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Never Again, Never Forget: Remembering The Armenian Genocide

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  • Never Again, Never Forget: Remembering The Armenian Genocide

    NEVER AGAIN, NEVER FORGET: REMEMBERING THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

    The Daily Collegian, MA
    April 24 2014

    Posted by Maral Margossian on Thursday, April 24, 2014 · 1 Comment

    William Saroyan, an Armenian-American writer, wrote in his short story
    "The Armenian and the Armenian," "I should like to see any power of the
    world destroy this race, this small tribe of unimportant people whose
    wars have all been fought and lost, whose structures have crumbled,
    literature is unread, music is unheard, and prayers are not more
    answered. Go ahead, destroy Armenia. See if you can do it."

    The timeline of the 20th century bears the scars of some of the ugliest
    and most brutal events in human history. World War I, the "war to end
    all wars," proved anything but, as brilliant minds devised brilliant
    means of murder and discrimination-fueled crimes against humanity
    were committed indiscriminately, beginning with the Armenian genocide.

    On April 24, 1915, hundreds of Armenian intellectuals were arrested
    and killed in Istanbul by Ottoman officials, marking the beginning
    of the first genocide of the 20th century. An estimated 1.5 million
    Armenians were killed by the Ottomans, if not straight away, then
    during mass deportations.

    Hostility toward Armenians began to mount increasingly toward the end
    of the Ottoman Empire. In the late 19th century, Sultan Abdul Hamid
    II grew increasingly wary of Armenians' demands for civil rights
    and instituted pogroms to quell their protests. In 1908, a group
    called Young Turks overthrew Hamid and re-instituted a constitution,
    instilling hope in the Armenians for reform.

    However, the Young Turks had a vision to "Turkify" the empire. In 1914,
    they sided with Germany and the Austro-Hungarian Empire during World
    War I. Perceiving Armenians as a threat to the empire, the Young Turks
    were already skeptical of them. These suspicions were confirmed after
    Russian forces with Armenian soldiers defeated the Young Turks during
    a confrontation in the Caucasus.

    As a result, the Young Turks launched a campaign against Armenians,
    thereby initiating the 1915-1923 Armenian genocide. In 1914, about
    2 million Armenians lived in the empire. By 1922, less than 400,000
    remained.

    After the murders of Armenian intellectuals, the Ottomans next
    targeted Armenian men who were rounded up and forced to join the
    Ottoman army. Soon after, their arms were seized and those who had
    not already died from brutal labor were slaughtered.

    Without any Armenian intellectuals and leaders to plant seeds of revolt
    in the minds of Armenians, and without the men to try and fight back,
    they were left weak and helpless. Accordingly, the Ottomans then turned
    to their last target: women and children. Women and girls were raped,
    beaten and some were forced into slavery to work in harems.

    Armenian children were kidnapped, forced into converting to Islam,
    and then given to Turkish families with new, Turkish names.

    In an article from The Independent, Robert Frisk describes the
    methods Turks undertook to "Islamize" Christian Armenian children,
    writing that, "some of the small, starving inmates stayed alive only
    by grinding up and eating the bones of other children who had died."

    The largest number of deaths resulted from the mass deportations
    of Armenians out of Western Armenia (Eastern Anatolia). Ottoman
    officials ordered Armenians out of their homes under the guise that
    they were being resettled in non-military zones for their safety. In
    reality, they were sent on death marches across the Syrian Desert
    to concentration camps. Once food supplies finished, the Ottomans
    refused to provide more. They were not permitted to stop for a rest,
    and those too weak to continue were shot on the spot. Ottoman officials
    oftentimes forced Armenians into caravans to strip, then walk naked
    under the blistering sun, thereby hastening their deaths.

    About 75 percent of Armenians on these marches died, and countless
    unburied bodies scattered the Syrian Desert. In fact, there were
    so many bodies that even today, in the Syrian town Deir ez Zor,
    the bones of Armenians can still be found by merely scratching at
    the surface of the desert sands.

    The Armenians were also gassed. Crude gas chambers were created by
    herding them into caves and asphyxiating them by lighting bonfires
    at the entrances. Other atrocities that took place include burning
    Armenians alive, crucifying them, drowning them and throwing them
    off cliffs.

    Every year, on April 24, the Armenian Diaspora and Armenians living
    in Armenia commemorate the genocide. They gather together and rally
    for international recognition of the events as a genocide because,
    shamefully, some countries have yet to identify the massacres as
    genocide, despite overwhelming evidence.

    Since the fall of the Ottoman Empire, the Turkish government has
    denied these events as genocide, attributing the deaths to byproduct
    casualties of WWI. They argue that genocide involves the systemic
    and premeditated massacre of a group of people and that the deaths
    of Armenians during the early 1900s were not premeditated but a
    consequence of war. However, more and more Turkish historians and
    scholars are beginning to accept the reality of the events of 1915.

    Though American leaders have used the word "genocide" in speeches,
    the United States has yet to officially pass a bill recognizing the
    massacres as genocide. However, earlier this month, the Senate Foreign
    Relations Committee passed a resolution that called to classify
    the events in 1915 as genocide. The resolution currently awaits a
    100-member floor vote.

    With nearly 100 years passed since the genocide, some ask why it
    matters if the genocide is recognized, and why we can't just move on.

    We learn about history in order to not repeat the mistakes of the
    past. But what happens when a people are denied their past? When our
    history is denied from us, how can we move forward? How can we learn?

    How can we make sure these horrendous crimes never happen again?

    Adolf Hitler understood the importance of wide recognition of the past
    when he asked, in a speech impending the invasion of Poland, "Who,
    after all, speaks today of the annihilation of the Armenians?" The
    crimes of our past serve as warnings for our future. Well, just about
    a century later, we are speaking today of the genocide of Armenians.

    No matter how hard one tries to edit history or censor truth, the
    ghosts of our past will haunt us until they are resolved. The current
    population of the Armenian Diaspora is estimated to be around 10
    million people, forming Armenian communities all around the world.

    Saroyan concludes his poem, "Send them into the desert without bread or
    water. Burn their homes and churches. Then see if they will not laugh,
    sing and pray again. For when two of them meet anywhere in the world,
    see if they will not create a New Armenia."

    http://dailycollegian.com/2014/04/24/never-again-never-forget-remembering-the-armenian-genocide/

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