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Balakian: Obama's Approach To Affirming The Genocide Takes Things Fu

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  • Balakian: Obama's Approach To Affirming The Genocide Takes Things Fu

    BALAKIAN: OBAMA'S APPROACH TO AFFIRMING THE GENOCIDE TAKES THINGS FURTHER THAN ANY OTHER PRESIDENT HAS
    By: Peter Balakian

    Armenian Weekly
    Thu, May 6 2010

    Peter Baker's article, "Obama Marks Genocide Without Saying the Word"
    (New York Times, April 24, 2010), like most of the media's coverage
    of President Barack Obama's April 24 commemoration of the Armenian
    Genocide, was based on an imprecise reading of the text of the
    statement. Although the president made the effort to avoid offending
    Turkey, he found a skillful way of acknowledging the Armenian Genocide
    of 1915 by stating, "my view of that history has not changed." That
    view, which he expressed as a Senator and presidential candidate,
    was that the Armenian Genocide is "a widely documented fact supported
    by an overwhelming body of historical evidence." In this year's
    address, Obama also referred to the events of 1915 as "one of the
    worst atrocities of the 20th century," and used the Armenian term
    Medz Yeghern twice--angering high-level Turkish officials because,
    for Armenians, it is synonymous with what Shoah is for the Jews. That
    Turkey's foreign minister, for example, said the president's statement
    was "not right and not acceptable" speaks to how adroitly Obama made
    it clear that, as he stated during his candidacy, he continues to
    accept as valid the designation "Armenian Genocide."

    If at this moment in U.S.-Turkish relations the State Department
    does not have the ethical courage to stand up to Turkey on the
    Armenian Genocide, Obama has taken a step forward in affirming it as
    president. In the future it could not be more appropriate for Obama,
    a former law professor, to note that Raphael Lemkin, the legal scholar
    who created the word "genocide" in 1943, was compelled to pursue the
    legal concept of genocide as an international crime on the basis of
    what happened to the Armenians in 1915.

    It was Lemkin who first called the Turkish intended group destruction
    of the Armenians: genocide. Although the Holocaust had a direct and
    personal bearing on Lemkin, who lost 49 members of his family to the
    Nazis, he explicitly argued that there is no hierarchical value placed
    on genocides.

    In 1948, he wrote: "In 1916 and thereafter, President Wilson took
    a warm interest in the fate of the Armenians, who fell victims of
    genocide. More than 1,200,000 men, women, and children were massacred
    at that time. The USA State Department wrote, 'This government cannot
    be a tacit part of an international wrong.' The genocide convention
    condemns mass violence as a system of government. This crime did not
    start with Hitler and did not end with Hitler."

    Following the adoption of the Convention on the Prevention and
    Punishment of the Crime of Genocide by the General Assembly of
    the United Nations, in December 1948, Lemkin wrote: "Genocide is
    defined in this Convention as the intentional destruction of national,
    racial, ethnical, and religious groups. Examples of genocide are the
    destruction of the Armenians in the first World War, the destruction
    of the Jews in the second World War."

    Many of us in the International Association of Genocide Scholars
    (IAGS) and the human rights community hope that Obama will openly
    use the term Armenian Genocide that Raphael Lemkin first did when he
    coined it in the 1940's.

    With Obama, in his way, having taken a significant step toward a full
    acknowledgement of the Armenian Genocide, there is potential for a
    new atmosphere in this country in which Turkish denial and coercion
    are no longer tolerated.

    Peter Balakian is Donald M. and Constance H. Rebar Professor of
    the Humanities at Colgate University and the author of many books
    including The Burning Tigris: The Armenian Genocide and America's
    Response, winner of the Raphael Lemkin Prize.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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