CR: Rep. Waxman Commemorates Armenian Genocide

[Congressional Record: April 24, 2007 (Extensions)]
[Page E848]
From the Congressional Record Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]
[DOCID:cr24ap07-44]

NINETY-SECOND COMMEMORATION OF THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

______

speech of

HON. HENRY A. WAXMAN

of california

in the house of representatives

Monday, April 23, 2007

Mr. WAXMAN. Mr. Speaker, each year on April 24, Armenian communities
around the world gather in somber commemoration of the genocide that
began in 1915. Sadly, after 92 years, their grief is only compounded by
those who aggressively deny or raise doubt about this troubling chapter
of history.
This should be a day reserved for honoring the memory of those who
were killed and paying tribute to the strength of those who survived.
It should be a time to reflect on the personal narratives of those who
were exiled, the historical evidence of villages and communities that
were destroyed, and diplomatic cables from U.S. officials that
described the atrocities. It should be an opportunity to resolve
ourselves to fight crimes against humanity in all forms and all places.
Instead, year after year, April 24 unleashes a battle of semantics.
Those who acknowledge what happened in Armenia as a “tragedy,” a
“catastrophe,” or a “massacre” are correct. But nothing other than
the term “genocide” can wholly characterize the systematic
deportation of nearly 2 million Armenians and the deliberate
annihilation of 1.5 million men, women and children. Anything short of
that is unfair to those who perished and unhelpful to our plight
against future acts of genocide.

____________________

CR: Schiff – Why the Armenian Genocide Matters

[Congressional Record: April 23, 2007 (House)]
[Page H3755-H3756]
>From the Congressional Record Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]
[DOCID:cr23ap07-102]

WHY THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE MATTERS

The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under a previous order of the House, the
gentleman from California (Mr. Schiff) is recognized for 5 minutes.
(Mr. SCHIFF asked and was given permission to revise and extend his
remarks.)
Mr. SCHIFF. Mr. Speaker, tonight I plan to speak on the anniversary
of the Armenian genocide; but before I do, I want to join my colleagues
in expressing my sincere condolence at the passing of Juanita
Millender-McDonald, someone who in my very first days of Congress
impressed me as a courageous, intelligent, dedicated public servant
who, every time I went to her for help on an issue in her committee or
outside her committee, was generous with her time and her energy,
always ready to help, always of good cheer, and someone that I think
enjoyed the unanimous and bipartisan respect of everyone in this body.
Her memory will be cherished; her presence will be deeply missed.
Mr. Speaker, tomorrow marks the 92nd anniversary of the start of the
Armenian genocide. In January, I introduced a resolution in the House,
along with my colleagues, Mr. Pallone, Mr. Knollenberg and Mr.
Radanovich, that would recognize the Armenian genocide. This resolution
should be passed. Ghazaros Kademian is one reason why.
Ghazaros Kademian was just 6 years old when his family was forced
into exile by Ottoman Turks bent on annihilating the Armenian people.
His father was murdered by Turk gendarmes, and the rest of his family
was forced to flee on foot to Kirkuk, where his mother died from cold
and hunger. He was separated from his siblings and orphaned.
Mr. Kademian’s story is terrible, but is not remarkable. Over a
million and a half Armenians were murdered in the first genocide of the
last century as the Ottoman Empire used the cloak of war to wipe out a
people it considered alien or disloyal. This mammoth crime was well
known at the time. Newspapers of the day were filled with stories about
the murder of the Armenians. “Appeal to Turkey to Stop Massacres”
headlined the New York Times on April 28, 1915, just as the killing
began. By October 7 of that year, the Times reported that 800,000
Armenians had been slain in cold blood in Asia Minor. In mid-December
of 1915, the Times spoke of a million Armenians killed or in exile.
Thousands of pages of evidence documenting the atrocities rest in our
own National Archives. Prominent citizens of the day, including
America’s ambassador to the Ottoman Empire, Henry Morgenthau, and
Britain’s Lord Bryce, reported on the massacres in great detail.
Morgenthau was appalled at what he would later call sadistic orgies of
rape, torture, and murder. “When the Turkish authorities gave the
orders for these deportations, they were merely giving the death
warrant to a whole race. They understood this well and made no
particular attempt to conceal the fact.”
Even those who most ardently advocated sweeping the murder of a
million and a half people under the rug of history have conceded that
the vast majority of historians accept the Armenian genocide as
historic fact. And how could they not? For it was the Government of
Turkey that in early 1919 held a number of well-publicized trials of
some of the young Turk leaders and executed the Keimal Bey, governor of
Diarbekir, specifically for his role as one of the Ottoman Empire’s
most savage persecutors of the Armenian people. The trials were as
widely covered in the American press as was the genocide itself.
So if the facts are not in dispute, why are so many nations complicit
in modern Turkey’s strenuous efforts to deny

[[Page H3756]]

the genocide ever took place? First, opponents argue that recognizing
the unpleasant facts of the genocide and of the mass murder risk
alienating an important alliance with Turkey. There is no question that
Turkey is bitterly opposed to recognition and is threatening our
military and commercial relationship, including access to the Incirlik
air base, but Turkey has made similar threats to other nations in the
past only to retreat from them and the European Union’s insistence that
Ankara recognize the crimes of its Ottoman’s forebears before Turkey is
admitted to the EU has not dimmed Turkish enthusiasm for joining the
EU.
If Turkish relations with the U.S. do suffer, it is far more likely
that the genocide recognition will be a pretext. The Bush
administration has done such a poor job managing our relations with
Turkey over the last 6 years that we have already seen the limits of
the U.S.-Turkish alliance tested and found lacking.
During the run-up to the war in Iraq, Turkey denied us permission to
bring in ground forces from its soil, allowing the Saddam Fedeyeen to
melt away and form the basis of a now persistent insurgency. Oddly
enough, critics of recognition decry it as pandering to the victims,
but are only too happy to pander to the sensibilities of an
inconsistent ally, and one that has shown no qualms about accusing the
U.S. of genocide in Iraq.
Second, opponents take issue with the timing of the resolution and
argue that Turkey is making progress with recognizing the dark chapters
of its history. This claim lost all credibility when Orhan Pamuk,
Turkey’s Nobel Prize winning author, was brought up on charges of
“insulting Turkishness” for alluding to the genocide, and Turkish
Armenian publisher Hrant Dink was gunned down outside his office in
Istanbul earlier this year.
Tomorrow marks the 92nd Anniversary of start of the Armenian
Genocide. In January, I introduced a resolution in the House that would
recognize the Armenian Genocide. It should be passed. Ghazaros Kademian
is one reason why.
Ghazaros Kademian was just 6 years old when his family was forced
into exile by Ottoman Turks bent on annihilating the Armenian people.
His father was murdered by Turk gendarmes and the rest of the family
was forced to flee on foot to Kirkuk, where his mother died from cold
and hunger. He was separated from his siblings and orphaned.
Mr. Kademian’s story is terrible, but not remarkable. Over a million
and a half Armenians were murdered in the first genocide of the last
century as the Ottoman Empire used the cloak of war to wipe out a
people it considered alien and disloyal. This mammoth crime was well
known at the time; newspapers of the day were filled with stories about
the murder of Armenians. “Appeal to Turkey to stop massacres”
headlined the New York Times on April 28, 1915, just as the killing
began. By October 7 of that year, the Times reported that 800,000
Armenians had been slain in cold blood in Asia Minor. In mid-December
of 1915, the Times spoke of a million Armenians killed or in exile.
Thousands of pages of evidence documenting the atrocities rest in our
own National Archives.
Prominent citizens of the day, including America’s Ambassador to the
Ottoman Empire, Henry Morgenthau, and Britain’s Lord Bryce reported on
the massacres in great detail. Morgenthau was appalled at what he would
later call the sadistic orgies of rape, torture, and murder. “When the
Turkish authorities gave the orders for these deportations, they were
merely giving the death warrant to a whole race; they understood this
well, and . . . made no particular attempt to conceal the fact.”
Even those who have most ardently advocated sweeping the murder of a
million and a half people under the rug of history have conceded that
the vast majority of historians accept the Armenian Genocide as
historical fact. And how could they not–for it was the Government of
Turkey that, in early 1919, held a number of well-publicized trials of
some of the Young Turk leaders and executed Keimal Bey, the governor of
Diarbekir, specifically for his role as one of the Ottoman Empire’s
most savage persecutors of the Armenian people. The trials, by the way,
were as widely covered in the American press as was the genocide
itself.
So if the facts are not in dispute, why are so many nations complicit
in modern Turkey’s strenuous efforts to deny the genocide ever took
place? First, opponents argue that recognizing the unpleasant fact of
mass murder risks alienating our important alliance with Turkey. There
is no question that Turkey is bitterly opposed to recognition, and is
threatening our military and commercial relationship, including access
to the Incirlik air base. But Turkey has made similar threats to other
nations in the past only to retreat from them and the European Union’s
insistence that Ankara recognize the crimes of its Ottoman forebears
before Turkey is admitted to the EU has not dimmed Turkish enthusiasm
for joining the EU.
If Turkish relations with the U.S. do suffer, it is far more likely
that the genocide recognition will be a pretext; the Bush
Administration has done such a poor job managing our relations with
Turkey over the last six years that we have already seen the limits of
the U.S. Turkish alliance tested and found lacking. During the run-up
to the war in Iraq, Turkey denied us permission to bring in ground
forces from its soil, allowing the Saddam Fedeyeen to melt away and
form the basis of a now persistent insurgency. Oddly enough, critics of
recognition decry it as pandering to the victims, but are only too
happy to pander to the sensibilities of an inconstant ally, and one
that has shown no qualms about accusing the U.S. of genocide in Iraq.
Second, opponents take issue with the timing of the resolution and
argue that Turkey is making progress with recognizing the dark chapters
of its history. This claim lost all credibility when Orhan Pamuk,
Turkey’s Nobel Prize winning author was brought up on charges for
“insulting Turkishness” for alluding to the genocide, and Turkish
Armenian publisher Hrant Dink was gunned down outside his office in
Istanbul earlier this year. Yet some opponents go even further, such as
a former Ambassador to Turkey who argued that the time may never be
right for America to comment “on another’s history or morality.” Such
a ludicrous policy would condemn Congress to silence on a host of human
rights abuses around the world. After more than ninety years and with
only a few survivors left, if the time is not right now to recognize
the Armenian Genocide, when will it be?
But the most pernicious argument against recognition is the claim
that speaking the truth would harm relations with Turkey “for no good
reason.” How can we claim the moral authority to decry the genocide in
Darfur, as we must, if we are unwilling to deplore other genocides when
it would inconvenience an ally? Elie Wiesel has described the denial of
genocide as the final stage of genocide–a double killing. If you don’t
think he’s right, talk to Ghazaros Kademian. But you had better hurry.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under a previous order of the House, the
gentlewoman from California (Ms. Eshoo) is recognized for 5 minutes.
(Ms. ESHOO addressed the House. Her remarks will appear hereafter in
the Extensions of Remarks.)

Karabakh travel agencies will participate in international expos

Karabakh travel agencies will participate in international expos

29-04-2007 12:17:54 – KarabakhOpen

In 2007 the government allocated 2 million drams for the promotion
of tourism, informed the ministry of territorial administration and
development of infrastructures.

The money will be spent on booklets, the creation of a travel
information service, and a documentary film lasting for 10 minutes. 300
thousand drams will be spent on the creation of a photo gallery, 160
thousand for participation of travel agencies of NKR in international
and regional expos.

We were also told at the ministry that 7854 thousand drams of
investments in the travel business are expected from individuals and
donors. 3080 thousand drams will be provided for the participation of
the Karabakh travel agencies in MITF 2007 international expo in Moscow
and 100 thousand for the stand of NKR in GST 2007 in Yerevan. Besides,
it is planned to set up a Web site on the travel resources of Karabakh,
as well as to publish the Karabakh Guide in Russian.

Toilets in dormitory are shining with cleanness

Toilets in dormitory are shining with cleanness

Naira Hayrumyan
29-04-2007 12:17:52 – KarabakhOpen

The reporter of the KarabakhOpen visited today together with the
representatives of the City Hall of Stepanakert and Water and Sewage
the dormitory at 120 Alex Manoogian Street. Our readers perhaps
remember reports in the media a few months ago on the epidemic of
yellow fever at the dormitory.

The reporters who had visited the five-storey building during the
epidemic were amazed by the awful state of sanitation at the dormitory
which has over 300 residents, half of them children. There are two
lavatories on each floor.

The building smells humidity from the worn pierced pipes and the
leaking roof. Children in every family have serious problems with
lungs. The basement is flooded withwater, the walls are covered with
mould, and people are mad of living in such conditions.

The residents of the dormitory, which was built in the 1960s for
the workers of the silk factory, demanded that the government solve
their problem of housing. "We deserve a better home," says Mania,
who has lived at the dormitory for 46 years, all her life.

The state and non-governmental media unanimously demanded solving
the problem of the dormitory. After these reports the government
set up a commission which decided after a study to allocate funds
for the repair of the roof and the lavatories of the dormitories
at 120 and 121 Alex Manoogian. Now the repair of the roof is over,
part of the lavatories of the dormitory were also repaired. Today the
opening of five lavatories took place. The residents are satisfied,
but Arev Mikaelyan, a resident, said this is not a solution of the
problem. "How long are we going to live in such conditions? Yes,
after the repair it will be more clean and comfortable. But we wait
until we get apartments.

They promised to provide the new building near the incubator but they
say the apartments are for sale," said Arev Mikaelyan.

"On these days the repair of the other five lavatories will start. The
problem will be solved gradually. If the building is not humid,
the health of the residents will improve," said Irina Khurshudyan,
a senior official of the City Hall.

"The state of the building was awful. Everything shines now. Now it
is up to the residents to keep it clean. We also provided mirrors
and hangers," said Vania Gasparyan, the president of the contractor.

We are happy that after our signal of alarm the government took steps
to relieve the problems of the residents.

The report is the result of failure of Armenian policy in the relati

The report is the result of failure of Armenian policy in the relations with
the United States

29-04-2007 12:17:51 – KarabakhOpen

The debate over the U.S. State Department Armenia country report
on human rights practices continues. The politicians are trying to
evaluate the state of things and forecast the consequences.

"From the point of view of legal force, it cannot have a direct
influence on the settlement of the Karabakh issue. On the other hand,
the report is highly important. After all, the United States has a
great importance in the world and is one of the three co-chairs of
the Minsk Group," said the chair of the Committee of Industry and
Infrastructures Gagik Petrosyan in an interview with the KarabakhOpen.

"The change in the report of the U.S. State Department is due to the
following factors: first, the failure of the policy of Armenia in the
relations with the United States, second, possible attack of the United
States on Iran, and the role of Azerbaijan as an emplacement, third,
the factor of oil, fourth, the parliamentary election in Armenia,
namely an effort to denigrate the pro-government forces of Armenia.

The confrontation of the United States and its partners on the one hand
and Russia together with his partners on the other hand in the Caucasus
is gradually outlining. In this context Russia should try to settle the
situation and set up direct relations with NKR," said Gagik Petrosyan.

Armenia probes into eavesdropped talk involving British diplomat

Armenia probes into eavesdropped talk involving British diplomat

Haykakan Zhamanak, Yerevan
26 Apr 07

Excerpt from report by Armenian newspaper Haykakan Zhamanak on 26
April headlined "Whom is the National Security Service going to
investigate?" and subheaded "The leader of the New Times Party,
Aram Karapetyan, was invited to the office of the National Security
Service yesterday"

Officers of the National Security Service [NSS] have questioned
[Aram Karapetyan, leader of the New Times Party] about a CD, which
contained a secretly recorded conversation between the leader of the
Orinats Yerkir (Law-governed Country) Party [OYP], Artur Baghdasaryan,
and a British diplomat.

The CD appeared in the office of the Golos Armenii newspaper, which
published the conversation. During the conversation, Baghdasaryan
allegedly urged international observers to give very negative
assessment of Armenia’s parliamentary election.

The NSS has decided to investigate the issue. NSS chief Gorik Hakobyan
has sent his representative to the editorial office of the newspaper
and wanted to receive the CD to launch an official investigation.

The leader of the New Times Party, Aram Karapetyan, has said that he
has also received a CD with the same content. He was invited to the
NSS yesterday.

Karapetyan explained how he had received the CD. He gave a copy of it
to the NSS and said that unidentified people had left it by his door.

It is very interesting how the NSS is gong to investigate the case.

Only few people doubt that the conversation between Artur Baghdasaryan
and the British diplomat was secretly recorded by the NSS itself.

Karapetyan also believes that no-one but the NSS could have done
the secret recording in Yerevan’s Marco Polo restaurant. He says
that the recording was publicized in order to discredit the people
[involved in the conversation] and to threaten the international
community. By making it public the authorities tried to create an
atmosphere of fear in the republic. This means that now people have
to realize that they could be eavesdropped everywhere and anytime,
and its consequences could be very serious for them.

Aram Karapetyan said in the NSS office that he did not doubt that the
NSS listened in all members of the opposition. Everybody knows this.

However, a foreign diplomat being eavesdropped and the recording
being published in the media is something new.

[Passage omitted]

Turkish Prime Minister Dismisses Bribe Offer Accusations Against One

TURKISH PRIME MINISTER DISMISSES BRIBE OFFER ACCUSATIONS AGAINST ONE
OF HIS FRIENDS

ANKARA, APRIL 28, NOYAN TAPAN. One of the closest friends of the
Turkish prime minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan offered a bribe to members
of the Republican People’s Party in return for their voting at the
presidential elections.

Chairman of the above mentioned party Deniz Baykal stated this during
a program broadcast by CNN Turk. "Yesterday we saw one of Erdogan’s
closest friends and the most famous Turkish businessmen looking for
a member of our party, saying that he is "ready to meet his material
demands," Baykal said.

According to "Milliyet", Recep Tayyip Erdogan convened a press
conference, at which he dismissed and criticized Baykal’s statements.

To recap, Deniz Baykal refused to assist the foreign minister Adullah
Gul, who was proposed as a candidate for presidency, in the issue of
securing the necessary number of MPs at the presidential elections.

Police Finds Address Of Orhan Pamuk Upon Searching Young Man Who Com

POLICE FINDS ADDRESS OF ORHAN PAMUK UPON SEARCHING YOUNG MAN WHO
COMMITTED ATTEMPTED MURDER PREVIOUS DAY

ANKARA, APRIL 28, NOYAN TAPAN. The police discovered written records
with information about some famous people upon searching Nurullah
Ilgun who was arrested for attemepted murder of Erdogan Tezic,
Chairman of Turkey’s Higher Education Board. According to "Zaman",
visting cards a member of the "National Army" union and some lawyers,
as well as information about chairmen of the "True Path" and "Great
Unity" parties were found. It is noteworthy that the home address
of Orhan Pamuk, winner of the 2006 Nobel Literature Prize, was also
found. Ilgun did not say why he had Pamik’s address with him.
From: Baghdasarian

Congressional Record: Rep. Berman Commemorates Armenian Genocide

[Congressional Record: April 24, 2007 (Extensions)]
[Page E847-E848]
>>From the Congressional Record Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]
[DOCID:cr24ap07-42]

NINETY-SECOND COMMEMORATION OF THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

______

speech of

HON. HOWARD L. BERMAN

of california

in the house of representatives

Monday, April 23, 2007

Mr. BERMAN. Mr. Speaker, today, April 24th, marks the 92nd
anniversary of the beginning of the Armenian Genocide. I rise today to
commemorate this terrible chapter in human history, and to help ensure
that it will never be forgotten.
On April 24, 1915, the Turkish government began to arrest Armenian
community and political leaders. Many were executed without ever being
charged with crimes. Then the government deported most Armenians from
Turkish Armenia, ordering that they resettle in what is now Syria. Many
deportees never reached that destination.
From 1915 to 1918, more than a million Armenians died of starvation
or disease on long marches, or were massacred outright by Turkish
forces. From 1918 to 1923, Armenians continued to suffer at the hands
of the Turkish military, which eventually removed all remaining
Armenians from Turkey.
We mark this anniversary of the start of the Armenian Genocide
because this tragedy for the Armenian people was a tragedy for all
humanity. It is our duty to remember, to speak out and to teach future
generations about the horrors of genocide and the oppression and
terrible suffering endured by the Armenian people.
We hope the day will soon come when it is not just the survivors who
honor the dead but also when those whose ancestors perpetrated the
horrors acknowledge their terrible responsibility and commemorate as
well the memory of genocide’s victims.
Sadly, we cannot say humanity has progressed to the point where
genocide has become unthinkable. We have only to recall the “killing
fields” of Cambodia, mass killings in Rwanda, “ethnic cleansing” in
Bosnia and Kosovo, and the unspeakable horrors in Darfur, Sudan to see
that the threat of genocide persists. We must renew our commitment
never to remain indifferent in the face of such assaults on innocent
human beings.
We also remember this day because it is a time for us to celebrate
the contribution of the

[[Page E848]]

Armenian community in America–including hundreds of thousands in
California–to the richness of our character and culture. The strength
they have displayed in overcoming tragedy to flourish in this country
is an example for all of us. Their success is moving testimony to the
truth that tyranny and evil cannot extinguish the vitality of the human
spirit.
The United States has an ongoing opportunity to contribute to a true
memorial to the past by strengthening Armenia’s emerging democracy. We
must do all we can through aid and trade to support Armenia’s efforts
to construct an open political and economic system.
Adolf Hitler, the architect of the Nazi Holocaust, once remarked
“Who remembers the Armenians?” The answer is, we do. And we will
continue to remember the victims of the 1915-23 genocide because, in
the words of the philosopher George Santayana, “Those who cannot
remember the past are condemned to repeat it.”

____________________

MFA of Armenia: Oskanian Speaks On Genocide Remembrance in Brussels

MINISTRY OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS OF THE REPUBLIC OF ARMENIA
—————————————— —-
PRESS AND INFORMATION DEPARTMENT
Government House # 2, Republic Square
Yerevan 0010, Republic of Armenia
Telephone: +37410. 544041 ext 202
Fax: +37410. 562543
Email: [email protected]

INFORM ATION FOR JOURNALISTS

26-04-2007

Minister Oskanian Speaks On Genocide Remembrance in Brussels

The Royal Conservatory of Belgium was full of diplomats, journalists and
students on April 25 as Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian highlighted a
Commemorative Evening under the auspices of the Armenian Embassy in
Brussels.

The Minister¹s talk, entitled ³Remembering a Past, Forging a Future,²
addressed the nature and purpose of remembering. He spoke about Armenia¹s
readiness for normal relations with Turkey, even as the Genocide and its
impact are remembered and recognized. [For the full text of the Minister¹s
remarks, see below.]

Belgian Senator Roelants du Vivier, head of the Belgian Senate¹s Committee
on Foreign Affairs, spoke about the imperative of acknowledging both to
honor genocide victims and to prevent future atrocities. He related how,
during a recent visit to Yerevan, in the Tsitsernakaberd Genocide Memorial
museum, he was moved by the display of Hitler¹s words. The Belgian Senator
had, in 1987, joined in the first Genocide recognition resolution passed by
the European Parliament.

Noted violinist Sergei Khachatrian, who in 2005 had won Belgium¹a Queen
Elisabeth Prize, performed pieces by Bach, Komitas and Franck. He, with
Lusine Khachatrian on piano, received the audience¹s deep appreciation.

Speech by H. E. Vartan Oskanian
Minister of Foreign Affairs
At a Commemorative Evening
Conservatoire Royal
Brussels, April 25, 2007

Thank you Mr. du Vivier, for sharing this evening with us and conveying your
message from the halls of Brussels. And thank you Sergey and Lusine. Sergey
graciously accepted my invitation to join us this evening, because I knew
well that Sergey¹s ³message² will resonate in this hall and stay with us
as the context for an evening of commemoration.

This is an evening of commemoration, much like those that are being held in
nearly every major city around the world this week. It¹s a day of
remembrance much like those that have been held every year for the last half
century.

But over these years, and especially since independence, the nature and the
purpose of our remembering have changed.

I would like to speak with you today not just about our past, but about our
future. I want to set the record straight about what we want for our people,
our country and our neighborhood. And I want to do that here in this
European capital that is the symbol of unity and not divisiveness.

Today, I want to talk about what we remember, how we remember and how the
reasons for remembering have evolved, just as our communities, our country
and the world around us have evolved. We have had a difficult, painful past
that we will continue to remember and honor. But let me be clear: we don¹t
want to live in the past. We want to reconcile with the past as we forge a
future.

In Aleppo, Syria, where I grew up, remembering rituals consisted mainly of
gathering to hear the stories of someone who had suffered things we could
not really imagine. Aleppo was the end of the road for those who were
deported and marched thru the deserts. This is where those with no hope of
returning to their homes set up ramshackle, flimsy refugee camps, trying to
cope with enormous loss, with wounds that refused to heal.

I think back now at our naïve efforts to lessen the grief of the survivors
by encouraging them to forget and not to speak of their experiences. We did
not understand that their lives and outlooks, memories and experiences were
forever traumatized. That is how they lived, how they raised their children,
how they interacted with the societies and countries in which they found
refuge. This we learned years later, as we read about Holocaust survivors
trying to cope.

Only when solitary memories were transformed into formal, community-wide
tributes, did the survivors begin to feel that their own individual
histories of horror had significance beyond the personal. Remembering became
a shared activity, a commemoration. Decades later, programs such as
Remembering the Cambodian Genocide, and the Remembering Rwanda Project
served the same purpose.

For Armenians, commemorations became the outlet for the disbelief and
outrage at how this historical event deeply affected our way of being in the
world, our sense of personal and collective identity. This was a new
generation, no longer victims, a generation that had come to understand that
what had been done had been done not to 1.5 million individual Armenians who
comprised 2/3 of a nation, but to an entire people who had been massacred,
uprooted, deported and whose way of life, whose culture and history, had
forever been altered. And all this, by government decree.

For a long time, we memorialized these events by ourselves. We were left
alone because there were two versions of history ­ the official and the
alleged. The acknowledged and the denied. The Ottoman Empire that fell was
succeeded by a Republic with an immaculate, almost divine, self-image. Such
murderous acts and their tolerance could not fit within this
self-definition. Therefore, a new history was invented in which these acts
never happened. The crimes were never committed.
The records of their own military tribunals were ignored, the eyewitness
reports of missionaries and diplomats were disputed.

Our history became the Oalleged¹ truth. Their history was the official
truth. And since the official truth had the backing of the entire state
apparatus, ours became the forgotten genocide.

Occasionally, some would raise their voices against forgetting, and for
condemnation. In 1987, Mr. du Villier and others introduced a resolution at
the European Parliament, calling the events of 1915, Genocide. Since then, a
host of countries have joined us in recognition and in commemoration.

These commemorations are very critical in the face of growing threat of
genocide in the world today from Bosnia to Rwanda to Darfur.

Commemoration is a way of countering the distortion of history, countering
the subversion of truth by power.

Commemoration is the victory of truth over expediency.

Commemoration is a condemnation of the violence.

Commemoration is a call to responsibility, and therefore to prevention.

Commemoration is an acknowledgement of the past, and even the present, but
not an obstacle to the future.

And herein lies the irony ­ I don¹t want to say impasse — in our
relations today, with Turkey.

We cannot build a future alone. But neither can we build a future together
with a neighbor that is disingenuous about the past, our common past.
This Monday¹s International Herald Tribune carried an ad that also ran in
many major newspapers around the world. It is a perfect distillation of
Turkey¹s willful blindness to historical and political processes
surrounding it. Just as it succeeded in creating a new history for itself,
it wants the world and us to dismiss all other histories not in line with
its own.

Turkey calls for Armenians to agree to a historical commission to study the
genocide. Not because none have ever convened, but because Turkey does not
like their conclusions! Reputable institutions such as the International
Assn of Genocide Scholars, the International Center for Transitional Justice
have seriously studied these historic events, independent of political
pressures, and independently arrived at the conclusion that the events of
1915 constituted Genocide.

Does Turkey want to go shopping for yet another commission, hoping for
different results? It has gagged its writers and historians with a criminal
code that punishes free speech. What does it expect these historians to
study? And with a closed border between our two countries, how does it
expect these historians will meet to explore this topic? This is why we
wonder about the sincerity and usefulness of the historical commission idea.

Despite these obvious obstacles to serious scholarly exchange, we have
agreed to an intergovernmental commission that can discuss everything, so
long as there are open borders between our two countries. If Turkey needs
discussion, we are ready to cooperate. But we don¹t want discussion for
discussion¹s sake; we don¹t want discussion of the past to replace
today¹s
vital political processes that are essential for us, for Turkey, for the
region. Yes, we want to explore and understand our common past, together.
But we don¹t want that past to be the sole link between our peoples and our
countries. We don¹t want that past to condition the future.

We, the victims of Genocide, have not made Turkey¹s recognition of that act
conditional for our present or future relations. Turkey, however, wants
Armenians in and out of Armenia to renounce our past, to understand their
denial of our past, as a condition for moving forward. Who is trapped in the
past?

I welcome the words of a Turkish intellectual who has said, I am neither
guilty nor responsible for what was done 90 years ago. But I feel
responsible for what can be done now.

I, too, believe that we must distinguish between the Ottoman Empire and
today¹s government of Turkey. But I must say that although that is possible
to do when speaking of the events of 1915, it becomes increasingly difficult
to do when speaking about the denial of the Turkish state today. As Elie
Wiesel said, the denial of genocide is the continuation of genocide So, how
do we distinguish between the two states, if the ideology that is put forth
and defended is the same?. This policy of denial is both intellectually and
morally bankrupt. And it is costing us all time. The later they get around
to making a distinction between their stand and that of their predecessors,
the harder it will be to dissociate the two regimes in people¹s minds.

It is absurd that 92 years later, Turkey can say, in public, that the
Armenian allegations of genocide have never been historically or legally
substantiated.

Dear Friends,

Armenians were one of the largest minorities of the Ottoman Empire. Where
did they go? Is it possible that all our grandmothers and grandfathers
colluded and created stories? Where are the descendants of the Armenians who
built the hundreds of churches and monasteries whose ruins still stand
today? What kind of open and honest discussion is possible with a government
that loudly and proudly announces its renovation of the medieval Armenian
jewel of a church, Akhtamar in Lake Van, while it carefully, consistently,
removes every reference to its Armenianness from all literature and signs?
What is Turkey afraid of?

It is a political reality that Armenia is not a security threat to Turkey.
It is a political reality that both Turkey and Armenia exist today in the
international community with their current borders.

Today, as the Foreign Minister of the Republic of Armenia, as the grandson
of genocide survivors, I can only say that Armenia and Turkey are neighbors
who will remain neighbors. We share a border. We can only move forward
together.

There is no national history in a vacuum. It can neither be created nor
transcended in a vacuum. For France and Germany, England and France, Poland
and Germany, in order to transcend their histories of conflict, they had to
transcend the past together to transform their future. That, too, can only
be done together.

Not always does history give mankind a second chance. In this neighborhood,
with our neighbors, we have a second chance. We can make history, again, by
transcending boundaries and opening the last closed border in Europe and
moving forward, together.

Europe ­ the premise of Europe and the legacy of Europe ­ is the distinct
promise of our age. Europe is where one takes from the past whatever is
necessary to move forward. Europe is where former enemies and adversaries
can dismiss and condemn actions, policies and processes, but not peoples.
Instead, people in Europe move from remorse to reconciliation, and embrace
the future. This is precisely what we want to do in our region. Thank you.

–Boundary_(ID_fCB0PuR9UJ6RsqJJCjvEKg)–

www.armeniaforeignministry.am