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Confront The Facts Of A Long-Ago Massacre

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  • Confront The Facts Of A Long-Ago Massacre

    CONFRONT THE FACTS OF A LONG-AGO MASSACRE

    Edmonton Journal (Alberta)
    May 14, 2006 Sunday
    Final Edition

    Whether or not Prime Minister Stephen Harper was diplomatically wise
    to acknowledge the 1915 mass killing of Armenians as a genocide may
    be debatable. The fact that the annihilation of as many as 600,000
    Armenians took place, and that it was the result of deliberate
    decisions of the Ottoman Empire during the First World War, is not.

    Harper cannot be faulted for wishing to put an end to the international
    pretence that the word "genocide" does not apply, and that the Turkish
    government of the time was not morally responsible.

    What this 90-year-old horror has to do with modern Turks, and modern
    Turkey, is not clear -- in the same way that it is not clear why modern
    residents of Balkan states take personally what their ancestors are
    accused of doing from time to time.

    But if we are to learn from history, we must make sure we remember
    it -- all of it -- accurately, whether we like what it says about
    our forebears or not.

    The facts of the Armenian tragedy are rooted in war. Reacting to
    evidence that Russia was recruiting Armenian subjects of the Ottoman
    Empire to fight against it, an estimated 1.7 million Armenians were
    sent into internal exile, and historians say at least a third died
    of starvation in the desert or were killed by Turkish troops.

    Yes, the Canadian government should do its best to get along with the
    countries of the world, and to respect their various sensitivities,
    just as we expect them to treat us in return. But that shouldn't mean
    having to accept as truth something that isn't.
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