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93 Years of Waiting - Senator Dave Cogdill, Senate Republican Leader

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  • 93 Years of Waiting - Senator Dave Cogdill, Senate Republican Leader

    The Office of Senate Republican Leader Dave Cogdill
    MaryAlice Kaloostian, District Director
    4974 East Clinton Way, Suite 100
    Fresno, CA 93727
    Tel: 559.253.7122
    Fax: 559.253.7127
    Email: [email protected]


    Ninety-Three Years of Waiting

    By Senator Dave Cogdill
    Senate Republican Leader
    District 14


    In a few days, Armenians all over the world will once again come
    together in observance of April 24th. This year marks the 93rd
    anniversary of the Armenian Genocide, which was perpetrated by the
    rulers of the Ottoman Turkish Empire. It is a melancholy commemoration
    that is made even more painful by the ongoing denial of history by the
    Republic of Turkey and those who are complicit in its revisionism.

    The Armenian people lived in their 3,000-year historic homeland in Asia
    Minor. They became the first Christian nation-state in 301 A.D.
    Throughout their rich history, including a period with a thriving
    empire, Armenians were subjects of successive conquerors. Yet they
    prospered as a people - adding abundantly to the economic, political,
    academic, religious and cultural life of the governments under which
    they lived and successfully survived. That all changed under the
    oppression of state-sponsored atrocities by the Ottomans in the late
    1890s and into the turn of the 20th Century. The culmination of the
    Ottoman's plan of ethnic cleansing began a few years later.

    On hideous orders from the "Young Turk" regime, as the rulers of the
    Ottoman government were known, the entire Armenian population of
    Anatolia was at risk and came under systematic, brutal assault. On
    April 24, 1915, hundreds of Armenian intellectual, political, religious
    and business leaders were rousted from their homes at dawn and arrested,
    exiled, and murdered. Thus began what would become known to historians
    around the world as the "First Genocide of the Twentieth Century."

    Armenians were subjected to torture, starvation, death marches in the
    Syrian Desert and other unspeakable atrocities that resulted in the
    murder of 1,500,000 Armenian men, women and children over a period of
    eight long years ending in 1923. Hundreds of thousands of young
    Armenian orphans spent the remainder of their lives haunted by the
    memory of the torture and mayhem inflicted on their loved ones before
    their eyes.

    Adolph Hitler, in persuading his army commanders on the eve of World War
    II that the merciless persecution and killing of Poles, Jews, and other
    peoples would bring no retribution, asked, "Who, after all, speaks today
    of the annihilation of the Armenians?"

    I hope that we will soon reach the point where the denials of
    revisionists will be universally repudiated. I look forward to a time
    of reconciliation that can only occur when the Republic of Turkey finds
    it futile to spend millions of dollars scheming to distort history and
    threatening American political, military and business leaders with
    reprisals. As stated by John Evans, who served as U.S. Ambassador to
    Armenia a few years ago: "...When an official policy diverges wildly
    from what the broad public believes is self-evident, that policy ceases
    to command respect." These words express a challenge to all who would
    cede ideals to the wretched whims of a foreign power.

    Public service offers wonderful opportunities to forge positive
    relationships, work on issues of importance to constituents, and gain
    knowledge. I am so honored to have become well-acquainted with so many
    Californians of Armenian heritage (as well as Assyrians, Greeks and
    others whose forebears were also victims of massacres) who make such a
    great contribution to our state's economic and cultural vitality and
    civic leadership. I strongly align myself with the cause of justice for
    the memory of the victims of the Armenian Genocide. I stand with them
    because it is simply the right thing to do.

    Contact: MaryAlice Kaloostian - (559) 253-7122
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