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The Armenian Genocide: The Road To 100

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  • The Armenian Genocide: The Road To 100

    THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE: THE ROAD TO 100

    Neon Tommy, USC Annenberg
    May 19 2014

    by Ani Ucar |

    Looking ahead, it will have been 100 years, 1,200 months, 36,524 days
    and one word: genocide.

    Every April 24, Armenians and supporters all across the world take to
    the streets to remember those who were lost during the 1915 Armenian
    Genocide and to protest the Turkish government's rejection of the
    events.

    The month of April carries feelings of sadness, frustration, passion
    and anger for many Armenians who think about the history of their
    ancestors during the First World War.

    The legal definition of the word is "any of the following acts
    committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national,
    ethnical, racial or religious group, as such: killing members of
    the group; causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of
    the group; deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life
    calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in
    part; imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group;
    [and] forcibly transferring children of the group to another group,"
    according to the United Nations.

    That definition has been the center of conflict between Turkey and
    Armenia for nearly a century, but the response and reaction are almost
    the same with every year that passes.

    Although the Turkish Consulate declined to do an on-camera interview
    citing "security concerns," it did respond to questions via email. In
    regards to the definition of genocide, they had this to say:

    "First, no direct evidence has been discovered demonstrating that
    any Ottoman official sought the destruction of the Ottoman Armenians
    as such. Second, Ottoman Armenian Dashnak and Hunchak guerrillas and
    their civilian accomplices admittedly organized political revolutionary
    groups and waged war against their own government. Only in the 1915
    Armenian revolt in Van province at least 60,000 Muslims were killed by
    these guerilla groups. Under these circumstances, it was the Ottoman
    Armenians' violent political alliance with the Russian forces, not
    their ethnic or religious identity, which rendered them subject to
    the relocation."

    [Full Q&A with Los Angeles Turkish Consulate Here]

    Despite Turkey's argument, more than 40 U.S. states and 20 countries
    have officially recognized the events as genocide.

    However, even with the large number of states backing the recognition,
    the U.S. has yet to acknowledge it at a federal level.

    "Until all governments including the U.S. and Turkey acknowledge and
    condemn this great crime against humanity we cannot heal completely
    and move beyond our violent past," said Councilmember Mitch O'Farrell
    of Los Angeles City Council District 13.

    The 13th District is home to Little Armenia, the only designated
    Armenian community in the country.

    For Glendale Mayor, Zareh Sinanyan, this year is just as important
    as all the others. As the mayor of the city with one of the largest
    Armenian populations in the country, Sinanyan says he feels the same
    amount of pressure every day to seek change, regardless of any big
    anniversaries.

    "Its about justice. It's about history. It's about taking ownership of
    your ancestry. It's about heritage. It's about moral values," he said.

    Days before the 99th anniversary, the Armenian Film Foundation
    delivered 420 digitized genocide survivor testimonies to the USC Shoah
    Foundation. All but one of the survivors featured in the recordings
    are no longer living.

    "Completing this now in the run up to the 100th is one more thing
    that is really going to make it difficult for Turkey to continue
    its denial," said Jerry Papazian, chairman of the Armenian Film
    Foundation. "It's going to be hard for them to deny Steven Spielberg.

    It's going to be hard for them to deny the Shoah Foundation."

    The Shoah Foundation has been committed to archiving the testimonies of
    all genocide and holocaust survivors in a way that is both educational
    and user-friendly.

    "I think one of the key building blocks of this is knowledge and
    education," said Stephen Smith, executive director of the USC Shoah
    Foundation. "Because these testimonies ... live not only in the archive
    here, but across the university network that the USC Shoah Foundation
    services ... what happens is that you create an undeniable fact of
    the existence of genocide."

    Congressman Adam Schiff, who represents California's 28th District,
    has been a major proponent in the fight to getting official recognition
    on the state level.

    "If we're going to have the kind of moral leadership to speak out
    on human rights as a nation, if we 're going to continue to be a
    preeminent voice for human rights, we cant discriminate when it comes
    to recognition of genocide," he said.

    For years, he has lobbied for legislation in support of the Armenian
    fight.

    Schiff has gone so far as to speak on the Senate floor in Armenian,
    a language far from his native tongue.

    "I am not a descendant of the fallen, but I speak to you in their
    beautiful language because on this day, we are all Armenian," he
    said in Armenian as part of his speech on the House floor on the
    97th anniversary. "And not just on this day. Whenever we speak out
    against mass murder, whenever we refuse to be cowed into silence,
    we are all Armenian."

    http://www.neontommy.com/news/2014/05/recognizing-armenian-genocide-road-100

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