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Remembering 20th century's first Genocide

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  • Remembering 20th century's first Genocide

    The Brockville Recorder and Times (Ontario)
    April 22, 2006 Saturday
    FINAL EDITION

    REMEMBERING 20TH CENTURY'S FIRST GENOCIDE

    BY SALIM MANSUR

    In the spring of 1915 with Europe at war, the Turkish rulers of the
    Ottoman Empire ordered the deportation and killing of the Armenian
    population within their territory.

    Between April 1915 and the end of the war in November 1918, the
    organized destruction of a people identified by ethnicity and
    religion was conducted by a government that ruled an empire in the
    name of Islam.

    The nationalist Turks who succeeded the defeated power-holders in
    Istanbul continued the massacres of Armenians in eastern Anatolia and
    into the Caucasus. Some 1.5 million Armenians perished during this
    period between 1915 and 1923.

    This destruction of the Armenian people was the first genocide of the
    20th century, a prelude to what would come later under Hitler's Third
    Reich as the "final solution" for the Jews.

    It took nearly 90 years for the Canadian parliament - by a vote of
    153 (yeas) to 68 (nays) on April 21, 2004 - to pass a resolution
    acknowledging the Armenian genocide and condemning it as a crime
    against humanity.

    Neither the passage of time required for such an acknowledgment nor
    the number of parliamentarians voting on record against it came as a
    surprise, since the mass murderers of our age well understand that
    the human capacity to deny evil is far greater than our inclination
    to oppose it.

    A mere 24 countries around the world have acknowledged the facts of
    the Armenian genocide, and with the exception of Lebanon - possessing
    a sizable Christian population - there is a wall of silence on this
    subject from the Muslim-majority member states of the United Nations.

    On April 24 every year, Armenians remember their dead. It was on this
    night in 1915 the Turkish government ordered arrests of Armenian
    community leaders in Istanbul, marking the start of the genocide.

    Turkey continues to dispute what occurred. It is a sensitive issue,
    and Turks willing to critically examine the events relating to the
    Armenian genocide face persecution from authorities for "insulting
    Turkishness."

    Orhan Pamuk, the widely translated and respected Turkish writer, was
    charged last year with the crime of insulting Turks when he told a
    Swiss newspaper that "30,000 Kurds and one million Armenians were
    killed in these lands, and nobody but me dares talk about it." The
    case was dropped in January this year under heavy pressure from the
    European Union.

    That the world is a cynical place is not news, however, nor is the
    fact that human nature is flawed.

    Even as I write this column, the systematic depredation of the
    wretchedly poor in Darfur remains unabated - while the United Nations
    and its grandees, led by Kofi Annan, quibble over the meaning of
    "genocide."

    Historians and philosophers struggle to find lessons from the tales
    of human wickedness, and teach future generations to do better.

    It is in vain, for the collective ears of humanity remain stuffed
    with wax. Prophets have admonished, as Amos of the Old Testament did:
    "They drink wine in bowls, and anoint themselves with the finest
    oils; but they are not grieved over the ruin of Joseph."

    The lesson of history is that, to paraphrase Santayana, there is no
    lesson.

    Each generation gets tested by the evil of its time and, in learning
    nothing from the past, fashions its denial of crimes witnessed.

    The present generation, not to be outdone in ingenuity, incessantly
    speaks of being history's victim and denies bearing any
    responsibility or accountability for the ruin of Joseph.

    Salim Mansur is a columnist with the Toronto Sun.

    The lesson of history is that, to paraphrase Santayana, there is no
    lesson. Each generation gets tested by the evil of its time and, in
    learning nothing from the past, fashions its denial of crimes
    witnessed.
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