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  • Charny: Israel Govm't Officially Calls on Knesset to Recognize The A

    ISRAEL GOVERNMENT OFFICIALLY CALLS ON KNESSET TO RECOGNIZE THE ARMENIAN
    GENOCIDE

    Issue 10, Spring 2012

    G P N O R I G I N A L
    B R E AK I N G N E W S

    This is the first time a government of Israel has endorsed recognition

    An in-depth report and analysis of the political process by GPN
    Prepared by Israel W. Charny


    Israel's Knesset, Jerusalem

    Jerusalem, June 12, 2012

    In an historic session of the Israeli Knesset, a wide ranging spectrum of
    members of the Knesset, from 7 different political parties, overwhelmingly
    endorsed recognition of the Armenian Genocide. The session was led firmly
    and inspiringly by the Chair of the Knesset, Reuven Rivlin , who himself
    spoke with profound feeling of both a Jewish and an Israeli imperative to
    extend a long overdue recognition. The issue is a moral one, he emphasized
    over and over again.

    "We must make our voices heard when other nations are targeted for
    destruction," Rivlin stated. "Those who drafted the Final Solution for the
    Jews figured the world would be silent as they were when the Armenians were
    murdered. The Knesset cannot ignore this episode that is factual. We
    cannot forgive nations who ignore our disaster and we cannot ignore the
    disaster of other," the Knesset Speaker added.

    Although several speakers also reconstructed briefly familiar parts of the
    traditional Israeli rhetoric of past years ofrealpolitik -- e.g., a
    chorus line that the government of Turkey in our time is not the Ottoman
    Empire that perpetrated the genocide -- the old excuses were as if album
    memories of the language that prevailed in the past to explain and justify
    Israel's failure, and in all cases but one soon gave way to clear-cut
    affirmations of the validity of the Armenian Genocide and support for its
    recognition by the current government of Israel.

    This reporter had to hold his breath during the beginning of the remarks by
    the official spokesman of the government before it became clear how
    positive the official position had become for Israel to recognize the
    Armenian Genocide at long last.

    There was only one notable effort at a counter-proposal by a member of the
    Knesset, Robert Tiviaev, who made a disingenuous effort to call for a
    commission of historians to research 'what really happened,' and he pledged
    that if the commission then concluded that there had been a genocide, "I
    will be the first to call for recognition." Knesset Chair Rivlin made
    short shrift of the speaker and ruled that there was no point in generating
    a formal counter proposal and voting on it because it was obvious from all
    the earlier speakers that an overwhelming majority of the Knesset adamantly
    confirmed the historical authenticity of the Armenian Genocide.

    Rivlin also concluded there was no point in calling for a vote on the
    resolution to recognize the genocide since the Knesset already had voted
    last year, unanimously, in favor of recognition. It was on the basis of
    that vote that the measure had been referred to the Knesset's Education
    Committee that held a several hour session in December 2011. (See the
    GPNarticle, "DIRECT QUOTATIONS FROM ISRAELI KNESSET HEARING, DEC 26 2011,
    ON RECOGNIZING THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE that was issued as a Special Bulletin
    by GPN and then incorporated in Issue 8 (
    http://www.genocidepreventionnow.org/Home/GPNISSUES/GPNBulletinISRAELIKNESSETSpecialSection8.aspx
    ).

    Knesset Chair Rivlin also said that today's session was a confirmation and
    extension of the original full Knesset resolution to recognize the
    genocide, and he then added forcefully that he now expected a continuation
    of deliberations in the Education Committee and a vote on the resolution.

    The government was officially represented at the hearing by MK Gilad Erdan,
    a member of the National Union Party and currently Minister of
    Environmental Affairs, who is described by some press as a close friend of
    Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. It was Erdan's role to present the
    government's position (that will be described shortly) and to answer
    officially on behalf of the government proposed parliamentary motion not
    to recognize the genocide.

    Erdan said clearly that the government had decided to recognize the
    Armenian Genocide, and even used what is normally the code word 'holocaust'
    in his remarks to describe what was done to the Armenian people. "I think
    it is definitely fitting that the Israeli government formally recognize the
    holocaust perpetrated against the Armenian people," Erdan, Israel's
    environmental affairs minister said.

    For this reporter, Erdan's remarks also reflected the struggles of the
    long-since denialist Israeli government that is now coming around
    dramatically in a welcome move to recognize the Armenian Genocide. At
    first, Erdan made at least one totally inaccurate remark in defense of the
    State of Israel when he said, "The State of Israel has never denied the
    [Armenian Genocide]. On the contrary, we deplore the genocide." Erdan
    also temporized briefly about the meaning of the word 'genocide' when he
    noted that, "Not everyone uses the same dictionary when they refer to
    'genocide'=85" Yet in the end - though this reporter thought somewhat
    nervously and hurriedly - Erdan announced unambiguously that he was
    conveying the government's official position. First of all, he said on
    behalf of the government that, "One must support full open discussion of
    the issue." He also went on to refer to a deeper meaning of the Armenian
    Genocide for mankind and to link the meaning of the Armenian Genocide to
    the Holocaust of the Jewish people: "The government notes that mankind has
    not learned the full meanings of the Armenian Genocide and the Holocaust."
    And finally Erdan announced the Israeli government calls for formal
    recognition of the Armenian Genocide which, as noted earlier, Erdan now
    characterized with the word 'holocaust:'
    ___________________________________

    GPN Explanation and Analysis

    Unlike the procedure in the US Congress, the Israel legislative sequence
    calls first for a vote in the plenum, and given a positive vote then the
    proposed resolution is referred for a hearing in one of the Knesset
    committees. Now, given a further positive vote in the committee, the
    measure returns once again to the plenum for three readings and a vote on
    each reading. At the successful conclusion of this process, the resolution
    becomes a legal decision of the Knesset.

    In the case of the bill to recognize the Armenian Genocide, it is known
    that if the government maneuvers to send the bill to the secretive
    Committee on Foreign Affairs and Security, the bill will most likely be
    killed - and no information on who said what and 'who done it' may ever be
    forthcoming. When the present resolution was sent last Fall to the
    Education Committee, whose hearings are public, it was a major step toward
    a possible recognition of the Armenian Genocide. The December hearing in
    the Education Committee was widely hailed in Israel as the first-ever
    extended consideration of the genocide in Israel's legislature.

    However - a very big however - as reported by GPN at the time, after
    several hours of a rich and quite moving session, the Chair of the
    Education Committee at the time, Alex Miller, a member of Knesset for the
    Yisrael Beitenu Party that is headed by Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman
    (the Foreign Ministry continued in its traditional opposition to recognize
    the genocide) as if broke the spell of the session that overall would
    clearly have produced a vote for recognition, and announced preemptively
    that the session was over. Bang! Miller then promised that there would be
    a continuation session in the future, but in fact has never made a move to
    schedule such a session, and GPN has learned privately over these months
    from the leaders of the Armenian community in Israel that Miller has said
    that he refuses to convene such a session.

    It now remains to be seen whether the government will act on its newly
    announced support of the recognition by working to have the Knesset send
    the measure once again to the Education Committee for a continuation of the
    hearing - there will be a new Chair of the Education Committee in the
    coming weeks.

    What is clear is that Knesset Chair Reuven Rivlin will do everything in his
    power in the behind-the-scene decision-making process to have the bill
    referred back to the Education Committee, but we do not know how to
    evaluate the range of his influence.

    If the government arranges for the bill to go to the secretive committee
    where it is likely to be killed or in any other way stops the unfolding of
    the full process, we will know that the statement made by the government's
    spokesman on June 12 was still another maneuver in the history of Israeli
    realpolitik - notwithstanding the fact the even this statement itself
    represents a major precedent in the tortured process that has taken place
    in Israel over so many years.

    One puzzle for this reporter in the day following the hearing is that so
    much of the press in Israel and in the U.S. too failed to report loudly and
    clearly what for us is the very big news - and therefore GPN's headline.
    The Government of Israel did state officially that it supports
    recognition. Wow. As I reviewed press today, I discovered to my amazement
    that most missed the point. Haaretz in Hebrew didn't even report the story
    of the hearing. The English edition of Haaretz this morning featured the
    hearing as its lead Page One story but still didn't convey the main point
    of the victory. Neither did the Jerusalem Post or the Los Angeles Times in
    their fairly full stories. One minor new service in israel, Arutz Sheva,
    did publish a small statement that the Minister Erdan "spoke for the
    government..." and quoted him saying in the first person (which could be
    one source of the confusion that has been showing up as to who he
    represented), "I believe it would be appropriate for the government to
    acknowledge the Armenian Genocide." In Istanbul, the newspaper Today's
    Zaman got it more correctly than some of the major Israeli papers and
    quoted the minister basically correctly, BUT added that he said Israel's
    government had not changed its policy, and in general erred very badly in
    saying the hearing was initiated in response to this minister's remark
    rather than that the minister came as the official government
    representative to the hearing initiated by the Knesset. The one source we
    have found so far that got it really right was the Chicago Tribune which
    clearly credited Erdan as speaking for the government.

    Why so much clouding of information? At the moment GPN's analysis is that it's
    a whopper of a correction for Israel to make after so many years and its
    hard to believe. As we reported, even the minister seemed nervously
    unsure!

    In spite of the clear risks of being very wrong, GPN's editor-reporter
    now predicts that this bill to recognize the Armenian Genocide will go the
    full route and will be approved by the Israeli Knesset.

    ___________________________________

    Statements by Various Speakers at the Knesset Hearing on the Armenian
    Genocide June 12, 2012

    A note to GPN readers: GPN's reporter was not actually present at the
    Knesset for this session, although I had been invited to attend. My
    delightful reason for not being present was that I traveled to the Tel Aviv
    area to attend a dance concert that evening in which a wonderful 10 year
    old granddaughter was performing (she and all the other children were
    beautiful). However, I was able to see the entire session late afternoon
    live on television and to take notes using the advantage of the big screen
    and the probing television cameras perhaps more effectively than would have
    been the case if I were actually in the Knesset.

    Knesset Chairperson Reuven Rivlin - Rivlin spoke sensitively and very much
    in a moral voice. Among his other remarks, he quoted Avshalom Feinberg, who
    as noted in the GPN report of December 2011 session was a member of Nili
    which was a Jewish spy group in Turkey in WWI, several of whose members,
    including Feinberg, stumbled into being full blown eye-witnesses of the
    Armenian Genocide. Nili then played an important and dangerous role for the
    Jewish community living in Turkish-ruled Palestine as they warned the
    Yishuv [Jewish
    community] that the same fate was heading toward the Jews in Palestine. (One
    famous woman in this group, Sara Ahronson, was caught and hung by the Turks
    in Palestine). In today's Knesset session Rivlin quoted Feinberg thus: "I
    ask myself if we are living in our era in 1915 or whether we really are
    living in the days of Titus [the Roman Emperor who destroyed the Temple]
    and Nebuchadnezzar [Persian ruler who exiled the Jews 6th century BCE]."
    Rivlin concluded: "The facts about the massacres of the Armenians were
    clear and unquestionable."

    Referring to the Holocaust some 25 years later, Rivlin noted that after the
    Armenian Genocide, "We were the next in line to be victims of genocide.
    Hitler believed that the world would be silent just as it was silent in
    response to the killings of the Armenians."

    Repeatedly Rivlin warned against turning the subject of recognition of the
    Armenian Genocide into a political issue: "It is forbidden to turn this
    subject into a political subject [in the 'American language' this would be
    called 'into a political football']. It is forbidden for us to turn our
    backs on the tragedies of other nations. This is our responsibility."

    MK Zahava Gal-On, Chairperson of the liberal party Meretz, co-sponsor of
    the resolution - Zahava Gal-On was one of the two authors (together with
    Arieh Eldad from the National Union Party) of the resolutions, continuing a
    very proud tradition of her party and its past leaders such as MK's Yair
    Tzaban, Yossi Beilin (who became Assistant Foreign Minister and made an
    official statement of the Armenian Genocide that drove the government
    bananas), Yossi Sarid (who became a Minister of Education, and like Beilin
    drove the government into denial of his significance when he too firmly
    recognized the Armenian Genocide), and Haim Oron (whom we have pointed out
    in the past is the brother of Professor Yair Auron, Associate Director of
    the Institute on the Holocaust and Genocide in Jerusalem, who is braving
    the development of an unprecedented program of collegiate education about
    genocide and has published the first series of textbooks on genocide in
    Hebrew at the Open University in Israel).

    Gal-On noted that the Armenian Genocide has already been recognized by 27
    nations in the world. "Once again the State of Israel is making a cynical
    political use of the subject," she said. Gal-On also made the connection
    between denials of the Armenian Genocide and denials of the Holocaust. "Denial
    of the Armenian Genocide supports denials of the Holocaust," she emphasized.

    MK Arieh Eldad, National Union Party, co-sponsor of the resolution: Eldad's
    cited additional members of the Nili spy group, and observed that
    historians feel that their experiences in eyewitnessing the Armenian
    Genocide played a major role in strengthening the Nili group's
    anticipations of serious dangers to the Jewish community from the ruling
    Turks. Eldad read a report by a Turkish officer about how the Turks forced
    Armenians into a school and burned them alive. He also cited the outcome
    of a forced march of Armenians into the desert who numbered at the outset
    170,000 of whom "only 180 survived this Armenian death march." Eldad
    continued with descriptions of other events including the killing of
    Armenians in Trebizond with chlorine gas and concluded: "It seems to me
    that this was a rehearsal of what was going to take place 25 years
    later." Eldad
    concluded: "Turkey must recognize the Armenian Genocide."

    MK Dov Khenin, Hadash Party: Khenin continued the remarks of many others
    emphasizing that the issue of recognition of the Armenian Genocide is "both
    an historical and moral issue." He went on eloquently to recognize that
    "the Armenian Genocide was committed no less than by human beings": The
    genocide of the Armenians is a warning signal to all of us human beings
    that we should not sink to the dark places of our humanness."

    Khenin also recalled the famous report by the American news correspondent,
    Louis Lochner, who was attached to the Berlin bureau of the Associated
    Press as WWII approached, and later in 1939 won a Pulitzer Prize for his
    reports of the Nazi invasion of Poland, who reported Hitler's cynical
    inspirational statement to his generals, "Who remembers the Armenians?"
    Khenin now continued, as if in reply to Hitler: "WE remember the
    Armenians. We MUST remember the Armenians. This is not something that
    belongs to history alone. It is reality. It [the genocide] happened. It
    is something that is continuing to happen to all of us."

    MK Daniel Ben-Simon, Labor Party (and a former correspondent of
    Haaretz): Ben-Simon
    compared the perpetrators of the Armenian Genocide to the perpetrators of
    many other genocides that have since followed, including Hitler, Stalin,
    Mao tse Tung, and the leaders of Cambodia [Pol Pot]. He spoke further
    about the fact that victim peoples must retain their memory of the
    traumatic tragedies they have endured, and noted that "Turkey invests
    enormous energies to attempt to subvert knowledge and deliberations of the
    murders of the Armenians. One must give free history a free reign to 'do
    its thing' and not hide from history. Ben-Simon concluded, "For a people
    to do self-reckoning [and take responsibility for the commission of
    genocidal acts] is not an act of weakness but an act of strength."

    MK Nino Abesadze, Kadima Party: Abesadze noted that now it is only three
    years before we reach the 100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide
    tragedy. "We Jews must understand and feel for the other. Our attitude
    cannot be dependent on any political consideration. It is precisely
    because we have been a victim people we do not dare fail to identify with
    another victim people. We must be an example of tolerance and respect for
    others."

    Nissim Zeev, Shas Party (and by profession a Rabbi): For this reporter one
    unusual and welcome development in this session of the Knesset was that one
    of the speakers who ended up very much supporting recognition of the
    genocide comes from a major religious party - something we at GPN do not
    remember in any previous Knesset deliberations about the genocide.

    Not surprisingly the same speaker, Nissim Zeev from the Shas party, by
    profession a Rabbi, actually began his remarks with a series of traditional
    denialist statements such as, "This is a massacre that is controversial."
    Zeev also gave an explanation at least of part of the genocide as being the
    Turkish response to Armenian support of Russia in WWI -- an argument that
    is a favorite ploy of Turkish denial propaganda and completely ignores the
    unfolding of the Armenian Genocide already from the end of the preceding
    century where 200,000 Armenians were slaughtered. Zeev also could not help
    himself but make an effort to differentiate between Shoah and genocide so
    that the Shoah - referring of course to the Holocaust of the Jewish people
    - remained a more severe crime than as if a more simple genocide.
    Nonetheless, Zeev then proceeded with flying colors to describe Turkey's
    sweeping campaign of denial of the massacre of the Armenians, Turkey's
    punishments of people who speak of the Armenian Genocide as criminals, and
    concluded more than powerfully: "We cannot close our eyes to such a
    terrible mass murder - just as mass murder is taking place in Syria
    today." Finally, Zeev used the word genocide. We must do everything to
    stop such genocides no matter what sensitive political issues are involved."

    MK Zeev Elkin, Likud Party, and Chair of the Likud Caucus in the Knesset:
    "We
    are one of the last nations in the world that has still not recognized the
    Armenian Genocide. It is our moral responsibility that we have still not
    met. There has even been a battle for many years about the very discussion
    of the Armenian Genocide in the Knesset. I pray that we will now complete
    this simple and trivial process. "

    Elkin, a significant and wizened political leader, now expressed the
    specific hope that the Knesset's Education Committee will now go ahead to
    complete the process. He emphasized that practical political considerations
    are not relevant. "Practical realpolitik considerations don't work. The
    State of Israel in particular should not conduct itself on this basis.

    Elkin observed: "Israel frequently claims that the Jewish people has earned
    a special moral confirmation of the validity of its existence after the
    terrible tragedy of the Holocaust, and now we cannot turn our backs on
    another people. If only because of Hitler's statement, 'Who remembers the
    Armenians?', Israel is obligated to remember!"

    http://www.genocidepreventionnow.org/Home/tabid/39/ctl/DisplayArticle/mid/1085/aid/560/Default.aspx



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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