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Clara Barton would have cried at today's stance on genocide

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  • Clara Barton would have cried at today's stance on genocide

    April 18. 2008 12:16AM
    Telegram & Gazette

    Clara Barton would have cried at today's stance on genocide
    AS I SEE IT

    By Harry N. Mazadoorian

    One of the greatest ironies involving the Armenian Genocide almost a
    century ago is the radically different reaction it brought forth from
    the United States then and now.

    April 24 marks the 93rd anniversary of what would be the first
    genocide perpetrated in the 20th century: the death of more than 1.5
    million Armenians by murder, starvation and deportation at the hands
    of the Ottoman Empire. This barbarity served as the blueprint for
    expanded atrocities toward the middle of the century and emboldened
    Adolph Hitler to conclude that such horrors could be conducted in full
    view of the world community with impunity. Continuing programs by the
    Strassler Family Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies at Clark
    University and, on Tuesday, a program there by Professor Richard
    Hovannisian of UCLA highlights the importance of never forgetting such
    inhumanity.

    At the time of the Armenian Genocide, and its preceding massacres of
    the 1890s, a seemingly endless torrent of American humanitarian
    efforts poured across the oceans to assist those Armenians who had
    miraculously survived the savagery and brutality. American newspapers
    carried report after report of the brutality and sparked a previously
    unheard-of generosity and concern.

    Peter Balakian's best-selling book, `The Burning Tigris,' reports that
    America's and Massachusetts' own angel of mercy, Clara Barton,
    personally went to Constantinople in 1896 to oversee the humanitarian
    efforts. Professor Balakian, of Colgate University, chronicles
    numerous other pro-Armenian relief initiatives from America at that
    time and then again after the unprecedented Genocide of 1915. Indeed,
    he reports that one of the earliest efforts began at a rally by
    indignant Boston luminaries, including the governor of Massachusetts,
    at Faneuil Hall.

    Herculean efforts such as those of the Near East Relief organization
    provided food and shelter for thousands of helpless children, my late
    mother being one of them. Comments of congressional leaders and
    elected officials - including Theodore Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilson -
    as well as almost daily headlines in the leading American newspapers
    left no doubt as to what was going on - and that the United States was
    meeting its moral obligation to not only protest but to provide
    assistance.

    Regrettably, today the zealous passion of the greatest country in the
    history of civilization has cooled, and successive administrations and
    congresses find excuse after excuse to keep from passing a mere
    resolution recognizing and deploring the genocide.

    Despite a mountain of uncontroverted evidence documenting the
    Genocide, the government of Turkey continues a charade of denial and
    stands essentially alone challenging the findings of eyewitnesses,
    statesmen and legitimate scholars of genocide. In addition, it expends
    massive funds to lobby the government of the United States to prevent
    recognition of the Armenian Genocide.

    Recently, Congress finally seemed poised to enact the commemorating
    resolution, but a last-minute bullying effort by Turkey derailed the
    effort - at least temporarily. Turkey pulled out all the stops,
    frantically threatening that the United States would lose its best
    Muslim ally in the Middle East with a litany of speculative
    ramifications.

    Turkey refers to the Armenian Genocide as an `internal, civil or
    political matter,' as though the countless unarmed children who were
    slaughtered were even capable of having a single `political' thought
    in their starving bodies.

    Many congressmen privately recognize the atrocities but refuse to act
    because of an expressed fear of `offending' the current Turkish
    government - a government not even in place at the time of the
    killings - and losing them as an ally in the volatile Middle
    East. Some, wishing to avoid taking a stand, claim it is something to
    be left to historians and not governments to judge.

    While it is, of course, essential that our country be ever mindful of
    its national interests, history has demonstrated time and time again
    that placating and ignoring injustice can lead to no other consequence
    than greater future injustice. Cambodia, Rwanda, the list goes on and
    on.

    If Clara Barton were still here, she'd be truly saddened. First, for
    the indelible memories of the atrocities which she saw. Saddened even
    more that after 93 years, American leaders forget their moral
    obligation and delude themselves into thinking that some good could
    possibly come by placating an ally and avoiding the recognition of a
    well-documented historical atrocity.

    If Clara Barton were here today, she'd be weeping.

    Harry N. Mazadoorian, a lawyer in Kensington, Conn., is Distinguished
    Senior Fellow at Quinnipiac University Law School's Center on Dispute
    Resolution. His parents were survivors of the Armenian Genocide.

    www.telegram.com

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