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  • Who Remembers the Armenians?

    Who Remembers the Armenians?

    Forward Forum

    The Forward (Published Weekly in New York)
    April 29, 2005

    By Christine Thomassian and Shabtai Gold

    Adolf Hitler was confident that the world would remain indifferent to
    the plight of the Jewish people he was planning to exterminate. After
    all, he reportedly told Nazi commanders before the outbreak of World
    War II, who remembers the Armenians?

    The answer to Hitler's rhetorical question remained much the same as
    the 90th anniversary of the Turkish genocide of an estimated 1.5
    million Armenians was commemorated last weekend.

    Yad Vashem, Israel's national Holocaust museum and the world's central
    address for commemorating the horrors of genocide, recently opened a
    new wing to its museum, with much international fanfare. There is not
    a single mention in the new museum of the Armenian genocide, which
    paved the ideological way for the Jewish genocide perpetrated by the
    Nazis.

    For its part, the Turkish government - much like today's Holocaust
    deniers - continues to disclaim its involvement in the genocide and
    the very occurrence of such a horror, expending large sums of money in
    this campaign. Some in Turkey admit that a few "individuals" committed
    massacres against the Armenians, but they are quick to assert that
    these acts were provoked by the Armenians themselves in order to
    receive aid and sympathy.

    Not satisfied with this accusation, this week the Turkish State
    Archives announced that more than a half million Turks were killed by
    Armenians. True, many Armenians collaborated with the Russians as
    irregular fighters against Turkey in World War I, and they may have
    killed as many as 75,000 Turks. But given the anti-Armenian pogroms
    initiated by Turkey during the 1890s that set the stage for the
    full-scale genocide in 1915, Armenians' partaking in the fighting is
    easily understood - no one should be expected to go like sheep to the
    slaughter.

    Sadly, the Turkish government is not alone in its campaign. Indeed, it
    is receiving support from some very odd sources, including a number of
    prominent Jewish organizations in Washington and the Jewish state
    itself. Noble Peace laureate Shimon Peres, while serving as Israeli
    foreign minister in 2001, called the Armenian genocide nothing more
    than a "tragedy," saying "nothing similar to the Holocaust occurred."

    Much energy, effort and money is justifiably spent on attempting to
    ensure that the world will never forget the Holocaust. Wouldn't it
    meet our standards of morality to include all such horrors?

    What about the Assyrian Christians murdered along with Armenians by
    Turkey? What about the Roma, homosexuals and other "undesirables"
    massacred by the Nazis? And what of the more recent killing fields in
    Cambodia, Rwanda and now Darfur?

    Shouldn't "never again" be applied to all men, women and children who
    are starved, beaten, obligated to undergo torturous medical
    experiments, marched through forests or deserts, forced to dig their
    own mass graves or herded into gas chambers? Is "never again" an
    admonition over which the Jewish people can maintain a monopoly?

    Shouldn't the American Jewish community be doing more to help gain
    recognition for the Armenian genocide, 90 years after the fact? After
    all, the first American human rights movement to focus on issues
    overseas was founded to stop the travesties being committed against
    Armenians. And it was Henry Morgenthau, America's Jewish ambassador to
    the Ottoman Empire, who led the campaign to alert the world to the
    horrors being perpetrated by Turkey.

    Denial is, without a doubt, the final stage of genocide. It murders
    the memory of the horrors, and of the dead. We must always guard
    against denial becoming accepted as legitimate discourse, let alone as
    fact. Will we allow Turkey to successfully continue its campaign of
    denial?

    If we do, we will be condemning our children to repeat these horrors
    and to have these horrors repeated unto them, as American philosopher
    George Santayana famously warned a century ago. But if we act now, if
    we insure that our children and our children's children are properly
    educated about the Armenian genocide, then just maybe we can prevent
    "never again" from becoming an empty saying.


    Christine Thomassian and Shabtai Gold are university students who lost
    members of their family in, respectively, the Armenian genocide and
    the Holocaust.

    http://www.forward.com/articles/3104
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