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Did Israel's President Recognize the Armenian Genocide at the UN?

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  • Did Israel's President Recognize the Armenian Genocide at the UN?

    Did Israel's President Recognize the Armenian Genocide at the UN?
    Wednesday, January 28th, 2015 | Posted by Contributor





    Israel's President Reuven Rivlin implicitly recognizes Armenian Genocide
    during remarks at UN General Assembly

    UNITED NATIONS--In remarks in front of the General Assembly on Wednesday,
    Israel's President Reuven Rivlin seems to have recognized the Armenian
    Genocide.

    As the Israeli newspaper Haaretz reported
    , Rivlin
    recognized the Armenian Genocide during the General Assembly's Holocaust
    memorial while he was defending Israel against what he called "cynical"
    accusations of genocide and war crimes in his country's dealing with
    Palestinians.

    Rivlin called on the UN to set boundaries beyond which it would intervene
    to stop acts of genocide. He then said:"At the same time we must remember
    that the setting of red lines requires us to stop diluting and cynically
    exploiting them in the name of pseudo objectivity, as is done in the
    rhetoric of human rights with the use of terms such as 'genocide' for
    political purposes," reported Haaretz.

    "Nonetheless, absurd comparisons... which we as Israelis are exposed to
    constantly... not only confuse the ally with the enemy, but they undermine
    this house's ability to effectively fight the phenomenon of genocide," said
    Rivlin according to Haaretz.

    Yaron Weiss
    ,
    an Israeli human rights activist and an advocate of Genocide recognition,
    shared with Asbarez a translation, by Yoav Loeff, of Rivlin's remarks,
    which were made in Hebrew at the UN General Assembly.

    Rivlin said: "In 1915, the days of the Armenian Genocide, Avshalom Feinberg
    of the NILI underground [A Jewish spy network in Ottoman Palestine] wrote
    the following: 'My teeth have been worn away by anger, who is next? I have
    walked on sacred and holy ground, on the road to Jerusalem, and asked
    myself if it is this time that we live in--1915-or in the days of Titus or
    Nebuchadnezzar? And I asked myself whether I may cry for the hurt of the
    daughter of My people alone and if Jeremiah did not shed his tears of blood
    also for the Armenians?'"

    Rivlin added: "Feinberg wrote that exactly 100 years ago. 100 years of
    hesitation and denial. In the Land of Israel of the time, in which I was
    born, no one denied the murder that occurred. The residents of Jerusalem,
    my parents, saw them coming by thousands, starving, burning sticks snatched
    from the fire. In Jerusalem they found refuge and their descendants live
    there to this day."

    In December, Asbarez, citing Israeli sources, reported

    that Rivlin, once an outspoken advocate of Israel's recognition of the
    Armenian Genocide, decided not to renew his signature on an annual petition
    calling for Israel to officially recognize the mass killings as Genocide.

    Perhaps, when faced with accusations by members of the UN, he decided that
    he would do the right thing.

    http://asbarez.com/131240/did-israel%E2%80%99s-president-recognize-the-armenian-genocide-at-the-un/


    From: Baghdasarian
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