Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

After 100 Years, Turkey Should Acknowledge Armenian Genocide

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • After 100 Years, Turkey Should Acknowledge Armenian Genocide

    AFTER 100 YEARS, TURKEY SHOULD ACKNOWLEDGE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

    12:39 21/04/2015 >> SOCIETY

    Thestar.com editorial
    http://www.thestar.com/opinion/editorials/2015/04/20/after-100-years-turkey-should-acknowledge-armenian-genocide-editorial.html

    After 100 years, it is now widely accepted as the first genocide of
    the modern era. The killing of as many as 1.5 million Armenians in
    Ottoman Turkey that began in April, 1915, was a stain on the conscience
    of humanity, the first such horror in a century that would sadly see
    many more.

    Here in Canada, Prime Minister Stephen Harper's government recognizes
    the genocide, and Parliament passed resolutions more than a decade
    ago condemning it as a crime against humanity.

    As Armenians the world over mark the 100th anniversary on Friday of
    the beginning of the "great catastrophe," they know that the mass
    slaughter and expulsion that their community suffered as the First
    World War raged has gained iconic status as a crime of monstrous
    proportions. Nazi leader Adolph Hitler may have believed that few
    would remember the Armenian tragedy, but history has proved him wrong.

    Just this past week Pope Francis used his powerful pulpit to urge
    world leaders to recognize the genocide, saying that "concealing
    or denying evil is like allowing a wound to keep bleeding without
    bandaging it." The Pope alluded, as well, to the current persecution
    of Christians by Islamic State jihadists and other radicals in places
    such as Syria, Iraq and Nigeria. Even so, his remarks predictably
    infuriated Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's government. It
    recalled its envoy to the Vatican and accused the Pope of fanning
    hatred with baseless claims.

    As the Star's Olivia Ward wrote on Saturday, the Turkish government
    has always maintained the claim that the Armenian "tragedy," while
    terrible, has been exaggerated, and was a byproduct of an ugly civil
    war as the Ottoman Empire disintegrated. But diplomats at the time were
    shocked by the sheer scale of the suffering of two million Christian
    Armenians in what is now eastern Turkey. They faced mass deportation,
    death marches, starvation, executions, torture and rape.

    To one American diplomat it looked like a systematic bid to crush
    the Armenian race.

    The Armenian tragedy proved to be just the first of several in a 20th
    century drenched in the blood of two world wars and state-sanctioned
    mass slaughter.

    The singular evil of the Shoah, the Holocaust, towers above the rest.

    Hitler's Nazi killing machine murdered 6 million Jews seeking to
    annihilate an entire people. But millions of Ukrainians died in
    Joseph Stalin's man-made famines. In Cambodia the Khmer Rouge killed
    millions. And nearly a million perished in Rwanda and Bosnia.

    Modern Turkey is a democratic, advanced state and a valued ally
    of Canada and the rest of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization
    alliance. The Ottoman Empire is long gone and Turkish people today
    have no such blood on their hands. With the hindsight of a century,
    they should be able to come to terms with past events, however painful.

    Yet, discouragingly, the Turkish government continues to attack any
    and all who dare utter the word genocide. In Erdogan's mind, "it
    is out of the question for there to be a stain or a shadow called
    genocide on Turkey." That perversely casts Turkey in the role of
    victim. That simply doesn't stand serious scrutiny. Modern scholarship
    has documented a campaign by Mehmed Talat Pasha and his regime against
    the Armenians, who were regarded as pro-Russian enemies from within,
    at a time when Turkey was allied with Germany against Russia.

    Turkey's current leadership, innocent of century-old crimes, should
    recognize that their country's international standing is suffering by
    their corrosive refusal to come to grips with the past. The European
    Parliament has just made that very case, urging Turkey "to come to
    terms with its past, to recognize the Armenian genocide and thus to
    pave the way for a genuine reconciliation between the Turkish and
    Armenian peoples." That reconciliation is long overdue. It's time to
    look history squarely in the face, or be haunted by a terrible wrong.

    http://www.panorama.am/en/analytics/2015/04/21/thestar/

Working...
X