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Uniting the potential

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  • Uniting the potential

    Uniting the potential
    Editorial

    Yerkir/arm
    January 28, 2005

    Often a question is asked: "What substantial result does the process
    of the international recognition of the Armenian Genocide bear, and
    why are we wasting our time and potential when it is used only by the
    others."

    It is true that from time to time, the Armenian Question has been
    included in the international diplomacy and used. Sadly, it did not
    depend on the will of the Armenian people. Other countries have used
    the Armenian Question for their interest -- to settle their political
    issues or expand their influence in the region, while our people,
    often being unprepared, had faced the fact that its issue had become a
    subject of the international diplomacy. And this is why we have seen
    losses.

    In its current stage, the Armenian Question has acquired a quite
    different quality as it is the Armenian nation that has raised the
    issue through the Artsakh struggle. On the way to settle it we have
    gained a national sovereignty, and now the national issues lie on the
    basis of our national policy. This means that now we are raising our
    issue internationally.

    The international recognition of the Genocide is the result of the
    Diaspora's decades-long extensive work because during its history, the
    Diaspora has gone through several severe stages: from refuges
    scattered around the world to a knowledgeable entirety. Later, this
    entirety was able to come together, the communities were formed with
    their many ties and then the Diaspora tried tomake political steps.

    This was reflected in defending the human and national rights of the
    Armenian people and formulating them as our claims. After they became
    more established in other countries, the masses who had been deported
    from their Homeland, continued to claim their right to go back and
    receive human or material reparation.

    Thus the issue became something that not only could be raised before
    the foreigners but also something that could organize the Armenians
    since thoseclaims are the powerful means of uniting Armenians living
    under different circumstances, as well as their organizations, no
    matter what their differences and interests were. We have a powerful
    uniting goal - our claims â=80` that also serve our goal of preserving
    the Armenian identity.

    So they are directed not only outward but also inward and have a great
    significance for organizing the communities. Now they have acquired a
    new quality because the independent Armenian state has included the
    international recognition of the Armenian Genocide in its foreign
    policy, thus building adurable bridge between the Homeland and the
    Diaspora.

    The movement for international recognition of the Armenian Genocide
    unites the Armenian potential for a great goal. So the issue is
    bigger; it is not only a matter of Armenia's foreign policy.
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