CANADIAN SENATOR: ARMENIANS FIGHT FOR GENOCIDE RECOGNITION FOR HUMANITY
PanARMENIAN.Net
April 26, 2012 - 18:14 AMT
PanARMENIAN.Net - Canadian Senator Maria Chaput addressed the Senate
with a speech on Armenian Genocide on April 24.
"I am joining with the thousands of our Armenian-Canadian citizens
who have gathered on Parliament Hill and across the country to honor
the memory of the victims of the Armenian Genocide of 1915.
On this day, 97 years ago, the Turkish Ottoman government proceeded
with the mass arrest of the Armenian intellectuals on its soil. The
arrest, deportation and execution of these hundreds of intellectuals
was only the beginning of the atrocities that followed. Left without
its elite, the Armenian population was brutally decimated in the
months and years that followed. More than 1.5 million men, women and
children fell victim to an ethnic cleansing campaign that was planned
and orchestrated by the central government.
Some 97 years later, the Turkish government continues to deny this
crime that was committed by its Ottoman predecessor despite the
academic consensus on the genocidal nature of these acts and the fact
that a number of countries, including Canada, recognize this genocide.
Ninety-seven years later, the Armenian people continue to fight on
two fronts: they are fighting for their rebirth and for the full
recognition of this crime. They are fighting for recognition of
this crime to honor the memory of their ancestors and for justice
and human rights, to raise awareness and to prevent such tragedies,
to encourage mutual acceptance among all peoples, for the Jews of
Europe and the Ukrainians, for Cambodia, for Rwanda, for Yugoslavia
and Sudan, for all of humanity.
A famous member of the Armenian diaspora, the great singer Charles
Aznavour, wrote these lyrics about his people: They fell . . . never
knowing the cause. The women fell as well, and the babies they tendered
. . . they fell believing their children could grow . . .
they fell like flies . . . all in vain, for just one helping hand . .
.
Honourable senators, we will never be able to explain why they fell.
Nevertheless, 97 years later, Armenians are standing up for their
cause and for all of humankind. I hold out my hand to them and stand
in their honor," Senator Chaput said.
PanARMENIAN.Net
April 26, 2012 - 18:14 AMT
PanARMENIAN.Net - Canadian Senator Maria Chaput addressed the Senate
with a speech on Armenian Genocide on April 24.
"I am joining with the thousands of our Armenian-Canadian citizens
who have gathered on Parliament Hill and across the country to honor
the memory of the victims of the Armenian Genocide of 1915.
On this day, 97 years ago, the Turkish Ottoman government proceeded
with the mass arrest of the Armenian intellectuals on its soil. The
arrest, deportation and execution of these hundreds of intellectuals
was only the beginning of the atrocities that followed. Left without
its elite, the Armenian population was brutally decimated in the
months and years that followed. More than 1.5 million men, women and
children fell victim to an ethnic cleansing campaign that was planned
and orchestrated by the central government.
Some 97 years later, the Turkish government continues to deny this
crime that was committed by its Ottoman predecessor despite the
academic consensus on the genocidal nature of these acts and the fact
that a number of countries, including Canada, recognize this genocide.
Ninety-seven years later, the Armenian people continue to fight on
two fronts: they are fighting for their rebirth and for the full
recognition of this crime. They are fighting for recognition of
this crime to honor the memory of their ancestors and for justice
and human rights, to raise awareness and to prevent such tragedies,
to encourage mutual acceptance among all peoples, for the Jews of
Europe and the Ukrainians, for Cambodia, for Rwanda, for Yugoslavia
and Sudan, for all of humanity.
A famous member of the Armenian diaspora, the great singer Charles
Aznavour, wrote these lyrics about his people: They fell . . . never
knowing the cause. The women fell as well, and the babies they tendered
. . . they fell believing their children could grow . . .
they fell like flies . . . all in vain, for just one helping hand . .
.
Honourable senators, we will never be able to explain why they fell.
Nevertheless, 97 years later, Armenians are standing up for their
cause and for all of humankind. I hold out my hand to them and stand
in their honor," Senator Chaput said.