Yervant1 Posted April 17, 2015 Author Report Share Posted April 17, 2015 12:34 16/04/2015 » IN THE WORLDPeter Balakian: On Armenian genocide, go ahead and offend TurkeyBy Peter BalakianLos Angeles TimesA friend once sent me a Christmas card with a handwritten greeting: "May your genocide be recognized this holiday season." It still makes me laugh out loud, because it captures something about the absurd and profound impasse between Turkey and the Armenian people.One hundred years ago this month, the Ottoman Empire began carrying out a systematic plan to exterminate its minority Armenian population. Between 1 million and 1.5 million people were killed or died of starvation. Yet the Turkish government won't admit this historical fact. It spends a fortune annually to stop scholarly and cultural events about the genocide, even going so far as to pay former Sen. Richard Gephardt's Gephardt Group more than $1 million each year to lobby against congressional resolutions on the genocide. Turkey has threatened several times, most recently in 2007, to close Turkish missile bases to U.S. airplanes if Congress passes a simple non-binding statement acknowledging the events of 1915 as genocide. And its tactics work; the resolution, which had the votes to pass, was killed at the State Department's behest.The United States isn't the only target of this censorship effort. At their government's prompting, Turkish diasporan organizations in 2009 mounted a campaign to stop the Toronto school board from including the Armenian genocide in a human rights curriculum. In 2010, Ankara succeeded in pressuring the Rwandan government to scrap a presentation on the Armenian genocide at a panel on genocide at the United Nations. In 2012, the Turkish government was successful in demanding that the British government order the Tate Gallery to remove the word "genocide" from the wall text of an Arshile Gorky exhibit.Substitute "Jews" for "Armenians" and "German government" for "Turkish government" and you can imagine the ensuing moral outrage. The Armenian community has been waiting a century for the international community to stand up to Turkey. It shouldn't have to wait any longer.The word "recognition" hovers over the history of the Armenian genocide like a hawk. It's a defining word that embodies an ethical basis for accountability after a human rights crime. The issue of recognition is not an abstraction, or a rhetorical game. The "R-word" is about responsibility, social justice and repair in the aftermath of one of the most extensive human rights crimes of the modern era: the crime that was instrumental in Raphael Lemkin's coining the very word and concept of genocide.When Lemkin was asked in February 1949, just after the U.N. Genocide Convention was ratified, why he became interested in genocide, he answered, "Because it happened so many times. It happened to the Armenians. And after — the Armenians got a very rough deal at the Versailles conference because the criminals who were found guilty weren't punished." Lemkin was not only noting the importance of the event but also pointing out that it's ethically harmful to commit such a crime with impunity.Denial of genocide is the final stage of genocide because it strives to kill the memory of the event; denial seeks to demonize the victims and rehabilitate the perpetrators; denial creates what the psychiatrist Robert Jay Lifton has called "a morally counterfeit universe for the survivors and their legacy."In December, after North Korea organized a hacking operation against Sony Pictures to stop the release of "The Interview," President Obama spoke out against the use of threats by foreign powers to inhibit free speech in the United States."We cannot have a society where some dictator someplace can start imposing censorship here in the United States," he said, "because if somebody is able to intimidate folks out of releasing a satirical movie, imagine what they'll do when they see a documentary that they don't like, or news reports that they don't like — or even worse, imagine if producers or distributors or others start engaging in self-censorship because they don't want to offend the sensibilities of somebody whose sensibilities probably need to be offended."Obama has gone further than any other president in confronting Turkish leaders by asking them to deal with the events of 1915 honestly, as he did in 2009 when he visited Turkey. But he should heed his own wisdom and stop self-censoring.The president understands clearly that what happened to the Armenians is genocide. In 2008, before his election, he stated, "My firmly held conviction [is] that the Armenian genocide is not an allegation, a personal opinion or a point of view, but rather a widely documented fact supported by an overwhelming body of historical evidence." The president should follow the example of Pope Francis who, in acknowledging the historical significance of the Armenian genocide on Sunday, refused to be intimidated by Turkish government bullying and cajoling.The Turkish government, for its part, should stop interfering with cultural events and intellectual freedom in democratic societies. And it should listen to many of its own ethically committed citizens who work hard for truth in Turkey. The Turkish scholar and journalist Cengiz Aktar spoke for many of his citizens when he wrote, "The Armenian genocide is the Great Catastrophe of Anatolia, and the mother of all taboos in this land. Its curse will continue to haunt us as long as we fail to talk about, recognize, understand and reckon with it."Removing the curse won't require magic. All that's necessary is moral leadership. Source: Panorama.am Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Yervant1 Posted April 17, 2015 Author Report Share Posted April 17, 2015 12:25 16/04/2015 » IN THE WORLDUSA Today: Obama, make good on ArmeniaBy Gregory J. WallanceUSA TodayOn April 24, 1915, in the midst of World War I, the Ottoman Empire began systematically massacring its Christian Armenian subjects. At Sunday's Mass in Rome, Pope Francis described the massacres as "the first genocide of the 20th century." Turkey, which emerged from the rubble of the defeated Ottoman Empire and has long fiercely denied that a genocide took place, angrily recalled its ambassador to the Vatican. "The pope's statement, which is out of touch with both historical facts and legal truths, is simply unacceptable," tweeted Turkey's foreign minister, Mevlut Cavusoglu.Will President Obama follow Pope Francis' lead?Contrary to the foreign minister's tweet, there is a solid factual and legal foundation for calling the massacres a genocide, defined as killing or other acts intended to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnic, racial or religious group.At the outbreak of the war, there were approximately 2 million Armenians living in the Ottoman Empire. Tens of thousands of Armenians were serving in the army of the empire, then at war with Britain and Czarist Russia. Seizing on the acts of a few Armenian sympathizers with Russia, the Ottoman government began systematically eliminating the Armenian leadership in Constantinople (now Istanbul) and sent Armenian men, women and children, many orphaned by the slaughter, on death marches into the Syrian desert, where they were left to die. One of the Ottoman leaders, Talaat *****, wrote that by "continuing the deportation of the orphans to their destinations (in the desert), we are ensuring their eternal rest." Ultimately, about 1.5 million Armenians died in the massacres which, together with Armenians who fled the Ottoman Empire, decimated the Armenian community.In fact, as a senator, Barack Obama strongly supported the passage of the 2007 Armenian Genocide Resolution, which called the massacres a genocide. As a presidential candidate, he condemned the Bush administration for dismissing John Evans, the U.S. ambassador to Armenia, after Evans said the word "genocide" in public. "As president," vowed Obama, "I will recognize the Armenian genocide."Not even close. On his first major foreign tour, President Obama visited Turkey and, while speaking in the Turkish Grand National Assembly about how "each country must work through its past," including the "terrible events of 1915," the word genocide did not then, and has not since, been publicly used by the president or members of his administration to describe the massacres. (As a senator, Hillary Clinton supported the Armenian genocide resolutions, but as Obama's first secretary of State, she opposed them.)The Obama administration has been hardly alone in its timidity. For example, aside from a brief reference in a 1981 Holocaust proclamation, the Reagan administration avoided calling the Armenian massacres a genocide. The historic reason is rooted in the perceived strategic importance of Turkey, first in the Cold War and now in the war on terror. Turkey, a member of NATO, has threatened to curtail operations at the U.S. Air Force base at Incirlik in Turkey whenever momentum built for a congressional resolution on the Armenian genocide.For Turkey, its national identity is at stake. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has gone so far as to acknowledge the "shared pain" and "inhumane consequences" of World War I, referring to the deaths of both Ottoman Muslims and the Armenians, but he categorically disputes that the Armenians died in a genocide by the Ottomans.Erdogan, who seems to exist in a state of near clinical paranoia, has warned against "new Lawrences of Arabia," read, the Western countries who he claims are working to destroy the Middle East. He can hardly afford to admit that modern Turkey was built on the greatest crime a government can commit.There are important U.S. interests at stake in relations with Turkey, but there is also something unseemly in a president breaking a firm campaign pledge rooted in moral considerations. Confronting a terrible past is essential to avoiding a repetition in the future. Or as the pope said Sunday, "Concealing or denying evil is like allowing a wound to keep bleeding without bandaging it."President Obama, who has prided himself on breaking foreign policy orthodoxy, as witness his opening to Cuba and nuclear negotiations with Iran, should do likewise with the Armenian genocide and finally make good on his own campaign pledge.Gregory J. Wallance, a lawyer and writer in New York City, is a board member of Advancing Human Rights. Source: Panorama.am Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Yervant1 Posted April 17, 2015 Author Report Share Posted April 17, 2015 TURKEY TRYING TO BLACKMAIL INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS FOR THEIR STANCE ON ARMENIAN GENOCIDEYEREVAN, April 17. /ARKA/. Turkey is trying to blackmail internationalorganizations and many countries and put pressure upon them, ArmenianForeign Minister Edward Nalbandyan, said in a statement posted onthe foreign ministry's website as response to Ankara's reaction tothe European Parliament's resolution on Armenian Genocide.<> he said.<which respect 1.5 million innocent victims of the Genocide and whichcondemn denial and try to prevent new crimes against humanity, theTurkish leaders find themselves lonely at the sinking ship of denial.>>The minister said in his statement that the resolution was adoptedby a parliament that represents 28 countries, but Ankara didn'trecall ambassadors from these 28 countries. <ambassadors would face unemployment problem,>> he added.In his opinion, Turkish authorities are like a chess player inzugzwang, whose every next step only worsens his position. Nalbandyanalso said citing the resolution: <without truth.>> ---0----http://arka.am/en/news/politics/turkey_trying_to_blackmail_international_organizations_for_their_stance_on_armenian_genocide_/#sthash.59jhtove.dpuf Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Yervant1 Posted April 17, 2015 Author Report Share Posted April 17, 2015 SWEDISH MEP: I'M HAPPY ABOUT THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE RESOLUTION FROM THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT04:28, 17.04.2015Region:World News, Armenia, TurkeyTheme: PoliticsThe Armenian Genocide is an issue that the Swedish Left Party(Vansterpartiet) has fought for both in Sweden and internationally,Swedish MEP and member of Committee on Civil Liberties, Justice andHome Affairs Malin Bjork told Armenian News - NEWS.am.The MEP said that she was very happy about the resolution from theEuropean Parliament regarding the Armenian genocide. "Indeed, it was aresolution from the Swedish Left Party in 2010 that led to the SwedishParliament recognizing the horrific events in 1915 as a genocide,"the MEP said. At the same time, Ms Bjork reminded that the Left Partyspokesperson and Swedish MP Hans Linde said in a press release: "Iam extremely proud and happy to have been involved in this decision,which represents a major step forward in the reconciliation processand means of redress for the victims of genocide and their survivors."The European Parliament adopted a resolution on Armenian GenocideWednesday in Brussels, in which it calls on Turkey to recognize theatrocities of 1915 as a genocide, confront its past and make effortsfor the actual reconciliation between Armenian and Turkish nations.http://news.am/eng/news/262425.html Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Yervant1 Posted April 17, 2015 Author Report Share Posted April 17, 2015 AGOS: HISTORY HAS ALREADY DECIDED: GENOCIDE13:30, 17.04.2015Region:Armenia, TurkeyTheme: PoliticsThe chief editor of Agos Armenian bilingual weekly of Istanbul,Yetvart Danzikyan, has harshly criticized Turkish President RecepTayyip Erdogan for his words against Armenians, and in connectionwith the European Parliament resolution on Armenian Genocide.Danzikyan, recalling Erdogan's statement that, "The decision by theEuropean Parliament enters from one of our ear and comes out from theother," stressed that this shows that Turkey continues its denialistand racist policies."Another time Erdogan had said, 'Let the historians decide [whetherit was genocide].' Yes, history has already decided: Genocide."Next, Erdogan said Armenians have fled Armenia and have come andare living in Turkey [today]. Armenians [from Armenia] have not fled,they work here [in Turkey]; Erdogan offends with this. In addition,most residents of Armenia are the descendants of those who went toArmenia from these lands."Erdogan used the word 'deportation' in connection with expellingthe Armenians [from Turkey]. In English, this has the meaning of'displacement," Agos' chief editor specifically said.http://news.am/eng/news/262480.html Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Yervant1 Posted April 17, 2015 Author Report Share Posted April 17, 2015 FRENCH-ARMENIAN ACTOR SAYS THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE IS LIKE A WOUND THAT NEVER HEALS17:28, 17 April, 2015PARIS, 17 APRIL, ARMENPRESS. During the television program called"Stories of French-Armenians", French-Armenian actor Simon Abgariantalked about the Armenian Genocide, reflected on his past, the historyof his ancestors and called on Turkey to recognize the crime that itcommitted in the early 20th century and turn a new page in its history.As "Armenpress" reports, Abgarian emphasized that the ArmenianGenocide is like a wound that never heals and doesn't allow one toforget what has happened. "The wound is still open. It's impossibleto forget the pain, and it has to remind the future generations,including the Turks about what happened 100 years ago. It has toremind them so that such events never happen again," Abgarian said.Talking about Turkey, the actor placed emphasis on the futureand stressed the fact that Turkey's modern society and generationacknowledge what their ancestors did."The events taking place today show that we have to learn the lessonsfrom the past because only be condemning will we be able to preventfuture crimes against humanity," the French-Armenian actor mentioned.http://armenpress.am/eng/news/802245/french-armenian-actor-says-the-armenian-genocide-is-like-a-wound-that-never-heals.html Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Yervant1 Posted April 17, 2015 Author Report Share Posted April 17, 2015 TURKISH POLITICAL PARTIES RELEASE JOINT STATEMENT AGAINST EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT'S RESOLUTION ON ARMENIAN GENOCIDE15:37 â~@¢ 17.04.15Turkey's ruling party, along with two opposition parties, havereleased a joint statement "harshly condemning the partial approach"of the European Parliament (EP) which backed a motion to call themass killings of Anatolian Armenians during World War I a "genocide,"the Hurriyet Daily News reports.The ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP), the main oppositionRepublican People's Party (CHP) and the opposition Nationalist MovementParty (MHP) signed the declaration on late April 16; only the Peoples'Democratic Party (HDP) abstained from signing the declaration.The statement condemned the EP's "partial" approach as it "opposesthe idea of peace, toleration and building of a common future.""Despite our objections, the European Parliament prefers to deepen theproblem and gap between our two societies ... and prevent impartialand scientific research of the issue," said the joint statement.Since 1985, some 13 joint statements have been released in the Turkishparliament's general assembly about various countries' statements,including ones by France and the United States, about Armenian claims."The government should found a truth and reconciliation commissionin order to face the past," HDP Co-Chair Selahattin DemirtaÅ~_ toldreporters on April 16, displaying a different approach than otherpolitical leaders."The pope says something; they give a childish reaction. The EuropeanParliament makes a decision; they give a childish reaction to this,too. It's like a kindergarten, not as if they are governing a state.They are like children attending a kindergarten," he said."You should explain to society how the Armenian reality should befaced. This is an issue which is not discussed in Turkey. This isan issue which is not officially clarified," he said. "This problemcannot be resolved by saying 'We don't recognize the pope.'"The HDP has long recognized the 1915 events as a genocide.http://www.tert.am/en/news/2015/04/17/turkparties/1649424 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Yervant1 Posted April 17, 2015 Author Report Share Posted April 17, 2015 ARMENIAN GENOCIDE ISSUE: ISRAEL'S POLICY BECOMING MORE FAVORABLE TO ARMENIA16:44 * 17.04.15Recognition of the Armenian Genocide was formerly a taboo in Israel,whereas that state is gradually shifting its foreign policy focuswhich is more favorable to Armenia, and the Pope's liturgy provedshock therapy for the morally degrading world regardless of religiousaffiliation, Head of the Jewish community in Armenia Rima Varzhapetyantold Tert.am."As regards European Jews, I can only say that not only theChristendom was impressed by the Pope's remarks, but they also provedshock therapy for the whole morally degrading world regardless ofreligious affiliation. And all of them, both Christians and Judaists,sobered up. And nothing human is alien to the people of Israel,"Ms Varzhapetyan said.According to her, recognition of the Armenian Genocide is "almosta moral matter" for Israel, and that state will certainly recognizeand condemn the heinous crime.The American Jewish Committee (AJC) is sending its members to numerouscommunities in the United States to participate in commemoration of1.5. million victims of the Armenian Genocide.Armenia will host Israeli Culture Days on May 13-18, and numerouswell-known political figures, and "two very important persons" areexpected to arrive in Armenia.Without naming them, Ms Varzhapetyan said that the powerful Turkish andAzerbaijani lobby, as well as sponsors, in Israel may exert pressureto prevent their arrival in Armenia.Armenian political analysts are cautiously optimistic about someprogress in the attitude of Israel and European Jews to internationalrecognition of the Armenian Genocide."The ice is breaking," said Hmayak Hovhannisyan, the chairman of theUnion of Armenian Political Analysts.He said Israel has so far avoided acknowledging the Armenian Genocideon a state level, being surrounded by Muslim that that haven'trecognized the tragedy either.According to Styopa Safaryan, Chairman of the Armenian Instituteof International and Security Affairs, there are reasons to expectpositive moves by Israel in light of past years' deterioration inthe country's relations with Turkey."So there's nothing surprising about the fact that we had many visitslast year," he told our correspondent.http://www.tert.am/en/news/2015/04/17/rimavarjapetian/1649383 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Yervant1 Posted April 17, 2015 Author Report Share Posted April 17, 2015 REPUBLIKA SRPSKA TO ADOPT DECLARATION ON ARMENIAN GENOCIDE14:30 17/04/2015 >> IN THE WORLDThe President of the Republika Srpska Milorad Dodik said in Srebrenicathat he will attend the "marking of the 100th anniversary of theArmenian Genocide," at the invitation of the President of Armenia,Bosnia Today reported.Dodik told reporters in Srebrenica that he submitted the Declarationon the recognition of the Armenian genocide from 1915 to 1917 to theNational Assembly of the Republika Srpska, and proposed its adoptionat the very next session.He said that "the same was done by the Council of Europe and about20 countries around the world, and even some 40 countries of the US."Dodik visited the Memorial Center in Potocari, where he laid a wreathand paid tribute to the victims of massacre in July 1995, but declinedto name this crime as genocide. International Court of Justice ruledthat genocide was committed in Srebrenica.Republika Srpska is one of the two Bosnian entities.http://www.bosniatoday.ba/republika-srpska-to-adopt-declaration-on-armenian-genocidehttp://www.panorama.am/en/politics/2015/04/17/milorad-dodik/ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Yervant1 Posted April 17, 2015 Author Report Share Posted April 17, 2015 A CENTURY AFTER ARMENIAN GENOCIDE, TURKEY'S DENIAL ONLY DEEPENS - THE NEW YORK TIMES13:17 * 17.04.15By Tim ArganoThe crumbling stone monastery, built into the hillside, stands as aforlorn monument to an awful past. So, too, does the decaying churchon the other side of this mountain village. Farther out, a creviceis sliced into the earth, so deep that peering into it, one sees onlyblackness. Haunting for its history, it was there that a century ago,an untold number of Armenians were tossed to their deaths."They threw them in that hole, all the men," said Vahit Sahin, 78,sitting at a cafe in the center of the village, reciting the storiesthat have passed through generations.Mr. Sahin turned in his chair and pointed toward the monastery. "Thatside was Armenian." He turned back. "This side was Muslim. At first,they were really friendly with each other."A hundred years ago, amid the upheaval of World War I, this villageand countless others across eastern Anatolia became killing fieldsas the desperate leadership of the Ottoman Empire, having lost theBalkans and facing the prospect of losing its Arab territories as well,saw a threat closer to home.Worried that the Christian Armenian population was planning to alignwith Russia, a primary enemy of the Ottoman Turks, officials embarkedon what historians have called the first genocide of the 20th century:Nearly 1.5 million Armenians were killed, some in massacres like theone here, others in forced marches to the Syrian desert that leftthem starved to death.The genocide was the greatest atrocity of the Great War. It alsoremains that conflict's most bitterly contested legacy, having beenmet by the Turkish authorities with 100 years of silence and denial.For surviving Armenians and their descendants, the genocide became acentral marker of their identity, the psychic wounds passed throughgenerations."Armenians have passed one whole century, screaming to the world thatthis happened," said Gaffur Turkay, whose grandfather, as a young boy,survived the genocide and was taken in by a Muslim family. Mr. Turkay,in recent years, after discovering his heritage, began identifying asan Armenian and converted to Christianity. "We want to be part of thiscountry with our original identities, just as we were a century ago,"he said.http://www.nytimes.com/2015/04/17/world/europe/turkeys-century-of-denial-about-an-armenian-genocide.html?_r=0http://www.tert.am/en/news/2015/04/17/turkey-armenia-genocide/1649226 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Yervant1 Posted April 17, 2015 Author Report Share Posted April 17, 2015 EU PARLIAMENT RECOGNIZES ARMENIAN GENOCIDEArutz Sheva, IsraelApril 16 2015Following Pope Francis's lead, EU lawmakers vote overwhelmingly torecognize genocide in move likely to trigger Turkish anger.By Ari SofferThe European Union parliament has voted overwhelmingly in favor ofrecognizing the mass-murder of Armenians by Ottomoan Turkey in 1915as a genocide.The decision to recognize the genocide - which saw more than 1.5million Christian Armenians perish at the hands of Muslim Turkishforces - is sure to enrage Turkey's Islamist leadership, coming justdays after the Pope similarly recognized it, comparing the ArmenianGenocide to other atrocities including the Holocaust.EU parliamentarians backed the motion, which stated that the "tragicevents that took place in 1915-1917 against the Armenians in theterritory of the Ottoman Empire represent a genocide," accordingto Reuters.Armenian Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian hailed the resolution, andsaid it sent an important message to Turkey - despite Turkish PresidentRecep Tayyip Erdogan vowing to ignore the vote even before it was held."The Resolution contains an important message to Turkey to use thecommemoration of the centenary of the Armenian Genocide to come toterms with its past, to recognize the Armenian Genocide and thus pavethe way for a genuine reconciliation between Turkish and Armenianpeoples," Nalbandian said in a statement.Turkey denies the massacres amounted to a genocide, although it admitssome killings of Armenians by Turkish forces did happen.While Armenia and several western states do recognize the genocide,most countries have yet to do so, mainly due to political pressurefrom Turkey.The EU Parliament also praised Pope Francis for his comments on Sunday.Speaking at an Armenian event at the Vatican, Francis told worshippers:"In the past century, our human family has lived through three massiveand unprecedented tragedies."The first, which is widely considered 'the first genocide of the20th century', struck your own Armenian people," he said, going onto name the other two tragedies as the Holocaust and Stalinism.The Pope also condemned those who attempted to deny such crimes hadtaken place.The European Union parliament has voted overwhelmingly in favor ofrecognizing the mass-murder of Armenians by Ottomoan Turkey in 1915as a genocide.The decision to recognize the genocide - which saw more than 1.5million Christian Armenians perish at the hands of Muslim Turkishforces - is sure to enrage Turkey's Islamist leadership, coming justdays after the Pope similarly recognized it, comparing the ArmenianGenocide to other atrocities including the Holocaust.EU parliamentarians backed the motion, which stated that the "tragicevents that took place in 1915-1917 against the Armenians in theterritory of the Ottoman Empire represent a genocide," accordingto Reuters.Armenian Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian hailed the resolution, andsaid it sent an important message to Turkey - despite Turkish PresidentRecep Tayyip Erdogan vowing to ignore the vote even before it was held."The Resolution contains an important message to Turkey to use thecommemoration of the centenary of the Armenian Genocide to come toterms with its past, to recognize the Armenian Genocide and thus pavethe way for a genuine reconciliation between Turkish and Armenianpeoples," Nalbandian said in a statement.Turkey denies the massacres amounted to a genocide, although it admitssome killings of Armenians by Turkish forces did happen.While Armenia and several western states do recognize the genocide,most countries have yet to do so, mainly due to political pressurefrom Turkey.The EU Parliament also praised Pope Francis for his comments on Sunday.Speaking at an Armenian event at the Vatican, Francis told worshippers:"In the past century, our human family has lived through three massiveand unprecedented tragedies."The first, which is widely considered 'the first genocide of the20th century', struck your own Armenian people," he said, going onto name the other two tragedies as the Holocaust and Stalinism.The Pope also condemned those who attempted to deny such crimes hadtaken place."http://www.israelnationalnews.com/News/News.aspx/194143#.VTBAe5scSP8 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Yervant1 Posted April 17, 2015 Author Report Share Posted April 17, 2015 THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDECanada Free PressApril 16 2015By Dr. Ileana Johnson Paugh"Around the world, Christians are facing violence, persecution,brutality in a way we have not seen in generations." - Rey Flores,"The Wanderer"The hypocritical "war on women" movement is deafly silent, no realeffort to save the captives, and good men are doing nothing whenfaced daily with photographs of Christian hostages on their knees,clad in orange jumpsuits, about to be beheaded, when women and girlsare kidnapped, raped, genitally mutilated by ISIS, and driven intoa life of slavery as forced converts to Islam.One year later, the Clarion Project says, " #BringBackOurGirls" arestill sex slaves to Boko Haram, sold into slavery for 2,000 rials each,about $12.The Christian genocide continues unabated. ISIS is demanding $100,000per hostage, for the 250-300 Assyrians who were captured in theHasaka province.The Pope spoke about the Armenian genocide during Mass in the ArmenianCatholic rite at St. Peter's Basilica in Rome. Church leaders and theArmenian President Serzh Sargsyan were in attendance. He spoke abouthumanity witnessing "three massive and unprecedented tragedies" inthe 20th century. "The first, which is widely considered, 'the firstgenocide of the 20th century,' struck your own Armenian people," hesaid. The Nazi Holocaust and Stalin's mass killings were followed byother genocides in Cambodia, Rwanda, Burundi, and Bosnia.As Christians, it is our duty and responsibility to keep alive thememories of those killed, the Pope said. "Concealing or denying evilis like allowing a wound to keep bleeding without bandaging it,"Pope Francis continued.BBC News reported on April 12, 2015 that Turkey was angry with PopeFrancis' description of the mass killings of Armenians under Ottomanrule in WWI as "genocide." Turkey plays down the genocide as smallernumbers of deaths resulting from the WWI clashes in which ethnicTurks have also suffered. Most Western scholars regard the 1.5 millionArmenians civilians, who were deliberately deported between 1915-1916to desert regions where they succumbed to starvation and thirst, asgenocide. "Thousands also died in massacres." Countries like Belgium,Canada, Argentina, France, Italy, Russia, and Uruguay recognize themass killings of Armenians as genocide.Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan offered condolences in2014 for the first time to the grandchildren of all the Armenians whowere massacred in 1915. This year marks a century since the atrocitieswere committed, and, until all countries recognize that the genocidehad occurred, it is an incomplete mourning exacerbated by the denialstories to this day.Why were Armenians massacred by the Turks? To understand the reason,you must understand who the Armenians were, how, and why theylived under the Ottoman Empire, and their status as non-Muslims,"non-believers," and second-class citizens.Armenians are ancient people who lived in Anatolia some 2500 yearsago. They had their own distinctive alphabet and culture. There are 6to 7 million Armenians today, half living in the Republic of Armenia,while the rest are scattered in the U.S., Russia, France, Lebanon,and Syria.In the year 301 A.D., the King of Armenia was the first ruler toadopt Christianity as the official state religion, even before theRoman Emperor Constantine's conversion to Christianity. Captured bythe Ottoman Empire in the 15th century, Armenia was absorbed into theIslamic Ottoman Empire, along with a large swath of European lands. Assubject of the Sultan, Armenians had less freedom, had to pay highertaxes, were discriminated against, and were not allowed to serve inthe military.Unhappy with the second-class citizen status, by the end of the 1800s,Armenians demanded equality. In the 1890s the Bloody Sultan who waspresiding over a weak government, used massacres as a way to maintainlaw and order. In 1894-1896 200,000 Armenians were killed during theHamidian massacres under the rule of Abdul Hamid II, a foreshadowingof what was to come in 1915.When the Young Turks forced the Sultan out in 1908, Armenians wereallowed to serve in the military. In 1912-1913 the Christian regionsof Greece, Serbia, and Bulgaria gained their independence from theOttoman Empire.According to Vahaken Dadrian, Director of the Genocidal Research atZoryan Institute, as quoted on a film aired on PBS, "For the firsttime in recent history, the glorious Ottoman army suffered a majormilitary defeat at the hands of their former subject-nations, Greeks,Bulgarians, and Serbs," losing in two weeks 75 percent of their formerEuropean territories.The despair borne by such a loss in the Balkans gave rise to a deephatred against Christians, inflamed by Ottoman refugees' stories,refugees thrown out of Christian lands, turning angry Turks againsttheir indigenous Christian population, the Armenians - "Revenge,revenge, revenge, there is no other word."Ambassador Henry Morgenthau published in 1918 his personal account ofthe Armenian genocide. Chapter 24, The Murder of a Nation, describesin grizzly detail how Armenian men, who were formerly soldiersand cavalrymen in the Turkish army, were stripped of their arms andtransformed into road workers and "pack animals." Carrying heavy loadsonto their backs, these men were whipped and bayonetted by the Turksinto the Caucasus Mountains, sometimes waist-deep through snow."They had to spend practically all their time in the open, sleepingon the bare ground. ... They were given only scraps of food; ifthey fell sick they were left where they had dropped," while theTurks robbed them of their possessions and their clothes. "Squads of50-100 men were taken in groups of four, marched to a secluded spot ashort distance from the village," they were stripped naked and shot,having been forced to dig their own graves.Morgenthau describes the fate of an entire Armenian regiment sentto Diarbekir. Agents notified Kurdish tribesmen to attack and killthese weak and starved soldiers "that they might gain that merit inAllah's eyes that comes from killing a Christian."Ambassador Morgenthau explained how "throughout the Turkish Empire asystematic attempt was made to kill all able-bodied men, not only forthe purpose of removing all males who might propagate a new generationof Armenians, but for the purpose of rendering the weaker part ofthe population an easy prey."When thousands failed to turn in weapons, the Turks ransacked churches,desecrated altars, marched the naked men and women through the streets,letting them be whipped by angry Turkish mobs. Those imprisoned whodid not manage to flee into the woods and caves were subjected to the"bastinado" torture, the beating of the soles of the feet until theyburst and had to be amputated.Crucifixion, pulling of fingernails, of hairs, of eyebrows, tearing offlesh with red-hot pincers, and then pouring hot oil into the woundswere some of the barbaric methods of torture drawn from the recordsof the Spanish Inquisition.Torture was just the beginning of the Armenian atrocities. What wasto come was the actual destruction of "an entire Armenian race" bydeporting it to the south and southeastern part of the Ottoman Empire,the Syrian desert and the Mesopotamian valley. Morgenthau said,"The Central Government now announced its intention of gatheringthe two million or more Armenians living in the several sections ofthe empire and transporting them to this desolate and inhospitableregion." They knew they would die on the way of thirst, starvation,or be murdered by "Mohammedan desert tribes."The deportations took place through the spring and summer of 1915. Theentire Armenian population of villages were ordered to appear inthe main square, sometimes with little time to prepare, their homesand possessions confiscated for "safekeeping" and then divided amongTurks. Once the deported Armenians had traveled several hours, theywere attacked and killed in secluded valleys by Turkish peasants withclubs, hammers, axes, scythes, spades, and saws.The "caravans of despair" originated in thousands of cities andvillages in the Ottoman Empire. Ambassador Morgenthau describedhow village after village and town after town were emptied of theirArmenian populations and, in six months, "about 1.2 million peoplestarted on this journey to the Syrian desert." He believed it absurdthat the Turkish government claimed to deport Armenians to "new homes,"the real intent was extermination. He concludes, "The details inquestions were furnished to me directly by the American Consul inAleppo, and are now on file in the State Department at Washington."(Ambassador Morgenthau's Story: A Personal Account of the ArmenianGenocide, Henry Morgenthau, Cosimo Classics, New York, 2010)Henry Morgenthau Sr. (1856-1946) "details how Turkey fell under theinfluence of Germany and how this led to the Armenian Genocide. In atrial run of the extermination of the Jews, the Germans orchestratedthe murder and exile of the Armenians from Turkey, with 'Turkeyfor the Turks' as a rallying cry. The similarities to the Holocaustare chilling."Also chilling is the recent discovery made by Stefan Petke of theTechnical University of Berlin who uncovered rare WWII footagethat documents the existence of Muslim units (The Free Arab Legion)in the Nazi army who were used as 'working soldiers' because they"were a complete failure in the battlefields of Tunisia in 1943."The Marxist/Nazi/Ottoman/Islamist ISIS pogrom against Christianitycontinues to this day.http://canadafreepress.com/index.php/article/71223#.VTAsOAq2RYo.facebook Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Yervant1 Posted April 17, 2015 Author Report Share Posted April 17, 2015 MEP: WHEN WILL ERDOGAN HEAR TURKS' WORDS ON GENOCIDE?23:54, 16.04.2015Region:World News, Armenia, TurkeyTheme: PoliticsSajjad Karim MEP, who co-chairs the European Parliament (EP) Delegationto the EP/Armenia Parliamentary Cooperation Committee, today welcomedthe adoption by the EP Plenary of a Joint Resolution on the 100thAnniversary of the Armenian Genocide.MEPs paid tribute to the memory of the 1.5 million innocent Armenianvictims who perished in 1915-1917. While these tragic events tookplace in the times of the Ottoman Empire, the European Parliamenthas reiterated its formal position, adopted as early as 1987, thatgenocide did in fact take place, as defined by the Convention on thePrevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide of 1948.This resolution follows both the Euronest Parliamentary Assembly andthe EP/Armenia Parliamentary Cooperation Committee adopting similartexts in mid-March. The joint EP/Armenia PCC statement, in particular,had strongly hoped that the legacy of the past could be overcome by thenormalization of Turkey - Armenia relations, without any preconditions.The EP Plenary, in turn, encourages both countries to focus onan agenda that puts cooperation between both their people first,believing this will contribute to historical reconciliation.Speaking during today's plenary session in the European Parliament,Dr Karim said:"It's quite clear that whilst President Erdogan may take the viewthat he is going to ignore what this house has to say, how long is hegoing to ignore all of those Turkish people that are saying exactlywhat we have said in our resolution.I say to the Turks and I say to the Armenians - our intent isconstructive. We want to help you both to move forward towardsnormalization of relations, but to do that we must first stand byour own core principles."Armenia News - NEWS.am Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Yervant1 Posted April 17, 2015 Author Report Share Posted April 17, 2015 GENOCIDE SCHOLARS CALL ON TURKEY TO END DENIAL OF THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDEANCA Welcomes Open Letter by Leaders of theInternational Association of Genocide ScholarsWASHINGTON, DC - The Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA) haswelcomed an open letter by leaders of the International Associationof Genocide Scholars (IAGS) calling on Turkey to end its campaign ofdenial of the Armenian Genocide and urging the Turkish government toaccept responsibility for this crime against humanity.The open letter, dated April 6th and first reported by Bloomberg Newson April 14th, was signed by Robert Robert Melson, the President ofthe IAGS; Israel Charny, Vice-President of the Association, and; NewYork Times Best-Selling author Peter Balakian, who holds the Donald M.and Constance H. Rebar Professor of the Humanities at ColgateUniversity. These scholars wrote in response to Turkish Prime MinisterErdogan's call for an "impartial investigation" of the fate of theArmenians in Turkey in 1915."We very much appreciate the strong leadership, academic integrity,and moral clarity of professors Melson, Charney, and Balakianin challenging Prime Minister Erdogan's cynical attempt to forcean artificial debate on an issue that is thoroughly documented anduniversally accepted - except by the few remaining academic mercenariesin the service of Turkey's state-controlled institutions," said AramHamparian, Executive Director of the ANCA.Speaking on behalf of the "the major body of scholars who studygenocide in North America and Europe," the authors of the letter notedthat the "Armenian Genocide is abundantly documented by thousands ofofficial records of the United States and nations around the worldincluding Turkey's wartime allies Germany, Austria and Hungary, byOttoman court-martial records, by eyewitness accounts of missionariesand diplomats, by the testimony of survivors, and by decades ofhistorical scholarship."The letter went on to stress that, "there may be differinginterpretations of genocide - how and why the Armenian Genocidehappened, but to deny its factual and moral reality as genocide isnot to engage in scholarship but in propaganda and efforts to absolvethe perpetrator, blame the victims, and erase the ethical meaning ofthis history.""We would also note that scholars who advise your government and whoare affiliated in other ways with your state-controlled institutionsare not impartial. Such so-called "scholars" work to serve the agendaof historical and moral obfuscation when they advise you and theTurkish Parliament on how to deny the Armenian Genocide," the lettercontinued. "We believe that it is clearly in the interest of theTurkish people and their future as a proud and equal participant ininternational, democratic discourse to acknowledge the responsibilityof a previous government for the genocide of the Armenian people,just as the German government and people have done in the case ofthe Holocaust."Commenting on the letter, Hamparian added: "Clearly, the internationalpressure is growing on Turkey, and Ankara is finding itselfincreasingly isolated in its campaign of genocide denial.Unfortunately, rather than following the post World War II Germanmodel of accepting responsibility - as suggested in this letter - theTurkish government has responded, internally, by outlawing discussionof the Armenian Genocide - through Section 306 of their new penal code,and, abroad, in the form of aggressive, but increasingly transparent,efforts to deny the truth, engage in diversionary tactics, and escapejustice for its crime."The full text of the letter is provided below.#####INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF GENOCIDE SCHOLARSPresident: Robert Melson (USA) Vice-President: Israel Charny (Israel)Secretary-Treasurer: Steven Jacobs (USA)Respond to: Robert Melson, Professor of Political Science PurdueUniversity, West Lafayette, IN 47907 USAApril 6, 2005Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan TC Easbakanlik Bakanlikir Ankara,Turkey FAX: 90 312 417 0476Dear Prime Minister Erdogan:We are writing you this open letter in response to your call for an"impartial study by historians" concerning the fate of the Armenianpeople in the Ottoman Empire during World War I.We represent the major body of scholars who study genocide in NorthAmerica and Europe. We are concerned that in calling for an impartialstudy of the Armenian Genocide you may not be fully aware of theextent of the scholarly and intellectual record on the ArmenianGenocide and how this event conforms to the definition of the UnitedNations Genocide Convention. We want to underscore that it is not justArmenians who are affirming the Armenian Genocide but it is hundredsof independent scholars, who have no affiliations with governments,and whose work spans many countries and nationalities and the courseof decades. The scholarly evidence reveals the following:On April 24, 1915, under cover of World War I, the Young Turkgovernment of the Ottoman Empire began a systematic genocide of itsArmenian citizens - an unarmed Christian minority population. Morethan a million Armenians were exterminated through direct killing,starvation, torture, and forced death marches. Another million fledinto permanent exile. Thus an ancient civilization was expunged fromits homeland of 2,500 years.The Armenian Genocide was the most well-known human rights issue ofits time and was reported regularly in newspapers across the UnitedStates and Europe. The Armenian Genocide is abundantly documentedby thousands of official records of the United States and nationsaround the world including Turkey's wartime allies Germany, Austriaand Hungary, by Ottoman court-martial records, by eyewitness accountsof missionaries and diplomats, by the testimony of survivors, and bydecades of historical scholarship.The Armenian Genocide is corroborated by the international scholarly,legal, and human rights community:1) Polish jurist Raphael Lemkin, when he coined the term genocidein 1944, cited the Turkish extermination of the Armenians and theNazi extermination of the Jews as defining examples of what he meantby genocide.2) The killings of the Armenians is genocide as defined by the 1948United Nations Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of theCrime of Genocide.3) In 1997 the International Association of Genocide Scholars, anorganization of the world's foremost experts on genocide, unanimouslypassed a formal resolution affirming the Armenian Genocide.4) 126 leading scholars of the Holocaust including Elie Wiesel andYehuda Bauer placed a statement in the New York Times in June 2000declaring the "incontestable fact of the Armenian Genocide" and urgingwestern democracies to acknowledge it.5) The Institute on the Holocaust and Genocide (Jerusalem), theInstitute for the Study of Genocide (NYC) have affirmed the historicalfact of the Armenian Genocide.6) Leading texts in the international law of genocide such as WilliamA. Schabas's Genocide in International Law (Cambridge University Press,2000) cite the Armenian Genocide as a precursor to the Holocaust andas a precedent for the law on crimes against humanity.We note that there may be differing interpretations of genocide -how and why the Armenian Genocide happened, but to deny its factualand moral reality as genocide is not to engage in scholarship but inpropaganda and efforts to absolve the perpetrator, blame the victims,and erase the ethical meaning of this history.We would also note that scholars who advise your government and who areaffiliated in other ways with your state-controlled institutions arenot impartial. Such so-called "scholars" work to serve the agenda ofhistorical and moral obfuscation when they advise you and the TurkishParliament on how to deny the Armenian Genocide.We believe that it is clearly in the interest of the Turkish peopleand their future as a proud and equal participant in international,democratic discourse to acknowledge the responsibility of a previousgovernment for the genocide of the Armenian people, just as the Germangovernment and people have done in the case of the Holocaust.Sincerely,[signed] Robert Melson Professor of Political Science President,International Association of Genocide Scholars[signed] Israel Charny Vice President, International Association ofGenocide Scholars Editor in Chief, Encyclopedia of Genocide[signed] Peter Balakian Donald M. and Constance H. Rebar Professorof the Humanities Colgate Universityhttp://www.anca.org/press_releases/press_releases.php?prid=747http://www.genocidescholars.org/sites/default/files/document%09%5Bcurrent-page%3A1%5D/documents/US%20Congress_%20Armenian%20Resolution.pdf Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Yervant1 Posted April 17, 2015 Author Report Share Posted April 17, 2015 http://static01.nyt.com/images/2015/04/16/opinion/16chappatte/16chappatte-master675.jpg NYT POSTS CARTOON ON ARMENIAN GENOCIDE18:03, 16 Apr 2015Siranush GhazanchyanThe New York Times has posted a cartoon on Armenian Genocide by PatrickChappatte with the following caption: "A century on, the debate overthe killings continues."Patrick Chappatte is an editorial cartoonist for The InternationalNew York Times.http://www.nytimes.com/2015/04/16/opinion/patrick-chappatte-armenians-ottoman-turkey.html?smid=fb-nytopinion&smtyp=curhttp://www.armradio.am/en/2015/04/16/nyt-posts-cartoon-on-armenian-genocide/ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Yervant1 Posted April 17, 2015 Author Report Share Posted April 17, 2015 GERMAN JOURNALIST: "THERE ARE ALL THE DOCUMENTS IN THE TURKISH ARCHIVES PROVING THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE": ERMENIHABER.AM13:44 | April 16,2015 | Politics"There is a huge number of documents in the Turkish archives,which prove the Armenian Genocide," notes German "Die Tageszeitung"newspaper's correspondent in Istanbul Jurgen Gottschlich. He iscarrying out a research on that topic. He has even published a bookon the role of Germany in connection with the Armenian Genocide.Gottschlich has had a chance to work at Istanbul's Ottoman and Ankara'smilitary archivesAsked by Ermenihaber.am "Is it possible to find documents provingthe Armenian Genocide in the Turkish archives or have such documentsbeen removed from the archives?", German journalist said, "Both in theTurkish and the German archives there are huge amounts of documents,which prove the Armenian Genocide. Erdogan invites the Armenians tostudy the archives, as he doesn't know what there are in the archives.Turkish archives "haven't been cleared", as Armenians think."More- on the source websitehttp://en.a1plus.am/1209728.html Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Yervant1 Posted April 18, 2015 Author Report Share Posted April 18, 2015 15:02 18/04/2015 » SOCIETYIn Defense of Christians condemns Armenian GenocideIn Defense of Christians (IDC) Executive Director Kirsten Evans issued the following statement: “On Wednesday April 15th, the European Parliament joined its voice with other international bodies and adopted a resolution recognizing the Armenian Genocide, “paying tribute, on the eve of the centenary, to the memory of the one-and-a-half million innocent Armenian victims who perished in the Ottoman Empire.” In Defense of Christians (IDC) extols the EU for this timely and needed recognition of a tragic episode in human history, according to PRWeb.“IDC agrees that ‘genocide’, defined by the United Nations as acts committed with intent to destroy a national, ethnical, racial or religious group, accurately describes the systematic eradication of minority Christian populations in the Ottoman Empire beginning on April 24, 1915. The campaign of religious cleansing targeted men, women, and children, murdering more than a million Armenians, as well as Assyrians, Greeks, and many vulnerable members of other ancient Christian communities.“On the centennial of the Armenian Genocide, societies championing truth and endeavoring to build a more humane world are calling upon the Turkish government to acknowledge the crime against humanity. In the face of the current ethnic cleansing of Christian communities in Iraq and Syria by the Islamic State, and the targeting of Christians by extremist groups in other parts of the world, Turkey’s acknowledgement of this dark chapter of history is imperative. Official obfuscations from Ankara, while unable to hide historical facts, only serve to reopen generational wounds in the memories of millions around the globe.“Recognition, as highlighted by both the EU and Pope Francis, is not only necessary for reconciliation and healing, but to protect the world from repeating similar horrors. ‘Only in this way will new generations open themselves to a better future and will the sacrifice of so many become seeds of justice and peace.’“In Defense of Christians (IDC) stands in solidarity with the descendants of the Armenian Genocide, as well as with the many Middle Eastern Christian communities that continue to suffer persecution today. As we approach its centenary, IDC calls upon Turkey to acknowledge the historical reality of the Ottoman genocide of the Armenian people.”IDC exists to empower the Middle Eastern Christian Diaspora and energize the American people to stand in solidarity with the Christian communities in the region. Last September, at IDC’s Inaugural Summit, “Protecting and Preserving Christianity — Where It All Began,” Members of Congress, members of the Diaspora, and religious leaders from around the world gathered in Washington, D.C. to champion the cause of Middle Eastern Christians through awareness, advocacy, and unity. Source: Panorama.am Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Yervant1 Posted April 18, 2015 Author Report Share Posted April 18, 2015 11:34 18/04/2015 » DAILY PRESSHraparak: New shock awaits Erdogan: Ecuador is going to recognize Armenian GenocideEcuador is going to recognize the Armenian Genocide in the coming days, Hraparak reports, citing its sources.“This will be a new shock for Erdogan, who is “paralyzed” from the Pope, and whose delegates in the United States are trying to prevent new troubles connected with the U.S. President’s speech on April 24. It is clear that Obama will not say the word “genocide” this time as well. But the American side will sublimate this with a Mass dedicated to the Armenian Genocide victims that will be served in early May, and Cavusoglu, who is in the United States now, will not be able to derail it,” a diplomatic source told Hraparak. The source also said that Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan will travel to the United States on May 6 to participate in the Mass. Catholicos of All Armenians Karekin II, Archbishop Navasard Kchoyan and Catholicos of the Great House of Cilicia Aram I will also be among the attendees. Source: Panorama.am Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Yervant1 Posted April 18, 2015 Author Report Share Posted April 18, 2015 IF US WISHES ... TURKISH HISTORIAN ON GENOCIDE RECOGNITION18:28 * 17.04.15The countries which are powerful enough to end the political disputesover the Armenian Genocide have to first of all explain why theydo not use the proper wording to address tragedy, says Taner Akcam,a Turkish historian and publicist.In an article published in Taraf, Akcam particularly points out tothree countries, the United States, Great Britain and Israel (asa country having a great influence on the US), comparing Turkey'sdenialism with the South African regime."Such denialist and racist regimes will be possible to change if andonly if we juxtapose two phenomena: external pressure and internalcivilian opposition."If you are afraid of the denialist regime and look for a place tohide from its threats, then such regimes are never likely to facethe need to change. They will feel the urge in case they are isolatedand deprived of the opportunity to move on the international arena."But the United States and the West became the accomplice of thedenialist regime, assisting in its efforts to maintain its existence.With that, became part and parcel of the problem instead of offeringa solution."After the assassination of [Turkish-Armenian journalist] Hrant Dink,Turkey saw the emergence of an opposition calling for a confrontationwith history."To demonstrate its attitude to Turkey, the West must, of course,consider itd role in the region and make certain strategiccalculations, but it has to pay attention to that civil opposition too."Confronting the history is serious affair. To do that, it is necessaryto offer apologies, abandoning the logic of a common trader and leavingaside the denial policies pursued for years," reads the article.http://www.tert.am/en/news/2015/04/17/usa/1649409 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Yervant1 Posted April 18, 2015 Author Report Share Posted April 18, 2015 IMPUNITY ENJOYED BY TURKEY GAVE RISE TO HITLER, MUSSOLINI - EDUARD SHARMAZANOV17:21 * 17.04.15The Chairperson of the IPA CIS Council, the Speaker of the RF FAFederal Council Valentina Matvienko presided over the session.In his speech at the session, Mr Sharmazanov said, particular:"Ahead of the 70th anniversary of the Victory in the Great PatrioticWar we mark the Armenian Genocide Centennial. At first glance therelation of these two events is invisible and seems to be indirect,but I should note that in 1915 one and a half million Armenians fellvictim of that very Nazism and fascism. It was the impunity enjoyedby Turkey that bore Mussolini's fascism and Hitler's Nazism. Itsvivid example was Hitler's announcement before the German militarycommanders: 'Who after all speaks today of the annihilation of theArmenians?' This once again proves that the policy of Germany wasthe continuation of the policy of the Young Turks' Nazism.The Great Patriotic War, in fact, was one more experience for ourpeople, experience of victory, when the Armenians, together with otherpeoples, fighting against fascism and Nazism, withstood the evil,the victim of which they became in the Ottoman Empire."http://www.tert.am/en/news/2015/04/17/sharmazanov2/1649401 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Yervant1 Posted April 18, 2015 Author Report Share Posted April 18, 2015 ARMENIA'S GENOCIDE: DEATH AND DENIALApril 17, 2015 4:10 pmDavid GardnerPersonal testimony and scholarly research leave no doubt that theOttoman-orchestrated massacre of Armenians that began 100 years agothis month was genocide ©AFPReleased by the Armenian Genocide Museum in Yerevan, this 1915 pictureshows soldiers surveying the skulls of victims in an Armenian village'They Can Live in the Desert but Nowhere Else': A History of theArmenian Genocide, by Ronald Grigor Suny, Princeton University Press,RRP£24.95 / RRP$35, 520 pagesGreat Catastrophe: Armenians and Turks in the Shadow of Genocide, byThomas de Waal, Oxford University Press, RRP£20 / RRP$29.95, 312 pagesGoodbye, Antoura: A Memoir of the Armenian Genocide, by KarnigPanian,Stanford University Press, RRP$25, 216 pagesPope Francis caused a diplomatic uproar in Turkey this week when hecalled the massacre of the Ottoman Armenians of Anatolia a century agogenocide. Even if the term had not been invented when most of the masskillings took place in 1915-16, and was to be legally defined only inthe 1948 UN convention on genocide, he was stating a fact. Thoroughlyan array of documented accounts over the past two decades, by Turks,Armenians and western historians, have placed the nature of thoseatrocities beyond the questioning of the modern Turkish republicannarrative.Essentially, that denialist story holds that massacres did, indeed,take place, but in the context of total war -- the first world war --that also killed many hundreds of thousands of Muslims when the OttomanEmpire, allied with Germany and assailed by the main Entente powers ofBritain, France and Russia, was fighting for its life. It lost thatfight, and the republic of Mustafa Kemal, or Ataturk, was built fromits residual Turkic core, in an Anatolia almost entirely emptied ofArmenians, as well as Assyrian Christians and Ottoman Greeks.Up to 1.5m Ottoman Armenians perished. They were then largely erasedfrom official history and Kemalist Turkey's school textbooks, anenforced amnesia strengthened by a wall of silence from reputedOttomanist scholars. The infamous remark attributed to Adolf Hitleron the eve of the Nazi invasion of Poland in 1939 -- "Who, after all,still talks nowadays about the extermination of the Armenians?" --should remind us of the colossal cost of amnesia about genocide.Only in recent years, especially following the rise to power ofRecep Tayyip Erdogan and his neo-Islamist Justice and Developmentparty (AKP), has there been a fuller debate inside Turkey about whathappened. Yet the way Mevlut Cavusoglu, Turkish foreign minister,attacked the Pope's "unfounded allegations" shows how far Turkey isfrom a full reckoning with what befell the Armenians 100 years ago.Last April, on the eve of the anniversary of the governmentdeportations in 1915 that began the systemic massacres, then primeminister and now president Erdogan, in a hedged but nonethelessunprecedented statement, offered his condolences for the mass murder,speaking of the "shared pain" of "millions of people of all religionsand ethnicities [who] lost their lives in the first world war". Yetthe messaging is mixed. This year Turkey has chosen to mark thecentenary of the allied landings in Gallipoli -- a battle MustafaKemal was instrumental in winning -- on the same date, April 24,as the remembrance of the Armenian genocide.One can now find books in Turkey analysing these terrible events asa genocide but no official recognition that this was what it was.Erdogan's offer to open Ottoman archives to a panel of internationalscholars to determine the truth of what happened is superfluous inlight of scholarship there for all to see.The three newly published, and very different, books discussed here --and many previous works besides -- can leave no one with a scintillaof doubt that what was done to the Ottoman Armenians (and the AssyrianChristians of eastern Anatolia) was genocide. They were annihilated,and the merciless drive against the Armenians was centrally directedby the Ottoman government under the Committee of Union and Progress(CUP) or Young Turks. One man in particular, Talat *****, ministerof the interior, later grand vizier, and one of the CUP triumviratealong with Enver ***** and Cemal ***** that ruled the empire at thetime, oversaw the process in chilling detail, demanding by telegraphalmost daily tallies from his provincial enforcers.So rapidly did most of them obey that, by August 1915, Talat feltable to tell Henry Morgenthau, the US ambassador who forged a closerelationship with both Talat and Enver and is a key witness in allserious histories of the killings, that "it is no use for you toargue .â~@~I.â~@~I.â~@~Iwe have already disposed of three-quartersof the Armenians; there are none at all left in Bitlis, Van, andErzeroum. The hatred between the Turks and the Armenians is now sointense that we have got to finish with them. If we don't, they willplan their revenge."These lines, in the history by Ronald Grigor Suny, an Armenian-Americanprofessor at the University of Michigan and great-grandson ofgenocide victims, have been often quoted. But what distinguishesSuny's scholarship is a scrupulous attention to context and thegenuine imperial anxiety of the Young Turks. They Can Live in theDesert but Nowhere Else (a title taken from another Talat diktat)is a fair-minded account. Unsparing in depicting the viciousnessof the killing, forced conversions and kidnapping of children andyoung women, it is rigorous in its choice of language and nuance,generous in its empathy but implacable in its conclusions.The Armenians lived in what Suny calls "relatively benign symbiosis"with their imperial masters for more than four centuries after theOttomans conquered Constantinople in 1453. Clearly subordinate, theyenjoyed a measure of cultural and religious autonomy in six easternprovinces of Anatolia where they were most numerous, while Armenianbusinessmen and professionals thrived in Istanbul and west coastcities. Armenian nationalism was confined mostly to the diaspora,in Venice, Vienna or Madras.The Young Turks, with the conspiratorial CUP at their core and astrong base in the army, were originally Europeanist moderniserswho at times allied with like-minded Armenians. Centred on Salonikain what is now Greece, they took power cumulatively from 1908 in anattempt to save the crumbling Ottoman Empire. In the Balkan wars of1912-13 they lost the European heartland of their empire. They threwin their lot with Germany, a gamble to safeguard their territory fromthe predatory European empires, especially an expansionist Russia.They suffered the humiliation in 1914 of the future Entente imposingreforms that would have established European stewards of Armenianrights in eastern Anatolia. In the CUP mind, Suny shows, this confirmeda treacherous nexus between the imperial powers and Ottoman Christianminorities. When war came, Enver *****'s Third Army was routed bythe Russians at SarikamiÅ~_ in the Caucasus in 1915, and soon afterthe Gallipoli landings threatened an Istanbul in panic.This grim outlook, plus the need to find space for Muslim refugeespushed into Anatolia as the empire lost its European territory,is part of the rationale for its Armenian policy, but, as both Sunyand Thomas de Waal show -- the latter in his measured and meticulousGreat Catastrophe -- it is hardly the only part. After serial Ottomanfailures, Young Turk ideology, inchoate but influenced by Europeannationalism, evolved away from multicultural Ottomanism into nationalimperialism, which upgraded the value of ethnic homogeneity andMuslim solidarity.Talat's and Enver's arguments that the Armenians allied with theRussians to stab the empire in its eastern back does not bearreal examination -- despite the hopes of some Armenians, and thereckless incitement of the European powers. Most Armenians, waryof Russification as well as Turkification, remained loyal, to thepoint they could not imagine what they faced, despite pogroms againstthem in 1894-96 and 1909. The fifth-column paranoia or "provocationthesis", as Suny calls it, was largely fabricated. As Suny shows,the most celebrated acts of Armenian resistance, notably at Van,which was portrayed as a generalised insurrection, occurred aftermassacres had begun."The Young Turk leaders did face threats to their security, but outof the options they had at their disposal, they came to choose massmurder," argues De Waal. A scholar of Russia and the Caucasus, hefocuses on the relations between Turks and Armenians in the centuryafter the Medz Yeghern or Great Catastrophe, the traditional termArmenians used for 1915. He wonders whether denialists have an interestin confining the controversy over the atrocities to the semanticsof the word "genocide", and whether a convention on "crimes againsthumanity" -- words used in an Entente démarche in that fateful springof 1915 -- might not bring more mass murderers to justice.Talat ***** oversaw the process in chilling detail, demanding almostdaily tallies from his enforcers Tweet this quoteThe late Karnig Panian's memoir begins in what he calls "our littlecorner of the universe", where his grandfather owned bountiful cherryorchards -- a Garden of Eden in which he recalls an uncle warning ofthe spectre of Cain and Abel, well before the deportations began. Asa five-year-old boy, Panian endured a forced march from his nativeeast-central Anatolia to the Syrian Desert that wiped out his family.He was then placed in an orphanage at Antoura in Lebanon, whichsystemically brutalised its Armenian charges to turn those who survivedinto Turks.Panian's recollection of the heat and hunger, the thirst and theconstant menace of predatory bands licensed by the government tomassacre those Armenians who didn't die on the road, is unbearablyvivid. But nor does it omit the compassion and kindness of someordinary Turks, Kurds and Arabs, typically in the form of foodand water.At Antoura, the boys were given Turkic Muslim names -- and a number. Afew older boys became whip-wielding trusties, grotesquely bearing thenames of the CUP triumvirs who had exterminated their people. "We wereall humiliated, reminded that being Armenian was a punishable crime,"Panian writes. Despite it all, most of them clung desperately on totheir identities.The most uplifting section of this harrowing but luminous story ofwitness is when more audacious boys organise to steal fruit fromneighbouring farms. Panian's group flees the orphanage to live incaves in the Lebanese hills. "It was a beautiful place to call home,even if we were living like animals," he writes. "We were like birds,satisfying ourselves with the bounty of nature and asking for nothingmore." The hero of the tale is Yusuf, a resourceful lad who turned theraiding parties into a self-sufficient little army. "We had created ourown little family of boys, without mothers or fathers. The wildernesswas our school, and Yusuf our guide."This searing account of a little boy wrenched from family and innocencemanages to retrieve irrepressible flashes of great humanity amid thehorror and chaos. It is a literary gem.David Gardner is international affairs editor at the FTThis article will be open to comments on Monday at 10am London timehttp://www.ft.com/cms/s/2/56d61e36-e28d-11e4-aa1d-00144feab7de.html Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Yervant1 Posted April 18, 2015 Author Report Share Posted April 18, 2015 RUSSIAN NTV TO SHOW ARMENIAN GENOCIDE DOCUMENTARY19:35, 17 April, 2015YEREVAN, APRIL 19, ARMENPRESS: The Russian TV Channel NTV will show adocumentary film, devoted to the centenary of the Armenian Genocide,on April 24. Armenpress reports that the TV Channel stated in itswebsite that the authors of the documentary will present with maximumprecision the events, which took place a hundred years ago, usingarchive documents, interviews with historians, the evidences of thewitnesses, etc.The creative group of the film left for Turkey to find theabovementioned materials, where they visited the only Armenian village,preserved up now. Moreover, in Turkey the group managed to meet alsowith the eyewitnesses of the Armenian Genocide. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Yervant1 Posted April 18, 2015 Author Report Share Posted April 18, 2015 HISTORIAN: THE NETHERLANDS RECOGNIZED THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE IN WORDS AND NOT IN DEEDS22:02, 17.04.2015Region:World News, Armenia, TurkeyTheme: PoliticsThe Netherlands recognized the Armenian Genocide in words and not indeeds, the writer and historian Anthonie Holslag stated in the article"Government, finally recognize the Armenian Genocide," published inthe Dutch newspaper De Volkskrant.The Netherlands acknowledged Turkey's crimes against Armenians,Assyrians, Aramaeans, but this had no impact on the Kingdom's policy.Relations with Turkey, including commercial ones, prevent thegovernment from speaking about the Armenian question, and the eventswhich took place in 1915-19 in the Ottoman Empire, Holslag underscored."It's sad to see this in a country with the Hague Tribunal, whichtries Genocide war criminals. It's sad to see this in a countrywith a government, whose FM Bert Koenders, speaking on the firstchannel of the Dutch television on March 31, admitted that "the humanrights are the cornerstone of the western society." The Pope himselfcalled on Turkey to acknowledge the Armenian Genocide. Nevertheless,on April 24, the Free University, founded on Christian traditions,hosts a person, who denies the Armenian Genocide and who can alsoappear in debates. Debates on the day of recognition...This is nothingbut a provocation and once again provocation with a capital letter,"the historian writes in the article.Among the works by Anthonie Holslag is the book "On the stones ofArarat," dedicated to the Armenian Genocide history.http://news.am/eng/news/262589.html Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Yervant1 Posted April 18, 2015 Author Report Share Posted April 18, 2015 It's a "historical fact" says white house! If so, why don't you call a Genocide?WHITE HOUSE SAYS 1915 ARMENIAN DEATHS A 'HISTORICAL FACT'Today's Zaman, TurkeyApril 16 2015White House press secretary Josh Earnest answers questions during adaily briefing at the White House in Washington on Dec. 17. (Photo: AP)April 16, 2015, Thursday/ 23:44:24/ MAHIR ZEYNALOV / WASHINGTONThe White House has described the the World War I killings of up to1.5 million Armenians as a "historical fact," urging Turkey to facepainful elements of its past to build a more tolerant future."President [barack Obama] and other senior administration officialshave repeatedly acknowledged as historical fact that 1.5 millionsArmenians were massacred or marched to their deaths in the final daysof the Ottoman Empire," Josh Earnest said during a press briefingon Thursday.He said Washington earlier stated that they mourn those deaths and"full, frank and just acknowledgements of the facts is in the interestof everybody, including Turkey, Armenia and the US."As Armenians across the world are preparing to mark the centennialof the Armenian killings in 1915, the issue has stirred controversyin Turkey. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan rejected remarksby Pope Francis on the 1915 events and other ministers described theEuropean Parliament's resolution on the issue as "null and void."Turkey says it had never had an intention to massacre Armenians andthat the deaths with "inflated numbers" are part of a tragic war thathad taken a toll on all sides, including Turks. Ankara says it is upto historians to decide on the issue and rejects politicization ofthe debate. Armenia rejected an offer by Turkey to establish a jointcommission, arguing that such a move would dilute the tragedy.Armenians believe that up to 1.5 million of their brethren were eitherkilled or sent to death a century ago and claims that the killingsamounted to genocide. On Sunday, Pope Francis angered Turkey bysuggesting -- not for the first time -- that the Armenians killingswere the "first genocide of the 20th century." Turkey scoled Vaticanambassador in Ankara and recalled its ambassador from Vatican for"consultations" -- a nickname for a diplomatic protest.One of the principles that has guided the US administration's work inthis area and the atrocity-prevention more broadly, Earnest added,has been that nations grow strong by acknowledging and reckoningwith painful elements of their pasts and doing so is essential to"building a foundation in a more just and more tolerant future."Every year on April 24, Obama issues a statement to mark theanniversary of the 1915 events. Although he made an electoral promisethat he would recognize the killings as the genocide, he only usedthe Armenian word for the events -- the great tragedy -- so far.The question remains if he is going to use the term this year asArmenians have renewed their push on Western governments recognizethe 1915 killings as genocide. A resolution on the recognition of theso-called Armenian genocide remains on the agenda of a US House ofRepresentatives committee and nearly 50 US lawmakers have extendedtheir support for the resolution.President Obama has so far refrained to use a language in hisstatements that would outrage Turkey. "This has been our policy,position and our approach for a number of years now," Earnest said whenasked he the president is going to use the word "genocide" this year.He said it has been customary for the president to issue a statementon this "terrible historical event" on April 24, but he said he wouldnot anticipate "any updates on our policy until then."http://www.todayszaman.com/anasayfa_white-house-says-1915-armenian-deaths-a-historical-fact_378204.html Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Yervant1 Posted April 18, 2015 Author Report Share Posted April 18, 2015 MICHAEL JANSEN: FIRM DENIALThe Gulf Today, UAEApril 16 2015Turkey promptly recalled its ambassador from the Vatican afterPope Francis called the mass killings of Armenians 100 years ago a"genocide."The pope said, "In the past century, our human family has livedthrough three massive and unprecedented tragedies," the slaughterof the Armenians being the first in the 20th century. He also saidCatholic and Orthodox Syrians, Assyrians, Chaldeans and Greeks werealso slain in this round of bloodletting.The two other major genocides he mentioned were perpetrated by Nazismand Stalinism although he also spoke of genocides in Cambodia, Rwanda,Burundi and Bosnia. The term "genocide" was not applied to such masskillings until 1944.While Pope Francis used the same form of words employed by Pope JohnPaul II and the Armenian patriarch in 2001, Ankara registered itsobjection in an unprecedented manner as this was the first time everTurkey has summoned home its envoy "for consultations."Turkey's Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusolglu deemed the use of the word,"genocide," to be "unacceptable" and "out of touch with both historicalfacts and [with no] legal basis."Among the states that recognise the Armenian massacres as genocide areArgentina, Belgium, Canada, Cyprus, Greece France, Italy, Lebanon,Russia and Uruguay. The US Congress has repeatedly tried and failedto adopt a resolution on this issue while Barack Obama used the word"genocide" while campaigning in 2008 but not since as president.It is significant that the post-World War I Turkish courts-martial of1919-20 referred to the Ottoman treatment of the Armenians as <crimes>> and sentenced to death those involved. They were, however,amnestied in 1921 and the first government of the modern Turkishstate headed by Mustafa Kemal Ataturk initiated the policy of denial.In 2014, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan presentedcondolences to the grandchildren of Armenians who died but saidArmenia should not make the issue a source of political conflict. Nowpresident, Erdogan is unlikely to overturn this policy of denial. Hehas adopted the mantle of the Ottomans and is fired with the ambitionof transforming Turkey into a regional power, a neo-Ottoman empire,and would not do anything to besmirch the Ottoman record.Armenia argues that as many as 1.5 million people died in 1915-16,Turkey contends the number is much smaller. Thousands died inmassacres while others perished when they were driven into desertareas or pursued in places of refuge.Armenian organisations and reliable scholars say the plannedpersecution of Armenians began on April 24th, 1915, with the arrestof their leaders in Istanbul. Turkey claims Armenians, ethnic Turks,and others died in inter-communal violence connected with World War Iand its aftermath. This is a misinterpretation of what happened during.The 19th century was a period of rising ethnic and culturalnationalisms that caused the break-up of the Ottoman Empire and theemergence of Greek, Serb, and Bulgarian states and ethnic cleansingof Turkish Muslims. The Committee of Union and Progress, which ruledduring the final 10 years of the Empire -- allied with Germany inthe war -- found that Armenian nationalists had formed militias thatintended to cooperate with Russia, the ally of Britain and France.While the latter had already shared out the Arab lands ruled by theOttomans, Russia had territorial ambitions in Anatolia, regarded asthe ethnic Turkish heartland.Writing on al-Monitor's website, Mustafa Akyol correctly stated that"the ethnic cleansing of Ottoman Armenians took place not because ofthe Ottoman system" which had been multi-ethnic and tolerant. "Ratherit occurred because of the fall of the Ottoman system. ChristianArmenians were driven out [and slain] not because of religion, but[of] a modern ideology: nationalism."Nationalism does not, however, provide an excuse for the murder andexpulsion of the Armenians --- or of other Christian minorities whosuffered the same fate.Post-war battles that were also a consequence of the fall of theOttoman empire came between 1919 and 1922 when the majority of Ottomancitizens of Greek origin were killed or expelled by the Turks afterGreece invaded Turkey with the aim of annexing territory in AsiaMinor in payment for standing with the British, French, and Russiansagainst Germany in the war.That the anti-Armenian campaign was planned and anticipated is revealedby a story told to me by my elderly Cypriot Armenian dentist a numberof years ago.His father was a dentist practicing in the port of Adana. Late onenight well before the deportations of Armenians began, soldierspounded on the door of his house and demanded that he should followthem as the *****, the governor, had a terrible toothache.The dentist dressed, collected his tools, and hurried to treatthe *****. The intervention was successful and the men became firmfriends. The dentist joined the *****'s circle of card players.Eventually, the *****, Ahmet Djamal, warned the dentist that it wasdangerous to remain in Adana and to take his family and go to Jerusalemwhere they would be safe. Notorious for his role in the massacres,Djamal ***** became governor of Greater Syria, which consisted ofmodern Syria, Palestine, Lebanon and Jordan.A colourful figure who told a riveting story, my dentist said hisfather was given the rank of colonel in the Turkish army and invitedto join the Turkish officers club so he could play cards with Djamaland his colleagues, presumably when he was in Jerusalem.As governor of the entire region, Djamal ruthlessly suppressed themultiple nationalisms that threatened Ottoman domination. He wasassassinated in July 1922 by Stephan Dzaghigian, Artashes Gevorgyan,and Petros Ter Poghosyan, activists belonging Operation Nemesis,a movement seeking retribution for the Armenian tragedy.Armenians now dwelling in Jerusalem have told The Gulf Today thatthe community there exists because forbearers had been warned andto a certain extent aided by Turkish officers and officials whowere informed what was about to happen in the Ottoman domains andacted upon this knowledge. One hundred years of Turkish denial hasactually sustained the Armenian campaign to compel Turkey to acceptresponsibility and agree that genocide had been committed.____________________________________________ The author, awell-respected observer of Middle East affairs, has three books onthe Arab-Israeli conflicthttp://gulftoday.ae/portal/4b8d741f-4e97-4e29-8ecf-426a332deb55.aspx Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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