Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

UCLA: Armenian Genocide Reveals Lessons for Today

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

  • UCLA: Armenian Genocide Reveals Lessons for Today

    The Daily Bruin
    April 21, 2004

    Armenian Genocide Reveals Lessons for Today
    By Garin Hovannisian
    Daily Bruin Columnist
    [email protected]

    On April 24, Armenians around the world will commemorate the darkest
    period in their history. Through organized deportations and massacres
    of 1.5 million people, over half of the Armenian population was
    forcibly removed from its home of 3,000 years.

    The crimes began on April 24, 1915 and were continued by successive
    Turkish governments until 1923, when the ethnic cleansing of Armenians
    in the region was virtually complete.

    Today, the Armenian Student Association will join in the commemoration
    of these crimes with a silent march across the campus to Bruin
    Plaza. There, the group will open an hour-long ceremony, including
    poetry, music, recitations and addresses to spread awareness of the
    first genocide of the 20th century.

    For most participants, the day will be filled with memories of
    ancestors and relatives who either died or miraculously survived but
    remained scarred for life. Yet the dominant emotion will be a deep
    resentment toward the Turkish government and others that continue to
    deny the reality of the Armenian Genocide.

    The commemoration today and this column are not meant to garner pity
    for the suffering of the Armenian people. Even the most sinister of
    historic tragedies lose much of their poignancy and impact over
    time. What is crucial is that people understand the magnitude and
    historic legacy of this precedent-setting event - especially when
    their own government does not.

    Like most cases of deliberate violence against members of a society,
    the Armenian Genocide was executed by the government itself.

    On April 24, 1915, several hundred Armenian civic leaders and
    intellectuals were arrested in Istanbul, and subsequently exiled and
    murdered. While the world was preoccupied with the Great War, the
    so-called Young Turk government created its own blueprint of genocide.
    First, the young men were drafted and placed into unarmed labor
    battalions, where most would be killed. Then, the populations of all
    Armenian towns and villages were forced to relinquish any weapons in
    brutal arms searches. After the religious and political leaders had
    been led away to meet a bloody end, the remaining population - largely
    women and children - were placed in caravans of death leading to the
    desert wasteland of inner Syria. En route, the caravans practically
    melted away under the scorching sun. As women were raped and
    tormented, children were kidnapped and forcibly converted as the
    elderly died of starvation and dehydration.

    The relatively few people who somehow made it to the final
    destination, the desert of Deir-el-Zor, were murdered there or burned
    alive in their cave-shelters.

    In the end, the Armenian nation lost its homeland to a xenophobic
    regime that used genocide to achieve its vision of a new regional
    order based on one people, one religion, one language and one
    identity.

    To this day, the Turkish government denies an Armenian Genocide ever
    happened. Other governments, including the United States, are
    complicit in the cover-up for economic, political and military
    reasons. These deniers dismiss a historic happening that stripped an
    entire people of its rights, properties and homeland.

    They fail to acknowledge the need to face history and engage in acts
    of redemption that may lead to reconciliation, or at least
    conciliation. They spurn the eminent importance of truth.

    What does this mean for you and me in the contemporary world? It means
    mass murder has been carried out without repercussions. It means that
    even now, our right to life - the most basic of rights - is vulnerable
    and should never be taken for granted.

    The events of 1915 are not antiquated occurrences of a bygone
    era. They were repeated throughout the 20th century by Hitler, by the
    Khmer Rouge to the Cambodian people, and through slaughters in Burundi
    and Rwanda, among others. The 20th century began and ended with
    genocide. All of these mass killings shared important aspects in a
    historic pattern scholars and human rights activists are trying to
    decode and prevent.

    The passionate commitment of individuals and the integrity of
    governments is required. Only through recognition can this history be
    understood and made meaningful to prevent future crimes against
    humanity.

    Recognizing, understanding and learning from the Armenian Genocide is
    not an end in itself. It is only a means through which we can craft a
    free, just and prosperous new century.

    On April 24, take a moment to remember the lost Armenians -- if not
    for the memory of their lives, then for the longevity of our own.

    Hovannisian is a first-year history and philosophy student. E-mail him at
    [email protected]. Send general comments to
    [email protected].

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X