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ANCA: National Council of Churches Urges Adoption of Genocide

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  • ANCA: National Council of Churches Urges Adoption of Genocide

    Armenian National Committee of America
    1711 N Street, NW
    Washington, DC 20036
    Tel. (202) 775-1918
    Fax. (202) 775-5648
    [email protected]
    Internet www.anca.org

    PRESS RELEASE

    May 22, 2009
    Contact: Elizabeth S. Chouldjian
    Tel: (202) 775-1918

    NATIONAL COUNCIL OF CHURCHES CALLS ON SPEAKER PELOSI
    TO ACT FOR ADOPTION OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE RESOLUTION

    WASHINGTON, DC - The National Council of the Churches of Christ, a
    broad-based coalition representing over 100,000 congregations, has
    called on Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi to work for passage of
    the Armenian Genocide Resolution, H.Res.252, reported the Armenian
    National Committee of America (ANCA).

    In a powerfully worded letter, dated May 20, 2009, the Council's
    General Secretary, Rev. Dr. Michael Kinnamon, restated the
    organization's 2007 resolution that found it "unacceptable" that
    the U.S. government continues to refuse to use the term genocide to
    describe the events of 1915. The highly regarded church leader
    then urged, as a step toward true Armenia-Turkey healing, that all
    parties, the White House and Congress included, use "the proper
    term under international law to classify the event for what it was:
    a genocide."

    The Council's President, Archbishop Vicken Aykazian, has publicly
    noted his own deep disappointment with President Obama's avoidance
    of the word genocide in his April 24th statement. "I speak on this
    issue as a person who lost 50 percent of my family to the Armenian
    genocide in Turkey," Aykazian said in a letter to Kinnamon and the
    NCC Governing Board.

    Since its founding in 1950, the National Council of the Churches of
    Christ in the USA has been the leading force for ecumenical
    cooperation among Christians in the United States. The NCC's member
    faith groups - from a wide spectrum of Protestant, Anglican,
    Orthodox, Evangelical, historic African American and Living Peace
    churches - include 45 million persons in more than 100,000 local
    congregations in communities across the nation.

    The Council's press release on this letter available online:
    http://www.ncccusa.org/news/090514armenian genocide.html

    The full text of the Council's letter is provided below.

    #####

    National Council of the Churches of Christ in the USA
    475 Riverside Drive, Suite 800
    New York, NY 10115-0050
    www.ncccusa.org
    Office of the General Secretary
    P: 212-870-2025
    F: 212-870-3112
    E: [email protected]


    May 20, 2009

    Hon. Nancy Pelosi
    Office of the Speaker
    H-232, US Capitol
    Washington, DC 20515

    Dear Speaker Pelosi:

    I am writing to support passage of H.R. 252, calling upon the
    President to ensure that the foreign policy of the United States
    reflects appropriate understanding and sensitivity concerning
    issues related to human rights, ethnic cleansing, and genocide
    documented in the United States record relating to the Armenian
    Genocide, and for other purposes.

    In November 2007, a National Council of Churches resolution found
    it "unacceptable" that the United States government had yet to use
    the word "genocide" to describe the events of 1915. This omission
    is in large measure due to international politics unrelated to
    those events. Despite a consensus of world governments and
    historians, the government of the Republic of Turkey rejects the
    use of "genocide" and forbids its friends and allies to use the
    word.

    But history is clear. On April 24, 1915, authorities of the Ottoman
    Empire arrested some 250 Armenian religious and community leaders
    in Constantinople (modern day Istanbul). Immediately afterward, the
    Ottoman army forced hundreds of thousands of Armenians from their
    homes and forced them to march without food or water from Turkey to
    the Syrian desert. Massacres of men, women and children,
    accompanied by rape and sexual abuse, were reported by survivors
    and their descendants. When it was over, 1.5 million were dead. The
    meticulously organized and systematic executions, elements of an
    Ottoman policy of extermination also aimed at others in the region,
    has been sadly declared by historians as the first of the twentieth
    century genocides.

    Nearly a century later, the pain of these events is unabated in
    Armenian hearts and in the hearts of all people. Nothing can take
    the memories away, but the view of the National Council of Churches
    USA and its member communions - including the Diocese of the
    Armenian Church in America - is that the events of 1915 will
    continue to fester until all people acknowledge the verdict of
    history that they are a twentieth century genocide.

    On Armenian Remembrance Day, April 24, 2009, the President of the
    United States sought to put the event in its appropriate historic
    context. Although as a candidate Mr. Obama had termed the
    atrocities a "genocide," his statement as president avoided the
    word. The President wrote:

    Ninety four years ago, one of the great atrocities of the 20th
    century began. Each year, we pause to remember the 1.5 million
    Armenians who were subsequently massacred or marched to their death
    in the final days of the Ottoman Empire. The Meds Yeghern must live
    on in our memories, just as it lives on in the hearts of the
    Armenian people.

    Mr. Obama also declared that his previously stated views of the
    events of 1915 had "not changed," and his use of the Armenian words
    for genocide - "Meds Yeghern" - were a welcomed clarification of
    U.S. policy. The President also stated an obvious truth: "History,
    unresolved, can be a heavy weight."

    The National Council of Churches welcomes the President's efforts
    to help resolve this terrible episode of history. But it is also
    our view that this resolution cannot take place unless all parties
    use the proper terms under international law to classify the event
    for what it was: a genocide. We urge that future statements of the
    President and U.S. government officials use the word as an
    essential step toward reconciliation and healing.

    We believe the passage of House Resolution 252 will be an important
    means of taking this crucial step.

    With all best wishes, I am

    Yours faithfully,

    [signed]
    Michael Kinnamon
    General Secretary

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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