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Stanford: Turkey should own up to responsibility for Arm. Genocide

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  • Stanford: Turkey should own up to responsibility for Arm. Genocide

    Turkey should own up to responsibility for Armenian genocide

    Daily Stanford

    By Seepan Parseghian
    Guest Columnist
    Friday, April 23, 2004


    By SEEPAN PARSEGHIAN
    Adolf Hitler said it all those years ago. The National Socialist Party
    was planning one of the most horrific events of the 20th century, and
    Hitler only looked back once. That moment came when one of Hitler's
    generals asked if he was afraid they would be punished for what they
    were about to execute. He casually shrugged off the concern, asking in
    return: `Who today remembers the annihilation of the Armenians?' The
    Jewish Holocaust ensued.

    On Monday, Holocaust survivor Gloria Lyon spoke on campus as part of
    Holocaust Memorial Day. Listening to Lyon share her painful experiences,
    I realized that she was not only a symbol of enduring strength and
    survival, but was also a product of a grossly overlooked historical
    event: the Armenian genocide of 1915.

    Eighty-nine years ago, the Young Turk party that was ruling the Ottoman
    Empire orchestrated the first genocide of the 20th century. The Allied
    powers were preoccupied with the supposed `war to end all wars.' The
    Young Turk party had ousted the last royal sovereign of the Ottoman
    Empire, Sultan Abdul Hamid II, from leadership and had risen to power on
    a democratic platform. After their victory, the Young Turks decided to
    adopt nationalistic ideals, presenting the idea of pan-Turkism to the
    Turkish citizenry.

    The Armenians, already segregated from the Turkish population in millets
    (religious communities), were an obstacle to the formation of a
    pan-Turkish nation. They became the victims of severe oppression and
    bigotry, according to American officials who were present in Turkey at
    the time. Without a democracy protecting them, the Armenians were left
    defenseless under the dictatorial swords of leaders who wanted to rid
    the empire of them. Behind the smokescreen of World War I, the Young
    Turk leaders Talaat, Enver and Cemal Pasha saw an opportunity to do so,
    and so carried out the extermination of 1.5 million Armenians under the
    cloak of deportation.

    There to witness the Armenian genocide unfolding were U.S. Ambassador to
    the Ottoman Empire Henry Morgenthau and U.S. Consul in Harput, Turkey,
    Leslie Davis. Both Morgenthau, a graduate of Columbia Law School, and
    Leslie Davis, a famous American humanitarian, observed firsthand the
    systematic murder of the Armenian race in 1915.

    In his memoirs that were later published as `Ambassador Morgenthau's
    Story,' Morgenthau noted, `When the Turkish authorities gave the orders
    for these deportations, they were merely giving the death warrant to a
    whole race; they understood this well, and, in their conversations with
    me, they made no particular attempt to conceal the fact.' In `The
    Slaughterhouse Province,' Davis reported the disappearance of the
    prominent figures of the Armenian community in Harput on June 23, 1915.
    After prodding Turkish soldiers with inquiries of the whereabouts of
    these Armenian leaders, Davis was told that they had been rounded up and
    taken to a desolate location to be `done away with.' Left without
    leadership and manpower, the Armenian elders, women and children of
    Harput were deported three days later to the Syrian Desert, where they
    were tortured. Davis' description of these tortures is too graphic to be
    included in this op-ed.

    The Turkish government denies that the Armenian genocide ever occurred.
    Not only does it deny the historical facts surrounding this systematic
    massacre, but it has also taken extensive steps to manipulate those
    facts into historical fallacies. Discrediting the personal memoirs of
    educated American foreign servicemen like Morgenthau and Davis has been
    a financially and politically strenuous task for the Turkish government
    to accomplish. It has provided millions of dollars to American scholars
    like Princeton Prof. Bernard Lewis, University of Louisville Prof.
    Justin McCarthy and UCLA Prof. Heath Lowry, who discredit scholarship of
    the Armenian genocide.

    Further, Turkey has extensively lobbied in Washington to suppress
    American recognition of the genocide. As The Washington Post reported in
    Oct. 2000, for example, when House Resolution 596 - a bill seeking
    American recognition of the Armenian genocide - was on the Congressional
    floor, the Turkish government immediately threatened to pull out of a
    $4.5 billion deal in which it would purchase 145 advanced Bell-Textron
    attack helicopters from the United States. House Res. 596 failed.

    Speaker of the House Dennis Hastert told The Washington Post that the
    resolution `would have enjoyed support among the majority of the house.'
    The U.S. government has yet to officially recognize the Armenian
    genocide. The gunsmoke of World War I hid the genocide of the Armenians
    from the world, and today a thick cloud of political and social
    malpractice by the Turkish regime has reached the same effect.

    The government of Turkey must take responsibility for its 1915 crimes
    against humanity, not only for humanity's sake, but for its own future
    as well. As Turkish historian Taner Akcam, now at the University of
    Minnesota, states, `If and when the government of Turkey acknowledges
    its past wrongs and recognizes the Armenian genocide, it well then be
    able to ensure a democratic future.'

    Had the Turkish regime done so in 1915 and paid the according price in
    reparations and compensation, Hitler would have taken the annihilation
    of the Armenians into account, and would have been forced to at least
    reconsider carrying out his Final Solution. Lyon could possibly have
    spoken not of Auschwitz and Bergen-Belsen on Monday, but of the
    prosperity of the European Jews during the World War II era.

    Tomorrow, on the 89th anniversary of the Armenian genocide, it is time
    for Turkey to recognize the wrongs of carrying out the Armenian
    genocide, in order to restore the progression of its own societal
    development. This will convincingly allow Turkey to encourage the
    advancement of human culture and morality.

    Seepan Parseghian is a freshman. You can send him your questions and
    comments to [email protected].
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