Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Jerusalem: Metro Views: New Armenian genocide museum

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Jerusalem: Metro Views: New Armenian genocide museum

    Jerusalem Post
    April 13 2008


    Metro Views: New Armenian genocide museum

    By MARILYN HENRY

    Several blocks from the White House, Armenian-Americans are building
    a genocide museum. Like the US Holocaust Memorial Museum down the
    street, its location will make it impossible to ignore.

    Genocide is a word that the White House avoids each April 24, when
    the Armenians commemorate the horrific event, which traditionally is
    dated from 1915. The US government acknowledges the atrocity without
    naming it, so as not to offend Turkey, which vehemently denies there
    was a genocide.

    "Each year on this day, we pause to remember the victims of one of
    the greatest tragedies of the 20th century, when as many as 1.5
    million Armenians lost their lives in the final years of the Ottoman
    Empire, many of them victims of mass killings and forced exile,"
    President George W. Bush said in a statement last April 24. "I join
    my fellow Americans and Armenian people around the world in
    commemorating this tragedy and honoring the memory of the innocent
    lives that were taken. The world must never forget this painful
    chapter of its history."

    Memory is part of the mission of the Armenian Genocide Museum of
    America. The museum, to be constructed in the landmark building that
    was once the National Bank of Washington, is intended to commemorate
    the victims and educate the public about the Armenian genocide and
    subsequent crimes against humanity.

    Many Armenians see the rescue of the survivors largely as an American
    endeavor, and as an American story. "This is the story of what
    Americans did for another people - saving them from starvation,
    bringing them back to life, creating the foundation for a community
    that wants to thank the United States for bringing it here, giving it
    its liberty and the security that allows for this expression in the
    museum," said Dr. Rouben Adalian, a historian and the museum's
    project coordinator.

    And much of it has a strong Jewish component. Museum exhibits are
    likely to feature three figures: Henry Morgenthau, Franz Werfel and
    Raphael Lemkin, each of whom reflected on the genocide within his own
    field - diplomacy, literature and law.

    IT WAS Henry Morgenthau, the American ambassador to the Ottoman
    Empire, who first raised the alarm. "Deportation of and excesses
    against peaceful Armenians is increasing and from harrowing reports
    of eyewitnesses it appears that a campaign of race extermination is
    in progress under a pretext of reprisal against rebellion,"
    Morgenthau wrote in a 1915 cable to the State Department.

    Last month, the Armenian Genocide Museum passed a critical test when
    the District of Columbia's Historic Preservation Review Board
    approved a proposal for the museum to restore and use the former
    bank, which is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

    The site is about a 20-minute stroll along 14th Street from the US
    Holocaust Memorial Museum. The Armenians learned much and lost much
    from the American museum, which held its dedication ceremonies 15
    years ago, on April 22, 1993.

    "The construction of Holocaust museums - especially the US Holocaust
    Memorial Museum - was illuminating in the sense that a story that is
    so stark and horrifying could be conceived and reconstructed in a
    manner that could be made comprehensible to general audiences and be
    respectful of the subject and the victims," said Adalian.

    But the Washington museum, funded by tax dollars and private
    donations, gave short shrift to events before the Nazi rise to power.
    It uses a famous quote of Hitler's, made shortly before the invasion
    of Poland: "Who, after all, speaks today of the annihilation of the
    Armenians?" The museum could say: "Not us."

    "The US Holocaust Memorial Museum essentially committed itself to
    telling the Jewish story," said Michael Berenbaum, who was the
    project director for the Washington museum's permanent exhibition.
    "It made a couple of references to the Armenian story, but it did not
    fulfill the Armenians' fondest hopes, maybe even unrealistic hopes,
    to create an Armenian wing or maybe an Armenian memorial."

    The Armenian museum, which is privately financed, is scheduled to
    open in two years.

    "Jews should have a couple of eerie feelings as they enter an
    Armenian museum," said Berenbaum, now the director of the Sigi
    Ziering Center for the Study of the Holocaust and Ethics at the
    American Jewish University in Los Angeles. "The first is: What would
    have happened to the remembrance of the Holocaust if Germany had
    denied the crime?"

    The Armenian museum should also remind Jews to be grateful for
    survivors' testimonies, Berenbaum said, noting that technological
    advances had made these testimonies - the dramatic means for
    remembrance - inexpensive to produce and accessible on video. "We
    have so much more first-hand documentation, which they will not have
    because it was earlier, from a less articulate and less visual era,"
    he said.

    THERE ARE between seven million and eight million Armenians worldwide
    today. "Part of the damage of the genocide was the destruction of the
    civilization, and what remains is all the more precious to the
    Armenian people," said Adalian. The museum will have exhibits on the
    history and culture of the Armenians, as well as the genocide and the
    bitter battle to have the Armenian fate acknowledged. "We understand
    that the denial and the challenge to the Armenian genocide is part of
    the story of the Armenian genocide."

    Armenians see the genocide as the beginning of a pattern that began
    in one century and continued into the next. Along the way, its
    consequences were felt in the Holocaust, Cambodia, Rwanda and Darfur.
    The museum planners also envision an "action center," to help
    visitors prepare to respond to violations of human rights.

    "We are not interested in having visitors come through and merely
    stare at an exhibit," he said. "We want them to come out of the
    exhibit further committed to defending human rights, anybody's human
    rights."

    A week after Armenian Genocide Memorial Day, we will commemorate Yom
    Hashoa. The calendar is such that one day, 17 years from now, Yom
    Hashoa will coincide with the Armenians' memorial day. What will we
    do? We know they were murdered; to deny it is killing them twice. If
    we are silent, are we killing them yet again?

    As we adamantly demand that Holocaust denial find no quarter, so must
    we insist that other genocides cannot be denied. By failing to do so,
    we diminish ourselves and squander the moral authority we gained -
    gained not only because Jews are commanded to remember, but because
    Germany owned up to its crimes.

    The Armenians and the Jews have much in common: atrocities,
    expulsion, our own languages and cultures, and schisms within our
    faiths. But we Jews have been spared one grievous harm: as Berenbaum
    has noted, the fact that Germany acknowledged the Holocaust enabled
    the Jews to commemorate it appropriately - not to argue about whether
    it happened.

    http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite? c=JPArticle&cid=1207649994342&pagename=JPo st%2FJPArticle%2FShowFull

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X