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  • The Enemy of My Friend is My Enemy?

    The Conservative Voice, North Carolina
    Feb 16 2008


    The Enemy of My Friend is My Enemy?


    by by Edward Papelian
    February 16, 2008 12:00 PM EST



    With all due respect to the numerous Jewish-born humanists,
    historians, writers, individual personalities, Chief Rabbi, Yona
    Metzger and many other that have had the courage to take a stand for
    the recognition of the Armenian Genocide and justice for this crime,
    it is none the less obvious that the official representatives of
    Judaism and above all Jewish/Israeli politicians still have a lot to
    catch up on.

    Turkish Prime Minster, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, called upon Turkish
    migrant workers in a very controversial and emotional speech, on Feb
    10 in Germany city of Cologne, to resist assimilation and remain
    Turkish. Erdogan confused in his above mentioned speech "integration"
    with "assimilation". According to Turkish Prime Minister:
    `Assimilation is a crime against humanity'! Erdogan´s nationalistic
    views on needed intergration of Turks in German society cuased an
    outcry in Germany. One should just bring to the attention of Turkish
    authorities that the Australian government apologized Wednesday (Feb
    13) for years of "mistreatment" and decades of racist policies that
    inflicted "profound grief, suffering and loss" on the country's
    Aboriginal people. When is Turkey - an `allay and friend' of Israel
    and Us - going to end its racist policies and apologize for the
    systematic destruction of Armenians as other Christian folks and
    forced turcifications in Turkey? According to Turkish palace
    historians all Non Turks living in Ottoman Turkey were `foreign spies
    and infidels..."

    Even though the internationally recognized and respected Jewish
    jurist and human rights activist Rafael Lemkin already concerned
    himself with and recognized the systematic destruction of the
    Armenians as a "murder of race" at the start of the 1930s, the fact
    remains that justice for the Armenian Genocide is still being
    aggressively denied by influential organizations of the Jewish
    Diaspora as well as by the State of Israel itself.

    Genocide - extermination of a race - is a political crime. Genocides
    are not committed by private individuals, but by the state itself.
    The reference to historians and historical science in regard to the
    Armenian Genocide is a tactical and spurious argument to relieve the
    world governments from the responsibility to act while simultaneously
    giving the perpetrators carte blanche. The proper reaction to
    political crimes is therefore only possible through political
    response - from the parliamentary houses, the politicians and the
    governments.

    Now more than ever the denial of genocide must be responded to, for
    denial is intrinsic to the methodology of genocide. Genocide is
    denied even as it is practiced.

    >From the beginning, the perpetrator seeks pretexts and justifications
    to conceal the real intentions. Thus, the extermination is referred
    to as "transporting," as "deportation" or "resettlement" - "moving to
    secure places" or even as the "final solution." A verbal code is used
    to camouflage and thus deny the annihilation, even as it is being
    committed. No wonder after the `deportation (i.e. Annihilation) of
    Armenians in Turkey everything become ?Turkish'.

    Genocide without simultaneous denial is unthinkable - yes, even
    impossible. The first thing that must be done is to consider what the
    perpetrators want to attain through denial. Denial is not just the
    simple negation of an act; it is much more the consequent
    continuation of the very act itself. Genocide should not only
    physically destroy a community; it should likewise dictate the
    prerogative of interpretation in regard to history, culture,
    territory and memory. As the victims- Armenians - "never exists".

    The Turkish have not only murdered humans , destroyed an ancient
    culture/civilization and rewritten history, but they continue to
    legitimize the act as well as the racist ideology that led to the
    act. This includes the legitimization of any and all stereotyping of
    the Armenian people as a dangerous enemy, as a deadly bogeyman in the
    closet.

    Denial is the final step in the completion of a mass extermination -
    and the first step towards the next genocide. If genocide is
    committed in Ruanda or Sudan, it is done with the knowledge that the
    rest of the world will only watch and then forget.

    They look to Turkey and think themselves safe in the assumption that
    their actions will likewise remain unpunished! Whether in Sudan or
    Ruanda or any other potential hotspot of mass murder the accountable
    powers-that-be rhetorically ask - as Hitler supposedly did just
    before invading Poland - "Who, after all, speaks today of the
    annihilation of the Armenians?"

    The Republic of Turkey has denied the Armenian Genocide for the past
    84 years, and politicians in Israel and a vast majority of officials
    of Jewish Diaspora are aboard their boat now. In the USA, for
    example, the Jewish Anti-Defamation League (ADL) not only denied the
    Armenian Genocide in the past but also actively fought against the
    Congressional Resolution for the Recognition of the Armenian
    Genocide. At the end of August 2007, the ADL finally recognized the
    Armenian Genocide through gritted teeth. The acknowledgment given,
    however, was qualified to such an extent that one could have done
    without it. A similar statement of recognition was also
    simultaneously supplied by the American Jewish Committee.

    Presently, the AIPAC totally denies to have ever fought against the
    official recognition of the Armenian Genocide by the US government
    and now presents itself as being neutral in regard to the subject.
    (And apparently "neutral" is just what they are.)

    Pierre Besnainou, the acting president of the European Jewish
    Congress (EJC) until early 2007, stated in 2006 that the Armenian
    people should stop making fools of themselves: there has been only
    one genocide in modern times and as everyone knows it was that of the
    Jews - an Armenian Genocide never happened. (We have yet to see what
    the attitude of Moshe Kantor, the current president of the EJC, is in
    this regard.)

    In 2001, while he was the Israeli Foreign Minister, Nobel Prize
    winner and current President of Israel Shimon Peres described the
    Armenians as "meaningless" ("Armenian allegations") Moreover, this
    year President Shimon Peres and the current Israeli Foreign Minister
    Tzipi Livni did a heroic act that in no way pales to the statements
    regarding the Holocaust expressed by the President Ahmadinejad: Peres
    affirmed Israel's attitude to the "Armenian Question" and promised
    the Turkish Prime Minster Erdogan to lobby against the Armenians,
    while Minster Livni prevented the Knesset from officially recognizing
    the Armenian Genocide.

    The statement given: "Genocide never happened. There was a "tragedy"
    with victims on both sides. Please reconcile yourselves now and start
    a dialog." Once again, a replay of the Turkish argument of shameless
    denial by a Israeli official: "There were mutual killings and No mass
    Killings."

    Just recently Israeli President Shimon Peres let himself be vocally
    celebrated by hundreds of Genocide deniers in the Turkish Parliament,
    including numerous Turkish fascists, racists, ultra-nationalists and
    fundamentalists In Ankara, President Shimon Peres reiterated his
    support for the denial of the Armenian Genocide and conveyed his full
    acceptance of the Turkish politics of lies and denial. But it cannot
    escape the notice of an experienced politician like President Shimon
    Peres that the Genocide deniers in Ankara are no longer simply
    satisfied with the repudiation of the Armenian Genocide.

    Turkish Prime Minster Erdogan and the other Turkish nationalists have
    long since joined forces to create Pan Turanic - "Pan Turkish"-
    institutions with the specific aim of try(ing) to prove the
    'illegality' of the existence of the Armenian people to the world.

    When the French Ambassador to Great Britain, Daniel Bernard, referred
    to Israel as "this shitty little country" in 2001, there was a storm
    of protest and he was quickly labeled an Anti-Semite. But what should
    an Armenian call someone that denies the Armenian Genocide and refers
    to Armenians as "meaningless"? If that were even just all that is
    being done: Above and beyond this, Turkey has demanded that Israel
    instruct the "Jewish Lobby" to agitate against the Armenians. Of
    course the reference to the "Jewish Lobby" is an allusion to the
    Jewish Diaspora and - as is the case when talking of Diasporas -
    carries a whiff of world conspiracy and global domination.

    Thus, the "Jewish Conspiracy" should follow Ankara's tune and
    eliminate, obliterate, purge (whatever you choose to call it) the
    "Armenian Conspiracy." Under normal circumstances the concept would
    be laughable, but laughter is not advisable as it could result in
    asphyxiation.

    Why Do Jewish Organizations and their Functionaries Deny the Armenian
    Genocide as Turkey Does Deny recognition and Justice for this Crime?
    How can this act of denial be harmonious with the Jewish moral
    concepts and identity in light of the xenophobia, racism,
    Anti-Semitism, hostility and intolerance that the sorely tested
    Jewish People are themselves confronted with on a daily basis?
    Genocide is racism: it is the most paramount and aggressive form of
    racial discrimination, and is aimed at the obliteration of the
    existence and life of a people only because they belong to a specific
    community or collective - a community that is defined by the
    aggressors as "the others," as "the alien."

    Two reasons are commonly given for the "placating" activities of the
    international Jewish community in regard to Turkey's denial policies:
    Israel needs Turkey, and the Holocaust is unique. On occasion a third
    reason is also offered: to do otherwise would result in repercussions
    against the Jewish community in Istanbul. (Although if this were
    true, the US Congress and Senate could never pass any resolutions
    against Iran: as is well known, numerous Jewish people also live in
    Tehran, Yazd, and Isfahan for centuries!) Statements such as those
    are, in the end, nothing but hollow attempts to justify denial.
    The attitude of Jewish Organizations and their functionaries in
    regard to the Armenian Genocide not only results in their involvement
    in the guilt of the perpetrators but also produces a culpability of
    their own as well.

    An attitude such as theirs supports and perpetuates the bogeyman
    image of the Armenians that has long been cherished by the Turkish
    while simultaneously strengthening the Turkish nationalistic
    self-image. Above and beyond this, when Jewish functionaries describe
    the Ottoman Turkey as a paradise of earth, they both distort history
    and negate the inhumanities experienced by the Armenian as other Non
    Turkish People; instead, an unmerited image of a heroic and
    pro-Judaic Turkey is propagated throughout Jewish communities and
    private homes.

    Thus, in turn, within the sphere of the Jewish Diaspora and even
    Israel itself, a new generation grows that is spoon-fed the
    misconceptions of the valiant Turk and perfidious Armenian. In regard
    to this current situation, is oddly ironic that the modern usage of
    the word "Holocaust" - used so often by international communities to
    describe the Shoah - was first introduced to describe the Turkish
    bloodbath suffered by the Armenians in Adana in 1909. (Ferriman,
    Z.D.: The Young Turks and the Truth about the Holocaust at Adana in
    Asia Minor during April 1909; London, 1913.)

    The Enemy of My Friend is also My Enemy. Is the demonization of the
    Armenian Community within the Jewish Diaspora done with this concept
    in mind? Some examples among others: In July 2007 an article was
    published in the "Juedische Zeitung" ("Jewish Newspaper") in Germany
    which totally supported and serviced the policies of genocide denial
    and victim-perpetrator-reversal as practiced alla Turca.

    The "Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs" published in November this
    year in its webpage an article written by Ms. Aydan Kodaloglu, an
    advisor to the former Turkish President Turgut Özal; in her article,
    Kodaoglu attempted to make the denial of the Armenian Genocide (even
    more) palatable for the Jewish and Israeli population. (Ironically
    enough, according to Nüzhet Kandemir, the former Turkish ambassador
    to the USA, President Turgut Ozal was himself on the brink of
    recognizing the Armenian Genocide.)

    In turn, in the Jerusalem Post Joel J. Sprayregen (the former
    National Vice-Chair of the ADL and a member of the Executive
    Committee of the Jewish Institute for National Security Affairs
    (JINSA)) took the Armenian resistance during the Genocide to justify
    denial alla Turca - "There was no genocide" - he was referring to
    history fakers - despite the fact that he must be fully aware that
    one could easily reinterpret reality and deny the Jewish Holocaust
    through the misrepresentation of the Warsaw Uprising, the
    Theresienstadt- deportation camp, the "sale" and departure of the
    Jews to Switzerland during the Holocaust , existence of Jewish units
    in the British Army (traditional foe of Germany during WW) ,struggle
    of Jewish for a "Jewish State", and survival of millions of Jews
    people ...

    And in the US, one could easily come to assume that Washington Times
    - which often reads as a copy of the Turkish press - aims at leading
    a war against the Armenian Genocide Resolution (HR 106) in the US
    Congress.

    Holocaust-denier, David Irving, is serving more and more as example
    as a paradigm for the denial of Armenian Genocide. Mr. Lenny
    Ben-David, former undersecretary at the Israeli Embassy in the US and
    A adviser for five years to the Turkish embassy in Washington, until
    earlier this summer, In his article published in the Oct. 5 issue of
    the Jerusalem Post, titled "Turkey and Armenia: What Jews should do,"
    Not only denied the Armenian Genocide and creates hysteria and
    Armenophobe but in his article he gives a lot of credit to the
    fabrication of Turkish and Azeri nationalists and fascists. This is
    again not a hidden fact even for this politician that the aim of
    Turkish fabrications against Armenians in the next step includes:
    suggesting removing Armenia from the maps, as a people and country
    which doesn't exist...

    If you assume A Armenian student from Jerusalem will be allow in an
    official ceremony in Israel to refer to the Armenian Genocide, you
    are mistaken. This shouldn't come to you as a surprise either; in
    Istanbul the remaining Armenian children from "Western Armenia"
    (After Genocide renamed to "Eastern Anatolia") are forced to write
    essays how their ancestors committed "genocide against Turks" (This
    is just distressful, nauseating, sadistic and perverse.)

    Denial is known as a second killing (a "bloodless-killing"). There is
    an aggressive denial of Armenian Genocide on going by Turkey.
    Unfortunately, a big part of officials of Jewish Diaspora and Israel
    are involved in the denial of Armenian Genocide and this act - their
    involvement in denial - doesn't differ much from the involvement of
    German military officer in Armenian Genocide in 1915 (This reference
    should make clearer - to help to reach a better understanding- what
    really the denial of Armenian Genocide by Jewish politicians means
    for Armenian people and other Christian people who were subject of
    genocide by Turkish!)

    If politically allies do it, it's not genocide but "Tragedy". `Only
    the Turkish Nation has the right to put an ethnically and racial
    claim on this land (e.g. "Anatolia" including ears where Armenians
    were deported and killed en mass by Turkish).' Ismet Inonu 1939,
    President and successor of Ataturk. Presdient Isemt Inonu was one of
    the chief architects of Turkish denial and justification of Armenian
    Genocide. Today, there are Turkish "palace historians" that aim to
    erase all references to "Armenia" and "Armenian people" in the
    libraries of the world. This is a fact that is easily documented.
    Professor Dr. Yusuf Halacoglu, the racially motivated President of
    the Turkish Historical Society with the assistance of Turkish
    fascists, extends great effort on proving the non-existence of the
    Armenian People and, in turn, the state of "Armenia." The statements
    of many Jewish Diaspora and Israeli officials that "there was no
    Armenian Genocide" play directly into the hands of the official
    policy Turkey and the Turkish Nationalists and fascists.
    Justification of Armenian Genocide and a narrow-minded ethnic foreign
    politics of Turkey in the region leads us to the conclusion that
    Turkey has no problems with the fact of Armenian Genocide. Turkish
    problem seems to be the existence of Armenian State and the struggle
    of Armenian Diaspora for justice. Denial of Armenian Genocide by
    Turkey, Turkish hostile attitudes regarding Armenian State and the
    statement of Recep Tayyip Erdogan in 2004 that `Even if the Kurds
    establish a Kurdish State in Argentina Turkey would fight this', are
    the policies of a failed State rather than the policy of a civilized
    and democratic country!

    A nation that has been the victim of genocide should not be forced to
    prove the fact of genocide. For a nation to support the perpetrators
    of genocide by placating the world with official statements
    supporting the Turkish government's shameless policies of denial is
    disgraceful and appalling; for a nation that itself has likewise
    suffered an attempted obliteration to do so is incomprehensible. The
    "placating" efforts by Jewish officials and functionaries are doomed
    to backfire: the denial of the Armenian Genocide in no way helps to
    make Israel stronger or to increase the security of the Jewish
    People.

    Turkey and Turkish nationalists have always used other people for the
    implementation of their inhuman policies against "non-Turks" in order
    to achieve their own final goals, if not their own "final solution"

    Words such as dialogue, reconciliation, and rapprochement are terms
    that awaken fundamentally positive associations, but they are being
    used without any reflection upon or reference to historical fact or
    fairness, let alone justice. It is beyond understanding that the
    newspapers of the Jewish Diaspora present the Armenians as the
    "irreconcilable" or "troublemaker", as the "true" disruptor in
    international relations, when it is the Turkish that continually
    attempt to illegalize or negate the discussion. (What dialogue would
    the Jewish Nation have with Germany had Germany demanded and been
    permitted to forbid the acknowledgment of the holocaust and justice?)

    Is the Jewish community the "troublemaker" when the Iranian President
    Ahmadinejad denies the Shoah? A crime that happened 60 years ago and
    that he himself did not participate in?

    The statement that the genocide happened 90 years ago or the
    insinuation that the Armenian Diaspora - the "Armenian Conspiracy" -
    are endangering world peace because they are motivated by
    self-swerving interests serve again nothing else than to protect the
    perpetrator. But is it not the purpose and duty of international
    criminal law to protect the victim? Should criminal law protect the
    rapist or killer because the victim supposedly "asked for it"? Is
    international law only a "law for the stronger" and thus only there
    to protect the state and not the individual?

    Are terms such as "crimes against humanity," "genocide," "war crimes"
    and "war of aggression" only there to protect the aggressors and not
    the victims? The Armenian Diaspora - the masses of people forced to
    disperse throughout the world - is a result of the genocide executed
    by the Turkish; the Diaspora Armenians are not pursuing an arbitrary
    and unfounded interest, they have a justified demand for justice and
    recognition. At the same time, this demand is also a concern of the
    international community of states which created and approved the
    legislation known as "public international law" or "international
    criminal law."

    It is not just a matter of morality to condemn genocide; it is a
    premise for peaceful coexistence. It is a cornerstone of
    international peace, and the looming threat of this very crime is a
    principal reason behind military intervention and self-defense.

    A question that might arise when reading this text is why do I only
    write about the Jewish Community and Israeli politicians? Well, this
    is due to the following fact: aside from the Turkish themselves,
    Israeli politicians and the Jewish Diaspora are the only ones that go
    beyond the "simple" denial of the Armenian Genocide (and denial of
    Turkish genocides against other Christian people, e.g. The Assyrian
    Genocide) to both aggressively practice a virulent policy of denial
    and likewise try to inspire others to do the same. For example, the
    unprecedented dedication with which Shimon Peres supported the
    "fight" against the Armenian Resolution in the US Congress while Bill
    Clinton was still president.

    The relationship between the Jewish People and the Turkish is based
    on lies and the denial of the Armenian Genocide - the denial of the
    1.5 million Armenians that died by the hands of the Ottoman Turkey
    from 1915-1923. It is a relationship that is based on criminal
    complicity in hushing up a horrific transgression against humanity
    and that totally disregards all concepts of moral and justice.

    Namik Tan, the Turkish Ambassador to Israel, described this
    relationship in September 2007: "The Turkish People make no
    differentiation between Israel and the Jews of the world. To us, you
    are all one. We have no pact with Israel, but rather with the whole
    Jewish world. If the Jewish lobby disappears, Israel loses its
    importance to us. Therefore, Israel takes the responsibility when a
    Jewish organization speaks of Genocide." (Jerusalem Post, 2007)

    The truth shall set Turkish and Jewish officials free. Implementation
    of international agreed reforms for "Western Armenia/ Turkish
    Armenian" and eliminating - "getting rid" - of a nation/people by
    Turkey are not the same. Only the fact of genocide can keep alive
    disinformation policy, the genocide denial industry and the
    nationally authorized and aggressive Turkish politics of denial.
    Israeli/Jewish officials should advice their "friends/allies" in
    Ankara to stop making fools of themselves. Armenian Genocide was
    proved as Armenian Genocide was happening.

    The whole world was witness of this genocide. Besides this: Armenian
    Genocide is well documented above all by Turkish war time ally
    Germany (even though a part of this documents being destroyed in1919
    and 1940s.) According to Taner Akcam, a nonconformist Turkish
    historian, "The denial of the Armenian Genocide is the basis of
    Turkey's existence." At the latest, Amb. Namik Tan's statements above
    and the aggressive denial of Armenian Genocide by President Shimon
    Peres also reveal and proves that the relationship between Israel and
    Turkey is also based the denial of the Armenian Genocide (raison
    d'État instead of right to truth and justice.)

    One cannot help but wonder how long a relationship built on boundless
    dishonesty, immorality, denial and lies is capable or destined to
    last... Indeed, it is truly incomprehensible that the Jewish Diaspora
    denies the Armenian Genocide for the "good" of Israel. What lasting
    "good" has ever come from the denial of genocide, from the denial of
    truth, from the denial of the justice?

    Author's Note: I am aware of the fact that my essay on Jewish/Israeli
    Denial of Armenian Genocide may upset some so please feel free to
    write comments on it . And, in the meantime, the author likes to let
    you know: who ever denies one genocide he/she denies all genocides.
    Jewish denial of Armenian Genocide kills not only the Armenian
    Genocide but in the end this denial kills The Jewish Holocaust too...


    E-mail: [email protected]">noahsark2008@yahoo .com

    http://www.theconservativevoice.com/article/ 30795.html
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