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Memories must live on for Armenian genocide victims

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  • Memories must live on for Armenian genocide victims

    Memories must live on for Armenian genocide victims
    by ART TONOYAN, guest columnist

    Baylor University The Lariat Online, Texas
    April 20 2006

    April 24 marks the 91st anniversary of the Armenian genocide in the
    Ottoman Empire -- the first genocide of the 20th century, which has
    come to be described as the "century of genocide."

    Some 90 years ago, the ruling elites of the Ottoman Empire put into
    motion a plan to homogenize their empire and thus save it from imminent
    collapse due to a number of internal as well as external factors like
    economic mismanagement and resurgent nationalisms among the empire's
    subject ethnic minorities.

    A nationalist and a racialist ideology known as Turkism was adopted,
    which while elevating the Turkish ethnos, defined the subject
    nationalities as malicious and cancerous entities actively contributing
    to the demise of the empire.

    This ideology subsequently provided grounds for the establishment
    of a distinctively Turkish national economy, effectively putting an
    end to the traditional multiethnic mercantile strata of the empire
    composed mainly of Armenians, Jews and Greeks.

    One of the folk sayings circulating around at the time went something
    like "Trust a snake before a Jew; trust a Jew before a Greek; but
    never trust an Armenian." Their stories were boycotted in a load of
    cases, and in many other cases their businesses were increasingly
    becoming subject to frenzied mob attacks and looting. Yet this was
    only the beginning.

    Armenians, who had gained prominence in the empire over the centuries,
    not the least because of their fiscal competence, became increasingly
    vulnerable to this kind of harassment.

    It did not help them that they were religiously and geographically
    in close proximity to their Russian neighbors to the north with whom
    the Ottoman Empire was in a state of war.

    In response to the increasing discrimination and violence against them,
    the Armenian minority began agitating for the betterment of their
    condition. The response from the government was swift, calculated
    and cruel.

    Rendering the Armenians economically defenseless was only part of
    the plan.

    Now they were defenseless existentially.

    The European powers as well as the U.S. did not intervene on their
    behalf in any significant fashion that went beyond condemnatory,
    if symbolic, enjoinments.

    And on April 24, 1915, nearly all Armenian intellectuals in the empire
    were arrested and executed without a trial.

    After the bulk of the Armenian leadership was put to death and the
    viability of resistance was reduced to nil, the Ottoman government
    under the guise of World War I began systematic deportations and
    massacres of the Christian Armenians en masse.

    Armenian villages and churches were burned down, and a large number
    of women and children were killed with indescribable cruelty. Over
    the course of three years, an estimated 1.5 million Armenians became
    victims of indiscriminate massacres.

    Their crime? Their distinct national and religious identity.

    Despite the enormity of the atrocities and the cruelty wrought upon
    the victims, virtually all of the perpetrators were spared punishment.

    As time went on, political expediency coupled with business interests
    in the newly formed Turkish Republic would make sure that the victims
    and their plight would be remembered no more. But as it turned out,
    not everybody was as forgetful.

    In 1939, having the benefit of historical hindsight, Adolph Hitler --
    while planning genocide of his own against the Jews and the Poles --
    urged on his generals, who may have displayed reservation at this
    plans, to carry them out nonetheless by saying: "What the weak western
    European civilization thinks about me does not matter. Thus for the
    time being I have sent to the East only my 'Death Head Units' with
    the order to kill without pity or mercy all men, women and children
    of the Polish race or language. Only in such a way will we win the
    living space we need. Who still talks nowadays of the annihilation
    of the Armenians?"

    Czech novelist Milan Kundera had once remarked that "the struggle
    against power is the struggle of memory against forgetting."

    It has become human, all too human, to hit the imaginary delete button
    and send tragic events like the Armenian genocide, the Jewish Holocaust
    and countless others into the Orwellian "memory hole."

    In the case of the victimized Armenians, Jews, Rwandans and others,
    it may be too late to be our brothers' keepers.

    Yet in keeping their memories alive we may very well keep ourselves
    alive in an age of insanity and endless amusement.

    And let us never forget that genocide is ours to commit and ours
    to prevent.

    Art Tonoyan is a doctoral candidate in the J. M. Dawson Institute
    for Church-State Studies.

    http://www.baylor.edu/Lariat/news.php?ac tion=story&story=40334

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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