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  • Armenian Genocide Debate Continues

    ARMENIAN GENOCIDE DEBATE CONTINUES
    By: Matthew Watkins

    Texas A&M The Battalion, TX
    April 24, 2006

    Adan Peņa, Robert Saucedo, Wade Barker - THE BATTALION. Susan Gordone
    discusses photos of her relatives who experienced the Armenian genocide
    that started in 1915.

    Very few would doubt that Armenian-American Susan Gordone's family
    has suffered. However, what to call the cause of their suffering is
    a ninety year-old debate.

    In 1913, Gordone's grandmother, Rose, was asked by her pregnant
    mother to help deliver her younger sister. At the time, her whole
    family lived in Turkey.

    "Rose was eight years old. The baby, with its afterbirth, slipped
    through her hands and died. Three days later, her mother died," said
    Gordone, who lives in College Station and is a former worker for the
    Texas A&M theater arts and English departments. "A week later when
    her father returned, he told the remaining members of the family that
    they must leave immediately, pack into a wagon or be killed."

    Seven years after the death of her mother and sister, Rose traveled
    to America to escape the danger in her home country.

    "But in those seven years, she, along with my Uncle John and Aunt
    Tervanda, would persevere in the death caravans, watching other family
    members die along the way before arriving in Ellis Island in 1920,"
    Gordone said.

    On Monday, Gordone, along with the Armenian community, will observe
    the 91st anniversary of the Armenian genocide, which some estimates
    indicate took the lives of as many as 1.5 million Armenians. However,
    others, including the Turkish Government, contend that the Armenian
    genocide never happened.

    The events of the Armenian genocide occurred when the Young Turks, who
    had power over Turkey at the time, relocated or deported the country's
    Armenian population during World War I. Most of the Armenians were
    relocated on foot causing many to die of exhaustion or starvation. Most
    Armenians and many scholars contend that the deaths were genocide.

    The Turkish government acknowledges the deaths of hundreds of thousands
    of Armenians between 1915 and 1917, but says the deaths were the
    result of a civil war and starvation that affected all members of
    the Turkish population.

    The debate about the events has become so heated that it has sometimes
    prevented Armenians and Turks from becoming friends at A&M, said Yaman
    Evrenoglu, a Turkish graduate student in electrical engineering. He
    said he remembers at least five times when a personal friendship
    between an Armenian and Turk was halted when the pair's nationality
    was revealed.

    The most recent shake up in the controversy was an hour-long
    documentary, "The Armenian Genocide," which aired on PBS and told
    the story of the genocide. The film featured many scholars, some
    of whom were Turkish, telling the story of death marches in which
    Armenians were pushed off cliffs, drowned, starved and exhausted. A
    25-minute panel discussion about the Turkish involvement in these
    deaths followed the documentary.

    "(The documentary) provides a blatantly one-sided perspective of a
    tragic and unresolved period of world history," Turkish ambassador
    to the United States Nabi ?ensoy said in a statement after the
    documentary's airing. "Its premise is rejected not only by my
    government, but also by many eminent scholars who have studied the
    period in question."

    Armenians and the myriad of scholars who contend that the genocide
    is a historical fact said the panel legitimized a view that hatefully
    refused to acknowledge the genocide.

    "Turkish denials of the genocide are part of a state-sponsored policy
    of propaganda that serves only the interests of Turkey. The historical
    truth of the Armenian genocide has been established beyond reasonable
    doubt by abundant documentary and eye-witness evidence from thousands
    of sources," Vako Nicolian said in an online petition he authored
    and sent the vice president of programming at PBS.

    As of Sunday, the petition has gathered 22,195 signees.

    Gordone said she had no problem with the airing of the panel
    discussion, which featured two scholars on each side of the issue,
    because it simply revealed the lack of depth to the Turkish
    government's claims.

    "If we are going to pretend that a stateless Christian minority
    population, unarmed, is somehow in a capacity to kill people in an
    aggressive way that is tantamount to war, or civil war, we're living
    in the realm of the absurd," said Peter Balakian, a professor at
    Colgate University in the debate.

    Evrenosoglu said he was more upset about the debate than the
    documentary.

    "The documentary was much more moderate compared to ones that I
    have witnessed," he said. "It was too biased for us of course, but
    at least they presented the Turkish government and the Turkish point
    of view. The debate was a complete disaster because the theme of the
    debate was not about discussion of the Armenian genocide but why the
    Turkish government is rejecting it."

    http://www.thebatt.com/media/storage/paper65 7/news/2006/04/24/News/Armenian.Genocide.Debate.Co ntinues-1867136.shtml?norewrite200604241732&so urcedomain=www.thebatt.com

    --Boundary_(ID_1Q2JEUg ClZLbxBHxGkw/yQ)--

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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