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CTV.ca: Ninety Years Later: The Armenian Genocide Continues

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  • CTV.ca: Ninety Years Later: The Armenian Genocide Continues

    CTV.ca

    Ninety Years Later: The Armenian Genocide Continues

    By Amir Hassanpour
    Special to CTV.ca

    Canadians scored a victory last year when our parliament recognized
    the Armenian genocide. The motion approved in the House of Commons
    declared: ...this House acknowledges the Armenian genocide of 1915 and
    condemns this act as a crime against humanity."

    However, the struggle of the Armenian people for justice, in Canada
    and elsewhere, is far from ending.

    Ten years ago, on the 80th anniversary of the Armenian genocide, some
    citizens in Montr al decided to build a public memorial at the
    Marcellin-Wilson Park in the citys north end. In order to prevent the
    building of the memorial, the Turkish embassy and consulate threatened
    the government of Qu bec with retaliation against two Montreal firms,
    which had major operations in Turkey [1]. This was no less than
    intervening in the internal affairs of Canada and at the same time,
    violating the rights and freedoms of Canadian citizens.

    The institution of the state is a major perpetrator of
    genocide. States, including Canada, continue to ignore, deny, and
    gamble on the Armenian genocide. Prime Minister Paul Martin and his
    Foreign Affairs minister tried to defeat the motion in the House of
    Commons, and failing to do so, rejected the decision of the highest
    organ of Canadian democracy, the parliament. Canadas national
    interest, i.e., its economic, political, and military ties to this
    NATO ally, prevailed over the cause of justice.

    In what sense is the Armenian genocide a Canadian issue? The Armenian
    case, like other genocides, is an international crime. This implies
    that perpetrators have committed crime against humanity, and they can
    be prosecuted beyond their national borders, and under international
    jurisdiction. Canada has ratified the 1948 UN Convention on the
    Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide and is also a state
    party to the International Criminal Court, which prosecutes
    perpetrators of genocide, war crimes, and crimes against humanity.

    Genocides do not end. Although there is an exact date, April 24, 1915,
    for the beginning of the Armenian genocide, this crime was launched by
    Ottoman Turkey in late nineteenth century, and led to the elimination
    of the Armenian people in their ancient homeland by the time the
    Turkish Republic replaced the Ottoman state in 1923.

    Ninety years later, the genocide lives not only in the memory of the
    few survivors, their descendants, and the rest of the Armenian people,
    but also continues in its denial by the Turkish state. Its denial by
    other states, including Israel [2] and the United States, also
    contributes to the perpetuation of the crime.

    The genocide also goes on in the policy of the Turkish state to
    eliminate any trace of Armenian life in a continuing project of ethnic
    cleansing of the Armenian homeland, its toponymy, monuments,
    buildings, music, dance, and art, and in archives, libraries, and
    museums. The genocide continues, in its harshest form, in the museums
    of Turkish cities such as Van and Kars, where the victims,
    i.e. Armenians, are depicted as perpetrators of a genocide of the
    Turkish people [3 ].

    The Turkish governments threat of retaliation against the government
    of Qu bec must also be considered as the extension of the genocide
    beyond the borders of Turkey and into the end of the twentieth
    century.

    If the Turkish Republic perpetuates the genocide in Turkey and
    throughout the world, the struggle against this crime must also be
    worldwide. We in Canada have a responsibility to ensure that the
    cabinet endorses the decision of the House of Commons. The burden of
    this struggle should not be on the shoulders of
    Armenian-Canadians. All Canadians, especially those of Turkish origin,
    have a special responsibility to recognize the genocide, and call for
    justice.

    It is known that some Kurds participated in the genocide as
    accomplices of the Ottoman state. As a Canadian citizen of Kurdish
    origins, I strongly denounce, without hesitation, all Kurds who
    participated in this crime as well as the genocide of the Assyrians,
    which happened in the same period, 1915-1923. Had the accomplices been
    alive, I would have called for their trial and punishment.

    Mark Levene, a historian of genocide, has noted that the Ottoman state
    turned Eastern Anatolia, which comprises parts of Armenia and
    Kurdistan, into a modern zone of genocide from 1878 to 1923 [4]. The
    Armenian and Assyrian peoples were wiped out, and the Kurds were
    deported in hundreds of thousands beginning in 1917, and then
    subjected to a genocidal campaign in 1937-38.

    Genocide has continued in the region and elsewhere in the world, and
    appeared in its most open and brutal form in the Nazi Holocaust of
    1933-45. All states and even non-state entities are capable of
    committing the crime.

    Here in Canada, we should not feel assured that it will never happen
    again. The indigenous peoples of Canada have experienced genocide, and
    Canadians of Japanese and Italian origin were rounded up during WWI
    and incarcerated in camps. The charter of rights, the constitution,
    and legislation against hate and advocacy of genocide are important
    legal tools, but they do not guarantee the end of racism, national
    chauvinism, fascism, and genocide. Only citizen awareness and their
    action can prevent new disasters. Mass murders have occurred
    frequently in the past, but genocide is distinguished by its ties to
    nationalism, which is itself a product of modernity, its politics and
    culture.

    I have seen much progress, within the last decade, in the struggle
    against the Armenian genocide. Some Turkish intellectuals and
    political activists, in and out of Turkey, have already recognized the
    genocide. The Turkish people must be seen as allies of the Armenian
    people in this struggle for justice, if justice can ever be
    achieved. The crime was planned by the government not by the Turkish
    people.

    The last phase of the genocide, 1915-23, was planned by a small group
    of Turkish nationalists who shared power with the Ottoman sultan in
    the wake of the 1908 Young Turk Revolution. It would be a serious
    error to treat all Turks, i.e. the Turkish people, as perpetrators of
    the crime. In fact, many Turks and Kurds risked their lives by saving
    some Armenian victims.

    While we should persist in revealing the atrocities committed by
    Turkeys armed forces and civilians, it is equally important to
    celebrate the resistance against it by Turks and Kurds while the crime
    was being committed. A world free of genocide is possible only when we
    build and promote these traditions of solidarity. Twenty years ago,
    Yilmaz G genocide now and in future, and take the first step in this
    direction by recognizing the Armenian genocide. We should contribute
    to this struggle here in Canada.

    Amir Hassanpour is Associate Professor at the Department of Near and
    Middle Eastern Civilizations at the University of Toronto

    [1] Alexander Norris, Armenians fear city bowing to pressure, The
    Gazette [Montreal], March 2, 1996, pp. A1, A15

    [2] Yair Auron, The Banality of Indifference: Zionism and the Armenian
    Genocide. New Brunswick (USA), Transaction Publishers, 2000.

    [3] Azmi Suslu et al, Armenians in the History of Turks: Basic Text
    Book. Kars, Rectorate of the Kafkas University. Printed in Ankara
    1995.

    [4] Mark Levene, Creating a modern zone of genocide: The impact of
    nation- and state-formation on Eastern Anatolia, 1878-1923, Holocaust
    and Genocide Studies, Vol. 12, No. 3, 1998, pp. 393-433.

    [5] Retrouver notre honneur: Un interview de Ragib Zarakolu,
    France-Arm nie, Mai 1998.
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