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It Was 94 Years Ago Today

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  • It Was 94 Years Ago Today

    IT WAS 94 YEARS AGO TODAY
    by Jane Wells

    Huffington Post
    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/jane-wells/it-w as-94-years-ago-today_b_191220.html
    April 24 2009

    April 24th is the 94th Anniversary of The Armenian Genocide. On this
    day we honor those who perished in the first genocide of the 20th
    century. The numbers are so huge and the events so long ago that it
    is increasingly hard to put a face to such suffering -that is why
    hearing the testimony of 96 year old survivor Alice Shnorhokian is
    all the more powerful and important. Although Alice was only three
    years old when the genocide occurred she still speaks to us on behalf
    of over a million people lost. (link) The Armenian National Committee
    of America has recently launched a campaign The Fierce Urgency of Now,
    and it is aptly named. Genocide is still raging in Darfur, and crimes
    against humanity are taking place in other parts of the world. Today
    the Armenian story has a special impact, for several reasons.

    Turkey and some of her allies, including the United States, have not
    recognized the atrocities against the Armenian population of Turkey
    in 1915 as genocide. If we take the time to look at the documentary
    evidence and read the history there is no doubt that there was a
    systematic, racially and politically motivated campaign to eliminate
    a minority population in Turkey. Yet even nine decades later this is
    still a potent political issue and one that the US has religiously
    evaded as we value our strategic geographical relationship with Turkey.

    In January 2008 Senator Obama spoke openly of the Armenian genocide and
    he made an election promise to formally recognize this as genocide. Yet
    when he spoke to the Turkish parliament earlier this month, he danced
    around the issue:

    "I know there's strong views in this chamber about the terrible events
    of 1915. And while there's been a good deal of commentary about my
    views, it's really about how the Turkish and Armenian people deal
    with the past."

    The Armenian National Committee feels, not surprisingly, that President
    Obama missed an opportunity there. There may be reason to think that he
    has a discreet plan to change the years of deadlock and denial. Let's
    hope so, for it is vital to the security and future of all of us
    that genocide is called when it occurs and denial is not allowed to
    re-write history. If this can happen with the Armenian genocide now
    that so few survivors are still alive, it might then only be a matter
    of time until Holocaust denial is allowed to flourish and followed
    by denial of the Cambodian, Bosnian and Rwandan genocides.

    We must honor the dead, and fight for a future free of genocide and
    crimes against humanity. The fierce urgency of now means today.

    Today why not hear Alice Shnorhokian's story and those of other
    genocide survivors? They deserve to be heard. Genocide Prevention
    Month is nearly over, but genocide is not yet over or eradicated.
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