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  • 'Beyond human redress'

    The Gazette (Montreal)
    April 10, 2005 Sunday
    Final Edition

    'Beyond human redress': This month marks the 90th anniversary of the
    slaughter and exile of Turkey's Armenian population, a human tragedy
    that still haunts both the persecuted and the persecutors

    by TARO ALEPIAN, Freelance


    The year 2005 marks the 90th anniversary of the Armenian genocide. It
    will be commemorated by the 60,000 Canadians of Armenian descent,
    sons and daughters of the 1.5 million Armenians who were tortured and
    massacred in this crime against humanity. Millions of Armenians
    around the world will do the same.

    On the evening of April 23, a multi-denominational ecumenical service
    will be held in St. Joseph Oratory to mark the occasion. Cardinal
    Jean-Claude Turcotte will lead the prayers.

    The events that took place 90 years ago in Turkey are considered the
    first ethnically motivated genocide in a century filled with
    holocaust, genocide and ethnic cleansing. They were not random
    events, but a government-sponsored and led program of ethnic
    annihilation including torture, rape, starvation and the killing of
    innocent men, women and children.

    Many governments and parliaments around the world, including
    Canada's, now recognize the genocide. Although it was a catastrophe
    of epic proportions, its denial by Turkey and the apathy of the
    civilized world in the decades that followed set the tone for what is
    arguably the most murderous century in history.

    Adolf Hitler, in persuading his army commanders on the eve of the
    Second World War that the merciless persecution and killing of Jews
    would bring no retribution, declared: "Who, after all, speaks today
    of the annihilation of the Armenians?"

    These infamous words speak volumes. They clearly demonstrate that
    denial was not just a betrayal of the Armenian people, but of
    humanity, and that the apathy of the West was not only unfair, but
    precedent setting.

    With the eyes of the world on Turkey as it campaigns to join the
    European Union, human-rights issues and the Armenian genocide are now
    being discussed worldwide and, perhaps more importantly, are being
    put on the negotiating table by the leaders of the European Union.

    Canada, as a world leader and a respected voice of reason, must join
    the nations of Europe in calling on Turkey to recognize this genocide
    and to grow into the respectable and honourable member of the
    community of nations that it strives to become. After all, Canada is
    the nation that taught the world to use military force as a
    peacekeeping tool and that set the benchmark for a just society based
    on human rights, individual freedoms and democratic principles. That
    is why we, as Canadians, expect more than a House of Commons
    resolution. We expect action.

    That genocide took place is no longer a debate. It is an accepted
    fact, based on a mountain of factual evidence.

    The United States ambassador to the Ottoman Empire at the time, Henry
    Morgenthau, Sr., wrote: "I am confident that the whole history of the
    human race contains no such horrible episode as this. The great
    massacres and persecutions of the past seem almost insignificant when
    compared to the sufferings of the Armenian race in 1915. The killing
    of the Armenian people was accompanied by the systematic destruction
    of churches, schools, libraries, treasures of art, and cultural
    monuments in an attempt to eliminate all traces of a noble
    civilization with a history of more than 3,000 years."

    Winston Churchill wrote: "As for Turkish atrocities - massacring
    uncounted thousands of helpless Armenians, men, women, and children
    together, whole districts blotted out in one administrative holocaust
    - these were beyond human redress."

    There are numerous writings by American, German, Swiss and Italian
    missionaries, diplomats and newspaper reporters who witnessed the
    genocide, documenting the facts. The volume of evidence speaks
    clearly for itself.

    What remains, however, is to transform this fact, this genocide, from
    calamity to lesson - from grievance to a collective "turning of the
    page."

    Turkey today is a country trying hard to modernize itself. It is
    addressing its human-rights issues, working to improve its financial
    situation and campaigning to join the European Union. It has a rich
    history and its people are justly proud of their recent achievements
    as they look forward to a brighter future.

    It takes leadership and courage to right past wrongs. The time is
    right for the Turkish government to recognize that genocide was
    perpetrated by a predecessor regime in a past generation.

    Modern Turks can then disassociate themselves from the sins of their
    ancestors, and finally bury this unfortunate event in the pages of
    history where it rightly belongs. The world will respect them for
    doing so, and it will remove one of the thorny issues hindering their
    acceptance into the family of European nations.

    Turkey can certainly benefit from some courageous leadership right
    now. Perhaps Canada can help those courageous leaders who surely
    exist in Turkey to stand up and take action.

    Taro Alepian is president of the Congress of Canadian Armenians.
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