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  • Remembering the Armenian genocide

    Remembering the Armenian genocide

    By RAFFI K. HOVANNISIAN
    04/11/2015 22:09


    The government of Turkey, which now occupies those lands, denies that
    a genocide ever took place there.

    An Armenian protester holds a banner reading '1915 never again' as she
    takes part in a demonstration near the European Court of Human Rights
    in Strasbourg in January. (photo credit:REUTERS)

    YEREVAN, Armenia - On April 24, 2015, a century closes circle upon the
    1915 genocide and great national dispossession perpetrated by the
    Young Turk Party against the Armenian people.

    This primer in premeditated nation-killing resulted not only in the
    deportation and murder of 1.5 million civilians on their native soil
    but also in the destruction of an entire civilization - nearly four
    millennia of continual presence in an ancestral cradle long mapped as
    Western Armenia.

    The government of Turkey, which now occupies those lands, denies that
    a genocide ever took place there.

    What shall I say on that April day, 100 years later, to my survivor
    grandfathers Kaspar and Hovakim, who had watched their parents and
    siblings killed by the sword or else taken away for conversion? Or to
    their wives, my grandmothers Siroon and Khengeni, the latter of whom
    was saved by a righteous Turkish neighbor?

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    We know that, in 1915, the survivors of Western Armenia were dispersed
    to the four corners of the earth and live to this day, some well and
    others poorly, in their adopted countries. My own family moved to the
    United States; I grew up in Los Angeles. We know too that a small
    Armenian republic, commonly known as Eastern Armenia, has recently
    come forth from under the rubble of the Soviet Union.

    I repatriated to that Armenia, Eastern or Soviet Armenia, in 1989,
    during the final hours of the USSR. In 1991, I served as the new
    republic's first foreign minister. I raised Armenia's flag before the
    headquarters of the United Nations. This was not the Western homeland
    of my grandparents, but it was the reborn Armenia I was proud to call
    home.

    Soon, however, our newfound freedom began to disintegrate.

    Greed and corruption plagued the halls of government. I resigned.
    Years later I founded an opposition party, Heritage, and entered
    parliament. In 2013, I ran for president. Official results gave me 37
    percent of the vote, although the hundreds of thousands who staged
    protests that spring were convinced this was not so. The incumbent
    administration stands.

    Pending the accomplishment of a Republic of Armenia that is ruled by
    law, it is the progeny of Western Armenia who must come forward to
    press their collective rights, that flow from genocide and national
    dispossession.

    This necessarily presumes a novel, contemporary mechanism of recourse
    with the denialist government of Turkey, and the braver segments of
    Turkish civil society.

    A comprehensive agenda they must forge together, and in consultation
    with official Yerevan, but the bottom line must encompass the creation
    of an Armenian national hearth in historic Western Armenia.

    This strategy should entail: 1) a guaranteed right of return for
    survivors of the genocide and their generations, whether or not their
    property deeds are currently intact; 2) designation for them of a
    special Hearth status that does not require a change of existing
    citizenship; 3) the rebuilding of Armenian schools and colleges,
    churches and monasteries, all with jurisdiction duly vested in the
    Armenian Hearth; 4) the construction of memorials and introduction of
    public curricula to educate the Turkish public about their true past;
    5) celebration of the Armenian identity throughout the land, from
    Mount Ararat to Musa Dagh; and 6) negotiations between the republics
    of Turkey and Armenia triggering the first-ever sovereign reciprocal
    demarcation of the official frontier, including but not limited to
    provisions for an Armenian easement to the Black Sea.

    As for me, having lived in Eastern Armenia for 25 years, the western
    heartlands of my grandparents have not stopped being mine. They are
    not, and shall never become, wastelands. They have been breached,
    perforce and by malicious policy, over the past century. But they and
    I continue to belong to each other. Nobody has more title than I do,
    the grandson of Kaspar and Hovakim, and the resilient multitudes whose
    forebears are as sacred as mine.

    I plan shortly to return to find my Home, and trust that the Turkish
    authorities currently in power - pending their own facing of history
    and their own recognition of and redemption for the Armenian Genocide
    - will take every measure that my homecoming will be received with
    full honor, dignity, and an enduring respect for my rights as a child
    of the new-old Homeland.

    The author, whose grandparents hail from Garin-Erzerum, Mezre-Elazig,
    Bazmashen-Bizmishen and Ordu, was born in the United States, worked as
    an international lawyer in Los Angeles, and moved to Yerevan, becoming
    the nation's first foreign minister. He is the executive producer of
    1915 (1915themovie.com), which will be released in theaters on April
    17.


    http://www.jpost.com/Opinion/Remembering-the-Armenian-genocide-396789

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