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Bonior: Genocide against Armenians can't be ignored or forgotten

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  • Bonior: Genocide against Armenians can't be ignored or forgotten

    Detroit Free Press, MI
    April 29 2005

    LOCAL COMMENT: Genocide against Armenians can't be ignored or
    forgotten

    April 29, 2005

    BY DAVID BONIOR


    Dachau, Buchenwald, Auschwitz -- we recognize these names, these
    locations, because they are synonymous with murder, atrocity, and,
    yes, genocide. They stand as universal symbols of crimes against
    humanity, acknowledged and remembered, so that they will never be
    repeated.


    Not so recognizable, however, are Kharpert, Shabin Karahisar, and Der
    Zor. The first two locations housed once-thriving Armenian
    communities that were ethnically cleansed. The third is a desert in
    which thousands upon thousands of Armenians perished on death
    marches. These are places where the world also witnessed similar
    crimes against humanity -- yes, genocide.


    Before Nazi death camps of World War II brought the horrors of
    genocide to international consciousness, the world experienced its
    first modern introduction to the crime decades earlier. It was at the
    time of World War I, when Ottoman Turkey carried out one of the
    largest genocides in world history, murdering and deporting vast
    numbers of its minority Armenian population in its stated aim to
    eradicate the Armenian presence. This spring marks the 90th
    anniversary of that campaign of death.


    About 1.5 million Armenians were systematically killed. That number
    does not include the hundreds of thousands more who died in
    subsequent campaigns in 1918, 1920 and 1923 as the Turkish government
    extended the genocide beyond the Ottoman Empire into neighboring
    territories.


    In some respects, that campaign may have set the stage for similar
    programs of genocide in the next war. It's no secret that Adolf
    Hitler felt quite comfortable about pursuing his agenda, recognizing
    that the international community had done nothing in terms of direct
    action concerning Armenia. Whether it was based on hatred and twisted
    ideology, or the greed of a concerted land grab, the result and the
    act are one and the same. What happened in Armenia 90 years ago was
    genocide.


    Despite international outrage and condemnation at the time --
    including widespread reports on the massacres by the New York Times
    and other top media -- Turkey never took responsibility, nor even
    acknowledged the true nature of the mass slayings. To this day, the
    Turkish government still refuses to recognize and accept its role in
    the genocide of the Armenian people.


    Adding insult to injury, nation-states such as the United States
    today refer to the genocide as merely "alleged." Falling victim to
    alliances and politics -- first during the Cold War and now during
    the War on Terror -- the United States has gone soft on Turkey, and
    the truth has become an acceptable casualty of necessity.


    But there are those who will not forget or overlook -- especially
    among Armenians. Remembrance helps to heal the wounds of genocide
    because, despite the systematic attempt to erase their culture and
    very existence, the Armenian people have survived. In addition to the
    Armenian republic established since the fall of the Soviet Union,
    Armenian culture and enclaves flourish throughout the world -- most
    notably, in America.


    During the past 90 years, Armenians from throughout the world have
    continued to tell their story, in hopes that their pain, suffering
    and losses may be recognized, acknowledged and accounted for.


    This is why thousands of Armenian-Americans congregated Sunday in New
    York City, in an international day of remembrance. Only in this
    context can the survival and flourishing of this proud people be
    truly understood and appreciated. Only then can those who perpetrate
    such heinous crimes realize that there will be a day of reckoning.


    >From Ottoman Turkey to Nazi Germany, from Rwanda to Darfur, the
    international community must recognize and address genocide at every
    corner of this earth -- and those responsible must account for their
    actions. Official acknowledgement of the Armenian genocide is
    important, because acknowledgement and remembrance are the first true
    steps towards prevention.


    DAVID BONIOR, who was a Michigan congressman for 26 years, serves as
    executive director of American Rights at Work, a Washington,
    D.C.-based human rights organization. Write to him in care of the
    Free Press Editorial Page, 600 W. Fort St., Detroit, MI 48226.
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