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  • Activists Ask Congress To Investigate Planned Wilson Center Award To

    ACTIVISTS ASK CONGRESS TO INVESTIGATE PLANNED WILSON CENTER AWARD TO DAVUTOGLU

    Armenian Weekly
    Thu, May 20 2010

    WASHINGTON-Citizens from across the United States are asking their
    Members of Congress to look into the controversial decision by the
    Woodrow Wilson Center to award Armenian Genocide denier, Turkey's
    Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu, with their public service award,
    reported the Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA).

    Through an ANCA Action Alert, Armenian American and other anti-genocide
    activists are expressing "profound anger and disappointment" over
    the Woodrow Wilson Center's plans to travel to Turkey to bestow the
    award on Davutoglu, who had recently openly threatened the United
    States against speaking honestly about the Armenian Genocide.

    "This award dishonors President Wilson's vision of justice for the
    Armenian nation," explains the letter to Senate and House members.

    "Mr. Davutoglu represents a government that, in its aggressive denial
    of the Armenian Genocide and ongoing obstruction of justice for the
    Armenian nation, makes a mockery of the Wilson Center and its founding
    commitment to fostering scholarship commemorating 'the ideals and
    concerns of Woodrow Wilson.'"

    The letter makes special mention that "Mr. Davutoglu leads a Foreign
    Ministry that reflects and actively reinforces the anti-Armenian
    hatreds and intolerances that fueled the Armenian Genocide in the
    first place," noting that the Turkish Embassy in Washington, DC hosted
    a group of demonstrators who insulted and mocked Armenians gathered
    on April 24th, Armenian Genocide Remembrance Day, to mark the murder
    of 1.5 million men, women, and children, and the exile of a people
    from their ancient homeland. Video from the Turkish protest can be
    viewed at:

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LNfpYNeSyfE

    T he Woodrow Wilson Center receives one-third of its annual funding
    from Congress. Senators and Representatives are being encouraged to
    "formally investigate this matter and to share [their] concerns on
    this deeply troubling development directly with the leadership of
    the Woodrow Wilson Center."

    The ANCA Action Alert can be viewed at:
    http://www.capwiz.com/anca/issues/alert/?alert id=15045776

    The complete text of the letter is provided below.

    ***

    Dear Senator / Representative:

    I am writing to share with you three reasons behind my profound anger
    and disappointment over the recently announced decision of the Woodrow
    Wilson International Center for Scholars, a U.S. government-supported
    institution, to honor the Foreign Minister of Turkey, Ahmet Davutoglu,
    who, only weeks ago, openly threatened the United States against
    speaking honestly about the Armenian Genocide.

    1) This award dishonors President Wilson's vision of justice for the
    Armenian nation

    Mr Davutoglu represents a government that, in its aggressive denial
    of the Armenian Genocide and ongoing obstruction of justice for
    the Armenian nation, makes a mockery of the Wilson Center and its
    founding commitment to fostering scholarship commemorating "the ideals
    and concerns of Woodrow Wilson." President Wilson, throughout his
    time in public office, was a tireless champion of Armenian rights
    and security. He sharply condemned the Armenian Genocide, provided
    extensive relief to its survivors, and pressed, both domestically
    and internationally, for a viable Wilsonian Armenia as a means of
    restoring to the Armenian people their rightful place at the table
    of nation's following this horrific crime. Mr. Davutoglu, whose
    government blockades the very Armenia that Woodrow Wilson sought to
    protect, flagrantly and in the most offensive terms rejects our great
    President's vision of a truthful, just and lasting resolution of the
    Armenian Genocide.

    2) This award makes a mockery of President Wilson's belief in free
    and open inquiry

    Mr. Davutolgu represents a government that aggressively suppresses free
    speech and open historical inquiry, particularly on issues dealing
    with the Armenian Genocide. His government, including the leaders of
    his political party, continue to enforce laws, such as Article 301,
    that criminalize the discussion of the Armenian Genocide and demonize
    scholars, journalists and others who dare to speak honestly about
    this crime against humanity. His record runs directly counter to the
    Center's policy that the Woodrow Wilson Award for Public Service
    should be reserved for those who share Woodrow Wilson's steadfast
    belief in "the free and open exchange of ideas" and his commitment to
    "examin[ing] the historical background and long-term implications
    of issues confronting society." Far from supporting open inquiry,
    Mr. Davutoglu has devoted his own personal energies and the resources
    of his Ministry to silencing discourse within Turkey and the United
    States on the Armenian Genocide, one of the most prominent human
    rights issues that Woodrow Wilson himself actively pursued.

    Three weeks before the award was announced, Mr. Davutoglu openly
    condemned President Obama's Administration for not doing enough to
    prevent the March 4, 2010 vote on the Armenian Genocide Resolution
    in the House Foreign Affairs Committee. Not even two months later,
    Davutoglu condemned President Obama himself for making a statement
    express empathy towards Armenian Americans on the 95th anniversary
    of the Armenian Genocide, a statement which did not even use the
    term "genocide." While Turkey's Prime Minister Erdogan expressed
    appreciation that President Obama's statement considered "Turkish
    sensitivities" and did not use the term genocide, Foreign Minister
    Davutoglu called the statement "unacceptable" and protested that "No
    nation has the right to impose its memory records on another nation."

    3) This award provides an undeserved U.S. endorsement for Turkey's
    anti-Armenian policies

    Mr. Davutoglu leads a Foreign Ministry that reflects and actively
    reinforces the anti-Armenian hatreds and intolerances that fueled the
    Armenian Genocide in the first place. On April 24th of this year, a
    day of solemn remembrance for Armenians worldwide, the Turkish Embassy
    in Washington, DC hosted a group of demonstrators who, as this video
    link shows, had, only moments before, insulted and mocked Armenians
    gathered on this day to mark the murder of 1.5 million men, women,
    and children, and the exile of a people from their ancient homeland.

    Please take a moment to watch this video on YouTube (which is banned
    in Turkey) as you consider whether Mr. Davutoglu, whose staff hosted
    the protesters celebrating genocide, is worthy of this great honor
    in the name of our late President Woodrow Wilson.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LNfpYNeSyf E

    I bring this matter to your attention because, as a Member of Congress,
    you appreciate the public policy implications of the Wilson Center
    receiving approximately one third of its budget from our tax dollars
    and of it having been granted its location in a wing of the Ronald
    Reagan Building by the Federal government. The leaders of the Center
    are, of course, answerable to the American people and their elected
    representatives, to act in accord with both their own official mandate,
    as well as with the values and interests of the American people. In
    proposing to honor Mr. Davutoglu with this award, the Center acts
    counter to its own mandate, disgraces President Wilson's proud legacy,
    and diminishes the good name of the world-renowned institution named
    in his sacred memory.

    It is in this spirit that I call upon your office to formally
    investigate this matter and to share your concerns on this deeply
    troubling development directly with the leadership of the Woodrow
    Wilson Center. I look forward to hearing from you regarding any action
    that you take or feedback you receive on this subject of immediate
    and pressing concern to my family, friends, and community.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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