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CR: Berman: Commemorating The 90th Anniversary of The Genocide

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  • CR: Berman: Commemorating The 90th Anniversary of The Genocide

    [Congressional Record: April 22, 2005 (Extensions)]
    [Page E739]
    >From the Congressional Record Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]
    [DOCID:cr22ap05-28]




    COMMEMORATING THE 90TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

    ______


    HON. HOWARD L. BERMAN

    of california

    in the house of representatives

    Thursday, April 21, 2005

    Mr. BERMAN. Mr. Speaker, this Sunday, April 24th, marks the 90th
    anniversary of the beginning the Armenian Genocide. I rise today to
    commemorate this terrible chapter in human history, and to help ensure
    that it will never be forgotten.
    On April 24, 1915, the Turkish government began to arrest Armenian
    community and political leaders. Many were executed without ever being
    charged with crimes. Then the government deported most Armenians from
    Turkish Armenia, ordering that they resettle in what is now Syria. Many
    deportees never reached that destination.
    From 1915 to 1918, more than a million Armenians died of starvation
    or disease on long marches, or were massacred outright by Turkish
    forces. From 1918 to 1923, Armenians continued to suffer at the hands
    of the Turkish military, which eventually removed all remaining
    Armenians from Turkey.
    We mark this anniversary of the start of the Armenian Genocide
    because this tragedy for the Armenian people was a tragedy for all
    humanity. It is our duty to remember, to speak out and to teach future
    generations about the horrors of genocide and the oppression and
    terrible suffering endured by the Armenian people.
    We hope the day will soon come when it is not just the survivors who
    honor the dead but also when those whose ancestors perpetrated the
    horrors acknowledge their terrible responsibility and commemorate as
    well the memory of genocide's victims.
    Sadly, we cannot say humanity has progressed to the point where
    genocide has become unthinkable. We have only to recall the ``killing
    fields'' of Cambodia, mass killings in Rwanda, ``ethnic cleansing'' in
    Bosnia and Kosovo, and most recently, the unspeakable horrors in
    Darfur, Sudan to see that the threat of genocide persists. We must
    renew our commitment never to remain indifferent in the face of such
    assaults on innocent human beings.
    We also remember this day because it is a time for us to celebrate
    the contribution of the Armenian community in America--including
    hundreds of thousands in California--to the richness of our character
    and culture. The strength they have displayed in overcoming tragedy to
    flourish in this country is an example for all of us. Their success is
    moving testimony to the truth that tyranny and evil cannot extinguish
    the vitality of the human spirit.
    The United States has an ongoing opportunity to contribute to a true
    memorial to the past by strengthening Armenia's emerging democracy. We
    must do all we can through aid and trade to support Armenia's efforts
    to construct an open political and economic system.
    Adolf Hitler, the architect of the Nazi Holocaust, once remarked
    ``Who remembers the Armenians?'' The answer is, we do. And we will
    continue to remember the victims of the 1915-23 genocide because, in
    the words of the philosopher George Santayana, ``Those who cannot
    remember the past are condemned to repeat it.''
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