Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

The Congressional Genocide Resolutions Are A Cruel Hoax

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

  • The Congressional Genocide Resolutions Are A Cruel Hoax

    THE CONGRESSIONAL GENOCIDE RESOLUTIONS ARE A CRUEL HOAX
    By William M. Paparian

    USA Armenian Life
    January 21, 2009
    Pasadena, California

    Adam Schiff, Howard Berman, and Nancy Pelosi are perpetrating a cruel
    hoax upon the Armenian-American community. And we have allowed them
    to get away with it. With a wink and a nod they solemnly profess their
    public support of an Armenian Genocide Resolution. Nevertheless, they
    have absolutely no intention of ever bringing the Armenian Genocide
    Resolution to the floor of the United States Congress for a vote,
    let alone bringing before the House Committee on Foreign Affairs
    where it was referred on March 17, 2009. It's a fraud, plain and
    simple. And like a parlor magician who uses the device of misdirection,
    they seek to divert our attention away from their clever tricks as
    they tout their complicit colleagues announcements of support or
    when they denounce opposition to the resolution. One example can be
    found most recently with Mr. Schiff when, on December 17, 2009, he
    attacked Turkish lobby opposition to a resolution which he knows will
    simply never be voted on. We have been deceived long enough by these
    shysters. Am I being too harsh? Then let Mr. Schiff, and Mr. Berman,
    and Ms. Pelosi prove me wrong. Stop the limp-wristed shenanigans and
    put the resolution on the agenda of the House Committee on Foreign
    Affairs and then bring it to the floor of the House of Representatives
    for a vote. Otherwise it's time to put an end to this charade and
    move on. It's time for us to stop wallowing in this bottomless pit
    of false promises and broken dreams.

    It's an integral part of the DNA of Armenian-Americans to be
    respectful to our elected representatives, to be loyal and faithful
    citizens and hope that our government will be nice to us. One way
    in which this unfortunate pathology has manifested itself is in
    our perpetual hope that the United States government will become
    a champion of the Armenian cause with regard to relations with the
    Turkish government. And so we lobby candidates and office-holders in
    what has been, up to now, a perpetual merry-go-round. We give them
    our money. We give them our votes. They show up at community events
    with meaningless proclamations and issue empty statements of support.

    And ultimately we are betrayed. The cycle continues unabated and the
    agenda for justice for the Armenian nation never advances forward.

    What have we been waiting for? Why not simply proclaim "Mission
    Accomplished" and move on? We have to convince ourselves that we
    cannot rely on anyone else to help us in our fight for justice. We
    have to be self-reliant. No one can do for us what we must do for
    ourselves! We must be uncompromising in dealings with our government.

    We can no longer remain quietly on the sidelines while cold-blooded
    bureaucrats sell off our children's future. Speaking with a single
    voice, Armenian-Americans must reject any further attempt to water
    down our nation's just demands on Turkey.

    It's time to declare that the record is abundantly clear: he Armenian
    Genocide has long been recognized by the government of the United
    States, from contemporaneous communications from the American
    Ambassador to Turkey to the Secretary of State in Washington, DC,
    up to President Ronald Reagan's proclamation in 1981.

    On July 16, 1915, at 1 PM, the American Ambassador in Constantinople
    sent the following message to the Secretary of State:

    "Deportation of and excesses against peaceful Armenians is increasing
    and from harrowing reports of eye witnesses it appears that a campaign
    of race extermination is in progress under the pretext of reprisal
    against rebellion."

    On April 22, 1981, in Proclamation 4838, President Ronald Reagan said:

    "Like the genocide of the Armenians before it, and the genocide
    of the Cambodians which followed it - and like too many other such
    persecutions of too many other peoples - the lessons of the Holocaust
    must never be forgotten."

    There is the official record of the United States Department of State
    and the proclamation from the President of the United States what
    happened to our nation was a Genocide. Ladies and Gentleman of the Jury
    we rest our case. Mission Accomplished. Now let us finally move on!

    As a young Armenian-American activist one of my earliest lessons
    was to learn the three R's of the Armenian Genocide: recognition;
    reparation; and return. It's time to declare victory on the first "R",
    recognition, and advance our struggle to the second and third "R's,
    " reparation and return. Here's one example. Passed down to me from
    my late maternal grandfather, Mihrtad Dickranian, is the deed to my
    family's residence in Izmit, Turkey. On December 16, 2008, I wrote to
    the Turkish Consul General in Los Angeles a letter and enclosed a copy
    of the deed to my family's house. I explained that during World War I,
    my family was deported from Izmit, that it was my understanding that
    there was a government accounting prepared of the property owned by the
    deportees, and that I wanted to know what happened with this asset of
    my family. The tone of my letter was tactful and straightforward. I
    made no accusations of criminal misconduct. Yet, more than a year
    later, the Consul General has not responded. Why not? I'm sure the
    Consul General forwarded the letter to Ankara. And I'm equally sure
    that the Turkish Foreign Ministry made a most sober assessment of the
    implications presented by my simple inquiry. How many other property
    deeds like the late Mihrtad Dickranian's are in the hands of the
    descendants of Genocide survivors? And what is the present day value
    of these property holdings that were stolen from citizens of Turkey
    like my grandfather by their own government? They are loosing sleep in
    Ankara over the calculations of the value of our collective claims! I
    will relentlessly pursue an accounting to what happened to my family's
    home. Make no mistake, this is no Quixotic endeavor. But this is the
    individual pursuit of one determined person. I know that there must
    be countless other property deeds in the possession of others in the
    Armenian-American community. There must be other documentation of the
    losses suffered by our fallen nation. Why not make reparations and
    return part of the agenda when Armenian-American community leaders
    meet with Secretray of State Hillary Clinton? Why not declare the
    opening of a new front in our campaign for justice?

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