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Armenian Museum In Washington: Beyond Genocide

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  • Armenian Museum In Washington: Beyond Genocide

    ARMENIAN MUSEUM IN WASHINGTON: BEYOND GENOCIDE
    by Nareg Seferian

    http://www.reporter.am/index.cfm?objectid=1D95DD07-98B8-11E0-B08A0003FF3452C2
    Published: Friday June 17, 2011

    Interior view of the National Bank of Washington building, part of
    the site of the future museum and memorial to the Armenian Genocide.

    Armenian Reporter

    Washington - I had the great pleasure and unique opportunity to
    visit the future site of the Armenian Genocide Museum and Memorial
    the other day. It is truly an amazing location and space whose value
    in its potential to reach out to the Armenian-American community,
    the US political establishment, and American society as such cannot
    be underestimated.

    Of course the ongoing disputes and legal matters dogging the project
    have been disappointing and, frankly, embarrassing and shameful. More
    than that, however, even as this idea was made public a few years
    ago, I got the impression that the efforts may be better served to
    highlight Armenian history and culture generally, as opposed to a
    giant commemoration of the Armenian Genocide alone.

    Indeed, the Armenian Library and Museum of America in Watertown in
    the Boston area is just that kind of informative, educational, and
    outreach establishment which I imagine could be realized on a larger
    and more successful scale in the heart of Washington, DC.

    Most members of the Armenian-American community trace back their
    roots to the Armenian Genocide and I cannot blame a majority of
    the community for basing its identity on that one tragic chapter of
    our history. Yet, there is so much more to the Armenian experience
    generally that is worthy of being celebrated and shared.

    Armenians and Jews: more different than similar I often get the
    impression that the Armenians of America take their lead from the
    Jewish community in this country. I don't know why that should be
    the case.

    We Armenians certainly do have some things in common in terms of our
    history and culture, but, for the most part, the comparison ends after
    loosely applying a couple of terms such as "diaspora" and "genocide."

    The fact of the matter is that the Jews of the United States are
    much greater in number, wealthier, better-organized in some ways, and
    certainly far better-established and more influential on policy. That
    may inspire Armenians and other groups to take on their tactics, but
    the Jewish hold on the public consciousness of the US extends to the
    classroom and the media in a way which could never be duplicated in
    the short- to medium-term.

    Movies, books, and TV and radio are replete with regular Jewish
    references. The Jews are an immense, visible community in the US today,
    just as they were in the old countries, in the European societies
    the heritage of which many Americans bear. The fact that most people
    who live in this country are Christian and exposed to the Bible
    automatically ensures some familiarity with the Jewish heritage anyway,
    which continues in everyday life as many Americans have friends,
    neighbors, and colleagues who are Jews, much more than they have
    Armenian acquaintances. Many are even partially Jewish by blood.

    There are innumerable celebrities in the field of the arts and
    entertainment, business and politics, sports and academia who are
    Jewish. The strong political relationship between the United States
    and Israel and the ongoing, prominent dispute over the Holy Land only
    adds to the big part that Jews and their legacy play in the national
    conversation which reaches out to any even partly-informed or educated
    individual in America.

    We Armenians could never have the sort of reach that the Jewish
    community has in this country, barring extreme circumstances. Our
    successes in the United States are praiseworthy, but, at the end of
    the day, we are fewer in number, much less wealthy, and not as well
    organized as the Jews.

    The Armenian vote could only influence the popular elections in a
    handful of districts at the most, and there may be a few more where
    there are influential and rich individual Armenians who have the ear
    of the local decision-makers and their counterparts in Washington. Our
    language or humor or art and culture have had little to no influence
    on the public consciousness in this country.

    For that matter, even when it comes to those points in common, our
    diaspora tradition is not as ancient as the Jewish one, to say nothing
    of the tradition of being a victimized minority. The latter, in fact,
    is a very rare phenomenon in Armenian history which was taken to the
    extreme in the last half-century or so of the Ottoman Empire.

    As a Christian people subject to Muslim overlords, the Armenians were
    privileged in many ways under Turkish and Persian rule, serving as
    go-betweens with Europe and the rising Western powers.

    All of that changed by the late nineteenth century, of course.

    Moreover, the Armenian Genocide for today's Armenians, the youth
    in particular, is one generation removed from the Holocaust and the
    young Jews of this country.

    It was my great-grandparents who were kicked out of what is Turkey
    today, great-grandparents whom I have never met, with whom I have
    never spoken. Their memory is sacred to me, worthy of being honored,
    but that removal across time, I feel, discourages me from basing my
    identity as an Armenian on that one event alone, especially given the
    earth-shaking events in Armenian history over the past few decades
    with the re-establishment of a sovereign Republic of Armenia and the
    continuing struggle over Artsakh.

    We have managed to convince academia of the narrative of the Armenian
    experience as "the first genocide of the twentieth century", the
    prototype of all genocides, serving as inspiration, of course, most
    particularly for the Holocaust. It cannot be a matter of pride that
    led us to that point. It can certainly be a matter of truth, of facts
    speaking for themselves.

    Whatever it may be, I find it uncomfortable to establish and perpetuate
    a complex of victimization for the Armenians of America, and, by
    extension, the world, to institutionalize playing the victim all
    the time. And why do we even want to keep on playing the victim in
    a country with its own, in many ways ongoing, tradition of genocide
    against a native population? That does not make much sense to me
    at all.

    House of Armenia or another Holocaust museum?

    The plans for an official memorial to the Holocaust in Washington were
    not without controversy, both within and outside the Jewish community.

    (The Jewish and Armenian communities and states also share the
    similarity of being divided into political, religious, and other
    factions, a characteristic which can have an effect on the process
    of establishing museums among other things.) It took over a decade
    to get the project going.

    It should please some that mention of the Armenian Genocide happens to
    form part of the US Holocaust Memorial Museum's exhibit as well. But
    it seems to me that the Armenian-American community has once again
    tried to imitate Jewish initiatives, only without federal funding.

    Maybe it will take us a decade and more to finally inaugurate our
    facility too, past the desirable 2015 date.

    All this is to say that we Armenians have much going for us which
    need not be reflected on the Jewish model, and that we have an
    enviable opportunity to capitalize on things uniquely Armenian just
    a few blocks from the White House which ought not be squandered. The
    Armenian-American community, I find, is often very inward-looking. An
    establishment that showcases our history and culture would provide
    an excellent opportunity for outreach to the world generally and also
    across Armenian communities within the United States and beyond.

    It is our unique culture and our rich history which sets us apart from
    others. Our traditions may share a great deal with other peoples in
    the region as well, but many aspects of our music and dance, clothing,
    cuisine, and architecture are particular to us, not to mention our
    very special language and our distinctive church tradition, and also
    those unique pages in our history which no other peoples can claim
    to share, such as our success as a kingdom in Cilicia for a couple
    of centuries, our remarkable community in India, and such figures as
    Anania Shirakatsi, Hovsep Emin, and Komitas, to name but a few.

    To have an "Armenia House", for example, in downtown DC would be
    much more attractive for visitors to share in the celebration of
    our tradition, to say nothing of the much more positive name as a
    location for receptions and other events, as opposed to a genocide
    museum and memorial.

    We have a legitimate, just cause in making our demands for the
    recognition of the dispossession of the Armenians and other Christian
    peoples over the course of many decades during the turn of the
    last two centuries in what is today Turkey, as well as the formal
    acknowledgement and protection of that heritage by the Republic
    of Turkey.

    Our aim, as I understand it, is to alter the perceptions within society
    in Turkey and to fundamentally shift the national, state policy of
    the Republic of Turkey with regards to Armenians, as well as Greeks,
    Assyrian and other Syriac peoples and other minorities, their cultural
    heritage in Turkey, their current circumstances, and future relations.

    An establishment in Washington, DC marking that dispossession - and
    only that dispossession - could only serve to highlight one aspect
    of our struggle.

    An establishment which celebrates our entire immense and rich cultural
    legacy, on the other hand, our history, our language, our church and,
    of course, that dark, tragic page of our history which was the Armenian
    Genocide, could serve to renew our connection as Armenians with the
    heritage that we bear, as well as introducing this most interesting
    member of the family of peoples to American society generally.

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