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  • The Armenian Genocide:The Betrayal Of Souls And The Denial Of The Ar

    THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE:THE BETRAYAL OF SOULS AND THE DENIAL OF THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

    The Cutting Edge
    http://www.thecuttingedgenews.com/index.php?a rticle=12016
    March 8 2010

    In the book The Guilt of Nations, Elazar Barkan wrote, "For a 'new'
    history to become more than a partisan 'extremist' story, the narrative
    often has to persuade not only the members of the group that will
    'benefit' from the new interpretation but also their 'others,' those
    whose own history will presumably be 'diminished,' or tainted by
    the new stories." Clearly Turkey's reaction to the vote by the House
    Foreign Affairs Committee on the Armenian Genocide resolution shows
    that Turkey remains unpersuaded by its own guilt. This is painful to
    continue to witness.

    Nearly a hundred years after the slaughter of 1.5 million Armenians
    by Turkish forces during World War One, Turkey, an otherwise moderate
    country, continues to deny what eyewitness accounts prove to be an
    undeniable fact. Turkey's reaction in recalling its Ambassador to
    the United States is both heavy-handed and a touch of "thou protesth
    too much."

    In recent efforts to defeat similar resolutions, Turkey has enlisted
    the help of high-paid Washington lobbyists to cajole, persuade, and
    arm twist individual Members of Congress to make it impossible to pass
    the resolution recognizing this genocide. Threats of dire consequences
    to US-Turkish relations ensued, with cynical accusations of damaging
    the relationship over a resolution recognizing what the world already
    knew to be true. March 4th's Turkish reaction is no different.

    During the Senate Banking Committee's three-year investigation into
    the actions of the Swiss banks withholding of the assets of Holocaust
    victims, Swiss banks tried the same trick of buying their way out
    of trouble. Perhaps in the end, their settlement with the survivors
    and claimants of $1.25 billion was tantamount to the same, but it was
    nevertheless accompanied with a quasi-admission of guilt. For Turkey,
    there is plenty of money being spent to fight the campaign against
    them, but certainly no admission of responsibility or wrongdoing is
    forthcoming, only simple, stubborn, unremitting denial.

    Turkey's denial of its forefathers' actions would be laughable were it
    not so deadly serious for its historical precedent. As it has often
    been said, Turkey's genocide of the Armenians opened the door to
    further genocides in the twentieth century: the Holocaust, Cambodia,
    Biafra, Bosnia, Rwanda, Sudan, and the long list goes on. Official
    Turkey is overwhelmed with denial.

    During meetings with Turkish diplomats years ago in Ankara to discuss
    Turkey's role on the ill-fated United Nations Oil-for-Food program,
    instead of addressing the topic I was serenaded by complaints about
    the "propaganda" spewed from Armenian summer camps in California about
    the "supposed genocide." Even Turks who promote the idea within their
    own country, including Nobel Laureates, are prosecuted. This is sad.

    While this denial is awful in its construction, it is harmful
    no less to Turks than it is to Armenians. For Turkey to continue
    this irresponsible attitude is to tar their country with an almost
    snickering response to its protestations. Far better for Turkey
    would be to confess its wrongdoings in a responsible, humble way and
    to move forward. Germany, the obvious poster child for historical
    guilt and genocidal successor to the Turks--as Hans Frank, the former
    Governor-General of Poland was to have stated, "A thousand years will
    pass and the guilt of Germany will not be erased."--has long dealt
    with the responsibility for its crimes.

    Some will say that now is not the right time. They will say Turkey
    and Armenia are in delicate negotiations. They say it will damage
    Israel's relations with this important Muslim country. While not
    discounting the threats Turkey will bring out, surely, the souls of
    those marched out into the Anatolian desert and slaughtered cry out
    for more. They cry out for recognition.

    About the Holocaust, Alan Dershowitz argues, all Jews are victims. For
    the Armenians, the same is true. Jews are so clearly pained when idiots
    who deny the Holocaust do so with a straight face, defiant in their
    ignorance. When Mahmoud Ahmadinejad says the Holocaust is a lie, Jews
    cringe. How must Armenians feel when Turkey denies its responsibility
    for the same type of crime? As long as Turkey refuses responsibility
    for its sins, then all Armenians are in fact victims: the souls of the
    Armenian dead wander and their descendants are betrayed. The time for
    denial is over and the time for recognition is overdue. When this crime
    is finally recognized, memory, history, and truth will be restored.

    Cutting Edge contgribuitor Gregg J. Rickman served as the first U.S.

    Special Envoy to Monitor and Combat Anti-Semitism from 2006-2009. He
    is a Senior Fellow for the Study and Combat of Anti-Semitism at the
    Institute on Religion and Policy in Washington, DC; a Visiting Fellow
    at The Yale Initiative for the Interdisciplinary Study of Antisemitism
    at Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut; and a Research Scholar
    at the Initiative on Anti-Semitism and Anti-Israelism of the Institute
    for Jewish & Community Research in San Francisco.
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