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Berkeley: Students Comemorate Genocide's Legacy

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  • Berkeley: Students Comemorate Genocide's Legacy

    Daily Californian (UC Berkeley)
    Tuesday, April 27, 2004

    Students Comemorate Genocide's Legacy

    The Armenian Genocide of 1915 resulted in the extermination of 1.5
    million Armenians at the hands of the Ottoman Turks. Millions of
    Armenians were tortured, murdered and starved to death during a forced
    death march through the Syrian deserts. To this day, Turkey refuses to
    acknowledge its past and instead distorts the truth by attempting to
    rewrite history. In spite of the overwhelming evidence documenting the
    Armenian Genocide, Turkey continues to refute its crime and pursues a
    well-funded campaign here and throughout the world to deny the
    Genocide. Organizations such as the United Nations, the European
    Parliament, the People's Tribunal, and countries such as France,
    Argentina, Australia, Belgium, Greece, Italy, Lebanon, Russia, Sweden,
    and Uruguay have all recognized the genocide. After years of referring
    to the Genocide as a "tragedy," Canada's Parliament passed a motion
    last week stating, "this House acknowledges the Armenian genocide of
    1915 and condemns this act as a crime against humanity."

    The official commemoration day of the Armenian Genocide is the 24th of
    April, as it was on that day in 1915, that several hundred Armenian
    intellectuals were rounded up and mass murdered. This was the starting
    point of the genocidal plans of the Young Turk regime which would then
    forcibly remove the Armenians from their ancient homeland. They would
    be driven to their deaths in manners unconceivable to the human
    imagination. As bullets were too expensive, daggers, bayonets, ropes,
    and gas chambers were used. It is just as much unimaginable how the
    Turkish government can blatantly deny and falsify its own history.

    On the evening of April 16 the hallways leading to the History
    Department's Conference Room in Dwinelle Hall echoed with the voice of
    Turkish scholar, Taner Akçam. Akçam is one of the few Turkish scholars
    who has not only openly recognized the Genocide, but publishes and
    teaches about it. He delivered a lecture specifically about Ottoman
    documents which carried obvious evidence of the orders for the
    extermination of the Armenians. Akçam currently teaches at the
    University of Minnesota since he is not hired by universities in
    Turkey, as his topics are too controversial for the government's
    standards.

    During a week of Genocide Commemoration and Education, the Armenian
    Student Assocation at UC Berkeley organized lectures and documentary
    showings to educate the campus community about the genocide. Last
    Monday, the association spearheaded an event called United Hands
    Across Cal, the purpose of which was to bring students together,
    irrespective of cultural, ethnic, racial, and gender differences to
    stand in solidarity against genocide and all forms of human rights
    violations. More than 100 students lined up, holding hands, from Lower
    Sproul Plaza up to the Golden Bear Café. After a short program of
    speakers, every student as well as every participating student group
    had the opportunity to vocally express what they stood for or against
    in this world.

    It is important to acknowledge such horrific events that have occurred
    throughout history. Failing to acknowledge such events allows leaders
    to justify their actions. After all, it was Hitler, who before
    beginning his campaign of extermination, said "Who still talks
    nowadays of the extermination of the Armenians?"

    Alina Azizian
    Hasmig Tatiossian
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