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Correcting a history of denial

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  • Correcting a history of denial

    Chicago Tribune

    Editorial
    April 23, 2005

    Correcting a history of denial

    Scarcely nine months into World War I, Turkey began the deportation of
    hundreds of thousands of Armenian citizens to camps that supposedly
    had been prepared for them in the Syrian desert.

    There were no camps.

    By the time the forced march into the desert and other atrocities were
    over, an estimated 1.5 million Armenians were dead.

    The courageous U.S. Ambassador Henry Morgenthau shouted insistently
    into Washington's deaf ears about the ongoing slaughter. He called it
    "race murder;" the term "genocide" would not be invented until the
    1940s, by Raphael Lemkin, a Polish Jew. "Persecution of Armenians
    assuming unprecedented proportions," Morgenthau cabled to
    Washington. "Reports from widely scattered districts indicate
    systematic attempt to uproot Armenian populations through arbitrary
    arrests, terrible tortures, whole-sale expulsions and deportations
    ... accompanied by frequent instances of rape, pillage, and murder."

    Sunday is the 90th anniversary of the start of the Armenian
    genocide--and also of one of the longest-running cases of national
    amnesia in history. To this day the Turkish government insists no
    genocide took place, that it was a mutual bloodbath in which many
    Turks also died. As recently as April 14, the Turkish Parliament
    issued a declaration denying, once again, Armenian charges of
    genocide. However, some Turkish writers and academics have slowly
    begun to recognize the validity of Armenian claims.

    Unlike Germany's admission of responsibility for the Holocaust, Turkey
    continues a furious worldwide campaign to prevent governments from
    using "Turkey" and "genocide" in the same sentence. Only a few
    countries have officially condemned the genocide as such, including
    Canada, France, Poland and Russia.

    Ronald Reagan was the last American president to use the word genocide
    in an annual statement about the events in Armenia. All other
    presidents since have opted for "massacre" or "tragedy." Now a letter
    to President Bush, so far signed by 178 House members and 32 senators,
    calls for the U.S. to officially recognize and condemn the Armenian
    genocide.

    Even if Turkey finally recognizes the genocide, it's doubtful
    Armenians will receive any compensation for something that happened 90
    years ago. By now most Armenians probably just want an admission from
    Turkey that a terrible evil was committed in its name in 1915.

    Copyright © 2005, Chicago Tribune
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