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Book Review: Children of Armenia

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  • Book Review: Children of Armenia

    The Washington Post
    November 1, 2009 Sunday
    Bulldog Edition


    HISTORY
    Children of Armenia
    A Forgotten Genocide and the Century-Long Struggle for Justice
    By Michael Bobelian
    Simon & Schuster. 308 pp. $26


    Like Native Americans, European Jews and Rwandan Tutsis, Turkish
    Armenians seem to have been in the wrong place at the wrong time.
    "Children of Armenia," Michael Bobelian's first book, describes the
    Ottoman Empire's 1915 mass extermination of this Christian minority
    without getting bogged down in "G-word" histrionics. "The purpose of
    this book is neither to prove the existence nor affirm the veracity of
    the Genocide," Bobelian writes: The Armenian holocaust is a historical
    fact.

    "Children of Armenia" focuses on the Turkish nationalism, world war
    weariness, survivor psychology and Cold War squabbling that let the
    world forget the unforgettable. Some will flinch at Bobelian's
    lionization of Gourgen Yanikian, an Armenian who shot two Turks in a
    revenge plot hatched in the 1970s, but the author stumbles only when
    he strays into Armenian exceptionalism, the idea that "no other people
    have suffered such a warped fate -- a trivialization of their
    suffering and a prolonged assault on the authenticity of their
    experience." Bobelian should know that if every culture insists on the
    supremacy of its own suffering, the world will only grow more jaded
    about stopping current horrors. Instead, any book about Armenia -- no,
    any exploration of any genocide -- should pose questions relevant to
    today's ethnic cleansings. Otherwise, who will remember the Sudanese?

    -- Justin Moyer [email protected]
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