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Article: Obama Stumbles On Genocide Again

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  • Article: Obama Stumbles On Genocide Again

    ARTICLE: OBAMA STUMBLES ON GENOCIDE AGAIN

    October 24, 2014 - 12:08 AMT

    PanARMENIAN.Net - After nearly a year of protests, the Obama
    administration has finally agreed to permit a rug connected to the
    Armenian Genocide to be publicly displayed. The long ordeal of the
    Armenian Orphan Rug, held hostage to fears of angering Turkey, has
    finally ended, Rafael Medoff, director of The David S. Wyman Institute
    for Holocaust Studies, in Washington, D.C. says in an article published
    by JNS.org.

    The controversy began in the autumn of 2013, when the Smithsonian
    Institution announced it would hold an event featuring a new book,
    "President Calvin Coolidge and the Armenian Orphan Rug," by Hagop
    Martin Deranian, Medoff reminds.

    The 18-foot long rug was woven 1925 by 400 Armenian orphan girls living
    in exile in Lebanon. They were survivors of the Turkish slaughter of
    approximately 1 million Armenians. The girls sent the rug to President
    Calvin Coolidge as a gesture of appreciation for America's assistance
    to survivors of the genocide. Coolidge pledged that it would have
    "a place of honor in the White House, where it will be a daily symbol
    of goodwill on earth."

    Instead, Medoff notes, it has become a daily symbol of politics taking
    precedence over combating genocide.

    The White House refused to loan the rug to the Smithsonian. Neither
    the White House nor the State Department would give an explanation
    as to why they were keeping the rug locked up. The only plausible
    explanation is pressure from the Turkish government, which to this
    day denies the genocide occurred.

    As a presidential candidate in 2008, then-Senator Obama said, "America
    deserves a leader who speaks truthfully about the Armenian Genocide."

    Yet the statements that President Obama has issued each April on
    Armenian Remembrance Day have never included the G-word. Instead,
    he has used an Armenian expression--"Meds Yeghern," meaning "the
    great calamity." Fear of displeasing the Turks appears to be the only
    plausible motive for that rhetorical evasiveness.

    Armenian-Americans are not the only ones who should be outraged.

    American Jews should be up in arms, too. Not only because of the
    sympathy that all victims of genocide naturally share--but also
    because if the White House can permit political considerations to
    take precedence over recognition of the Armenian genocide, there is
    a danger that memorialization of the Holocaust could one day suffer
    a similar fate, Medoff says.

    After numerous protests, the Obama administration announced that it
    will permit the rug to be displayed for six days in November--kind
    of a week-long furlough from its imprisonment in a White House closet.

    The rug will not be part of a display concerning the Armenian
    Genocide. Instead, it is being mushed together with other foreign
    gifts to the White House, in a display called "Thank You to the
    United States: Three Gifts to Presidents in Gratitude for American
    Generosity Abroad."

    The genocide rug will be sandwiched in between a Sevres vase presented
    by France to the United States after World War One, and a piece of
    artwork called "Flowering Branches in Lucite" sent by Japan after
    the 2010 tsunami. Grouping victims of genocide together with those
    who drowned in a tsunami or were left homeless by World War One
    disguises what happened to the Armenians. It blurs the distinction
    between something that was inevitable and something that was not.

    Weather-related disasters and damage caused by wars are inevitable.

    But the Armenian genocide was different: it was an act of mass murder,
    systematically planned and implemented by evil men driven by religious
    and ethnic hatred, Medoff says.

    The Armenian Orphan Rug is a work of great beauty. But the point of
    displaying it is not for the sake of its aesthetic value. Its power
    is its message. Its significance is as a symbol. It is a reminder of
    the genocide that the Turks perpetrated against the Armenians. Six
    days in an exhibit about gifts to the White House is no victory. On
    the contrary--it is a defeat for everyone who cares about historical
    truth and everyone who seeks to learn the lessons of the past so that
    they will not be repeated, he concludes.

    http://www.panarmenian.net/eng/news/183952/
    http://www.jns.org/latest-articles/2014/10/19/with-armenian-orphan-rug-obama-stumbles-again-on-genocide#.VEV3WBbgVuY=




    From: A. Papazian
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