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Remarks by President Serzh Sargsyan in Deir Ez-Zor

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  • Remarks by President Serzh Sargsyan in Deir Ez-Zor

    Azg Daily, Armenia
    March 25 2010

    REMARKS BY PRESIDENT SERZH SARGSYAN IN DEIR EZ ZOR

    24.03.2010


    Your Eminencies,

    Ladies and Gentlemen,

    I am here today since I could not but be here. It is the greatest
    grief of my nation that has brought me here, the grief of the first
    genocide of the 20th century and the greatest disgrace of the
    civilized humanity. Up to this moment, in the 21st century, the stigma
    of that disgrace still remains on the foreheads of all those who have
    turned the denial of the evident facts into their policy, turned it
    into their bargaining chip and into their lifestyle and norm of
    behavior.

    In the desert of Deir ez Zor the most monstrous acts of the tragedy
    had taken place, and it is neither possible to articulate the
    particulars of that tragedy in the language of human beings, nor am I
    going do that since these particulars are well-known even to those who
    publicly deny the veracity of the Genocide. Bereft of home and
    property, bereft of children and parents, bereft of health and the
    last hope, and finally bereft of the most important ` their homeland,
    these people were doomed to lose the last thing they had ` their life
    in accordance with the state orchestrated and meticulously developed
    plan of extermination.

    Quite often historians and journalists soundly compare Deir ez Zor
    with Auschwitz saying that "Deir ez Zor is the Auschwitz of the
    Armenians". I think that the chronology forces us to formulate the
    facts in a reverse way: "Auschwitz is the Deir ez Zor of the Jews".
    Only a generation later the humanity witnessed the Deir ez Zor of the
    Jews. Today, as the President of the Republic of Armenia, the homeland
    of all Armenians, I am here to ask: "Where and when will be held our
    Nuremberg?"

    I'm here to commemorate and to pray for the vast majority of my
    slaughtered nation that had suffered both physical and cultural
    extermination. I will elaborate neither on the quality, nor on the
    quantity of the loss. Let me recall a single fact: as a result of the
    Genocide the greatest share of the dialects of one of the most ancient
    Indo-European languages - the Armenian ` had been irreversibly
    eradicated along with its speakers.

    In spite of all that happened, we say that we are ready to establish
    normal diplomatic relations with the modern Turkey, we are ready to
    have open borders and economic relations, we are ready to make efforts
    towards building confidence between the peoples of Armenia and Turkey,
    we are ready to bring closer the two societies by breaking stereotypes
    and myths that have nothing to do with the reality and developed in
    decades of dearth of any sensible contacts.

    We do this sincerely since we believe that there is no alternative to
    the living and development between the neighbors through
    implementation of what is proposed and still at the table, at least to
    start it up. The signing of the Armenian-Turkish protocols presented
    us with an historic opportunity that should have a logical destine.

    We, however, do not accept the style of references to the
    Armenian-Turkish dialogue in attempts to avoid the recognition of the
    Genocide. I do not think it helps the process. Moreover, it is
    irrelevant to cite some Commission of Historians, since the
    Armenian-Turkish protocols provide for merely a governmental
    sub-commission on historic dimension. I assume everyone understands
    what it means and what the difference is. I ask all those who will
    have an occasion to elaborate or express themselves on the topic of
    the recognition of the Armenian Genocide: remember of this desert,
    millions of ruined human fortunes and this ancient people deprived of
    their motherland and with pain in their hearts, before you make up
    your minds.

    In 1915 the greatest Armenian poets of the 20th century - 35 years old
    Daniel Varuzhan and 37 years old Atom Yarjanian (Siamanto) had also
    been slaughtered. Before being tortured to death, they were undressed,
    because they wore European clothes. In those times and places European
    clothes were quite expensive. The executioners dressed up into the
    European clothes - stolen from the Armenian geniuses encompassing
    millennia old civilization, stolen from ordinary Armenians.

    I would not interpret symbols signified in these images but I am
    unequivocally convinced: while preaching European apparel, manners or
    values no one has a right to cast these images in oblivion.

    I am here to remind of the well-known words: "It is impossible to kill
    a nation that does not want to die". We mean to live and to grow. It
    is no more possible to intimidate or blackmail us since we have seen
    the most horrible. We shall continue to live and create with double
    vigor for us and for our innocent victims. We look forward since we
    have a lot to say and to share with each other, a lot to say and to
    share with the world: the brightness and glow that Daniel Varuzhan and
    Atom Yarjanian had no chance to share.

    And here, in Deir ez Zor, we firmly and loudly say over and over again
    that we are, shall exist and will flourish.
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