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In Memories Of Armenian Genocide 1915: A Kurdish Perspective

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  • In Memories Of Armenian Genocide 1915: A Kurdish Perspective

    IN MEMORIES OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE 1915: A KURDISH PERSPECTIVE
    By Ara Alan

    Kurdish Aspect
    Kurdishaspect.com
    July 7, 2009

    Armenian genocide remembrance was held at Georgia State Capital. Many
    distinguished guests were present: Armenian community in Georgia,
    Kurdish community in Atlanta, American friends and condemners of
    genocide, elected officials such as: State Senator Van Street, Superior
    Court Chief Judge Thelma Wyatt Cummings Moore, City Court Chief Judge
    Elaine Carlisle, Atlanta Chief of Police Richard Pennington, and
    Fulton County Sheriff Jackie Berrett, Dr. Julieta Stepanyan-Abgaryan,
    Mrs. Carolyn Young, spoke on behalf of her husband, civil rights
    leader, former Congressman and former US Ambassador to the UN Andrew
    Young, and ANC Georgia Chairman Sarkis Agasarkisian.

    Among the guests was a Kurdish perspective, shared by Ara Alan:

    We are gathered today on April 24th to commemorate the souls lost
    during the Armenian genocide. We are gathered to deliver the cries
    of help from those who were silenced in 1915 by the ottoman Turks. I
    would like to take a moment to remember all victims of genocide across
    the twentieth century; a century that has been darkened with their
    blood and silenced by our disregard.

    Ottoman Turks led the way into the twentieth century with its first
    act of genocide, their example was followed by many more such as the
    Holocaust in Germany, Pol-Pot in Cambodia, Rawanda, Kosovo and the
    notorious Anfal campaign by Saddam Hussein in Iraqi- Kurdistan.

    I come and stand with our friends the Armenians because I understand
    your cause. I understand what it means to have genocide committed
    against you. I look into you with inspiration and pride. I wonder
    will our next generation be as courageous as you are. Like your grant
    parent, crime of genocide has been committed against us.

    In Iraq, and in name of purification of a country, thousands of Kurds
    were taken from their villages and murdered in the deserts south
    of the country. This operation of genocide was name Anfal. In this
    operation Saddam Hussein used chemical weapons. He used this illegal
    weapon to help him scare and kill the innocent villagers. It was used
    as a tool to round up the people.

    In a strategic military planning; the Iraqi Army would attack a
    region in Kurdistan from three or more fronts. They would leave
    only one opening for the people. Doing so, the Army would force
    the residents of many villages in that region to gather in one
    location. The congregated villagers were then rounded up and shipped
    to concentration camps where they were systematically killed.

    Anfal genocide started in 1988 but it is without an end. The gassing
    during Anfal genocide has acted as a mutagen and caused the DNA of
    its victims to change. According to the health minister of Kurdistan
    Regional Government (KRG) the ratio of patients with cancer in the
    gassed populations is 5:1 when compared to non-gassed populations.

    Many of the little girls exposed to the gassing in 1988 today give
    birth to children with down-syndrome or still-birth and they have very
    high rates of miscarriage and some are completely infertile. Incident
    cases of breast cancer are much higher. Breast cancer in Kurdistan
    is much more aggressive than in other countries, and it is much more
    likely to kill.

    As result of the gassing many Kurds are dying today. Many are
    paralyzed, handicapped, blinded or bedbound. Many babies from the
    new generation are born with genetic diseases that result in their
    death or a life that is dependent on a medical care which is almost
    non-existent where they are born. Kurdish genocide continues since
    1988 into post Saddam-Iraq and today.

    Dr. Stanton from genocide watch has categorized genocide into
    eight stages. He has done so to help the international community
    to use these stages as an indicators and a warning sign of upcoming
    genocides. Strangely enough all genocide follows these eight stages.

    They all start with classification of the target group then followed
    by symbolization, then dehumanization, organization, polarization of
    the society, preparation, the seventh is the actual extermination,
    and the eighth stage is denial.

    It might come to you as a surprise, why would denial be part of
    genocide? According to Genocide Watch; denial is among the surest
    indicators of further genocidal massacres.

    The perpetrators of genocide dig up the mass graves, burn the bodies,
    try to cover-up the evidence and intimidate the witnesses. They deny
    that they committed any crimes, and often blame what happened on the
    victims. In short denial is a sign of justification of genocide and
    accepting it as a method of governance.

    Turkey's 94 years of denial policy should come as an alarm to the
    international community. The denial of Armenian genocide of 1915 was
    followed by the Dermis massacre in 1937. In a similar fashion to the
    Armenian genocide and with the exact justification 78 000 Kurds were
    massacred in that city in Turkey. The denial policy once again allowed
    Turkey to destroy over 4000 Kurdish villages in the 1990s.

    Just like the Ottoman Turks greeted the twentieth century with
    stains of genocide, our twenty-first century already has a stain:
    Darfur. Darfur stands tall, as a symbol of our failure to learn from
    previous genocides and our tolerance for genocide denial.

    Genocides don't occur because one race of humanity is superior to the
    other. They don't occur because one nation has the right to eradicate
    another or that one religious view or political ideology is superior
    above those different from it.

    Genocide occurs when one group appoint themselves as superior and
    the world turns a blind eye. Genocide occurs because we let it. Our
    silence is the fuel that genocide perpetrators use to burn the bodies
    and hid the evidence.

    Let us not be silent... let us Speak and condemn... let us bring
    those that deny to acceptance.
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