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IAGS calls on Obama to recognize Armenian Genocide

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  • IAGS calls on Obama to recognize Armenian Genocide

    IAGS calls on Obama to recognize Armenian Genocide
    18.03.2009 21:03 GMT+04:00


    PanARMENIAN.Net/ Last week, in an open letter to President Barack
    Obama, the International Association of Genocide Scholars, the leading
    organization of scholars who study genocide, urged Obama to "refer to
    the mass slaughter of Armenians as genocide in your commemorative
    statement," adding that it was what "you urged President George
    W. Bush to do in a letter dated March 18, 2005," the Armenian Assembly
    of America (Assembly) told PanARMENIAN.Net.

    "By acknowledging the Armenian Genocide," the letter reads, "you would
    demonstrate that you are that 'leader' you referred to on January 19,
    2008, who 'speaks truthfully about the Armenian Genocide and responds
    forcefully to all genocides'." Moreover, "you would signal a new
    chapter in U.S. diplomacy. You would also honor the truth of our own
    valiant history, which saw brave and selfless Foreign Service Officers
    risk their lives rescuing Armenians during the Genocide and compiling
    the more than 40,000 pages of documentation now housed in the National
    Archives."

    In regard to Turkey's refusal to acknowledge its history, the letter
    reads, "We also believe that it is in the interest of the Turkish
    people and their future as participants in international, democratic
    discourse to acknowledge the responsibility of a previous government
    for the genocide of the Armenian people, just as the German government
    and people have done in the case of the Holocaust. Over the past
    decade a growing number of Turkish scholars, writers, intellectuals,
    and publishers have been risking imprisonment and assassination to
    tell the truth about the Armenian Genocide. They understood that
    facing and accepting the history of one's country, however dark, is an
    essential part of growing a healthy democracy.

    "We believe that security and historical truth are not in conflict,
    and it is in the interest of the United States to support the
    principles of human rights that are at the core of American
    democracy."


    "President Obama's upcoming trip to Turkey presents a unique
    opportunity to address this critical human rights issue and the
    irreversible trend toward its reaffirmation. We applaud the
    International Association of Genocide Scholars and its President,
    Gregory Stanton, for its open letter and its steadfast support of the
    importance of historical accuracy as one method of countering the
    problem of genocide denial," stated Assembly Executive Director Bryan
    Ardouny.
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