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Making the Rounds: Anti-Semitism in Armenia

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  • Making the Rounds: Anti-Semitism in Armenia

    http://thehill.com/blogs/congress-blog/foreign-policy/227301-anti-semitism-in-armenia

    Anti-Semitism in Armenia
    By Alexander Murinson
    Dec. 17, 2014


    [Murinson, PhD, is a professor at the Begin-Sadat Center for Strategic
    Studies, Bar-Ilan University International; Advisory Board member of
    Outre-Terre, the European Journal of Geopolitics; and author of
    Turkey's Entente with Israel and Azerbaijan: State Identity and
    Security in the Middle East and Caucasus.]


    While the Armenian diaspora clamors for international recognition of
    their treatment during World War I, at the same time Armenians have a
    dirty secret crying for international recognition: brazen
    anti-Semitism and a profound hatred of Israel. This hypocritical
    streak runs deep within Armenian society.

    Horrifically, many Armenians have taken to addressing Jews as `ocar,'
    the Armenian word for soap. This is an underhanded reference to the
    Nazi practice of turning corpses of the victims of their extermination
    camps into soap, wallets, lampshades and other `useful' things. It has
    taken far less obvious intolerance to destroy a political campaign,
    yet, incongruously, certain members of Congress support the agenda of
    Armenia and its diaspora.


    In the Armenian body politic today, anti-Semitism is readily relied
    upon to besmirch or delegitimize political opponents. WikiLeaks cited
    a 2008 U.S. Department of State cable subtitled `ARMENIAN PRESS
    CONTINUES TO USE ANTI-SEMITISM TO VILIFY THE OPPOSITION.' Beginning in
    mid-May 2008, pro-government print media and state-run public
    television made outlandish anti-Semitic and anti-Masonic accusations
    against leaders of political opposition with gusto. Even a former
    Armenian president, Levon Ter-Petrossian, did not escape paranoid
    anti-Semitic diatribes against him in Armenian print media and even
    state-run television, simply because his wife is fabled to be Jewish.

    According to the cable in WikiLeaks, the accusations appeared in
    several scathing articles in the pro-government Russian-language Golos
    Armenii (Voice of Armenia) and Armenian-language Hayots Ashkhar
    (Armenian World) dailies. The articles portray Ter-Petrossian is as a
    traitor to Armenia and claim his true allegiance lies to the West --
    particularly to Israel and the Freemasons. Both papers also published
    an article entitled "Levon Hakob Ter-Petrosan or Levon Frayim
    Pliskovsky -- Armenian National Congress or Jewish Congress?" The
    author questions Ter-Petrossian's loyalty to the Armenian state by
    speculating on his alleged conspiratorial meeting with a wealthy
    Russian Jewish businessman where he presumably received $100-200
    million USD for his presidential campaign. The author then claims
    that "the Jewish-Masonic lobby spent $65-70 million USD on the same
    campaign.

    American-Jewish organizations, who visited Armenia on good will
    missions through the years following Armenian independence in 1991,
    received their share of anti-Semitic vitriol in the Armenian press. If
    these assertions are to be believed, the May 27-28, 2011 visit to
    Armenia of representatives of the American Jewish Committee was for
    Ter-Petrossian to receive further instructions on how to advance the
    Jewish cause. "It will be extremely interesting to ask L.
    Ter-Petrossian why the members of the Jewish-American Committee (sic)
    (arguably the most effective and prestigious Jewish organization in
    the United States and Europe) are arriving in Armenia on May 27-28?
    It should be noted that those arriving in Armenia are not ordinary
    members of the organization but rather, its leaders, i.e. Peter
    Rosenblatt, Barry Jabes (sic) and John Waters. According to available
    information, the leaders of the Jewish organization want L.
    Ter-Petrossian to report to them on his accomplishments; thereafter,
    they will specify the ex-President's further steps in the following
    three directions: 1. Armenia's domestic problems; 2. US-Armenian
    relations; and 3. Turkish-Armenian relations." Such fear-ridden
    propaganda has become regular fare in the Armenian press today, and
    has created a Nazi-reminiscent atmosphere. As this climate of
    vilification in Armenia spreads, the small remnant of Jews in Armenia
    unsurprisingly lives in fear.

    The Jewish community in Armenia is caught in a limbo between not
    upsetting the authorities vs. the need to raise an alarm about
    Armenia's increasingly hostile atmosphere towards Jews. In a country
    with state-controlled media, it is almost impossible to find criticism
    of the current government's anti-Semitic campaign; only the lone voice
    of Rimma Varzhapetian, head of Armenia's Jewish community, has raised
    an alarm. According to the WikiLeaks cable, Ms. Varzhapetian
    expressed her distress about the articles, calling them "a provocation
    and a kindling of anti-Semitism." She added that "I am afraid to
    think that this has the backing of the people in power." Varzhapetian
    said that she has no plans for a public response, though she believes
    it is incumbent upon the international community to condemn the
    hateful rhetoric. She noted with concern that people are starting to
    believe such hateful lies, including some of her acquaintances. They
    have reacted to her remonstrations about the anti-Semitic articles by
    attributing her objections to the fact that she is Jewish.

    Since ancient times, Armenian lands were not welcoming of Jews, yet
    their South Caucasus neighbors, Georgia and Azerbaijan, proudly claim
    the mantle of protection and tolerance towards their Jewish
    compatriots. The American tax payers spend quite a lot of money each
    year as `friends of Armenia' via acts of Congress. Perhaps it is time
    for Congress (and the American voters) to reconsider?




    From: A. Papazian
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