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Cairo: Remember The Armenians

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  • Cairo: Remember The Armenians

    REMEMBER THE ARMENIANS

    al-Ahram Weekly, Egypt
    May 9 2014

    Lubna Abdel Aziz

    'Outrage' seems to be the word of the day! With a slightly artificial
    tone, voices were raised in outrage at the death sentence of 528
    vicious, lawless criminals, murderers, terrorists, butchers and
    assassins. Not even as a token of taste did they exert any effort to
    inquire about the reasons behind the Egyptian courts' decision---how
    many heinous crimes had they committed, how many human lives have
    they taken, how savage, how truculent were their deeds!

    With a decidedly serious bias, they challenged the Egyptian legal
    system and its modus operandi, revealing a total ignorance of its
    procedures. Nothing was expressed but outrage, outrage, outrage!

    Following due process the number of death sentences was reduced to 39.

    The reaction was total silence.

    Another group of killers were sentenced by the same legal procedures
    pertaining to the code of justice of this land, resulting in
    more outrage. Some may find it a harsh decision it is a just one
    nonetheless.

    When hundreds of men, women and children were slaughtered by these
    terrorists, there was no outrage.

    When 21 Egyptian soldiers were kidnapped, hands tied behind their
    backs, outstretched on the naked ground and shot through the head
    more than once, where was the outrage?

    When every member of the 'Kirdassa' police force were shot, then
    slain, then dragged through the streets of the town, as the natives
    hid behind closed doors, no one was outraged. These are only a few
    incidents out of hundreds of horrific acts by those same criminals,
    what punishment would you suggest?

    Can those 'outraged' explain to judge and jury their attitude towards
    the merciless killings of the innocents of a peaceful people overcome
    with terror?

    In very sentence pronounced by a judge in the name of a sovereign
    nation, dwells the whole majesty of Justice! To the august character
    of justice, all should bow!

    The irony lies in those most outraged. The loud voices came from
    Germany, yet the memory of the holocaust is still alive and well.

    Another loud voice was that of the self-righteous Americans, bastions
    of human rights! Are those rights reserved only for criminals? The
    sight of the Ku Klux Klan cannot be forgotten. Racial discrimination
    still lingers, despite a black president and his attorney general. Is
    this sinister, ironic, sardonic or simply ludicrous?

    The loudest voice expressing outrage came from Turkey, in which case
    one can only call it laughable!

    Remember the Armenians? Last week the Armenians commemorated the 99th
    anniversary of the massacre of their race by the Turks in 1915.

    It was called Red Sunday--April 24, 1915. Slowly, silently, in the
    dark of night, all the Armenian intellectuals and community leaders
    were rounded up and executed en masse. The date is known as 'Genocide
    Remembrance Day', and that was only the beginning.

    While the Turkish government offered its condolences to the Armenians
    of this painful tragedy of mammoth proportions, the Prime Minister
    Recep Tayyip Erdogan dared to reject the charges of an Armenian
    Genocide. In his rigid immobility he appeared hardly human as
    he described it 'as exaggerated accounts' of those 'enemies of
    the Ottoman Empire' and 'casualties of a world war' that did not
    exceed 500,000... as if that were a trifling number of humans. Is
    he ever conscious of his lack of humanity. "We are a people who
    think genocide is a crime against humanity", said the Turkish PM,
    "and we would never turn an eye to such blind action". Is there a
    magic to vice that is irresistible? Who should be outraged now?

    MEDZ YEGHERN, the Armenian name for' Great Crime', started during
    WW1, as the Ottoman Empire was falling apart. It was the systematic
    extermination of the minority population of Armenians from their
    pre-historic homeland. Their only guilt is that of being different.

    The able-bodied male population was forced into hard labour or outright
    massacre. Women, children, the elderly, the sick were escorted by armed
    Ottoman soldiers and marched through roads that led only to the Syrian
    desert, hundreds of miles away. Deprived of food and water, subjected
    to rape and robbery, hundreds of thousands perished. The New York
    Times reported that: "the roads are strewn with the corpses of exiles."

    Every means of extermination was used against the Armenians. The
    shortest method of disposing of women and children was to burn them.

    Whole villages were burned to ashes, and Russians recall the odour of
    burning human flesh permeated the air for days. Physicians, sworn to
    save lives, were directly involved in the massacre, injecting those
    slated for deportation with active blood of typhoid fever. Children
    were sent to classrooms infused with toxic gas, or injected with
    morphine. The purpose was to annihilate the Armenian race.

    Armenians are descendants of a branch of the Indo-Europeans related to
    the Phrygians who entered Asia Minor from Thrace. They call themselves
    the Hayks and their country Hayasdan. The first state of Armenia was
    established in the 6th Century BC, which extended from the Caucasus
    to the present day Turkey, Lebanon and northern Iran. It succumbed
    to several invasions and was part of the Roman Empire, and later the
    Mameluks in the 16th Century. They formed the Alphabet in 405 which
    ushered in the Golden Age of Armenia. The ancient Armenian culture
    excelled in painting, sculpture and architecture. Around 11 million
    in number worldwide, Armenians have preserved their culture, language,
    religion and traditions to this day, despite their Diaspora and their
    martyrdom at the hands of their fellow man!

    "If you start throwing hedgehogs under me, I shall throw a couple of
    porcupines at you"

    Nikita Khrushchev (1894-1972)

    http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/News/6128/44/Remember-the-Armenians-.aspx

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