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It's time for Turkey to acknowledge Armenian genocide

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  • It's time for Turkey to acknowledge Armenian genocide

    Fresno Bee, CA
    April 24 2005

    It's time for Turkey to acknowledge Armenian genocide

    JIM BOREN


    In the close-knit Armenian families of California's San Joaquin
    Valley, the stories of the first genocide of the 20th century are
    passed along to each generation at dinner tables and family
    gatherings. It's a ritual to ensure that this scar on world history
    won't be forgotten.

    But this isn't just a history lesson about nameless victims of the
    Armenian genocide of 90 years ago. These stories are very personal.
    They trace how family members made their way to the Valley and the
    tragic circumstances of those who died in a calculated slaughter that
    meets every definition of genocide.

    They talk about the great-grandmother whose children were murdered by
    the Turks and only escaped the genocide by being hidden in a basement
    by a friendly doctor and his wife. Or the 8-year-old girl whose
    brother was killed and whose only hope was to find a way to survive a
    Turkish death march through the desert.

    They talk about how 1.5 million Armenians were killed during a
    massacre that the Turkish government still won't acknowledge.

    The Turks' intransigent attitude about those events still angers many
    Armenian Americans. There's also disappointment because the United
    States government has buckled under threats from Turkey if our nation
    dares call this tragic chapter what it is - a genocide.

    Because Turkey sits in a strategic spot in the world, the U.S. State
    Department, several presidents and Congress have refused to
    officially declare that a genocide occurred.

    The U.S. doesn't want to offend the Turkish government. Never mind
    that our leaders are offending the survivors of those 1.5 million
    Armenians slaughtered during World War I. This wasn't the collateral
    damage of war. The Armenians were rounded up by the Turks and
    executed.

    But the politics of this issue could change thanks to Turkey's desire
    to become part of the European Union. French President Jacques Chirac
    says Turkey must admit to the genocide as one of the conditions of
    entry into the EU.

    That says a lot about Turkey standing on principle. Its leaders won't
    acknowledge the genocide because it's the right thing to do, but they
    may admit to it occurring if the Turks get an economic benefit. That
    tells you all you need to know about this ally of the United States.

    Sunday is a special day for the Armenian community. It's the 90th
    anniversary of the genocide and a series of commemorative events have
    been held the past week across the Valley. One of those was a dinner
    by the Armenian Community School of Fresno (Calif.) that honored
    survivors of the genocide.

    In a north Fresno banquet room last week, family members told moving
    stories about how their relatives were killed in the genocide and
    what it took for some of them to survive. They all know these family
    stories very well, and they will not shield their children from this
    awful history.

    It's something that must be passed on.

    The Armenian Community School honored genocide survivors from four
    families. All but one has since died, but Oghda Boghosian, at age 98,
    was there to receive her honor surrounded by family members. Also
    honored were Mourad and Elizabeth Bedrosian, Anna Boyajian Koligian
    and Dertad and Siroun Tookolan.

    Oghda Boghosian was 8 when the Turks came for her family. Her oldest
    brother was killed and her mother thought her best chance at survival
    was to send Oghda on a march with her brother's wife.

    Going on a march usually meant death to participants, either through
    the sheer torture of the procession without adequate food and water
    or being shot when Turkish soldiers tired of marching along with
    their victims. But it also could be a chance to flee.

    Oghda was taken from the march by two Turkish boys and given to a
    Turkish family that wanted an Armenian girl to keep. She ultimately
    got away, and then finally arrived at Ellis Island in 1920. She
    married Nigholas Boghosian, and after several years they went into
    the farming business.

    Oghda Boghosian's story is not unusual and this 98-year-old woman
    knows all too personally that there was a genocide that claimed
    family members and so many others. It only compounds the tragedy for
    this genocide to be officially ignored.

    The Turkish government knows the truth. The American government knows
    the truth. It's time for both to speak it publicly.
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