Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Rossie: World still looks away from genocide

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Rossie: World still looks away from genocide

    Press & Sun-Bulletin, NY
    April 20 2005

    Rossie: World still looks away from genocide


    "Murder will out."

    DAVID ROSSIE Commentary

    -- Don Quixote,
    Miguel de Cervantes

    Cervantes apparently never met an official of the Turkish government.


    We are coming up on the 90th anniversary of the Armenian genocide in
    which an estimated 1.5 million Armenians were slaughtered by the
    Ottoman Turks.

    The official position of Turkish governments ever since has been:
    Genocide? What genocide? The Turks were and are like the Bush
    administration. If you never admit to a mistake or a wrong-doing,
    there's no need to apologize for it.

    For the record, the blood-letting began on April 24, 1915, and
    continued through 1923, five years after the end of World War I, in
    which the Turks came out losers. By then the Armenians were a
    scattered remnant in their native land. Some of the survivors made
    their way to America, which is why Binghamton today has a small but
    vibrant Armenian community.

    And come Saturday, members of that community will hold a
    commemorative service recalling the start of the genocide. In years
    past, I learned from Dr. Gary Fattal, Armenian community members have
    planted trees at the south end of the Washington Street bridge -- a
    symbolic remembrance of the start of a new life in America.

    This year, the group has planned something different, the
    installation of a monument at that location. The ceremony will begin
    at 11 a.m. on the 23rd, and local dignitaries have been invited to
    join members of the Armenian community for the event.

    Following the installation, a reception will be held at St. Gregory's
    Armenian Church hall, 12 Corbett Ave., Binghamton.

    Elsewhere around the country, Armenian communities will observe the
    anniversary on Saturday and Sunday. One of the largest observances
    will be in New York City's Times Square, where thousands are expected
    to attend a noon rally. The rally will be followed by an ecumenical
    requiem service at St. Patrick's Roman Catholic Church, 50th Street
    and 5th Avenue, from 2:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m.

    Part of the observance of the genocide's anniversary is a call for
    the Turkish government to acknowledge what was done and apologize for
    it. Armenians aren't seeking reparations, at least not that I know
    of, but the Turks, for nearly a century, have stuck to their denials
    of responsibility. Perhaps they fear that if they owned up, demands
    for reparations would follow.

    Almost as shocking as the Turks' arrogance is the rest of the world's
    indifference. The Wilson administration ignored the Armenians' pleas
    for help, and in what was to become a pattern, the United States and
    most of the rest of what is laughingly referred to as the "free
    world" pretended not to notice what Nazi Germany was doing to the
    Jews, gypsies, homosexuals and assorted others until it was to late
    to do anything about it.

    The slaughter of a half-million Africans in Rwanda a decade ago
    became part of that pattern, and the Clinton administration dithered
    and did nothing.

    Today, the Sudanese Army and its janjaweed cohort are raping and
    killing at will in Darfur, and while the Bush administration has
    deplored it and sent material aid to the victims, it has made no
    attempt to intervene. And how could it even if it wanted to? With the
    Iraqi tar baby firmly in its grasp, it can't reach out to anyone.

    The lesson for oppressive governments over the years? If you're not
    sitting on a billion barrels of oil, you can get away with just about
    anything.
Working...
X