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CR: Time to Remember the Armenian Genocide - Rep. McGovern

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  • CR: Time to Remember the Armenian Genocide - Rep. McGovern

    TIME TO REMEMBER THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

    Mr. McGOVERN. Mr. Speaker, this April marks the 89th anniversary of
    the cataclysmic events that occurred in the Turkish Ottoman Empire
    between 1915 and 1923, where 1.5 million Armenians were killed and
    over a half million survivors were forcibly deported into exile. On
    Sunday, I had the privilege to participate in a service at the
    Armenian Church of Our Savior in Worcester, Massachusetts, where in
    the presence of 19 survivors, the community of Worcester paid homage
    to the martyrs and survivors of the Armenian Genocide and their
    descendents. Mr. Speaker, last May, the House Committee on the
    Judiciary reported out House Resolution 193. We have been waiting for
    nearly 1 year now for the Speaker of the House to schedule this bill
    for a debate and for a vote, and I would urge at this time that the
    Speaker schedule this bill as quickly as possible so that the House of
    Representatives may join those nations and those scholars who affirm
    the Genocide Convention and recognize the Armenian Genocide and
    Holocaust as genocides of the 20th century. Mr. Speaker, I am
    submitting for the Record comments I made at the Armenian Church of
    Our Savior this past Sunday.

    I would very much like to thank Father Terzian and the
    community of faith of the Armenian Church of Our Savior for
    inviting me once again to this commemoration. It is one of the
    great privileges of my office to participate in this annual day
    of remembrance of the martyrs and survivors of the Armenian
    Genocide. It is a privilege to be in the company of our city's
    mayor, the Honorable Tim Murray, and in the company of Councilor
    Petty, Representative Leary, Representative Fresolo, Senator
    Moore, Senator Glodis, and Selectman Montocalvo. And I am very
    much looking forward to the pleasure of hearing the Worcester
    Chorale perform after their five-month break, under the
    continuing leadership of Maestro Petrossian. It is also a
    pleasure for me to share the podium with Nathaniel Mencow, who is
    so well known for his work as a historian, and who has worked for
    so long for the recognition of the heroic service of his brother,
    First Lieutenant William Martin Mencow, who gave his life in
    defense of freedom during World War II. But I am most privileged
    and most honored to be here in the presence of survivors of the
    Armenian Genocide, their descendents, and the descendents of
    those who perished in the genocide. This April marks the 89th
    anniversary of the cataclysmic events that occurred in the
    Ottoman Empire between 1915 and 1923, where one-and-a-half
    million Armenians were killed and over half-a-million survivors
    were exiled. Our city has been especially blessed by the
    presence and contributions of a large and vital Armenian
    community. Each year we come to this church to recognize, honor
    and remember that this rich heritage is, in part, a sad
    inheritance paid with the blood of millions of innocent men,
    women and children. I know that most of you are aware that
    legislation has been introduced in the U.S. House of
    Representatives which reaffirms U.S. support for the Genocide
    Convention, calls upon the president and the U.S. government to
    work to prevent future genocides, and recognizes the Armenian
    Genocide. This bill, H. Res. 193, has 110 bipartisan cosponsors
    and was reported out of the House Judiciary Committee last May.
    It has been waiting for nearly one year now for the Speaker of
    the House, Dennis Hastert, to put it on the schedule of the House
    for debate and vote. I am always amazed that there are those in
    Congress who view this bill as controversial. They are
    influenced, in part, by those voices who continue to deny that
    the Armenian Genocide or the Holocaust, which is also cited in
    this bill, ever happened. The Turkish government, for example,
    claims that the Armenian Genocide does not meet the definition of
    genocide, despite the fact that the father of the Genocide
    Convention, human rights pioneer Rafael Lemkin, specifically
    cited the Holocaust and the Armenian Genocide as the two clear
    instances of genocidal crimes covered by the Convention.
    Contrary to the Turkish government's claims, legal scholars,
    historians, human rights organizations, journalists and the
    majority of political leaders around the world firmly believe and
    assert that the 1915 mass slaughter of Armenians fits the legal
    definition of genocide. Israel Charney, the noted genocide and
    Holocaust scholar and the editor of the respected Encyclopedia of
    Genocide, has written extensively about the psychology of
    genocide denial. He has stressed that to deny the countless
    deaths of a known event of genocide is to celebrate those deaths
    and to send a signal that the power that brought about this
    destruction is still in force and can be used again when
    opportunity permits. To seek to erase agonizing memories--to
    assert that those memories are false--is to

    [[Page H2380]]

    openly mock the feelings and sensibilities of the victims and
    their descendents--to once again victimize the victims. This is
    why it is so important to recognize--openly and freely,
    officially and informally, every single day--the events of the
    Armenian Genocide. America, along with the rest of the world, is
    famous for using the words ``never again,'' when speaking about
    the Armenian Genocide and the Holocaust carried out by Nazi
    Germany. Unfortunately, ``never again'' happens over and over
    again--in Cambodia, in Rwanda, in Kosovo, and now in present- day
    Sudan. It has been a blessing to me in my work that when
    genocide threatens any people, anywhere in the world, the
    Armenian- American community has always worked to bring these
    events to my attention and to the attention of U.S. and
    international policy-makers. The Armenian-American community has
    always joined with other organizations to educate the public
    about present-day horrors and to organize relief and support for
    victims and survivors. In this way, through these works, the
    tragedy of the Armenian Genocide is transformed into a legacy of
    life, of hope, of survival and resistance. So, I come here today
    not only to remember and honor the martyrs, survivors and
    descendants of the Armenian Genocide, but to honor and celebrate
    this community, which has given back so much to this city and our
    country. Please let me thank you--each and every one of you--for
    allowing me to share this day with you.
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