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Remembering Armenian Genocide admirable, not hateful

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  • Remembering Armenian Genocide admirable, not hateful

    Daily Bruin - View Point
    Tuesday, February 22, 2005


    Remembering Armenian Genocide admirable, not hateful
    Students working to spread awareness provide opportunities for valuable
    dialogue


    By Paul Von Blum

    Like many others in the UCLA community, I was distressed to read Fatma
    Asli Velieceoglu's submission to the Daily Bruin misleadingly titled
    "Armenian propaganda against Turkey untrue, divisive" (Feb. 10). Her
    allegation that Armenians have engaged in a campaign of hatred against
    Turkey utterly contradicts my experience as a teacher at UCLA for the
    past 25 years.

    During that time, I have had the pleasure of having hundreds of students
    of Armenian heritage here. My contact with these intellectually and
    morally engaged young men and women has been a highlight of my academic
    career.

    One major reason is that all of them have been passionately concerned
    about Turkey's shameful denial of the Armenia Genocide almost 90 years
    ago. Their focus has properly been on educating their fellow students
    about one of the most horrific eras of 20th-century history.

    In all of my conversations with Armenian American students and others,
    with no exceptions whatever, I have heard no expression of hatred toward
    Turks or anyone else. Their sole focus has been on demanding that Turkey
    acknowledge its historical accountability for the mass murders of
    Armenians.

    I join my Armenian brothers and sisters in working against genocide
    denial. As the son of a Holocaust survivor, I feel an enduring
    solidarity with all people whose lives have been shattered by both
    genocide and its progeny, the cynical refusal to acknowledge historical
    responsibility.

    We live in an era where countless thousands of human beings were
    slaughtered in Cambodia and Rwanda and presently in Sudan. Velieceoglu
    should take advantage of her educational opportunity at UCLA to learn
    about the sorry historical legacy of the 20th and early 21st centuries,
    including her own government's continuing refusal to acknowledge its
    past.

    Genocide deniers might begin by engaging in thoughtful dialogue with
    many of the students Velieceoglu foolishly maligned in her Daily Bruin
    submission.


    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Von Blum is a professor of African American studies and communication
    studies.
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