Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Haim Oron: It's Impossible To Accept Any Disregarding From Armenian

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Haim Oron: It's Impossible To Accept Any Disregarding From Armenian

    HAIM ORON: IT'S IMPOSSIBLE TO ACCEPT ANY DISREGARDING FROM ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/
    09.02.2010 11:39 GMT+04:00

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ The discussion about the Armenian Genocide and the
    need to recognize it should have taken place in the Knesset a long
    time ago, said Haim Oron, Knesset member and the head of Meretz party.

    "I think that as sons of the Jewish People that knew the Holocaust
    and constantly fighting against those who deny the Holocaust, it's
    impossible to accept any disregarding from the Armenian Genocide. I
    hope that one day this recognition will be possible because we have
    moral and educational duty to this subject especially in this time
    when Israel keep stressing the need to preserve the memory of the
    Holocaust," Mr. Oron told PanARMENIAN.Net.

    As to war with Iran, he said it is possible. "I think that nuclear
    armed Iran is a world wide problem that should be solved in
    international framework," Mr. Oron said.

    Haim Oron was born in Tel-Aviv in 1940. He served as secretary of
    the Hashomer Hatzair movement from 1968-1971, and as later secretary
    of the movement's leadership. He was a founding member of the Peace
    Now movement. From 1994-1995 he was treasurer of the Histadrut (New
    General Federation of Labor). Haim Oron has been a Member of Knesset
    since 1988. In 2009, he introduced a draft resolution on recognition
    of the Armenian Genocide but the motion failed to gain the essential
    number of co-sponsors.

    The Armenian Genocide (1915-23) was the deliberate and systematic
    destruction of the Armenian population of the Ottoman Empire during
    and just after World War I. It was characterized by massacres, and
    deportations involving forced marches under conditions designed to
    lead to the death of the deportees, with the total number of deaths
    reaching 1.5 million.

    The date of the onset of the genocide is conventionally held to be
    April 24, 1915, the day that Ottoman authorities arrested some 250
    Armenian intellectuals and community leaders in Constantinople.

    Thereafter, the Ottoman military uprooted Armenians from their homes
    and forced them to march for hundreds of miles, depriving them of
    food and water, to the desert of what is now Syria.

    To date, twenty countries and 44 U.S. states have officially recognized
    the events of the period as genocide, and most genocide scholars
    and historians accept this view. The Armenian Genocide has been also
    recognized by influential media including The New York Times, BBC,
    The Washington Post and The Associated Press.

    The majority of Armenian Diaspora communities were formed by the
    Genocide survivors.

    The Holocaust was the systematic, bureaucratic, state-sponsored
    persecution and murder of approximately six million Jews by the Nazi
    regime and its collaborators. "Holocaust" is a word of Greek origin
    meaning "sacrifice by fire." The Nazis, who came to power in Germany
    in January 1933, believed that Germans were "racially superior"
    and that the Jews, deemed "inferior," were an alien threat to the
    so-called German racial community.

    The slaughter was systematically conducted in virtually all areas
    of Nazi-occupied territory in what are now 35 separate European
    countries. It was at its worst in Central and Eastern Europe, which
    had more than seven million Jews in 1939. About five million Jews were
    killed there, including three million in occupied Poland and over
    one million in the Soviet Union. Hundreds of thousands also died in
    the Netherlands, France, Belgium, Yugoslavia and Greece. The Wannsee
    Protocol makes clear that the Nazis also intended to carry out their
    "final solution of the Jewish question" in England and Ireland.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X