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NPR: Genocide is a Matter of Opinion

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  • NPR: Genocide is a Matter of Opinion

    National Public Radio (NPR)
    April 11, 2009 Saturday
    SHOW: Weekend Edition Saturday 12:00 PM EST NPR


    Genocide is a Matter of Opinion

    SCOTT SIMON, host:

    When President Obama was beginning his run for office, he said he
    believed the 1915 slaughter of 1.5 million Armenians by Turkey was not
    war but genocide, that the American people deserve, quote, "a leader
    who speaks truthfully about the Armenian genocide and responds
    forcefully to all genocides."

    But when President Obama addressed the Turkish parliament this, he
    referred only to, quote, "the terrible events of 1915."

    I was part of a PBS program called "The Armenian Genocide." There was
    no question mark in the title. I think there are times when you have
    to say genocide to be accurate about mass murder that tries to
    extinguish a whole group. That's why the slaughter of a million Tutsis
    in Rwanda is not called merely mass murder. An American politician who
    got to Germany, for example, and called the Holocaust of European Jews
    merely killings would be mocked.

    Now, I don't doubt that President Obama is still outraged by the
    Armenian genocide. When he ran in the presidential primaries, it was
    important to win support from people concerned about human rights, and
    perhaps Armenian- Americans in California.

    Now, President Obama may feel it is more important for the United
    States to win Turkey's cooperation on a range of issues than it is for
    him to be consistent on a controversy that may seem like old
    history. But it's not. Almost every year the Turkish government has
    charged reporters and writers, including the Nobel Laureate Orhan
    Pamuk, for insulting national identity by referring to the massacre of
    1.5 million Armenians as genocide.

    Peter Balakian, the preeminent scholar of the genocide and
    co-translator of a new widely-lauded family memoir called "Armenian
    Golgotha: A Memoir of the Armenian Genocide," told us this week he
    admires President Obama for telling Turkish leaders that confronting
    the past and restoring good relations with Armenia is important. But
    he believes that Turkey's campaign against acknowledging its genocide
    raises questions about their reliability.

    Mr. Balakian told us a country that spends millions of dollars a year
    in an effort to stop the facts about the Armenian genocide from being
    known and that persecutes and prosecutes its own citizens for speaking
    truthfully about the extermination of the Armenians is hardly a
    government to trust to broker honest and just foreign policy.

    In a way, the president's choice to say killings in front of his host
    may just remind us it might be wise to regard what any politician says
    as the words of a suitor who coos I love you during courtship. They
    mean it at the moment, but any adult should know they may not mean it
    in just a few weeks.
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