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    The Ottawa Sun
    April 26, 2004 Monday Final Edition

    HISTORY OF HATE

    BY PAUL STANWAY, EDMONTON SUN


    Armenians around the world today commemorate the beginning of what
    they view as the darkest period in their long history, which is
    saying something for a people who have been subject to almost
    constant invasion and persecution.

    On Wednesday the House of Commons voted overwhelmingly (153 to 68) in
    favour of a motion that "acknowledges the Armenian genocide of 1915
    and condemns this as a crime against humanity."

    The history of Armenia is a litany of tragedy and suffering,
    endlessly repeated. But it is also a story of survival, against all
    the odds and in the face of every possible indignity and handicap we
    humans are capable of imposing upon one another.

    The Armenians are the oldest Christian nation on earth, a forgotten
    remnant of the ancient world from a time before Islam conquered the
    Near East. You may not think you know any Armenians, but unless
    you've never heard of Cher (full name Cherylin Sarkissian), tennis
    great Andre Agassi or chess master Gary Kasparov, you are wrong.

    GREAT DIASPORA

    They are all children of the great diaspora that followed the
    massacre of Turkish Armenians in 1915 -- the "crime against humanity"
    deplored by a majority of our MPs. It began on April 24, 1915 with
    the arrest of Armenian professionals and intellectuals, and ended two
    years later with Turkey's Armenian population having been reduced
    from around 3 million to fewer than 200,000.

    What happened to the missing Armenians is still a matter of hot
    debate for our NATO ally, Turkey, which vehemently denies systematic
    slaughter. Hundreds of thousands fled to Russian Armenia, and
    thousands of others eventually made their way to Europe and North
    America, but somewhere between 600,000 and 2 million died as a result
    of forced relocation, starvation and the actions of Turkish troops
    and civilians.

    The actual number seems less important than the fact a brutal
    slaughter took place, documented by eyewitness accounts from
    survivors, and from credible reports by mostly American diplomats and
    aid workers on the scene. There was no Auschwitz, no Treblinka, and
    the weapons of choice seem to have been the bayonet and the knife,
    but the massacre of the Armenians was in no way less systematic and
    inhuman than the Holocaust. An entire population was driven from land
    it had occupied since the beginnings of recorded history, and those
    who were not killed were left to starve or die of exposure.

    There is no little irony in the fact Adolf Hitler used this genocide
    as a prototype for his own final solution, apparently noting that 25
    years later no one remembered what had happened to the Armenians. But
    at the time he was wrong. The story of the Armenians received wide
    publicity in the years between the world wars, particularly in the
    U.S., Canada and Britain.

    There was even a time when the Turkish authorities themselves
    acknowledged what had happened. Several of those responsible were
    tried for their crimes by Turkish courts and executed. But as a
    valuable ally during the Cold War years, as NATO's bulwark against
    Soviet Central Asia, there was a concerted attempt to forget and
    finally to deny Turkey's past.

    SIMPLE HONESTY

    What's the point of remembering a regrettable slice of the past?
    Apart from simple honesty, humanity is the accumulation of its
    history and it is impossible to learn from events if we deny they
    happened. In Turkey's case, denying the massacre of the Armenians
    guarantees the memory will fester.

    Some Turkish leaders in 1915 were openly critical of their
    government, others bravely refused to implement genocidal policies,
    while ordinary Turks were summarily executed for trying to help their
    Armenian neighbours.

    The present Turkish government would do better to remember their
    example than to deny history.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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