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Call to UCLA community to stand against Armenian genocide denial

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  • Call to UCLA community to stand against Armenian genocide denial

    Call to UCLA community to stand against Armenian genocide denial

    15:11, 16 Jan 2015


    The Daily Bruin urges UCLA community to stand against Armenian
    genocide denial. An editorial published on January 15 reads as
    follows:

    "Members of the Turkish Cultural Club tried to deny on Tuesday that
    the massacre of 1.5 million Armenians near the start of the 20th
    century was a genocide.

    Denying the existence of a genocide is a heinous act that degrades the
    experience of an entire people and is threatening to the prevention of
    future racism and genocides.

    To an audience of Armenian students and the undergraduate student
    government, members of the Turkish Cultural Club defended the Turkish
    government, which has failed to recognize the genocide for the last
    century. The presentation and public comments were part of the group's
    efforts to sway councilmembers to vote against a resolution next week
    that calls for the University of California to divest from the
    Republic of Turkey.

    More than 40 U.S. states and 22 countries, and the United Nations
    SubCommission on Prevention of Discrimination and Protection of
    Minorities have officially recognized the Armenian Genocide.

    But citing "documents" and "scholars," the students at the meeting
    said it was not a fact. Mark Bhaskar, a second-year political science
    and Middle Eastern studies student who presented, read a quote calling
    the genocide a "secondary matter." Gülnaz Kiper, president of the
    Turkish Cultural Club and third-year psychology student, said there is
    "an open debate going on in Turkey" about the existence of the
    genocide.

    These statements are a flagrant denial of historical facts. Genocide
    denial should not happen anywhere, and especially not at a university
    that is supposed to be one of the best in the world. The students who
    called facts into question Tuesday night demonstrated a lack of moral
    conscience.

    At the meeting, Bhaskar said he thinks the resolution is "a racist
    attempt to drive a wedge between the Turkish and Armenian communities
    here at UCLA."

    The true wedge is the Turkish students' attempts to minimize a
    genocide and stand on the side of a government that denies its
    existence.

    The real divide comes from not listening to people who have lived
    through the truth and from standing in front of a group of peers and
    downplaying the murder of their people.

    Though Kiper said she doesn't think it matters if she calls it a
    genocide or not, it does. Words matter, whether they come from
    students or from official institutions that should know better.

    Of course, students from the Turkish Cultural Club are allowed to
    speak whether they are refusing to acknowledge historical truths or
    not. But rational UCLA students, professors and administrators need to
    speak louder.

    If this unworthy debate continues, UCLA officials and the UCLA
    community should make it known that they wholeheartedly support facts
    and condemn genocide denial. If the UCLA community does not speak up
    and criticize these acts when they continue, they are allowing for the
    profound disrespect of a people and their history.

    This is not just a battle for Armenian students to fight."


    http://www.armradio.am/en/2015/01/16/call-to-ucla-community-to-stand-against-armenian-genocide-denial/

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