Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

The Armenian Genocide: Not Just For Once A Year

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

  • The Armenian Genocide: Not Just For Once A Year

    THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE: NOT JUST FOR ONCE A YEAR

    by George Shirinian

    http://reporter.am/index.cfm?furl=/go/article/2014-05-28-the-armenian-genocide-not-just-for-once-a-year&pg=1
    Published: Wednesday May 28, 2014

    A scene from the annual April 24 protest at the Turkish embassy in
    Washington. Photo via ANCA

    Many Armenians express their interest and concern in the genocide
    once a year, around April 24. They feel the need to participate in
    commemorative events because some feel obligated because of guilt,
    some do it once a year because they don't want to visit the trauma the
    rest of the year, and some dread the past altogether and stay away
    from it throughout the year, but for the sake of keeping the memory
    alive they feel compelled to attend these commemorative events. There
    are those who don't commemorate even once a year because they are so
    divorced from the history.

    But there is so much more to be done. The Armenian Genocide is a
    subject vital to Armenians that must be thought about and acted upon
    every day. Here are some critical reasons.

    1. It is a mass crime that demands recognition and restorative justice
    for the international criminal justice system to have any credibility
    for punishment, deterrence, or prevention.

    2. To bring a measure of comfort and closure to the victims and their
    descendants, who must endure tremendous psychological pain, not only
    for the loss of life, land, and property, but also for the threat to
    the sustainability of Armenian culture and civilization.

    3. To search for truth and understanding of the Genocide, what
    happened, how it happened, and its ongoing impact. This is still
    aggressively denied by the Government of Turkey and its supporters,
    who treat the Armenians as unworthy of consideration as human beings
    and perpetuates the effects of the Genocide, as Prof. Roger W. Smith
    has written so eloquently.

    4. The Genocide is the main obstacle to normal relations between
    Armenia and Turkey today. Turkey has unilaterally closed their mutual
    border and imposed an economic blockade on Armenia. Ostensibly this is
    over the Karabagh issue. But, clearly the Genocide is a major aspect
    of it, as Turkey continues to insist on a historical commission to
    review the subject. Thus, the 1915 Genocide is national security for
    Armenia's existence today.

    5. Turkey's denial of the Armenian Genocide is an assault not only on
    Armenians, but also on truth, on world history, and thus on humanity,
    itself.

    The deniers are at work every day. Prof. Vahakn Dadrian has described
    there being an "industry of denial." They are supported by the Turkish
    government in various ways with all the political and economic leverage
    that a powerful state has at its disposal. They organize conferences,
    give public lectures, publish books and articles using the forms
    of scholarship, with appropriate academic language and footnotes,
    but what they produce is not scholarship; it is anti-Armenian
    propaganda. Real scholarship follows the evidence-all the evidence-to
    arrive at conclusions. Real scholarship takes account of the arguments
    of other scholars and builds on them with new evidence or serious
    arguments. It does not hide, ignore, or dismiss information or ideas
    that do not fit a preconceived model. Recently, they have also been
    active in the courts, seeking legal validation in various ways for
    their denialist position.

    Therefore, it is necessary for us to deal with this issue more than
    once a year. We must be active in working energetically every day in
    promoting education and awareness of the Armenian Genocide at every
    level and to combat its pervasive, well funded denial, racism and
    hostility towards Armenians.

    There is at least one organization that has been doing just that
    successfully for the past thirty-two years, the Zoryan Institute.

    Zoryan has excelled at bringing the key Armenian issues to prominent
    international settings and publishing groundbreaking books on critical
    subjects, using original research based on archival materials. It
    collected original archival documentation, including some 3,000 hours
    of oral history testimony of Armenian Genocide survivors on video,
    providing raw data for future researchers, as well as a link to the
    eyewitness experience of the survivors for future generations. It was
    behind such significant international public events as the Permanent
    Peoples Tribunal in Paris in 1984, the first judicial hearing of the
    Armenian Genocide. Its verdict found that genocide had been committed
    against the Armenian people and that the modern republic of Turkey
    inherited the legal responsibilities for dealing with the consequences.

    Among the more than forty books and two journals fundamental to the
    field that Zoryan has produced, let me mention just a few example. A
    Shameful Act is the first account by a Turkish historian which
    documents that the mass killings of Armenians during WWI was a
    deliberate, centralized program of state-sponsored extermination.

    Judgment at Istanbul (in Turkish and English) provides the scholarly
    documentation and analysis of the Ottoman Military Tribunals
    prosecuting the perpetrators of the Armenian Genocide. The Armenian
    Genocide: Evidence from the German Foreign Office Archives, 1915-1916
    (in German, Turkish and English), pioneering work fourteen years in the
    making, which led the German Parliament to pass a unanimous resolution
    acknowledging Germany's role in the Genocide. It also prompted one
    of Turkey's leading journalists to write, "...if you read the book
    and look at the documents, if you are a person who is introduced to
    the subject through this book, then there is no way that you would
    not believe in the genocide and justify the Armenians." He called it
    "an extremely important and expensive study."

    Zoryan has also been engaged in court cases, participating as an
    academic amicus curiae, along with other distinguished organizations,
    to help defend Massachusetts from having to include denial literature
    in its high school curriculum on the Armenian Genocide. It was involved
    as an amicus curiae in helping to defend California's law on extending
    the deadline for payment of life insurance policies for victims of
    the Genocide. And as recently as a month ago, Zoryan was instrumental
    in organizing a coalition of major Armenian organizations in Europe
    and North America in a successful endeavor to persuade Switzerland
    to appeal the European Court of Human Rights' ruling absolving Dogu
    Perincek of Armenian Genocide denial.

    This work needs professionals, trained academics and experts involving
    huge financial resources for identifying, collecting, analyzing,
    transliterating, translating, editing and publishing, authoritative,
    universally recognized original archival documents on the history
    of the events surrounding 1915. This material must be distributed
    worldwide, especially in Turkey.

    No one expects the average person to devote him or herself to such
    specialized and labor intensive work. But, the denial and as a result,
    the racism and the threat of security to the Armenians must be resisted
    by everyone. The only way this can be done is through a professional,
    successful, highly acclaimed research center such as Zoryan Institute
    and with the generous financial support of every Armenian.

    In this month of April, the world commemorates the genocide not
    only of the Armenian, but also the Jewish and Rwandan peoples. We
    naturally focus on these issues at this time, but the work on the
    Armenian Genocide is not for just once a year.

    - George Shirinian is Executive Director of the Zoryan Institute;
    contact him at [email protected]

Working...
X