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The Stubborn Myth of Jewish Involvement in the Armenian Genocide

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  • The Stubborn Myth of Jewish Involvement in the Armenian Genocide

    The Stubborn Myth of Jewish Involvement in the Armenian Genocide

    By Khatchig Mouradian [1]

    Jewcy.com (http://www.jewcy.com)
    Feb 11 2008

    On Nov. 30, Jewcy published an article titled `Are Armenians Angry at
    Jews [2]?' in which I argued that although the Armenian community is
    upset that a prominent Jewish civil rights organization (ADL) supports
    Turkey's campaign to the deny the Armenian Genocide, it is also aware
    of the Jewish-American writers, bloggers, and activists who speak out
    against ADL's hypocrisy. Armenians know, I said, that throughout the
    20th century there was never a shortage of righteous Jews, individuals
    who spoke out against the Armenian genocide. I then proceeded to name
    three such righteous Jews: Henry Morgenthau, Franz Werfel (to whom I
    dedicated an entire article later), and Raphael Lemkin.

    I received dozens of comments - made either to me in person or posted
    on Jewcy - immediately after the posting of the article. In one of the
    emails, a reader advised Jewcy to continue `kicking Foxman's ass.'

    I will not dwell on the positive remarks and the many emails, some
    from prominent academics, suggesting several other names of righteous
    Jews (about whom I might write in the future). I will, however, bring
    to the reader's attention one point of view - from a fellow Armenian -
    that I thought was outrageous and, I believe, is shared by some other
    Armenians and non-Armenians.

    `It is with great reluctance,' my fellow Armenian said, `that I wish
    to tell you that your article is oversimplified, very naïve and, at
    bottom, worthless. The Jewish involvement in Armenian Genocide is much
    complicated, intricate and perplexing.' He went on to cite historians
    who studied the `Zionist Jewish participation and their ominous role
    in Armenian Genocide.'

    The author of the email also advised me to read a book by Christopher
    J. Bjerknes, who he'd cc'd, called The Jewish Genocide Of Armenian
    Christians [3]. Bjerknes, he said, is `our really great Jewish
    friend,' who, he alleged, had the following to say about my article:

    `Should Armenians grovel and lick Jewish boots, or should Jewry
    apologize to the Armenians, stop obstructing Genocide recognition and
    make reparations?'

    Having written several articles on Jewcy about the bigotry and racism
    of some Jews and Turks regarding the Armenians and their suffering, I
    now feel obliged to address one of the conspiracy theories that has
    been passed from generation to generation - and shared by some
    Armenians - for a few decades at least. It goes something like this:

    The plan to exterminate the Armenians in the Ottoman Empire was
    conceived and implemented by Jews, Zionists and Freemasons. You want
    proof? Several leaders of the Committee of Union and Progress (CUP) -
    that committed the genocide - were Jews converted to Islam (the
    Turkish term used to refer to them is Donme) and freemasons. Those who
    present these arguments, of course, set out several reasons that might
    have prompted the Jews to exterminate the Armenians, ranging from
    jealousy (for example, the Armenians were successful merchants, even
    more so than the Jews) to greater geo-political schemes sometimes
    involving the domination of the world. In some cases, this conspiracy
    theory is amalgamated with a similar theory prevalent among some Arabs
    that the Young Turk revolt of 1908 against the Ottoman Sultan
    Abdulhamid II was also a Jewish and Freemasonic conspiracy because the
    sultan was vehemently opposed the settling of Jews in Palestine, while
    the Young Turks were allegedly more inclined to implement the Zionist
    designs.

    While no professional historian of the Armenian genocide has taken
    this conspiracy theory seriously, there has unfortunately been no
    separate academic analysis as well to expose its origins and the
    reasons of its persistence, making it possible for this theory to
    survive on the margins of Armenian life.

    The truth is that Ottoman Empire was crumbling. The Turks were losing
    huge chunks of land in Europe, while Russia was threatening their
    empire from the East. Under these conditions, Anatolia, which hundreds
    of thousands of Armenians had called home for thousands of years, came
    to be regarded as the Turkish heartland - the vital space - that
    needed to be cleansed of Armenians. Turkey used the cover of World War
    I to annihilate the Armenians. It was the first major genocide of the
    20th century. Dozens of historians and genocide scholars have
    researched millions of archival documents and explained why and how
    the Armenian genocide happened.

    All the documentation and research has not stopped Turkey to fund a
    multi-billion dollar campaign of genocide denial, it has not stopped
    states like the U.S., the United Kingdom and Israel, and organizations
    like the ADL, to support Turkey's position of denial, and it may
    possibly not stop conspiracy theorists from finding `alternative'
    explanations to the why and how of the Armenian genocide.

    But it is a shame when ordinary Armenians, Jews and Turks - out of
    ignorance, convenience or gain - buy into the lies of the Turkish
    state or anti-Semitic conspirators. This is where our role becomes
    important: informing the public, even though some might consider that
    `licking Jewish boots' or `kicking Foxman's ass.'

    Links:
    [1] http://www.jewcy.com/user/1836/khatchig_mouradian
    [2] http://www.jewcy.com/cabal/are_armenians_angry_jew s
    [3] http://jewishracism.blogspot.com
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