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Armenian genocide must not be forgotten

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  • Armenian genocide must not be forgotten

    Stanford Daily
    April 15 2005

    Armenian genocide must not be forgotten


    By Ani Kardashian
    Friday, April 15, 2005
    last updated April 14, 2005 6:09 PM

    Throughout the 1990s and today, crimes against humanity in Rwanda,
    Kosovo and the Darfur region of Sudan have compelled Stanford students
    to take an active role in addressing worldwide issues of human rights
    crimes and genocide. Last Saturday, about 100 students joined in
    STANDFast, a nation-wide fast commemorating the 11th anniversary of
    the beginning of the Rwandan genocide, to raise money for the victims
    of the crisis in Darfur. The burgeoning interest among the
    undergraduate population in genocide affairs is a small step toward
    galvanizing national action against these recent crimes against
    humanity. Stanford students took an even bigger moral step forward
    this week with the passage of an Undergraduate Senate bill
    commemorating the 90th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide.

    And it's about time.

    I am always pleasantly surprised by the few people I meet on campus
    who know of the first genocide of the 20th century, the Armenian
    genocide of 1915, perpetrated by the Young Turks in an attempt to
    systematically eradicate the Armenian population throughout the
    Ottoman Empire. Yet my elation is always clouded by the disturbing
    fact that the majority of the people on campus have not even heard of
    the genocide, an event that accounts for more than 1.5 million deaths
    and for the displacement of an entire ethnic population from their
    homeland.

    At the turn of the 20th century, the Young Turk regime emerged,
    consisting of radical young military officers who were troubled by the
    decline of Ottoman power, the numerous minority groups inhabiting the
    empire and the stagnant environment of the empire. They espoused a
    form of Turkish nationalism called Pan-Turkism, or Turanism, which
    created a new and improved empire sans the problem of minorities. As
    U.S. Ambassador Morgenthau observed, "The time had finally come to
    make Turkey exclusively the country of the Turks." The Armenians, as
    the biggest minority within the empire, became the main obstacle to
    Turanism and beginning in April 1915 the defenseless victims of
    genocide. Under the guise of World War I, the Young Turk regime
    displaced the Armenian population from their villages to the Syrian
    Desert for the next eight years, using deportations as a new form of
    massacre.

    While making no attempt to conceal these atrocities, the Turkish
    government denies that the Armenian genocide ever occurred. Turkish
    denial of the genocide and attempts to erase their past atrocities
    from the history books has prompted the members of the international
    community, including the United States, to refuse acknowledging that
    the genocide actually occurred. This denial has arguably contributed
    to future genocides, including the Holocaust and more recent genocides
    in Rwanda and Darfur. Only three decades after the Armenian genocide
    for example, Hitler realized this international ignorance and used it
    as fodder for executing the Jewish Holocaust, remarking "Who, after
    all, speaks today of the annihilation of the Armenians?"

    Nine decades later, as the memory of the Armenian genocide lives on,
    it is imperative that we recognize this abhorrent crime against
    humanity and fight inaction, which inevitably leads to future
    genocide. Hopefully the passage of the genocide bill by the Senate
    will promote greater awareness on campus and stress the need to act
    against such inhumane offenses that occur today. In conjunction with
    the passage of the genocide bill, the Armenian Students Association is
    holding Fast For Armenia, a charity event commemorating the victims of
    the genocide and constructing a brighter future for the Republic of
    Armenia.

    While the Armenian community is promoting awareness on campuses like
    Stanford and throughout the world, the active denial from Turkey
    hinders closure from the past. The wounds inflicted by the Turks,
    still raw and tender, continue to fester, unable to heal from the
    stigma of denial. And while we wait for the day to come when Turkey
    will own up to its responsibilities as it proceeds to join the
    European Union, we must recognize the importance of shedding light on
    the memory of such minority groups as the Armenians, Jews, Sudanese in
    Darfur, and Rwandans that flicker with hope for a brighter future
    rather than fade away with the past.

    Ani Kardashian is a freshman majoring in biology and a member of the
    Armenian Students Association.
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