BAKU: Belarus Prepared To Provide Every Assistance On Final Document

BELARUS PREPARED TO PROVIDE EVERY ASSISTANCE ON FINAL DOCUMENT ON RESOLUTION
OF NAGORNO-KARABAKH CONFLICT IN MINSK – BELARUSIAN AMBASSADOR
Author: S.Agayeva

TREND Information, Azerbaijan
Nov 8 2006

Nikolay Patzkevich, the Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary Ambassador
of Belarus to Azerbaijan, stated on 8 November in Baku that Belarus
is prepared to provide every assistance to the final document on the
resolution of the [Armenian-Azerbaijani] Nagorno-Karabakh conflict
in Minsk.

We are deeply concerned about the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. We
understand the essence and outcome of the conflict, he noted. "As
a result of our experience of the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Station,
Belarus fully understands the problems of internally displaced people,"
the diplomat stated. It results in multi-million losses in funds,
moral and human losses for the Government and the State.

"We hope the conflict will be resolved on the basis of international
principles and are prepared to render every assistance on the signing
of a peace agreement in Minsk."

Turkish Policy Tried To Arrest Armenian MP For Statements On Genocid

TURKISH POLICY TRIED TO ARREST ARMENIAN MP FOR STATEMENTS ON GENOCIDE

PanARMENIAN.Net
04.11.2006 15:24 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The meeting of Newsxchange international forum
opened in Istanbul November 2.

Responsible for Haylur information program of the Public TV Company
of Armenia Harut Harutyunyan and Information Department Head
of Yerkir-Media TV channel, MP, ARF Dashnaktsutyun member Gegham
Manukyan took part in it. Turkish PM Erdogan addressing the meeting
reaffirmed Turkish official stand that there was no Genocide. In
response to Erdogan’s statement that owing to the war Armenians of
border regions of the Ottoman Empire were merely deported, Gegham
Manukyan asked a question how it could happen that Ottoman MP Grigor
Zohrap was arrested and killed. He also stated that Istanbul is a
city, symbolizing the beginning of the Armenian Genocide by arrests
of Armenian intelligentsia on April 24, 1915. Gegham Manukyan urged
the Turkish society and especially journalists to study these dark
pages of their history and recognize the fact of the Armenian Genocide.

During his speech he raised a poster, on which it was written in
English, "Turkey should find courage to recognize the Armenian
Genocide." Then Gegham Manukyan was surrounded by policemen, who
wanted to take him out of the hall. However, journalists prevented
this by asking Manukyan for a news conference. Manukyan repeated his
urge in English and Turkish. The organizers of the session stated
that if Manukyan is arrested, they will join him, reports the Yerkir.

Nepal: Reflections on Turks and Armenians, Nations and Society

PeaceJournalism.com, Nepal
Nov 3 2006

Reflections on Turks and Armenians, Nations and Society

Editorial Opinion Posted On: 2006-11-03 18:07:55

By: Greg Somerville Unsettled

It is unsettling to think about some matter after we have learned
that the words we were going to use are themselves in question, and
that we had best avoid them in order to speak truly. But it is a
constant possibility we must acknowledge.

In speaking about peoples located here and there, banded together as
nations, yet sharing across today’s borders most of the features
which enable us to recognize society and culture, we use words like
‘French’ or ‘British’ or ‘Irish’ or ‘German’ without much worry. You
have to start somewhere. But then you look a bit more deeply at
history and at conflict and you begin to wonder whether the conflict
has been misconceived, even by its participants. Nagging doubts begin
to complicate your life. Who shall we say was fighting? Who were
these people and what sort of a fight was that? And who should say?

Elizabeth Kolbert has written a short piece in the November 6, 2006,
edition of The New Yorker, describing the Armenians and the Turks and
a new history of this conflict by Taner Akcam, "A Shameful Act: The
Armenian Genocide and the Question of Turkish Responsibility."
Kolbert can be forgiven for starting somewhere and for writing a book
review rather than a tome. But it is all food for thought on the
table of life.

Who are these "Turks"? I will leave the corollary question regarding
Armenians aside for later delectation, anyway less pressing while we
address this course of our historical feast. The sentences of
Kolbert’s which piqued my interest are these, where she makes a claim
unremarkable among all the notions we entertain as facts concerning
the early twentieth century:

"As the rulers of the Ottoman Empire, the Turks had been fighting
against history; they had spent more than a century trying – often
unsuccessfully – to fend off nationalist movements in the regions
they controlled. Now, in defeat, they adopted the cause as their own.
In the spring of 1920,"…

And Kolbert goes on to sketch the establishment of the Ankara
government and their work to reject the Treaty of Sevres, just drawn
up by the Allies in 1920, and replace it in 1923 with the Treaty of
Lausanne recognizing the Republic of Turkey. And Kolbert draws our
attention to the pertinence of 1915 actions for the competing
treaties of five and eight years later. When a million Armenians lost
their lives at Ottoman hands in April of 1915, Kolbert (with Akcam,
we must presume) observes that it "changed the demographics of
eastern Anatolia; then, on the basis of these changed demographics,
the Turks used the logic of self-determination to deprive of a home
the very people they had decimated." Thus a war crime is made
foundational as to boundaries of a nation and self-organization of a
people.

But what people are we talking about? Kolbert and many others when
describing the legal adventures of Orhan Pamuk bring up the Turkish
penal code which outlaws "insulting Turkishness" and I think most of
us wince or smile chidingly at such bald defensiveness inscribed into
criminal sanction. And when we hear that Kurds are routinely called
"mountain Turks" so as to avoid their right name, we roll our eyes at
stubborn, willful racism ill-suited to a civilized modern
understanding.

Our own context frames a beginning, maybe, for diluting our disdain
with modest realism, for stepping back from such easy superiority as
leads us to mock the Turks for foolishness. In her final paragraph,
Kolbert leans this way, pointing to the forty million indigenous
people living in the Americas before Europeans came and fewer than
ten million visible by 1650. Racism in the United States is marked,
certainly, by no less confusion and argument over the proper naming
of people than our conventional reading of Turkish history and
custom.

But if we step back from the fog of the Great War and perform the
slightest of reality checks, we will find that empire and nation and
people and ethnic identification are far from simple, and Turkey is a
wonderful place to start. We should look at Turkey through two
lenses: composition of empire and bonds between people. That is to
say, from the top down and the bottom up, we will try to answer the
question of how society organizes, and how it ought to organize, with
Turkey as our focus. Let me announce my findings right off the bat.
We are all amateur humans; there are no professional social
practitioners; there is no agreement as to how we form society.

Alexander the Great swept eastward signally, momentously. In making
his conquered lands Greek, he Hellenized their people. Language is
implicated mightily in identifying one people or another, and has
become the lasting tool of historians, albeit ethnicity and
nationality cannot quite conform to its marker. But language can be
rejected, secret, disused, forbidden or broken: like memory, of which
it is one token, one treasury. One primary fact we can state with
certainty is that none of Alexander’s conquered peoples spoke such an
Altaic language as Turkish is. That family, standing apart from
Indo-European, lurked behind mountains north of Alexander’s route and
of Ashoka’s after him, reversing some of the Hellenic conquests.

Kabul would come to hear both the Mongolian and the Turkic branches
of the Altaic family spoken, and so would Jerusalem. So would the
Viking princes who followed the Huns in Ukraine. But it took some
time for Constantine’s city to lose its Greek accent, and much
Western European connivance. Turkic tribes moved through, and named,
Turkistan over long, disputatious migrations strikingly similar to
the uncoordinated arrivals of Angles, Saxons, Jutes and Frisians on
Britain’s coast. Like those Germanic speakers we now call English,
Turks displaced a number of indigenous inhabitants along the way.
Romans had already laid claim to Celtic lands both in southern
Britain and in central Anatolia, fielding first pagan, and later
Christian legions. Very few descendants of Celtic Britons persisted
as landowners outside Wales, learning Old English, but Galatians
sheltered within the Roman Empire, a subject kingdom where Paul would
preach and which even Jerome found flourishing.

So, when Seljuk tribes encroached ever more successfully upon the
well-trodden soil of Anatolia, Greek-speaking inheritors of
Alexandrine and Roman imperial tenure resisted militarily and
demographically, leaving an ethnic crazy-quilt more brightly colored
than even Byzantium sported. China, Christendom, Islam and Tibet were
all predecessor empires to the Ottoman establishment which made
Istanbul its capital, and all diverse.

Armenians, Kurds, Arabs, Jews and Bosnians retained their identity
within the Ottoman framework, along with many other minoritarian
ethnicities. While Ottoman rule consolidated its bicontinental
holdings, Persia to its east recovered national integrity. This was
Europe’s Renaissance as well, and it birthed new commercial economies
under Italian, Spanish, Dutch and English leadership. Which way was
history trending? When did the winner become clear, if there was a
race to organize best?

Frankly, I think the organization of society is no more a settled
matter than the organization of business enterprises. My own
experience has been that in any large business, there are a certain
number of quite obvious operational chores to be done. And if we
leave that bottom-up reality and adopt the perspective of the chief
executives, there is a clear mission: make money. In between, middle
management struggles constantly to find synergistic arrangements of
medium-sized blocs of staff and function. Corporate history is
littered with unsuccessful efforts at this sort of integration. So is
the history of our social arrangements. If you study the changes in
political maps, over time, you will see that there is no optimal size
or shape for national definition. Even the definition of nationalism
flaps in the wind of experience.

Ottoman forces suffered major defeat at Russian hands. Some Armenians
participated actively, helping Russians resist a siege of Baku. New
"Bolshevik" Russia was not invited to Paris, where President Wilson
checked them and Turkish self-determination by proposing that
generous terms of Allied settlement be granted all Armenian subjects,
Russian and Ottoman. Sevres extended exceptional generosity to the
Kurds as well, declared sovereign in their mountain passes for only
the second interval in their national existence. In all this the
Greeks were surely complicit, receiving for themselves large
Anatolian territories to rule with a sovereignty which they must have
viewed as an acknowledgement of their undisputed historic tenure, in
such places as the port of Smyrna. And the bitterness of Greeks at
the eviction codified in Lausanne is with us still. Is that, too, a
historical trend? But what of those who intermarried down the years,
submerging an original ethnicity and learning languages they never
heard in the cradle? Are they trendy or traitorous?

No matter what mixture of ethnic extraction today’s Turkish citizens
enjoy, and what ancestral languages war has bloodied with bad
memories, people in Asia Minor and everywhere else must hope that
human efforts to build society do it peacefully.

hp?article_id=1136

http://peacejournalism.com/details1.p

Armenian Amb. & King of Sweden exchange opinions on cooperation

ARMENIAN AMBASSADOR AND KING OF SWEDEN EXCHANGED OPINIONS ON
COOPERATION PROSPECTS BETWEEN SCANDINAVIA AND SOUTH CAUCASUS

ArmInfo News Agency, Armenia
Nov 3 2006

Today, Ara Ayvazyan, Ambassador of Armenia to Sweden, handed over
his credentials to Carl Gustav XVI, King of Sweden.

Press service of Foreign Ministry of Armenia told Arminfo that after
the ceremony they discussed issues of Armenia-Sweden historical
relations and development of the bilateral relations. Armenian
Ambassador told Carl Gustav XVI about political and economic situation
in Armenia and its regions. The sides exchanged views on cooperation
prospects between Scandinavia and South Caucasus.

More Details Of Russian-Armenian Gas Deal Released

MORE DETAILS OF RUSSIAN-ARMENIAN GAS DEAL RELEASED
By Anna Saghabalian

Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
Oct 31 2006

New details emerged on Tuesday of the latest Russian-Armenia energy
deal that will give Russia’s state-run Gazprom monopoly a commanding
share in Armenia’s natural gas distribution network and, most probably,
the incoming gas pipeline from Iran.

Karen Karapetian, director general of the ArmRosGazprom (ARG) network
operator, said Gazprom will pay $118.8 million to raise its share in
ARG from the current 45 percent to 58 percent.

The takeover was officially announced by the Russian energy giant
on Friday and confirmed by President Robert Kocharian on Monday. It
appears to be part of a broader Russian-Armenian agreement reached last
April. That deal allowed Armenia to temporarily avoid a doubling of
the price of imported Russian gas in exchange for ceding more energy
assets to Moscow. Those include the incomplete Fifth Unit of the big
thermal power plant in Hrazdan.

Karapetian revealed that Fifth Unit formally belongs ARG, another 45
percent of which has until now been owned by the Armenian government.

That stake will be diluted to approximately 30 percent as a result
of the latest deal.

"This is the sum needed for buying the Fifth Unit," Karapetian said
of the $118.8 million to be paid by Gazprom. "Who is buying it?

ArmRosGazprom. By what means? By means of the issuance of additional
shares [in ARG]. Who is buying the new shares? Gazprom."

"Why not the government of Armenia? Ask the government," he added.

The government announced in April that the Russians will pay $248.8
million for the modern facility and spend an additional $180 million on
completing it in the next few years. The lump sum may well be including
the cost of the first Armenian section of the under-construction
pipeline from Iran which is widely expected to be incorporated into
the ARG network.

Armenian officials for months denied reports that Russian control of
the Iran-Armenia pipeline is another, unpublicized provision of the
April deal. Still, Prime Minister indicated last week that this is the
case, arguing that "it would be illogical to have two gas distribution
networks in Armenia." A leading Moscow daily, "Kommersant," described
on Tuesday the anticipated Russian takeover of the pipeline as the
Kremlin’s "main, if not the sole, geopolitical victory in the region
registered in the last several years."

Karapetian claimed, however, that the government in Yerevan has
not yet decided who will own the pipeline. "Gazprom is right to be
willing to buy the pipeline," he said. "But I don’t know whether or
not Armenia will agree to sell it."

The overall deal will reinforce Russia’s already pervasive presence
in the Armenian energy sector which government critics in Yerevan
say is turning into an economic stranglehold. But Karapetian strongly
defended it, downplaying the fact that the bulk of the Armenian gas
infrastructure is now owned by Gazprom and another Russian energy
firm, ITERA.

"We remain an Armenian company not only because we pay taxes and are
registered in Armenia but because you will find few companies that
have invested $83 million here in the last four years," he told a
news conference.

Armenia’s severe energy crisis of the early 1990s disrupted
centralized gas supplies to virtually all individual consumers. ARG,
which currently employs some 6,000 people, began slowly but steadily
restoring them shortly after its establishment as a Russian-Armenian
joint venture in 1997. The process gained momentum in 2002 and seems
to be nearing completion.

According to the ARG chief executive, 84 percent of the country’s
households now have access to gas, saving at least $160 million in
combined expenditures on winter heating each year.

RA Foreign Minister Met With His Georgian Counterpart

RA FOREIGN MINISTER MET WITH HIS GEORGIAN COUNTERPART

ArmRadio.am
01.11.2006 15:00

November 1 RA Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian, who is participating
in the 15th sitting of BSEC Council of Foreign Ministers, met with
his Georgian counterpart Gela Bezhuashvili.

The Foreign Ministers discussed Armenia-Georgia bilateral relations,
the impact of Russian-Georgian relations on the region and the
opportunities of reducing the tension.

Turning to the relations of the two countries with the EU, the
Ministers highly assessed the adoption of the Action Plans with South
Caucasian countries and expressed confidence that it will enable
Armenia and Georgia to deepen bilateral cooperation in the direction
of European integration.

The parties exchanged views on the peaceful settlement of the conflicts
existing in the region, and the opportunities of elimination of the
possible consequences of the GUAM initiative in the UN.

Literary Critic Eduard Topchian’s Memorial Plaque Opened In Yerevan

LITERARY CRITIC EDUARD TOPCHIAN’S MEMORIAL PLAQUE OPENED IN YEREVAN

Noyan Tapan
Oct 30 2006

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 30, NOYAN TAPAN. State-public figure, publicist,
literary critic Eduard Topchian’s memorial plaque opened on October 27
in the address of Kasian 3, Yerevan, where the literary critic lived
in 1960-1975. The author of the memorial plaque is architect Samvel
Burkhajian. In words of Levon Ananian, the Chairman of the Writers’
Union of Armenia (WUA), talent and humane merits are combined in few
people, E.Topchian was one of those few. He was the first secretary
of the WUA and headed it for 21 years. "E.Topchian headed the WUA in
a period of time when the Central Committee of the Communist Party
created problems in many issues. It was also a period when great
people like Avetik Isahakian, Derenik Demirchian, Nairi Zarian, Stepan
Zorian, Gurgen Mahari and others were in the political field, it was
not easy to work with them as each of them has his literary views,"
L.Ananian mentioned. According to prose-writer Perch Zeytuntsian’s
characteristic, E.Topchian managed to head the WUA wisely and keeping
balance. He was engaged in organization works of the WUA as much that
there was almost no time for creating. But, as P.Zeytuntsian mentioned,
E.Topchian was the first literary critic who presented analyses of
Franz Werfel’s and Levon Shant’s works to the Armenian reader.

NKR Defense Minister Satisfied With The Results Of Military Exercise

NKR DEFENSE MINISTER SATISFIED WITH THE RESULTS OF MILITARY EXERCISES

ArmRadio.am
30.10.2006 16:10

NKR Defense Minister Seyran Ohanyan is satisfied with the results of
the recurrent military exercises of NKR Defense Army, ArmInfo reports.

"Progress is evident, all the tasks presented to the participants
of the military exercises were accomplished. The exercises were
primarily directed at the improvement of Officers’ skills and rise
of the level of cooperation between different divisions. During
the military exercises we managed to raise also the level of field
preparedness of the staff," NKR Defense Minister said.

"The process of the military exercises revealed the high level of
coordination of means and forces of military divisions in every stage,"
Seyran Ohanyan noted.

ANKARA: Benefits Of Waiting

BENEFITS OF WAITING
Gunduz Aktan

Turkish Daily News
Oct 26 2006

Some time has passed since the French parliament passed the bill that
criminalizes denial of the Armenian "genocide." Now that it has lost
its newsworthiness, we can better analyze the matter.

Passing such a law caused some problems for France, but we should not
exaggerate them too much. The criticisms directed against France were
all for needlessly limiting freedom of expression. Most EU citizens,
especially the French, believe the Armenian incidents in 1915
constitute genocide. All those who have anything to say first voice
their belief that the genocide actually occurred before criticizing
the bill. Maybe they get the right to raise such criticism only after
they present their credentials.

Most of the criticisms in Turkey are also for France limiting freedom
of expression. That’s why some argue that annulling Article 301 of the
Turkish Penal Code (TCK) would prove we respect freedom of expression
more than France and would provide a very wise response.

However, the problem goes beyond freedom of expression or academic
freedoms.

Genocide is the worst of crimes. Just like every other crime, law
defines it and the courts decide on it. Without a verdict, a person,
a group or a country cannot be accused of having committed genocide.

Moreover, it is impossible to refute a crime that has not been
proven first.

That’s exactly why a law passed by the French parliament in 2001 that
recognizes the Armenian "genocide" cannot be enforced. On the other
hand, the Gaysot Law (1990), which criminalizes denial of the Jewish
Holocaust, is enforceable because it is based on the Nuremberg court
sentences. Professor O. Duhamel, fervently praised former minister
Jack Lang as the only person who had the courage to voice this. How
unfortunate for France.

If the bill becomes law in its present form, the right of Turkey
and the families of Enver Pasha and Talat Pasha to defend themselves
against the charges are rescinded. This is a more severe human rights
violation than limiting freedom of speech.

After this injustice, the gestures of French President Jacques
Chirac and the French government, as if they share our concerns,
are sickening. The Armenian government has also resorted to similar
deception as if it has nothing to do with such initiatives. They place
the blame with the Armenian diaspora. Actually, while one tries to
protect its commercial interests, the other is working to ensure that
the Armenians who illegally work here are not repatriated. They are
after both material and moral benefits.

Armenians used Armenian Secret Army for the Liberation of Armenia
(ASALA) terrorism to promote their genocide claims and largely
succeeded. Westerners saw the courage to resort to terrorism as proof
of Armenians having been victims of genocide. They ignored the carnage
of terrorism until it also harmed them.

This incited Armenians to threaten academics in the United States
who said there was no genocide. They pressured universities to
dismiss such academics. They prevented publishers from printing
anything that went against their thesis. Those that were published
were collected. Dissident voices were not permitted in the meeting
they held.

They walked through the corridors of the European Parliament,
brandishing guns in 1987 in order to ensure the resolution the European
Parliament was debating would support their thesis. They prevented
deputies from entering the meeting hall.

The threats by some Armenians made against one Armenian member of
the Turkish-Armenian Reconciliation Council (TARC) resulted in him
hiding his family at a secret location and blood clots that caused
him to undergo two surgeries.

Armenian lobbies that spend exorbitant amounts of money influenced
administrations and parliaments. The Armenian diaspora used their
votes for political blackmail. They bought hundreds of people and
made them write books full of lies. It was proven that the Talat Pasha
telegraph was false. What Henry Morgenthau wrote about Talat Pasha and
Enver Pasha is full of falsehoods, too. Lepsius, who never set foot in
Anatolia, talked about the incidents as if he were an eyewitness. The
Blue Book is only war propaganda. They have now started to bribe Turks.

There is no United Nations resolution on the matter, but they look us
in the eye and say there is. Our archives are open, but they say they
aren’t. They say the Teþkilatý Mahsusa (Ottoman intelligence services)
organized genocide. Professors Lewy and Ericson smash this theory. Yet
they still look the other way. The figures they quote are sheer lies
and the documents they cite are a sham.

What does this disgrace have to do with freedom of expression?

–Boundary_(ID_JzutrHi5StTR7PLqAm/TvQ )–

The Mormonator : Mitt Romney’s Blinding Ambition. Plus…

THE MORMONATOR: MITT ROMNEY’S BLINDING AMBITION. PLUS, THE INEXPLICABLE
OPPOSITION TO AN ARMENIAN-GENOCIDE MEMORIAL

The Phoenix, MA
Oct 25 2006

1.aspx

Political dynasties are as American as apple pie. Since the Civil War,
witness the marks made ‘ or still being made (for better or worse) ‘ by
the Tafts of Ohio, the Stevensons of Illinois, the Roosevelts of New
York, the Bayhs of Indiana, the Bushes of Connecticut and Texas, the
Clintons of Arkansas and New York, and the Kennedys of Massachusetts,
New York, and Rhode Island.

Now comes Mitt Romney, son of George, who as governor of Michigan in
1968 unsuccessfully sought to become the first Mormon elected president.
Son Mitt hopes to succeed where dad George failed. And Mitt, the
governor of Massachusetts, is not going to let anything stand in his
way. On the surface he is as smooth and as gentlemanly as his dad. But
in his heart Mitt is a sharpie, as cold as he is ambitious. Like George
Bush II, who saw his dad outflanked on the right by Reagan, and on the
left by Clinton, Mitt Romney is not going let the failings of his
paternity mess with his success. His will to power, whatever the price,
is straight out of Nietzsche. And his desire to do his dad one better,
whatever the cost, feels like pure Freud.

Armchair analysis aside, Mitt Romney’s dedication to his own success is
undebatable. With the help of Christy Mihos (a politically delicious
irony), he strong-armed Republican acting governor Jane Swift aside to
stake his claim to Beacon Hill. He shamelessly fudged his Utah residency
to get on the Massachusetts ballot. He cavalierly abandoned
Massachusetts’s voters after two years in order to launch his White
House run, and he held on to his office to use it as a convenient bully
pulpit. From that perch he morphed from a centrist to a right-winger,
flip-flopping on choice and suggesting ‘ with a straight face ‘ that the
sort of stem-cell research conducted at Children’s Hospital and Harvard
Medical School should be criminalized. Mitt Romney: what an hombre.

In his latest exercise in duplicity, Romney secretly lobbied an
influential member of the Mormon church’s innermost ruling council to
leverage resources in the service of his White House campaign. The
scandal of this is that Romney has long sought to wrap himself in the
mantle of Roman Catholic John Kennedy, who in his 1960 presidential run
stressed that he would not be an ideological slave to the pope. On the
eve of that election American Protestants ‘ especially the evangelicals
and fundamentalists whom Romney now courts so assiduously ‘ still feared
Rome’s potential influence on the American Caesar. (What a difference 50
or so years can make.)

The case for an Armenian memorial

The Boston Globe, the Boston Herald, Mayor Thomas Menino, and the
Greenway Conservancy advisory board chaired by well-respected corporate
citizen Peter Meade all agree that a proposed monument commemorating the
deaths of at least 600,000 Armenians in the Turkish-prosecuted genocide
– the first historically recognized genocide – has no place in a park
named after Rose Kennedy, located on land cleared by the Big Dig near
the waterfront. We ask this simple and clearly inconvenient question:
why not? Are these Boston worthies afraid of offending local Muslim
sensibilities? Is their vision of the Rose Kennedy Greenway so sterile
and so suburban as to hold that history should not punctuate the reality
of this public space as it does so elegantly in the Public Garden and
along the Commonwealth Avenue Mall? Our advice is simple: set a limit.
Reserve space for a set number of monuments and memorials. Devise design
requirements. And set a high-minded example by approving this worthy
project. The august and historic Public Garden found a place for a
tasteful and quietly moving memorial to local victims of the 9/11
attacks. The Holocaust is memorialized near Faneuil Hall. The Irish
Potato Famine is remembered on Washington Street near Downtown Crossing.
The firemen who fell battling the blaze that almost destroyed the Hotel
Vendome, in 1972, are honored for their service on the nearby mall –
although approval for that modest shrine required a shameful battle.

The Armenian slaughter, together with Hitler’s holocaust, Pol Pot’s
massacre of his fellow Cambodians, and today’s carnage in the Sudan,
stand as sad testimonies to mankind’s capacity for inhumanity. We
memorialize tragic events such as these so that we may remember and
learn. Surely in these early days of the 21st century we have it in our
hearts to join in communion with our Armenian friends and neighbors, and
together say: never again.

http://www.thephoenix.com/article_ektid2599