Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

The right thing to do: Majority of Parliamentarians, If Not the Feds

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • The right thing to do: Majority of Parliamentarians, If Not the Feds

    Ottawa Citizen
    April 23, 2004 Friday Final Edition

    The right thing to do: At least a majority of parliamentarians, if
    not the federal government, is willing to acknowledge this crime
    against humanity

    by: Michael Petrou


    In the Turkish city of Diyarbakir, city employees work diligently to
    convert centuries-old church steeples into mosque minarets.

    Nearby lie the haunting ruins of the Armenian Surpagab Kilesi church.
    Once the place of worship for thousands of Armenians who used to live
    here, it is now home to the last family of Armenians in Diyarbakir.
    They live in a small building adjacent to the ruined courtyard.

    Tens of thousands of other Armenians from Diyarbakir and surrounding
    towns were murdered in 1915 by Ottoman Turks as part of a systematic
    genocide directed against the Armenians of Anatolia. Thousands more
    were deported, usually to starve to death in the desert or to be
    gang-raped and murdered by Ottoman soldiers and marauding Kurds. As
    many as 1.5 million died.

    The modern Turkish authorities have not yet destroyed all of the
    Armenian churches in Diyarbakir, or converted them all into mosques,
    but perhaps one day they will. They have been working for decades to
    cover up the crimes of their Ottoman predecessors. And Wednesday
    night they got help from Canada's Liberal government.

    A private member's motion acknowledging and condemning the Armenian
    genocide was passed by a majority of MPs sitting in the House of
    Commons in a non-binding free vote.

    The motion read simply: "This House acknowledges the Armenian
    genocide of 1915 and condemns this act as a crime against humanity."

    But the government opposed the motion, and even issued a press
    release shortly after the vote reiterating its position that the mass
    murders, deportations and ethnic cleansings were "tragic," but
    avoided any reference to the term "genocide."

    Many Liberals honourably broke rank with their party and supported
    the motion. Prime Minister Paul Martin, who never met a contentious
    issue he couldn't avoid taking a stand on, was absent for the debate
    and vote.

    Foreign Affairs Minister Bill Graham concluded his statement with
    what can only be described as cynicism or gross ignorance, suggesting
    the issue should be resolved by Armenian and Turkish governments and
    experts.

    The Turkish government has already made it clear how it believes the
    issue should be "resolved." Countries that acknowledge the genocide
    are frozen out of economic deals, as was France in 2001.

    Turks who discuss the genocide are likewise punished. Four years ago,
    Father Yusuf Akbulut, an Assyrian priest in Diyarbakir, told a
    newspaper that Assyrian Christians were also slaughtered during the
    Armenian genocide -- a historical fact -- and was promptly arrested
    and labeled a national traitor in the Turkish press.

    As for academic experts, Turkey regularly funds professorships at
    universities abroad. And try getting permission to access Ottoman
    archives in Turkey if you don't toe the correct line.

    Turkey is not interested in resolving the issue, only distorting it
    or pretending it never happened. Mr. Graham must know this. And yet
    he appears more concerned with potential contracts for Canadian
    companies in Turkey than with acknowledging a monstrous crime for
    what it is.

    Genocide denial is not resolution. Indeed in some countries it is a
    crime -- but not, it would seem, in Canada, at least when the
    genocide in question involves the Armenians.

    Some well-meaning people object to the use of the term genocide to
    describe the massacre of Armenians in Anatolia because they fear
    using the term too loosely will rob the word of its meaning and will
    dilute the impact of other genocides in history -- most notably Nazi
    Germany's attempted destruction of European Jewry.

    But the definition of genocide is the mass extermination of a people,
    and this is exactly what happened to the Armenians of Asia Minor.

    It is no coincidence that Adolf Hitler, the very architect of the
    world's most terrible genocide, recalled the Armenians' fate prior to
    his own assault on Poland, while urging his military commanders to be
    merciless toward all men, women and children of the "Polish race or
    language."

    "Who, after all, speaks today of the annihilation of the Armenians?"
    he asked, rhetorically of course, because nobody did.

    And while too many Israeli politicians have avoided calling the
    Armenian genocide a genocide, in part to avoid offending Israel's
    stalwart ally Turkey, in 2000 the then-Israeli education minister,
    Yossi Sarid, stood with the Armenians of Jerusalem on their day of
    remembrance. He affirmed that they too had suffered genocide.

    "For many years, too many years, you were alone on your memorial
    day," he said.

    "I am aware of the special significance of my presence here today
    along with other Israelis. Today, perhaps for the first time, you are
    less alone."

    The Armenians are less alone today in their efforts to have a
    national tragedy acknowledged and remembered.

    New scholars have persevered against Turkish obstructionism, and the
    steady accumulation of historical evidence is undeniable and
    overwhelming.

    While visiting Diyarbakir last year, I met Turks and Kurds who spoke
    openly about the massacres of 1915. They know more than even their
    own government will publicly admit.

    Wednesday night, a majority of our parliamentarians chose to
    acknowledge and condemn the 20th century's first genocide for what it
    was. Our government, however, preferred to abandon the genocide's
    victims.

    The slaughter of the Anatolian Armenians was genocide. Denying this
    is tragic.

    Michael Petrou is a PhD student at the University of Oxford.

    GRAPHIC: Photo: Chris Mikula, the ottawa Citizen; Recognizing the
    armenian genocide: NOT LISTENING: Despite annual demonstrations in
    many capital cities, including this one in Ottawa, that urge
    governments to condemn the 1915 genocide directed against Armenians,
    Canada still refuses to do so.
Working...
X