Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

A Public Conversation With Professor Richard Hovannisian

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • A Public Conversation With Professor Richard Hovannisian

    A PUBLIC CONVERSATION WITH PROFESSOR RICHARD HOVANNISIAN

    http://asbarez.com/113301/a-public-conversation-with-professor-richard-hovannisian/
    Tuesday, August 27th, 2013

    Rabbi Elie Kaplan Spitz

    BY RABBI ELIE SPITZ
    Congregation B'nai Israel

    TUSTIN, Calif.-On Sunday, August 18h, members of the Jewish and
    Armenian community shared a kosher Armenian dinner mentored by Zov
    Karardian, a child of survivors of the Armenian Genocide and much
    admired proprietor of Zov's Bistro. Afterwards, we enjoyed a public
    conversation with Professor Richard Hovannisian, a founding scholar
    of Armenian studies. Professor Hovannisian taught at UCLA, published
    extensively on Armenian history, and with his students interviewed
    close to eight hundred survivors of the Genocide of 1915-1918. He
    did so when there were still those alive to recount what they saw.

    As a Jew and a child of survivors of the Holocaust of World War II,
    listening to Professor Hovannisian gave me a wider context for my
    people's own tragedy. I learned that the nationalist Young Turks in
    an emerging new nation of Turkey saw the collapse of the once mighty
    Ottoman Empire as a national affront. Christian countries, such as
    Russia, were taking land away. In crafting the new Turkey, there was
    a desire to consolidate identity. Christians, Greek and Armenian,
    were seen as potential subversives and as lacking a commonality with
    the Islamic, Turkish majority. Under cover of World War I, the Turks
    were able in an organized, centralized fashion to direct the deaths
    of close to 60 percent of the more than two million Armenians who
    had lived in Turkey. Men were shot and most women and children died
    on brutal marches for relocation to the desert.

    Professor Hovannisian described a parallel with World War II and
    the Germans. Forced to pay enormous penalties marking the end of
    World War I and beset by a world economic crisis, German nationalism
    and scapegoating grew. The Nazis sought to purify Germany of the
    foreigners, the Jews, as potentially disloyal and different in race
    and faith than the Aryan. Under cover of War the Third Reich was able
    to engage in mass extermination of the Jews.

    A key difference between the Jewish and Armenian communities is the
    aftermath of our respective genocides. The Armenian Genocide meant
    that Armenians lost their historic homeland and were left to define
    themselves for the first time as primarily a Diaspora community. The
    Turkish government made it a crime to claim that the Turks perpetrated
    mass killings of the Armenians. Instead, the official line was that
    there were Armenian provocations and a kind of civil war during World
    War I. Turkey used much leverage against governments who were willing
    to recognize the Armenian Genocide. For instance, in 1982 there was the
    first international gathering on genocide, organized by institutions in
    Israel and to be held in Tel Aviv. Several hundred scholars from around
    the world were scheduled to participate. In anticipation of the event,
    an Israeli newspaper article noted that several scholars would address
    the Armenian Genocide. Turkish government leaders contacted their
    counterparts in Israel and said that if the Armenians participated,
    Turkey would close its borders to Iran during a time in which many
    Iranian Jews were fleeing toward freedom. Elie Wiesel, chair of the
    event, withdrew. He said that he could not deny the Armenian Genocide
    and would not want to jeopardize Jewish lives. The official Israeli
    sponsors withdrew their names from the conference, which still took
    place with the Armenian scholars participating, including Professor
    Hovannisian. Until now, both the United States and Israel have failed
    for political reasons to officially acknowledge the Armenian genocide.

    Jews have had a long history of Diaspora and the events of World War
    II were part of a larger identity of suffering and dispersion. Germany
    acknowledged its responsibility and reparations were paid. In fact,
    in the aftermath of the Holocaust, Jews regained a national land in
    the State of Israel, a product in part of international guilt for
    not having done more to prevent the horrific crimes. And Jews have
    memorialized their story through film, museums, and ritual events.

    Indeed, those museums have become places of learning the dangers of
    hate speech, political tyranny, and government sponsored crime.

    I asked Professor Hovannisian, "How can we as wounded peoples heal?"

    Professor Hovannisian responded, "We need to make our particular
    stories universal, so that they will be meaningful to others, and
    we need to respond to suffering in the world." As a Jew, I am much
    identified with his guidance for our people's healing.

Working...
X