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  • Forgotten Holocaust

    AZG Armenian Daily #075, 27/04/2005


    World press

    FORGOTTEN HOLOCAUST

    The Guardian, Saturday April 23, 2005

    It is not every day that there is a chance to ponder the significance of
    events that happened in the distant past, so tomorrow's 90th anniversary of
    the start of what Armenians call their genocide at the hands of the Turks
    should not pass unnoticed. This subject cannot be tackled without
    negotiating a minefield of claim, counter-claim and fury. Many historians
    believe that between 1915 and 1923 the Ottoman Turkish authorities
    orchestrated the killing of 1.5 million Armenian Christians. Turkish
    governments have always insisted that a few hundred thousand died in
    "spontaneous" violence that constituted neither extermination nor genocide,
    and that in any case began in wartime, when the Armenians, seen as a fifth
    column, were fighting alongside Russian forces.

    Orhan Pamuk, Turkey's most famous writer, was vilified recently for
    referring to a million deaths, many of starvation on a long march into exile
    in the Syrian desert. When France, home to the largest Armenian Diaspora
    community, planned to commemorate the killings, it received threats from
    Turkey. Henry Morgenthau, then US ambassador to Istanbul, reported
    "cold-blooded, calculating" slaughter. But American governments speak only
    of "tragedy" to avoid offending their ally. Armenians, marking the
    catastrophe in Yerevan and beyond, call it the forgotten holocaust and say
    Turks should no more be allowed to deny their responsibility than Germans
    for exterminating Europe's Jews. (Hitler, whose crimes are remembered, once
    scornfully asked who remembered the Armenians). With emotions still running
    so high, it is encouraging that Turkey has asked Armenia to join a
    commission with unfettered access to the records of both countries,
    including Turkey's first world war military archives. Armenia rejects this,
    saying the historical facts are clear. Ankara fears the issue is being
    exploited by those, especially in France, who oppose Turkish membership of
    the EU. To some extent, the response is defensive. But whatever their
    motives, it will be welcome if Turks are now ready to look at their past
    with a more open mind.
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