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Richard Hovannisin Discusses Armenian Genocide At University Of Utah

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  • Richard Hovannisin Discusses Armenian Genocide At University Of Utah

    RICHARD HOVANNISIN DISCUSSES ARMENIAN GENOCIDE AT UNIVERSITY OF UTAH

    Noyan Tapan
    Armenians Today
    Mar 30 2006

    SALT LAKE CITY, MARCH 30, NOYAN TAPAN - ARMENIANS TODAY. The Turkish
    government refuses to acknowledge the genocide committed against
    the Armenians, said Richard Hovannisian, professor of Armenian
    and near-eastern history at the University of California at Los
    Angeles. According to Daily Utah Chronicle, Hovannisian commented
    on the contemporary interpretations of the Armenian genocide at the
    University of Utah Hinckley Institute of Politics on March 23.

    Hovannisian's talk focused on the scholarly debate over whether
    the genocide was premeditated or a "crime of passion" that occurred
    suddenly during the tense conditions of war. He expressed his opinion
    that the elimination of the Armenians had been contemplated by
    the Ottoman government before the outbreak of war, but that it was
    wartime conditions that allowed it to turn a "final solution into
    an accomplished fact." The Ottoman Empire distrusted the Armenians,
    in part because they were a tight-knit Christian ethnic group in
    the middle of a mostly Muslim empire, Hovannisian said. "They were
    an ethnic group seen as potentially troublesome to an authoritarian
    state at war," he said. No official government document specifically
    outlining the Ottoman plan to eliminate Armenians has been found,
    although there is overwhelming evidence that the massacres occurred,
    he said. There may be a "smoking gun" somewhere in Turkish archives
    proving that the Ottomans premeditated the Armenian genocide,
    Hovannisian said, but the nation's government does not provide
    Western historians with access to those materials. He said there
    are psychological reasons that Turkey refuses to admit the genocide
    occurred. "They don't want to believe that their grandparents could've
    been murderers," Hovannisian explained. "They also don't want to
    deal with the consequences of recognition, including contrition and
    restitution."
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