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  • Recognition Is A Start

    RECOGNITION IS A START
    By Sheila Copps

    The Toronto Sun
    May 10, 2006 Wednesday
    Final Edition

    But The PM's Official Acknowledgement Of The Armenian Genocide Has Angered Turkey

    A couple of years ago, I hosted a fundraiser in my home for a Liberal
    MP. At the time, I received a rather nasty note from members of a
    local Turkish political action committee explaining why they would
    not attend.

    They refused to step foot in my home because, as former heritage
    minister, I had indirectly funded an Atom Egoyan film entitled
    Ararat. They went on to outline how this film distorted history by
    characterizing the loss of 1.5 million Armenian people as genocide.

    It did not seem to matter to these activists that as minister,
    I had absolutely no say as to which film received funding from the
    government. Telefilm guarded its independence jealously and would
    never bow to a ministerial intervention for funding.

    I wondered whether they had even seen the film. It was a sensitive,
    modern portrayal through the eyes of a self-described Armenian
    descendant, which asked questions about the genocide from a Turkish
    and Armenian perspective.

    For Egoyan, of Armenian heritage, the genocide was part of his story
    and the telling of it was an important personal journey.

    Notwithstanding his perspective, he made sure the film included a
    Turkish protagonist who held opposing views.

    The film was not objective (most historical accounts never are),
    and it did not pretend to be. But the fact that a local political
    committee could refuse an invitation to my home almost 90 years after
    the incidents shows just how deeply the issue still divides supporters
    of Armenia and Turkey.

    Today, Prime Minister Stephen Harper is feeling the political heat
    from Turkish anger about his public comments recogizing the genocide.

    Turkey said in a statement that it "rejects and condemns attempts
    based on long years of propaganda and political designs to create
    one-sided versions of history and to have lies be acknowledged as
    though they were facts." Its governmet has recalled its ambassador
    to Canada and is threatening economic sanctions.

    For years, Canadian parliamentarians have actively worked for
    recognition of what happened to the Armenians as genocide. The first
    parliamentary resolution was passed a decade ago, characterizing the
    deaths as a "tragedy." In 2004, a "genocide" resolution sailed through,
    despite opposition from Foreign Affairs, which feared reprisals from
    NATO ally Turkey.

    The parliamentary resolution did not convince the government, much
    to the chagrin of the 75 Liberal members who supported it. Business
    with Turkey was just too lucrative to risk.

    Ankara argues that history has been misinterpreted, that the casualties
    were simply the normal toll on civilians in a war-torn period for
    both countries. Others question why a 90-year-old wound matters. But
    all reconciliation starts with recognition.

    Holocaust deniers propagate more holocausts. Unacknowledged genocides
    promote future acts of genocide.

    That is why we should care that Armenia saw 1.5 million people
    wiped out, spawning a diaspora which started in Canada with a plan
    to resettle 100 orphans known as the Georgetown Boys. That is why
    we should care that Hitler wiped out six million Jews and up to 11
    million people in the Second World War. That is why we should care
    that Rwanda lost up to 1 million in the genocide of Tutsis and moderate
    Hutus. That is why we should also investigate recent published reports
    from China on organ harvesting and execution of Falun Gong followers.

    When genocide is long ago or far away, it is easy to ignore. When
    trade trumps human rights, it is profitable to gloss over the messy
    aftermath of genocide. It is a credit to Armenian-Canadians that they
    have never wavered in their pursuit of genocide recognition. It is
    a credit to the current government that it finally recognized what
    Parliament understood years ago.
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