President Sargsyan’s Speech On 100th Anniversary Of The Armenian Gen

PRESIDENT SARGSYAN’S SPEECH ON 100TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

12:15, 24 Apr 2015
Siranush Ghazanchyan

Today – the day of the 100th Anniversary of the Armenian Genocide
– RA President Serzh Sargsyan, Chairman of the State Commission
on Coordination of the Events for the Commemoration of the 100th
Anniversary of the Armenian Genocide, accompanied by heads of numerous
senior-level delegations and heads of state who have arrived in
Armenia, visited the Tsitsernakaberd Memorial Complex and took part
in the commemorative ceremony of the Armenian Genocide Centennial.

President Serzh Sargsyan delivered a speech.

Statement by Serzh Sargsyan, the President of the Republic of Armenia,
in Tsitsernakaberd

Honorable Presidents, Distinguished representatives of states and
international organizations; Your Holiness, Eminences, Esteemed Guests,
My fellow compatriots,

We stand on Tsitsernakaberd Hill today to commemorate the victims
of the Armenian Genocide. On the 24th of April, this day a hundred
years ago, the extensive enactment of one of the gravest crimes of the
20th century began with mass arrests of the Armenian intellectuals in
Constantinople, the capital of the Ottoman Empire, and other cities of
the empire. It had been preceded by the disarmament and massacre of the
Armenian servicemen. What subsequently happened in 1915 and the years
that followed was unprecedented in terms of volume and ramifications.

The Western part of the Armenian people, who for millennia had lived
in their homeland, in the cradle of their civilization, were displaced
and annihilated under a state-devised plan with direct participation
of the army, police, other state institutions, and gangs comprised
of criminals released from the prisons specifically for this purpose.

Human language is not capable of describing all that was experienced
by a whole nation. Around 1.5 million human beings were slaughtered
merely for being Armenian, as unimaginable atrocities of the human
race became concealed in eternal silence. Some survived, with their
life stories conveyed as historical testaments to generations to come.

Yesterday, the Armenian Apostolic Church canonized the martyrs of the
Armenian Genocide. They are victims no more. They are saints, whose
blood was shed, victorious over death and evil, heavenly soldiers
calling for justice.

Dear Attendees,

Unfortunately, April left a black trace in the history of not only
the Armenian people, but humankind as whole. April is also the month
in which the perpetration of the Holocaust, and crimes of genocide
in Rwanda and Cambodia commenced. We stand here today, in the very
month of April, in Tsitsernakaberd — the Armenian Genocide Memorial,
to proclaim: May there never again be a need to erect a memorial to
commemorate new disgraceful chapters of history anywhere in the world!

May there be no more need for a new Tsitsernakaberd, Yad Vashem,
Killing Fields, and Gisozi!

May this message rise to the skies, intertwining with the profoundly
symbolic liturgy served yesterday at the Mother See of Holy
Etchmiadzin, and the consonant peals of the Sister Churches in all
corners of the world, may it dispel the hundred-year-long darkness
of denial, and put an end to the suffering of people experiencing the
horrors of genocide even in the modern day, in the 21st century. This
is the testament that reached us, and it is our duty to convey it to
the generations to come.

The goal of our policy, anchored in memory and responsibility, is
to form effective mechanisms for preventing future crimes against
humanity. As Pope Francis justly said, “concealing or denying evil
is like allowing a wound to keep bleeding without bandaging it.” The
wound is bleeding, because there is too much neutrality, silence,
and denial around the world, and there is still too little humanity.

We shall not forget that for centuries humanism and benevolence have
been the engine that led the formation of international human rights
mechanisms. Moral aspirations and universal values were what inspired
Henry Dunant to lay the ground for creation of the International
Committee of the Red Cross. Moral values and the horrifying reality of
the Armenian Genocide were what urged Raphael Lemkin to coin the term
“genocide,” which would unfortunately have to be used over and over
again. As a matter of fact, when Lemkin was asked what genocide was,
he answered that it was what happened to the Armenians.

As we speak, there are still too many instances of denying universal
values and contorting history, which pave the way to the recurrence
of these crimes: we can all see the situation in the Middle East.

We must find solutions before humankind once more breaks its “never
again” vow. It seems that the Armenian Genocide Centenary has become a
new milestone in the international fight against these crimes: in the
last period, countries around the world and international organizations
recognized the first Genocide of the 20th Century, some reaffirmed
their recognition, and others criminalized attempts of its denial,
all sharing the belief that it is the only way to shed light on the
dark pages of the world history and to prevent such pages from being
written ever again.

Distinguished Guests,

Hundreds of thousands of Armenians perished in the Deir-ez-Zor desert
after suffering displacement and exile. A monument and a church were
built in Deir-ez-Zor, and the remains of our martyrs were laid to rest
there. A few years ago, I stood near that Church and said these words:
“We plan to live and multiply. It is no longer possible to intimidate
or to blackmail us, because we have experienced the most horrible. We
shall live and create twice as vigorously–for us, and for our innocent
victims. We look to the future, because we still have much to say
and to share with one another, we have much to say and to give to the
world.” When I stood near the Deir-ez-Zor church and said these words,
I was, like today, looking to the future. Last year, the church and
the monument were simply blown up. To this very day, there are some
who are yet at unease with the remains and bones of our victims.

This is the reality today. This is why the issue is pressing.

Human memory is a unique sieve of history. Global history shall
always remember and cherish all the individuals, countries, and
international organizations that came to help at the hardest times
and saved not only the physical existence of millions of people,
but also the ruined faith in humanity.

Around the world, conscience and probity are withstanding the cruel,
but retreating machine of the Armenian Genocide denial. Conscience
and probity are the antipodes of denial. Recognition of the Genocide
is not the world’s tribute to the Armenian people and our martyrs.

Recognition of the Genocide is the triumph of human conscience and
justice over intolerance and hatred.

Hence, on behalf of all Armenians, I am grateful to you, President
Anastasiades, President NikoliÄ~G, President Hollande, President Putin.

I am grateful to the whole international community, represented here by
many of your states and international organizations. I am grateful to
all those that stand by our side, to all those that wish to be by our
side. We are grateful to the global civil society and international
press representatives that have been voicing the importance of the
Armenian Genocide recognition. We are grateful to all people of good
will — all those who stood by the side of the Armenian people in the
course of commemoration events around the world this year. We are
grateful to those who gathered at Taksim Square in Istanbul today:
they are strong people who are standing for the right cause for
their fatherland.

The Armenian people will always remain standing by the side of those
who suffered from crimes against humanity. The unyielding international
struggle against crimes of genocide will remain an integral part of
our foreign policy.

I am grateful to all of you for being here to reiterate your commitment
to universal values, to say that nothing has been forgotten, and to
say that, a hundred years past, we remember and we demand.

From: Baghdasarian

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