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Thinking Aloud: The 2015 Centennial of the Armenian Genocide

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  • Thinking Aloud: The 2015 Centennial of the Armenian Genocide

    Thinking Aloud: The 2015 Centennial of the Armenian Genocide

    http://hetq.am/eng/news/29357/thinking-aloud-the-2015-centennial-of-the-armenian-genocide.html
    21:43, September 14, 2013

    By Christina Najarian

    In less than two years, the world will have an opportunity to prove
    Adolf Hitler wrong. It was him who, prior to embarking upon a
    genocidal campaign in Europe, said: `Who, after all, remembers the
    annihilations of the Armenians?'

    Unfortunately, 98 years after the onset of the Armenian Genocide, many
    countries worldwide still do not recognize the darkest moment of our
    history. Perhaps more painfully, the Armenian nation is still
    unprepared. With so little time left until the April 24, 2015
    centennial, the nation needs a strategy to ensure the recognition of
    the Genocide and to address its consequences in the foreseeable
    future, both necessary pre-conditions for healing between the two
    nations to begin.

    The centennial can bifurcate in two directions: it can be a time of
    healing or a time of further division. I suspect much will depend on
    the state of Turkey's civil and political societies themselves.
    However, Armenians should not rely on the developments in Turkey to
    move this agenda forward, as there is simply too much at stake. There
    needs to be a new course of action to guarantee that the centennial is
    a time of healing.

    To date, the Armenian community is still unprepared to ensure
    worldwide recognition. I always thought that Armenia's struggle
    towards genocide recognition was stifled by its weak stance in the
    global economy and also by weak coordination between Armenia and the
    Diaspora. I always wondered, however, if domestic politics too had any
    role to play here.

    There are currently separate centennial committees working in
    isolation to promote genocide recognition before the 2015 memorial
    service. These committees include the Pan-Armenian Centennial
    Committee put together by official Yerevan and the Armenian Genocide
    Centennial Committee set up in Los Angeles by major Armenian-American
    organizations on the West Coast. These committees share similar
    objectives, but they apparently rarely collaborate. It begs a question
    if there is enough drive on both sides to join forces and create a
    unified front, a formula that is guaranteed to be most efficient.

    Read More
    http://pfarmenia.wordpress.com/2013/09/13/thinking-aloud-the-2015-centennial-of-the-armenian-genocide/

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