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The Armenians, The Jews And Israel

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  • The Armenians, The Jews And Israel

    THE ARMENIANS, THE JEWS AND ISRAEL

    http://www.jpost.com/Opinion/Op-EdContributors/Article.aspx?id=222224
    Thu, May 26, 2011

    Until recently, Israel chose to ignore the genocide in the Ottoman
    empire.

    In 1915-16, during World War I, the Turks were responsible for the
    massacre of as many as 1.5 million Armenian inhabitants of the Ottoman
    Empire. Among the first to warn about the nature and scope of the
    atrocity was Aaron Aaronsohn - the renowned agronomist from Zichron
    Ya'acov who established the Nili spy ring, which in the course of
    the war collected information about Ottoman military movements and
    other strategic issues and passed it on to the British authorities.

    Several of Aaronsohn's relatives and colleagues actually witnessed the
    bloody manifestations of the massacre. In November 1916, Aaronsohn
    sent the British authorities a memorandum entitled "Pro Armenia,"
    in which he described the atrocities.

    The previous month, he had sent a long letter to Judge Julian Mack -
    a leading American Zionist - in which he tried to convince him to
    adopt a pro-British position, inter alia describing the massacre of
    the Armenians and claiming that the Ottoman policy against both the
    Armenians and the Jews (who he feared might suffer a similar plight)
    had "made in Germany" written all over it. The Ottoman Empire, it
    may be recalled, was an ally of Germany in the war, and at the time
    Aaronsohn was writing, many Jews held pro-German or neutral positions.

    The Jewish yishuv in Palestine, the Zionist Organization and the State
    of Israel since 1948 could not claim ignorance of what happened to
    the Armenians.

    And yet until recently, Israel has chosen to ignore the event, with
    numerous excuses, each of which is shameful in its own right.

    The first is that since Turkey denies that a systematic massacre of
    Armenians ever took place, as well as minimizing the numbers involved
    (a number that justifies the term genocide), and since for years
    Israel regarded Turkey as a strategic ally - one of the few Muslim
    states it could regard as such - Israel would do well not to "let
    sleeping dogs lie."

    The fact that other states, including the US, adopted a similar policy
    seemed to justify Israel's position.

    The second excuse was that referring to the massacre of the Armenians
    as genocide might belittle the enormity of the Holocaust - an Israeli
    attitude that applies to other cases of genocide as well (and is,
    in my opinion, not just unjustified, but disgraceful). The Jewish
    Holocaust - in terms of both its circumstances and its manifestations
    - is without doubt unique. Nevertheless, this does not justify our
    belittling or ignoring the horrors that have occurred to other peoples.

    The third excuse is that since we do not like others criticizing
    our treatment of the Palestinians, we should avoid criticizing other
    states for the way they treat their minorities. This excuse is simply
    foolish, and may easily boomerang, because no matter how problematic
    our record of treating our Arab citizens (and the Palestinians in
    general) might be, it bears no resemblance to the sorts of acts we are
    talking about. On the contrary, given the nature of the Arab-Israeli
    conflict, our record - though certainly not free of blemish - cannot
    be described as involving massacres or acts of genocide at all, as
    some, including the Turks, can. The Turks are the first who should
    be confronted with the difference, and it is a shame that only now,
    when Israel's relations with Turkey have deteriorated to unprecedented
    levels due to unbridled Turkish attacks, Israel has finally decided
    to have its public say on the Armenian genocide.

    For years, various MKs from Meretz have tried to get the Knesset to
    hold a public debate on the subject. Until last week, the only sort
    of debate to which the Foreign Ministry, speaking in the name of
    the government, would consent was one in the Knesset Foreign Affairs
    and Defense Committee, whose proceedings are confidential and whose
    minutes are not published.

    On May 18, the plenum finally decided, following a motion brought
    forth by MK Zehava Gal-On, to hold an open debate on the subject
    in the Education, Culture and Sports Committee - the proceedings of
    which are public, with full minutes published on the Knesset website.

    No one opposed the subject's being referred to the committee,
    and all the speakers, from Right and Left, religious and secular,
    spoke in its favor. All one can say is: "better late than never,"
    but what a shame it took so long.

    The writer is a former Knesset employee.

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