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Valley Voice: US Must Acknowledge Armenian Genocide

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  • Valley Voice: US Must Acknowledge Armenian Genocide

    VALLEY VOICE: US MUST ACKNOWLEDGE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

    The Desert Sun
    April 13 2015

    Steven B. Quintanilla, Special to The Desert Sun

    Although commemorating the 100th anniversary of the beginning of the
    Armenian Genocide through a "moment of silence" may be respectful,
    I am afraid it may be wholly inadequate in light of the exacerbated
    pain caused by a "century of silence" by our government in Washington.

    April 24, 1915, is the day several hundred Armenian intellectuals were
    arrested and later executed by the Ottoman (Turkish) Empire. Over
    the following seven years, two-thirds of the Armenian population
    (estimated at 1.5 million) was exterminated.

    At the start of the collapse of the Ottoman Empire during the early
    part of World War I, the ruler of the Ottoman Empire -- who was
    also the leader of the greater Islamic community at the time -- used
    Armenians as scapegoats for the Ottoman Empire's problems. Armenians,
    as a distinct and different ethnic group from the Turks and as
    Christians in an empire dominated by Islamic beliefs, were seen
    (at the time) as a threat to the Ottoman Empire and the greater
    Islamic community.

    In addition to the slaughter of 1.5 million Armenians, hundreds of
    thousands more were forced into permanent exile from their ancestral
    homelands. Tens of thousands of Armenian children were left orphaned
    with lifelong painful memories of murdered family members. Many
    thousands more were left in a state of crippled existence in mind,
    body and spirit caused by the unspeakable atrocities committed against
    the Armenian people during this dark and evil assault on humanity.

    "Genocide," as defined by a renowned Polish-Jewish lawyer in 1943,
    means the deliberate killing of a racial, ethnic, religious or national
    group. Clearly, under the plain meaning of this definition, the killing
    of 1.5 million people of a particular ethnic group (Armenian), most
    of whom adhered to the religion of the Armenian Apostolic Church,
    a Christian denomination, was "genocide."

    The Armenian Genocide has been recognized as a historical fact by
    Canada, Sweden, Italy, Poland, France, Belgium, Greece, Argentina,
    and (even) Russia. Concerns over upsetting Turkey, a key ally in a
    historically highly volatile region, have kept numerous U.S.

    presidential administrations and members of Congress silent on the
    issue, which tragically continues to this day. In fact, just last
    month, 40 members of House of Representatives launched a bi-partisan
    effort to persuade Congress and the president to officially recognize
    the Armenian Genocide as a historic fact. But, like many efforts
    before, it fell on deaf ears and the painful silence sadly endures.

    Why should America end its century of silence by formally recognizing
    the Armenian Genocide as a historical fact? I believe we should because
    most of the world will listen. America must end its silence on the
    issue not only because of the moral obligation I believe America owes
    to the Armenian-American community which has contributed in a very
    meaningful and highly productive manner to the social, cultural,
    economic and political fabric of America, but also because we have
    an ethical, fiduciary and moral obligation to humankind. I sincerely
    believe (and pray and hope) America's formal recognition of the
    Armenian Genocide will serve as a catalyst for creating an official
    international framework to prevent the same human atrocities from
    occurring again. We should not stand by and let our silence (let alone
    our century of silence) be used as justification, albeit as insane as
    it may be, by yet another despotic and evil ruler or regime to commit.

    Steven B. Quintanilla is an attorney in Rancho Mirage. Email him
    at [email protected]

    http://www.desertsun.com/story/opinion/contributors/2015/04/13/valley-voice-quintanilla-armenian-genocide/25737377/

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