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History Of Term 'Genocide' Linked To Armenians

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  • History Of Term 'Genocide' Linked To Armenians

    HISTORY OF TERM 'GENOCIDE' LINKED TO ARMENIANS

    The National
    http://www.thenational.ae/article/2009062 3/OPINION/706229904/-1/NEWS
    June 23 2009
    UAE

    It is astonishing to see the word genocide used in quotation marks,
    The Armenian city lives in a school museum (June 20), when the word
    was coined by the jurist Raphael Lemkin specifically to describe
    the barbarity that befell the Armenians at the hands of the Turkish
    state. Dr Lemkin, a lawyer of Polish-Jewish descent and Holocaust
    survivor, used the word genocide in 1943 to describe the deaths of
    the Armenians, and then the Holocaust. Before the word existed, the
    British prime minister Winston Churchill and world leaders described
    the events as the "Armenian holocaust".

    In 1985, the United Nations recognised the Armenian genocide in an
    official report. In 2003, the International Centre for Transitional
    Justice found that the events of 1915 included "all of the elements
    of the crime of genocide as defined in the 1948 UN Convention on the
    Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide".

    And in 2005 the International Association of Genocide Scholars
    unanimously affirmed the Armenian genocide. The genocide has been
    officially recognised by scores of countries and international
    organisations worldwide.So, with the exception of Turkish
    state-sponsored "historians", most historians and genocide scholars
    acknowledge the facts of the Armenian genocide.

    Berge Jololian, Cambridge, Massachussetts

    While the article by Daniel Bardsley was informative, it seemed
    ironic that he would use the word genocide in quotation marks three
    consecutive times.

    I wonder if it was Mr Bardsley's choice to use the quotation marks,
    or whether it was his editor who decided to put the word in quotation
    marks. In case his editor doesn't know, the word genocide was coined,
    in part, to refer to the Armenian massacres of 1915.

    If your newspaper is not convinced that the Armenian genocide
    took place, then you should stop using the word genocide since its
    etymology implies that the Armenian genocide did take place. Your
    political correctness or objectiveness aside, the article was an
    interesting read.

    Simon, Littleton, Colorado
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