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The Armenian Genocide - 97 Years On

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  • The Armenian Genocide - 97 Years On

    THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE - 97 YEARS ON
    By Robert Kazandjian

    The Comment Factory
    http://www.thecommentfactory.com/the-armenian-genocide-97-years-on-8846/
    April 24 2012

    An article that addresses Turkish state denial of the Armenian Genocide
    on the 97th anniversary.

    inShare.Malcolm X said 'If you stick a knife in my back nine inches
    and pull it out six inches, that's not progress. If you pull it all
    the way out, that's not progress. The progress comes from healing the
    wound that the blow made. They haven't even begun to pull the knife
    out. They won't even admit the knife is there.'

    The catastrophic wound inflicted upon our collective identity by the
    Armenian Genocide cannot begin to heal. The blade of the Ottoman
    Gendarme's bayonet is lodged deep in our hearts. There can be no
    progress without recognition.

    Ataturk built his modern Turkish state on the myth of resistance
    against the imperial powers and their influence. The reality is his
    immediate predecessors had expunged all minority peoples from the
    land. From Ataturk, to Erdogan, successive Turkish governments have
    followed a policy of fierce denial, perpetuating historical lies
    through propaganda and repression.

    Self-declared beacons of democracy, Israel, the United Kingdom and
    the United States, still fail to officially recognise the Armenian
    Genocide. Turkey has long been of great strategic importance to
    these nations, during the cold-war era as NATO defender on the Soviet
    border, today as a proxy in the crusade to liberate specific Middle
    Eastern states. It is not surprising that the Armenian Diaspora in
    Syria, directly descended from genocide survivors left to languish
    in desert deportation camps, shudders at the increasing prospect of
    a Turkish-led military intervention.

    Any move towards international recognition prompts a predictably
    angry response from Ankara.

    French parliament submitted legislation that would make it a crime
    to deny any genocide officially recognised by the state. France
    only recognises the Jewish Holocaust and the Armenian Genocide. The
    legislation prompted a furious response from Prime Minister Erdogan.

    Turkey threatened retaliatory measures against its NATO ally.

    In the United States, an Armenian Genocide resolution was proposed by
    congress to President Clinton. The resolution sought to ensure that
    recognition of the genocide became constitutional, a simple bill with
    no legal ramifications. Ankara warned the United States that passing
    the resolution would have disastrous consequences, Turkish airbases
    would be closed to American planes and weapons contracts would be
    cancelled. The resolution was quashed and a super-power had been
    censored by a client state.

    Any attempt to recognise the Armenian Genocide within Turkey is
    punishable by law and can have tragic consequences. Under Article 301
    of the Turkish Penal Code it is illegal to insult Turkey, Turkish
    ethnicity and Turkish government institutions. Article 301 is an
    overt suppression of free speech.

    Prominent Turkish-Armenian intellectual Hrant Dink, who publicly
    acknowledged the Armenian Genocide, was charged under Article 301.

    Ultra-Nationalists with suspected links to the Turkish deep state
    subsequently assassinated him. These explosions of violence are
    inevitable. Governmental denial reshapes history and demonises the
    victims, successfully replicating the anti-Armenian sentiment that
    was rife when the genocide occurred.

    The Armenian Genocide is of great importance to modern world history
    because it provided a blueprint for centrally organised, systematic
    annihilation of a race of people. Fuelled by a pan-Turkic ideology and
    under the cover of the First World War, the triumvirate leadership
    of the Committee of Union and Progress planned and conducted our
    great tragedy.

    On April 24th, 1915, Ottoman authorities arrested prominent Armenian
    community figures and intellectuals in Constantinople and the majority
    were executed. This date conventionally marks the beginning of the
    genocide. Operating under the pretence that the Armenian minority was
    a security threat to the Ottoman Empire, wholesale deportation of all
    Armenians from the eastern provinces to concentration camps in the
    Syrian Desert was ordered. Deportation was code for massacre. Men,
    women and children were slaughtered. The barbaric methodology varied.

    Those who survived the death marches were left to starve in the camps.

    Over 1,000,000 lives perished.

    Immediate parallels can be made between the Armenian Genocide and
    the Jewish Holocaust. World War created the ideal conditions for each
    atrocity to take place. The propagandist idea that Armenians were a
    disease that infected Turkish society foreshadowed the Nazi ideal that
    Germany needed to be free of the Jewish race in order to revitalise
    itself. When addressing his generals before the invasion of Poland in
    1939, Hitler asked rhetorically 'who, after all, speaks today of the
    annihilation of the Armenians?' This statement is indicative of the
    successful erosion of memory perpetuated by Turkish governments. The
    Zionist state's failure to recognise the Armenian Genocide is
    sickeningly ironic.

    It is a fallacy to believe that the Armenian Genocide has two
    legitimate histories, one for the perpetrators and one for the
    victims. The genocide is not an allegation. It is a fact. The denial
    of the genocide is a cruel attempt to subvert the truth in order to
    preserve a national mythology.

    The Armenian Diaspora long for a Turkish leader to recognise the
    babies, tiny bodies injected with morphine, futures callously
    extinguished by doctors in hospitals. To recognise the children,
    forced on to crowded vessels, drowned in the Black Sea and the Tigris.

    To recognise the women, brutally, repeatedly violated and left to die.

    To recognise the men, horseshoes nailed to their feet, forced to walk
    the dusty road towards their own crucifixions.

    The Armenian Diaspora long for a Turkish leader to recognise their
    ancestor's crimes so the tortured souls of ours can finally rest.


    From: Baghdasarian
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