Ottoman Empire
    of more than 1.5 million Armenians. The Ottoman government's desire
    at the time to "cleanse" minorities and create a Pan-Turkish state
    has been well documented. Records from then-U.S. Ambassador to Ottoman
    Turkey Henry Morgenthau, from German missionaries and even from Turkish
    officials reveal that the Ottoman Empire was particularly intent on
    annihilating the Armenian race, which had become so successful within
    the country -- a country with much territory previously belonging to
    ancient Armenia.

    Government archives in Turkey and around the world have proof of
    these goals. Yet Turkey still denies that an Armenian Genocide ever
    occurred, and many countries still side with Turkey when it claims
    that the deaths of 1.5 million Armenians were merely the result of a
    variety of World War I skirmishes and Armenian insurgencies impossible
    to pin on the government.

    Fortunately, France, Italy, Switzerland and other enlightened
    nations refuse to give into this lie, recently passing resolutions
    and legislation acknowledging the Armenian Genocide -- the first
    genocide of the twentieth 20th century, one that Adolf Hitler studied
    in preparation for his own Jewish Holocaust.

    Andrew Tarsey, former Director of the Anti-Defense League of New
    England, was essentially fired last year for his comments acknowledging
    the Armenian Genocide but has inspired Jews and Armenians alike with
    his uncompromised integrity on this issue.

    Momentum is shifting in other ways as well: U.S. House and Senate
    Resolution 106 acknowledging the Genocide, New York Life's settlement
    of insurance-policy reparations to descendants of Armenian Genocide
    victims, more and more countries passing genocide legislation as
    mentioned, the Los Angeles Unified School District incorporating
    a new Armenian-Genocide curriculum into the schools. These are
    important steps.

    Some Turkish scholars and artists, like historian Taner Akcam of the
    University of Minnesota, are now speaking out about the Armenian
    Genocide and acknowledging that it did in fact happen -- even
    dialoguing with their Armenian counterparts at academic conferences
    and panels.

    Perhaps Turkey does not recognize how much more respect it would gain
    worldwide if it did finally admit to the Ottoman Empire's Armenian
    Genocide -- perhaps its bid to join the European Union would even be
    helped. But Turkey also knows full well that the admission would result
    in a doling-out of financial reparations that could nearly bankrupt
    the country. So, admitting the truth is too embarrassing and costly.

    Yet Turkey apparently doesn't mind throwing millions of dollars
    at lobbyists and politicians worldwide to secure its anti-Armenian
    goals. Neither those efforts, however, nor vehement denial, can change
    the truth of history. Sadly, many Turks believe that the Armenian
    Genocide is a lie; saddest of all, younger generations of Turks are
    entirely ignorant of this period in their country's history.

    Some would say the aftermath of the genocide has even continued
    with a young Turkish nationalist's assassination of beloved
    Armenian-Turkish journalist/editor Hrant Dink last year, seemingly
    for his pro-Genocide views. His son Arat Dink, assuming leadership
    of his father's newspaper, was also convicted (like his father) under
    Turkey's Article 301 of the penal code, for the "crime" of insulting
    Turkishness. Never mind insulting the truth.

    Only an enlightened people are brave enough to explore and admit
    their mistakes and sins. Only an enlightened people are brave enough
    to be persecuted for their beliefs. And Armenians everywhere will
    keep fighting until the truth sets the world free.
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