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We Cannot Ignore The Line -- Ignorance Is A Threat To Our Freedoms

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  • We Cannot Ignore The Line -- Ignorance Is A Threat To Our Freedoms

    WE CANNOT IGNORE THE LINE -- IGNORANCE IS A THREAT TO OUR FREEDOMS

    The Varsity, Univ. of Toronto Student Newspaper, Canada
    March 30 2015

    A response to "Safe spaces, free speech, and the fight for unwelcome
    ideas"

    By Harout Kassabian

    Will Hall's article featured in the March 9, 2015 issue of The Varsity
    examines the problematic issue of holding freedom of expression as
    an absolute right for all in political thought-- while choosing to
    ignore the hard questions it entails in the real world.

    The article in question focuses on a lecture recently organized
    on campus by the Federation of Canadian Turkish Associations which
    featured known deniers of the Armenian Genocide. Hall expresses no
    doubt about the occurrence of the 20th century's first genocide but
    decries Armenian organizations for attempting to have the university
    cancel the event in what he sees as an attempt to supress freedom
    of expression.

    The fact is that freedom of expression is not limitless -- just as
    with the rest of our freedoms, it is not absolute. We allow it within
    reasonable bounds. We draw the line when someone else's freedoms
    are being infringed upon or there is a threat to the livelihood of
    others or society at large. This line exists and society has the
    responsibility to be conscious of it.

    The Armenian Genocide preceded the Holocaust. The Germans were well
    aware of the extermination of the Armenians and according to some
    scholars carried out their atrocious acts using it as an example.

    Unfortunately, deniers of the Holocaust also exist among us today. Do
    we allow them to speak in our university campuses on the grounds of
    freedom of expression, or do we ask them to take their hate speech
    elsewhere?

    We must ask ourselves: do they truly believe that the Holocaust didn't
    happen, or is there an underlying and sinister purpose at play? This is
    not an expression of honest opinion, a right that we try to maintain
    for all even when wrong. This is a deliberate act among anti-Semitic
    individuals to express their hate and disregard for Jews.

    Holocaust deniers go to infinite lengths to pretend that the
    atrocities did not take place -- they stare at the nail scratches
    on the walls of the Auschwitz gas chambers and dismiss them as part
    of the "conspiracy" by President Eisenhower. They are also blind to
    the endless testimonies of victims, soldiers, and journalists from
    across Europe, all of which corroborate the existence of the Holocaust.

    Similarly, there is no limit to Armenian Genocide deniers' attempts to
    revise well-established history. This is not honest ignorance; it is
    a systematic strategy promoted by the Turkish government itself. There
    is no reputable conflicting narrative or doubt regarding these events,
    yet they attempt to construe it as such -- a shameless shift to blame
    the victims.

    With this to consider, where do we draw the line of freedom of
    expression in academia? Do we allow the victims to be re-victimized?

    Do we allow a forum to defend the perpetrators and deny the
    well-documented crime?

    If we rightfully draw the line when faced with Holocaust denial,
    then the same line should exist for the Armenian Genocide.

    During the same week as this lecture, nationalists around Turkey held
    banners that red "We celebrate the 100th anniversary of our country
    being cleared of Armenians. We are proud of our glorious ancestors."

    Young Nihal Atsizs, a leading ideologue of Turkish racism and a
    proponent of Turanism, have directly accepted the Genocide. In
    Toronto, the Turkish deniers took a softer narrative by employing
    historical revisionism, but the inherent evil of their efforts is no
    different. The same underlying racism and nationalism remains.

    These individuals and groups are the ones who make a mockery of
    our democratic ideals. They hijack the freedoms afforded to them
    to marginalize and threaten the freedoms of others. Mr. Hall has
    defended them in his article and the university has encouraged them
    by allowing this event to take place.

    Would the university allow a radical Imam to speak on campus to
    radicalize disenfranchised youth and encourage them to kill the
    innocent and non-believers? The freedom of security afforded to society
    would be at threat and would trump the freedom of this individual.

    A line exists for everything, and Hall needs to understand that we do
    not live in an ideal world. It is difficult to maintain neutrality
    at times, but we can if we pull back the wool from our eyes and ask
    the difficult questions.

    U of T is well aware of the line, but chooses to acknowledge it for one
    case and not the other. The administration concluded it could weather
    whatever criticism and negative attention it receives as a result of
    this event and allowed it to proceed. By doing so, the university
    has assisted genocide denial -- a crime in many places -- and has
    re-victimized the descendants of the Armenian Genocide's survivors.

    The same body that claims to hold itself as a staunch defender of our
    freedoms compromised those victims' rights to freedom from harassment
    and discrimination. If the University of Toronto wishes to claim that
    it is a defender and promoter of freedom of expression, it must first
    show a bit more respect for the power that ideal holds.

    Harout Kassabian is a recent graduate of U of T in the faculty of
    applied science and engineering. He plans to return to the university
    next year to pursue a Master's degree.

    Will Hall's piece can be read at
    http://thevarsity.ca/2015/03/09/safe-spaces-free-speech-and-the-fight-for-unwelcome-ideas/

    http://thevarsity.ca/2015/03/30/we-cannot-ignore-the-line-ignorance-is-a-threat-to-our-freedoms/

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