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Don't Believe The Denialists Of The Armenian Genocide

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  • Don't Believe The Denialists Of The Armenian Genocide

    DON'T BELIEVE THE DENIALISTS OF THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE
    By Rep. Peter Koutoujian and Sona Petrossian

    Newton TAB, MA
    April 19 2006

    For those of us who are Armenian Americans, April 24 is an important
    day: it was on that date in 1915 that the Ottoman Turkish Empire
    began its slaughter of Armenians. Over the next several years, more
    than a million Armenians were murdered in a calculated campaign to
    rid Turkey of all Armenians. In other words, the so-called Young Turk
    government committed genocide against the Armenian people.

    Among scholars and genocide experts, there is no doubt about this
    issue. The International Association of Genocide Scholars (the
    definitive group of scholars on the subject), the Institute on the
    Holocaust and Genocide in Jerusalem, and the Institute for the Study
    of Genocide have repeatedly affirmed the historical facts of the
    Armenian genocide, as has Nobel Prize winner Elie Wiesel and Pulitzer
    Prize Winner Samantha Power.

    For those of us who are relatives of survivors there can be no
    doubt about this crime. Yet, sometime in the next several weeks,
    a federal judge in Boston will hear arguments in a suit brought by
    the Association of Turkish American Assemblies and others that seeks
    introduce materials into Massachusetts classrooms denying that the
    Armenian genocide occurred.

    How, after all these years, can this still be open to debate?

    Because the Turkish government and its American affiliate continue
    to deny that the Young Turks committed this grave crime. And they
    continue to seek forums to push their denialist point of view.

    Now they're bringing this campaign to Massachusetts, home to one of
    the largest Armenian populations in the nation. They claim that the
    Massachusetts Department of Education trampled on the First Amendment
    when it decided not to teach "the other side" of the Armenian genocide,
    i.e., that the slaughter was just the unfortunate byproduct of civil
    war between the Turks and the Armenians.

    This claim, refuted by every reputable genocide scholar in the world,
    is an affront to thousands of Armenian-Americans living here in
    Massachusetts whose families were victims of the Turkish government's
    murderous campaign. And it is particularly offensive for people like
    99 year-old John Kasparian of Worcester and 93 year-old Armine Dedikian
    of Watertown, two survivors of the slaughter.

    For anyone interested in ascertaining the truth about this genocide,
    they need merely to hear stories like Mr. Kasparian's, whose family
    left its home the night before the Turkish attack that took 200 of
    their fellow villagers and whose brother died of starvation while the
    family fled. Or that of Mrs. Dedikian, whose father was killed just
    before she was born and who was separated from her mother soon after.

    (Mother and daughter were eventually reunited when 15 year-old Armine
    arrived alone at Ellis Island to meet her mother, whom she had tracked
    down in the U.S., using newspaper ads and family connections.)

    Unfortunately, the U.S. government, afraid to offend Turkey, its
    military ally, has not taken a stand on this issue. But all 12 members
    of our state's congressional delegation - Senators Kennedy and Kerry
    and the 10 representatives in the House - have signed a resolution
    calling on the president to recognize the atrocity.

    Now we in Massachusetts find ourselves being pulled backwards into
    this debilitating debate over whether a genocide, long confirmed by
    victims and historians, ever existed. It is more than ironic that this
    court case was filed in a year when genocide has once again reared
    its ugly head in Darfur, where thousands have died at the hands of
    the Sudanese army, and in a year when the Iranian president has once
    again put Holocaust denials on the front page. As unfathomable as the
    crime of genocide is, it continues to occur in all its savagery. And
    as offensive as the official denials are, they also continue, not
    only when the crimes occur but for years afterward.

    In 1939, when announcing his decision to begin killing Polish men,
    women, and children, Hitler infamously uttered "Who, after all,
    speaks today of the annihilation of the Armenians?" He was counting
    on the world to forget his atrocities, as he believed the world had
    already forgotten the Turkish murders.

    Fortunately, the world has not forgotten either the Nazi crimes or
    the Turkish slaughter. But denialists continue to try to spread their
    peculiar amnesia. We in Massachusetts, home to a significant Jewish
    population and one of the largest Armenian-American populations in
    the country, must never forget.

    Peter Koutoujian is a state representative who lives in Waltham and
    Sona Petrossian is a Waban resident.

    http://www2.townonline.com/newton/opini on/view.bg?articleid=474484&format=&page=1
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