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ANCA Chairman Defines the Stakes: Survival or Surrender

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  • ANCA Chairman Defines the Stakes: Survival or Surrender

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

    PRESS RELEASE

    November 11, 2009
    Contact: Elizabeth S. Chouldjian
    Tel: (202) 775-1918

    ANCA CHAIRMAN DEFINES THE STAKES: SURVIVAL OR SURRENDER

    "We must keep our aspirations burning bright, our moral compass
    aligned toward justice, and our nation moving forward. We must
    choose survival, not surrender." - Ken Hachikian

    WASHINGTON, DC - Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA)
    Chairman Ken Hachikian called on Armenians worldwide to choose
    survival over surrender, in his remarks before federal, state, and
    local public officials, a broad array of coalition partners, and
    hundreds of community leaders gathered on November 8th at the
    Pasadena Convention Center for the ANC-Western Region's annual
    banquet.

    The full text of Hachikian's remarks, At the Crossroads, is
    provided below.

    #####

    At the Crossroads

    Remarks by Kenneth V. Hachikian
    Chairman, Armenian National Committee of America
    Presented at the ANC Western Region Banquet
    November 8, 2009 | Pasadena, CA


    As Armenians, we have reached a crossroads.

    Two paths - two very different paths - lay before us.

    Two starkly different roads for our nation. For our cause. And
    for our future

    Standing here today at this cross road, we must make a choice.

    One that will define our nation for decades, even centuries, to
    come.

    -- A choice that begins in our hearts. And calls upon all our
    collective wisdom.

    -- A choice of vision, born of long years of hard struggle

    -- A choice of courage, inspired by our enduring commitment to our
    nation's future.

    A choice to move forward. A choice, very simply, between survival
    and surrender.

    Survival and surrender

    For let there be no mistake, these are the true stakes.

    The choice before us stands as a great burden.

    But also as a sacred blessing. A chance to get it right
    for future generations.

    A choice for all those gathered here inside these walls -
    and for all the sons and daughters of our nation, in
    Armenia and across the far reaches of our world-wide
    diaspora.

    At this fateful moment, I am reminded of the words of the American
    revolutionary, Thomas Paine.

    In his great work, The American Crisis, he offered powerful words
    that offer us keen insight and inspiration.

    In the early days of the Revolution, he came across a well-known
    man who ran a tavern.

    Standing in its doorway, with his young son by his side, this
    tavern-keeper argued against seeking independence, ending with the
    words:

    "Give me peace in my day."

    "Give me peace in my day."

    A more generous parent, Paine wrote, should have said:

    "If there must be trouble, let it be in my day, that my
    child may have peace."

    Consider carefully his words from more than two hundred years ago,
    on a continent far from Armenia, for they ring just a true today as
    when they were first written.

    Just as compelling for Armenians as for Americans or for any free
    people.

    "If there must be trouble, let it be in my day, that my
    child may have peace."

    "This single reflection," Paine added, "is sufficient to awaken
    every man to duty."

    He understood that the true choice facing the American colonists
    was not peace or war, but rather where the burdens of the coming
    conflict - the inevitable oppression and aggression - visited upon
    them by the British would rest.

    Whether upon the shoulders of his generation or upon those of
    generations to come.

    These truly are "the times that try men's souls."

    The tavernkeepers of our day argue that the path they advocate will
    lead to peace and prosperity, when, in reality, it only defers the
    day when our nation will pay the full price for their surrender.

    -- They would have us accept - under foreign pressure - the
    "Protocols" being forced upon the Armenian nation, even though they
    clearly threaten Armenia's security, abandon the rights of all
    Armenians, and cast doubt on the Armenian Genocide.

    -- They would have us adopt the Madrid Principles, which trade the
    surrender of vast Armenian lands, today, in return for a vague
    promise that Azerbaijan may someday allow a decision on Artsakh's
    future status.

    -- They would have us reduce the Armenian Genocide from a crime
    against all humanity - one that must be recognized by the American
    government and resolved truthfully and justly by the international
    community and, of course by Turkey, - to a simple bilateral dispute
    to be negotiated between states, states of vastly unequal power.

    This is clearly the road to an unconditional surrender my friends,
    the path to appeasement, and the slippery slope of accomodation.

    On this path, we would allow others to speak in our name.

    We would let them set our aims to suit their interests, not our
    own. To put us in our place.

    It is on this road that we would see the Armenian Diaspora, long
    the loyal watchdog of Armenian interests, reduced to a lapdog for
    the foreign powers that pursue their own advantage at the expense
    of the rights, the security, and the very future of the Armenian
    nation and people.

    Let me be clear: It is on this road that we will witness the death
    of the Armenian Cause and, with it, the viability of the Armenian
    nation.

    The choice, for us, for every single one of us, is clear.

    We must reject retreat.

    We must dispense with the illusions of easy answers.

    We must reject the temptation that there is some quick shortcut to
    Armenia's security, Artsakh's freedom, or the realization of our
    national aspirations.

    We must reject surrender - on the Protocols, the Madrid Principles,
    justice for our nation, and freedom for our people - and choose
    instead a path forward based on hope and wisdom, not fear.

    We must, in our homeland and here in America, reclaim the right to
    our voice and our values.

    And back all this up with our activism, our political power, our
    energy, and our resources.

    Just as you are doing tonight, and as we must all do in days and
    weeks ahead.

    We must keep our national aspirations burning bright, our moral
    compass aligned toward justice, and our nation moving forward.

    We must choose survival, not surrender.

    Survival, not surrender.

    There is no other choice.

    I call upon you to join us in that struggle.

    We will persevere.
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