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Hebrew Uni. to commemorate Armenian Genocide Day with Event on May 2

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  • Hebrew Uni. to commemorate Armenian Genocide Day with Event on May 2

    Israel Hasbara Committee , NY
    April 26 2005

    24 April Marks Armenian Genocide
    Hebrew University to Commemorate Event on 2 May

    By Mayaan Jaffe

    Sunday 24 April marked the anniversary of the Armenian Genocide, the
    massacre of about 1.5 million Armenians by the Ottoman Turks. The
    Armenian government held an international conference in the capital
    of Yerevan dedicated to the day.

    Although the Armenians suffered the first genocide of the twentieth
    century and although their situation is closely connected to that of
    the Jews, who were systematically tortured and killed during the Nazi
    Holocaust, the State of Israel has yet to recognize the Armenian
    massacre. According to Professor Israel Charney, Executive Director
    of the Institute on the Holocaust and Genocide in Jerusalem, this is
    solely due to political considerations. However, he says, Jews
    denying the Armenian Genocide is the same as Christians (or anyone
    else) denying the Jewish Holocaust.

    `Jews run around legitimately angry about denials of the Holocaust,'
    he says. `We therefore have an absolute moral responsibility to
    recognize the Armenian Genocide.'

    Charney, a certified psychiatrist originally from the U.S., has
    dedicated his life in Israel to studying the how and why of genocide,
    sparked by confusion about the cause of the Holocaust and the ability
    of human beings to carry out such atrocities.

    At the university level, there are plenty of academics who would
    place their vote with Charney's; those professors are led by
    Professor Michael E. Stone, director of the Hebrew University
    Armenian Studies Program. His department will host a memorial event
    on 2 May at Beit Belgia on the Givat Ram University Campus. Though
    the event will center on memorializing the massacre, it will also be
    about building bridges between Israelis and Armenians, many living in
    Jerusalem. Prominent leaders from both parties will attend, including
    His Beatitude Patriarch Torkom Manoogian and His Excellency Mr.
    Tsolag Momjian, Honorary Consul of the Republic of Armenia.

    The event will feature an insightful lecture by Charney, as well as a
    celebration of Armenian culture, highlighted by the tunes of Armenian
    music.

    With only around 100,000 survivors of the Armenian Genocide alive
    today, Mr. Momjian expressed hopes that such an evening would `open
    the minds of young people' to the concept of the Armenian Genocide.

    This is not the first year Stone has planned such an event. In past
    years he has brought such intellectuals as Senior Lecturer at the
    Open University of Israel and the Kibbutzim College of Education,
    Professor Yair Auron. Like Charney, Auron has dedicated himself to
    bringing to light the connection between Armenians and Jews, their
    trials and tribulations. His book, The Banality of Indifference:
    Zionism and the Armenian Genocide (Transaction Books, 2000), will be
    published in Hebrew this month. It is an eye-opening book, whose
    English edition has already been highly praised.

    Former Minster of Education Yossi Sarid has been one of few
    government officials to encourage the State to recognize the Armenian
    Genocide. In a speech marking the 85th anniversary of the genocide at
    the Armenian Church in the Old City of Jerusalem, Sarid said, `We
    Jews, the main victims of murderous hatred, must be doubly sensitive
    and identify with other victims. Those who stand aside, turn away,
    cast a blind eye, make their calculations of gains and losses and are
    silent always help the murderers and never those who are being
    murdered...'

    Sarid encourages teaching Israeli students about the atrocity as part
    of the general history curriculum, if not for the educational value,
    then for the humanistic one.

    As Mr. Momjian put it, `For 90 years the Armenians have been living
    with the tragic memory of the family they lost. To deny the genocide
    is to deny a very important part of Armenian culture, history and
    life.'

    Charney and Momjian made their comments in exclusive interviews with
    the Israel Hasbara Committee.
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