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Groups Protest Genocide Denial at Northwestern University

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  • Groups Protest Genocide Denial at Northwestern University

    Groups Protest Genocide Denial at Northwestern University

    Chicago, IL - A coalition of groups working against genocide protested
    outside Northwestern's Lurie Medical Research Center in downtown
    Chicago, where a program denying Turkey's genocide of 1.5 Million
    Armenians was being conducted by the Turkish American Cultural
    Alliance (TACA) and the Assembly of Turkish American Associations
    (ATAA).

    `It's unfortunate that Northwestern University is allowing its
    facilities to be used for an event denying the Armenian Genocide,'
    stated Maral Vartanian-Abrahamian, representative of the Armenian
    National Committee of Illinois (ANC of IL), one of the organizations
    protesting the program. `Northwestern's prestige has been damaged by
    carelessly providing a podium for hate speech in the form of genocide
    denial,' she continued.

    Dozens of demonstrators carried signs displaying `ATAA Go Away' and
    `Northwestern - Complicit in Genocide Denial,' while chanting slogans
    such as `Don't Deny the Genocide,' referring to Turkey's 1915 genocide
    of 1.5 million Armenians. In addition to the ANC of Illinois, several
    other groups took part in the protest including Northwestern
    University's STAND (a student anti-genocide coalition), the Genocide
    Education Network of Illinois, and the Armenian Youth Federation.

    `We are here today to remind the ATAA and the TACA that genocide
    denial and historical revisionism will not be tolerated,' stated Shant
    Papazian, Chairman of the Armenian Youth Federation's Chicago chapter.
    `Instead of helping Turkey face up to its horrific past, these
    organizations continue to perpetuate the myths generated by Turkish
    government,' he added.

    The TACA/ATAA event featured a renowned genocide denier,
    Prof. Türkkaya Ataöv, whose presentation was entitled "Turks &
    Armenians: What Really Happened on April 24, 1915." During his
    presentation, Ataöv stressed how, through the centuries, the Turks
    had been benevolent toward the Armenians, and how the Armenians were
    an ungrateful nation. Leading up to the First World War, Ataöv
    stated, that the Armenians fought the Turks out of a sense of
    superiority, even though the Turks allowed Armenians to live in peace
    and freedom. He continued by stating the Turks were kind enough to
    escort the Armenians out of their homes in April of 1915 and into
    safety, telling them that it will be ok to return once the conflicts
    were over. He then surmised that the Armenians did not return because
    they were ashamed of their bad behavior towards the Turks.

    Early in Ataöv's presentation, Northwestern Campus police confronted
    the Armenians seated in the audience and demanded that they leave the
    auditorium, despite the fact that they had been seated and silent
    during presentation. Once in the lobby, the police informed the
    Armenian attendees that they were `not welcome at this event and
    needed to leave.' One of the event organizers came out of the
    auditorium and interceded, stating that they had not been disruptive
    and were welcome to stay.

    Prior to returning to the auditorium, however, the Armenians were
    accosted by ATAA President-elect Ergun Kırlıkovalı, who stated, "I
    am tired of you people showing up to all my events and calling me a
    bloody murderer." Despite this confrontation, the Armenians were
    allowed back into the auditorium, but were subject to close
    surveillance. Following Ataöv's presentation, Kırlıkovalı was
    introduced and took the podium. At various points in his
    presentation, Kırlıkovalı spoke sarcastically of the Armenians, and
    these comments were often greeted with laughter and warmly received by
    many the 100 or Turks in attendance.

    `Not only were the content and tone of Ataöv's and Kırlıkovalı's
    pre sentations offensive, but the fact that such a program is being
    held within days of April 24th, the 95th Anniversary of the Armenian
    Genocide, is insulting to the memory of the victims and their
    families,' stated Vartanian-Abrahamian.

    The Turkish organizations hosting the program have long been active in
    genocide denial. The ATAA has sued the State of Massachusetts and
    threatened school districts in unsuccessful attempts to exclude the
    Armenian Genocide from genocide and holocaust education programs such
    as those mandated by the State of Illinois. The ATAA has been under
    close scrutiny since wiretapped conversations between Turkish
    diplomats at the Chicago consulate and local ATAA officials revealed
    that the organization attempted to bribe Speaker of the House Dennis
    Hastert in order to prevent passage of legislation regarding the
    Armenian Genocide.

    Although the TACA is ostensibly a cultural organization, the majority
    of the activities listed on its website (grassroots.tacaonline.org)
    seem instead directed toward denying the Armenian Genocide rather than
    promoting Turkish culture. These activities include efforts to block
    legislation in Congress marking the Armenian Genocide and lectures
    focused on Armenians and Kurds, two of the most oppressed groups in
    Turkish society.

    Beginning in April, 1915, and continuing until 1923, the Turkish
    government conducted a program of described by then US Ambassador to
    Turkey Henry Morgenthau as `race extermination,' resulting in the
    deaths of over 1.5 million Armenians, 750,000 Assyrians, and 330,000
    Pontian Greeks. Although some of the leaders responsible for the
    genocide were found guilty in abstentia for crimes against humanity by
    a tribunal conducted by the post-war Turkish government, the current
    Turkish government denies that a genocide occurred. The Turkish
    government has gone as far a making it a criminal offense publicly
    discuss the Armenian Genocide, and several notable Turks, including
    Nobel-prize winning author Orhan Pamuk, have been indicted under this
    law.

    The Turkish government's position runs contrary to that of most
    independent genocide and holocaust scholars worldwide, as well as many
    governments. Raphael Lemkin, the Polish lawyer who was the primary
    force behind the adoption of the 1948 UN Convention on Genocide,
    invented the word `genocide' specifically to describe the experience
    of the Armenians in WWI and the victims of the Holocaust in WWII.

    The Armenian National Committee of Illinois is a grassroots public
    affairs organization serving to inform, educate, and act on a wide
    range of issues concerning Armenian Americans throughout the state of
    Illinois.
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