Erdogan dice che non c’è stato alcun genocidio armeno

L’Indipendenza, Italia
29 aprile 2014

Erdogan dice che non c’è stato alcun genocidio armeno

di ALTRE FONTI

“Se fosse stato un genocidio come potrebbero esserci ancora armeni nel
nostro Paese?”. E’ con queste parole che il premier turco Erdogan ha
di nuovo negato che i massacri – costati la vita a un milione e mezzo
di armeni – siano stati un genocidio.

Una settimana fa le condoglianze ai nipoti delle vittime
Dichiarazioni, rilasciate ad una TV americana, che colpiscono la
comunità armena della Turchia una settimana dopo che lo stesso
premier, in occasione del 99esimo anniversario dell’inizio delle
deportazioni, aveva presentato ai nipoti delle vittime le proprie
condoglianze. Rifiutate. Nessun commento dell’Armenia che non ha
relazioni diplomatiche con la Turchia e ha spesso denunciato il
negazionismo di Ankara.

Il genocidio armeno – Su questo sito, in inglese, la comunità armena
internazionale ha raccolto la storia e le testimonianze del genocidio
per commemorare le vittime del crimine di massa dell’allora Impero
Ottomano. Quello che viene ricordato come “genocidio armeno” si svolse
in due diversi momenti storici. Durante la Prima Guerra Mondiale, tra
il 1915 e il 1917, la comunità armena venne decimata: le migliaia di
persone deportate dall’Anatolia e dall’Armenia vennero mandati nel
deserto a morire di sete, molti vennero sottoposti ad abusi e violenze
e poi uccisi brutalmente. Ai sopravvissuti toccò la scure del 1920:
per tre anni vennero sottoposti ad ulteriori massacri, decimati. Tutti
i loro beni vennero espropriati.

http://www.lindipendenza.com/erdogan-dice-che-non-ce-stato-alcun-genocidio-armeno/

Turchia, genocidio: gelo armeni su condoglianze Erdogan

Italia chiama Italia
24 aprile 2014

Turchia, genocidio: gelo armeni su condoglianze Erdogan

Usa plaudono a premier turco. Aznavour, ‘gesto insufficiente’

La stampa governativa turca ha parlato di un gesto ‘storico’, salutato
come ‘positivo’ da Usa e Europa, ma la grande comunita’ armena
nell’anniversario dell’ inizio del genocidio del 1915 ha reagito con
freddezza alle ‘condoglianze’ offerte ieri per la prima volta ai
nipotini delle vittime dei massacri dal premier di Ankara Recep Tayyip
Erdogan. Il presidente dell’Armenia Serzh Sarksyan, nel messaggio
commemorativo del 99mo anniversario, non ha fatto nemmeno un accenno
alle parole di cordoglio di Erdogan. Che pero’ non si e’ scusato per
la Turchia e non ha ammesso la realta’ del “genocidio”. Un gesto
insufficiente, ha detto Charles Aznavour, uomo simbolo della diaspora
armena. Sarksyan ha invece duramente denunciato il fatto che la
Turchia continui a rifiutare “nel modo piu’ assoluto” di riconoscere
che il massacro di un milione e mezzo di cristiani armeni da parte
della Turchia ottomana e’ stato un “genocidio”.

“La negazione di un crimine ne costituisce il prolungamento. Solo il
riconoscimento e la condanna possono prevenirne la ripetizione in
futuro” ha tuonato

Le relazioni fra Erevan e Ankara sono gelide. I due paesi, divisi
oltre che dal contenzioso sul genocidio anche dal conflitto del
Nagorno Karabah fra l’Armenia e l’Azerbaigian, turcofono e sunnita,
alleato della Turchia, non hanno relazioni diplomatiche. La frontiera
e’ chiusa. Un tentativo di disgelo e’ fallito nel 2010. Segno pero’
dell’evoluzione delle mentalita’ in Turchia ci sono state anche oggi
come ogni anno dal 2010 commemorazioni a Istanbul, in parallelo a
quelle di Erevan e di altre capitali del mondo. Mentre da Washington e
Bruxelles sono arrivate parole di apprezzamento per il gesto di
Erdogan. Il presidente Usa Barack Obama ha evitato anche quest’anno,
rileva la stampa turca, di parlare di “genocidio” per non ferire
l’alleato turco preferendo il termine armeno di “Meds Yeghern” (Grande
Calamita) per ricordare “una delle peggiori atrocita’ del XX secolo”.

Diffuso dalla presidenza del governo turco in ben nove lingue, un
altro fatto senza precedenti, il messaggio di Erdogan sembra rivolto
soprattutto alla comunita’ internazionale, nel tentativo di migliorare
l’immagine oggi disastrosa del premier turco. Per Aznavour, Erdogan
“cerca di presentarsi come un uomo presuntamente ‘aperto'”, senza
pero’ cambiare nulla della posizione turca sulla strage degli armeni,
deportati e massacrati nell’ultimo periodo dell’Impero Ottomano
perche’ sospettati di poter collaborare con il nemico russo.

Per alcuni analisti il ‘gesto’ di Erdogan potrebbe essere collegato
con le imminenti elezioni presidenziali. Il ‘sultano’ di Ankara aspira
ora alla prima carica dello stato, e ha iniziato a lanciare segnali
distensivi verso alcune minoranze etniche, curdi e armeni in
particolare. C’e’ inoltre la scadenza del 2015, quando le
commemorazioni del centenario del genocidio si prevede scateneranno
grandi celebrazioni in tutto il mondo, e pressioni sulla Turchia,
perche’ finalmente riconosca la realta’ del primo genocidio dei tempi
moderni, pochi anni prima dello sterminio degli ebrei da parte della
Germania nazista.

http://www.italiachiamaitalia.it/articoli/detalles/21313//Politica/turchia-genocidio-gelo-armeni-su-condoglianze-erdogan.html

Per non dimenticare – 99° anniversario del Genocidio Armeno

Notizie Italia News, Italia
26 aprile 2014

Per non dimenticare – 99° anniversario del Genocidio Armeno

Diego Romeo
Venerdì 25 aprile 2014

Cento anni esatti sono passati dall’inizio di un conflitto, noto come
La Grande Guerra, che avrebbe definitivamente segnato ed influenzato
la storia del Novecento. Il grande storico tedesco Fritz Fischer
sostenne che la Prima Guerra Mondiale fu il male da cui scaturirono
tutti gli altri drammi del secolo. La Grande Guerra cambiò
definitivamente il concetto di guerra tradizionale, portando al
concetto di conflitto di massa, dove ad essere coinvolti non erano più
solo gli eserciti di professionisti, ma la popolazione nella sua
interezza. Per la prima volta furono bombardate città popolose; la
guerra causò almeno 14 milioni di morti, 5 milioni di sfollati e altri
14 milioni di invalidi e mutilati. Una guerra che lasciato una grande
eredità, non solo perché ha piantato i semi dei più grandi
nazionalismi della storia, ma anche perché ha generato grandi frutti
di morte.

Infatti il suo primo tragico frutto non tardò ad arrivare, a solo un
anno dal quel terribile giorno, ed esattamente il 24 aprile 1915, fu
consumato il primo vero stermino di massa del ‘900: il Metz Yeghern –
Il Grande Male. In questa data più di un milione e mezzo di armeni,
che vivevano in quello che era stato l’Impero Ottomano, furono
sistematicamente deportati ed uccisi.

Un avvenimento che segnò profondamente il secolo che si apriva e che
tutt’ora fatica ad avere il suo giusto riconoscimento da parte degli
stati europei e medio orientali.

Oggi, a 99 anni da quella tragica data, in tutti i paesi dove è
presente una comunità armena (che sia ortodossa, cattolica o
protestate), si è commemorato questo tragico anniversario. Così anche
a Roma dove, in una bellissima liturgia di rito armeno svoltasi al
Pontificio Collegio Armeno, il Rettore Mons. Georges Dankaye, partendo
da una riflessione sul brano biblico “Cerco i miei fratelli” [Gen. 37,
16], ha dichiarato che solo attraverso la “Verità” ci sarà la libertà
e la riunificazione di tutti i fratelli armeni, aggiungendo che solo
con la “verità” ci si potrà riunificare anche con il popolo turco.

Memoriale al pontificio Collegio Armeno
Un messaggio di speranza, quello proposto da Mons. Dankaye, che
aspettando il centesimo anniversario dello stermino auspica una
riappacificazione con i loro “fratelli”.

Un messaggio condiviso anche dalla curia romana che, attraverso il
Prefetto della Congregazione per le chiese orientali Mons. Card.
Leonardo Sandri, ribadendo la sua vicinanza al popolo armeno, ha anche
dichiarato che questa è sicuramente la via giusta per la verità e la
riunificazione.

Una commemorazione carica di speranza quella che oggi si è svolta a
Roma all’ombra della canonizzazione di due Papi, Giovanni XXIII e
Giovanni Paolo II, che hanno fatto della ricerca della pace e della
riunificazione il loro ministero principale.

http://www.notizieitalianews.com/2014/04/per-non-dimenticare-99-avversario-del.html

ISTANBUL: Pro-gov’t media twists German president’s remarks

Today’s Zaman, Turkey
May 2 2014

Pro-gov’t media twists German president’s remarks

May 02, 2014, Friday/ 18:33:34/ TODAY’S ZAMAN/ ANKARA

A pro-government media outlet, Daily Sabah, has twisted the contents
of an interview with German President Joachim Gauck on A Haber TV
channel to portray him as the victim of non-governmental organizations
due to his criticism of the Turkish government’s oppressive practices
towards the media and judiciary.

On a four-day visit to Turkey in which he delivered a speech at the
Middle East Technical University (ODTÃ`) on Monday, Gauck was vocal in
his criticism of the government and its anti-democratic measures on
the Internet and the judiciary as well as the broad powers it has
granted the National Intelligence Organization (MİT).

When asked about the critical stance towards the government he had
expressed on Monday, Gauck responded that when friends come together
they should able to utter critical remarks and should ask some
questions, adding, `It is not me who generated these complaints. These
criticisms have been expressed by NGOs. I also listened to what they
pointed out. I came together with the representatives of these NGOs as
well as government officials. As a result of these meetings, I
developed an opinion about the issues we discussed. I think that the
audience at ODTÃ` obviously understood what I meant.’

However, while Gauck’s statement is quite clear, Daily Sabah twisted
the statement in its report by claiming that “NGOs had influenced him
to speak in such a manner, and he was misguided by these NGOs,”
ignoring Gauck’s statement that he had reached a conclusion about the
government’s anti-democratic practices towards the media and judiciary
after a series of official and non-official meetings in Turkey.

Gauck had criticized gov’t for pressure on media and judiciary

The German president said in Ankara that he is “horrified” about the
negative developments in Turkey, criticizing the government for
censoring the Internet, controlling the judiciary and granting broad
powers to the spy agency.

“Don’t take my statements as interference in your domestic affairs,”
Gauck told a group of students at Ankara’s prestigious ODTÃ`, adding,
“I should confess that the developments in Turkey horrify me.” He said
the aim of his remarks was to share his concerns as a citizen of a
democratic nation.

Gauck’s remarks came at a time in which the government has placed the
judiciary under its control with a recent bill on the Supreme Board of
Judges and Prosecutors (HSYK). The German president said the
government’s removal of a number of police and prosecutors from their
posts will block the illumination of further suspect developments. “If
the government tries to manipulate court decisions in its favor or
escape from rulings against itself, can we talk about independence of
the judiciary?” he asked.

Gauck also mentioned some positive developments in Turkey, which
include the taming of the military’s power in politics. He recalled
that a dialogue has been started with Kurds and that tension has
decreased in that area. He added that the historic taboos about the
oppression of Armenians and Kurds have started to dissolve.

ErdoÄ?an targeted Gauck for his statements

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip ErdoÄ?an lashed out at Gauck on Tuesday for
his criticism of the Turkish government, saying he probably still
thinks of himself as a pastor and that he should keep his advice to
himself.

`What did he say [during his ODTÃ` talk]? ‘Don’t take this as
interfering in your internal affairs, but¦’ We have suffered a lot
from these ‘buts.’ We have no time to waste on such things. That’s why
he needs to act like a statesman. He must still feel like a pastor —
because he was a pastor at one time. He is looking at things from that
angle,’ ErdoÄ?an argued.

Resistance Growing To Zionism’s Corrupting Influence

Salem-News.Com, Oregon
May 2 2014

Resistance Growing To Zionism’s Corrupting Influence

Allan C. Brownfeld Salem-News.com

Narrow nationalism, in recent years, has corrupted this humane Jewish tradition

(WASHINGTON DC) – Zionism, the philosophy of Jewish nationalism which
believes that Israel is the “homeland” of all Jews and that those
living outside of Israel are in “exile,” has distorted American Jewish
life and is driving large numbers of young people away from what is
becoming an increasingly intolerant community.

Many synagogues fly Israeli flags and have replaced God with Israel as
the virtual object of worship, a practice akin to the idolatry
practiced in the worship of the Golden Calf. In 1999, the Union for
Reform Judaism adopted a resolution declaring that Israel, not God,
“is central to our religion.” Emigration to Israel—“aliyah”—was
encouraged as the highest form of religious expression.

Sadly, the organized Jewish community has turned itself, in effect,
into a defense attorney for Israel, defending actions by the Israeli
government which are vigorously opposed at home. When it comes to
separation of church and state, Jewish groups have led legal battles
even against voluntary, non-sectarian school prayer. Yet, in Israel,
they embrace a society with no separation of church and state, one
which is, in real terms, a theocracy. Non-Orthodox Jews have fewer
rights in Israel than any place in the Western world. Non-Orthodox
rabbis cannot perform weddings or funerals in Israel, and their
conversions are not recognized.

Religious Freedom

Do these Jewish groups really believe in religious freedom in the U.S.
as a matter of principle—-or do they take this position as a
minority defending its self-interest? When Thomas Jefferson and James
Madison promoted the Virginia Declaration of Religious Freedom, their
advocacy was based on their belief in religious freedom as an
essential element of a free society. Jefferson and Madison were part
of a protected majority—but opposed a state-supported church of any
kind. The same cannot be said for American Jewish defenders of
Israel’s theocracy.

Defending whatever a sovereign state does is hardly the expression of
a religious worldview, hardly the Judaism of the prophets, who called
for justice for men and women of every race and nation. What was the
Anti-Defamation League thinking when it opposed a congressional
resolution commemorating the Armenian genocide? Turkey, as it turns
out, was then an ally of Israel, and would have been offended by such
a resolution. The ADL’s concern was with Israel-Turkish relations, not
with the victimized Armenians. And how does the ADL explain its
opposition to the construction of a mosque in New York City. Surely
something other than a commitment to religious freedom was on its
agenda.

The Israel which American Jewish groups defend—whatever the
issue—-may be far different than the one many American Jews
envision. NEW YORK TIMES columnist Thomas Friedman (April 16, 2014)
writes: “We’re not dealing anymore with your grandfather’s Israel, and
they’re not dealing with your grandmother’s America either. Time
matters, and the near half-century since the 1967 war has changed both
of us in ways neither wants to acknowledge.”

More Religious Society

Israel, Friedman points out, “has become a more religious society—on
Friday nights in Jerusalem now you barely see a car moving on the
streets in Jewish neighborhoods, which only used to be the case on Yom
Kippur—and the settlers are clearly more brazen…there are a
growing core who are armed zealots, who will fight the IDF if it tries
to remove them. You did not go to summer camp with these Jews. You did
not meet them at your local Reform synagogue. This is a hard
core…There are now about 350,000 Jews living in the West Bank. It
took 50,000 Israeli police to remove 8,000 settlers from Gaza , who
barely resisted. I fear the lift in the West Bank to make peace there
is now just too heavy for conventional politics and diplomacy.”

With regard to Secretary of State John Kerry’s efforts to mediate a
peace settlement, Friedman is not optimistic: “The truth is Kerry’s
mission is less an act of strategy and more an act of deep friendship.
It is America trying to save Israel from trends that will inevitably
undermine it as a Jewish and democratic state. But Kerry is the last
of an old guard. Those in the Obama administration who think he is on
a suicide mission reflect the new U.S. attitude toward the region. And
those in Israel who denounce him as a nuisance reflect the new Israel.
Kerry, in my view, is doing the Lord’s work. But the weight of time
and all the changes it has wrought on the ground may just be too heavy
for such an act of friendship. If he folds his tent, though, Israelis
and Palestinians will deeply regret it, and soon.”

An article in THE NEW YORK TIMES (April 13,2014) asked the question,
“Are Iran and Israel Trading Places?” The authors, Israel
Waismel-Manor, a senior lecturer at the University of Haifa, and Abbas
Milani, who heads the Iranian studies program at Stanford, note that
while Islamic extremists appear to be in retreat in Iran, religious
extremism in Israel is on the ascent.

They write: “As the winds of change blow across Iran, secular
democrats in Israel have been losing ground to religious and
right-wing extremists who feel comfortable openly attacking the United
States, Israel’s strongest ally. In recent months, Israel’s defense
minister, Moshe Yaalon called Secretary of State John Kerry ‘obsessive
and messianic,’ while Naftali Bennett, Israel’s economy minister,
labeled Mr. Kerry a ‘mouthpiece’ for anti-Semitic elements attempting
to boycott Israel. Israel’s secular democrats are growing increasingly
worried that Israel’s future may bear an uncomfortable resemblance to
Iran’s recent past.”

Shift Toward Orthodoxy

The authors believe that, “Israel’s shift toward orthodoxy is not
merely a religious one. Since the vast majority of Orthodox Jews are
also against any agreement with the Palestinians, with each passing
day, the chances of reaching a peace deal diminish. Nor is time on the
side of those who want to keep seeing a democratic Israel. If Israel
continues the expansion of settlements, and peace talks serve no
purpose but the extension of the status quo, the real existential
threat to Israel will not be Iran’s nuclear program but rather a
surging tide of economic sanctions…One of Israel’s most popular
singers, the Iranian-born Rita Jahanforuz, laments on her recent
album, ‘In this world, I am alone and abandoned, like wild grass in
the middle of the desert.’ If Iran’s moderates fail to push the
country toward reform, and if secular Israelis can’t halt the
country’s drift from democracy to theocracy, both Iranians and
Israelis will increasingly find themselves fulfilling her sad
prophecy.”

In Israel, racism and religious intolerance are growing—with targets
ranging from Palestinian Muslims and Christians to Africans seeking
political asylum to Bedouin tribesmen to non-Orthodox Jews. In
response, American Jewish organizations have been silent.

Israeli Jews who are concerned about their country’s escalating
intolerance have expressed dismay with this silence on the part of
their American counterparts. Daniel Blatman, a history professor at
Hebrew University in Jerusalem, wrote an article in HA’ARETZ (March 7,
2014) headlined, “If I were an American Jew, I’d Worry About Israel’s
Racist Cancer.” The article’s subhead read, “Amid the awareness that
Israel is sliding toward an apartheid regime, the silence of Jews
worldwide is deafening.”

In Blatman’s view, it is not “the Iranian threat that endangers
Israel’s survival, it’s the moral and ethical collapse of its
society…The racist cancer after 47 years of occupation and
domination of another people has spread deep into Israeli
society…World Jewry must help Israel be cured of it. It must speak
out and act…and cooperate with the shrinking groups of Israelis who
have not yet lost hope that it’s possible to stop this downside toward
the abyss.”

“The King’s Torah”

Consider the reality of contemporary Israel, which American Jewish
groups completely ignore. The year 2009 saw the publication of Torat
Ha’Melech (“The King’s Torah”), which the Israeli newspaper MA’ARIV
described as “230 pages on the laws concerning the killing of
non-Jews, a kind of guidebook for anyone who ponders the question of
when it is permissible to take the life of a non-Jew.”

According to the authors, Rabbis Yitzhak Shapira and Yosef Elitzur,
non-Jews are “uncompassionate by nature” and may have to be killed in
order to “curb their evil inclinations.”

The commandment “Thou shalt not kill,” the rabbis argue, refers only
to killing other Jews. In their opinion, “There is justification for
killing babies if it is clear they will grow up to harm us, and in
such a situation may be harmed deliberately and not only during combat
with adults.”

Torat Ha’Melech was written as a guide for Israeli soldiers and army
officers seeking rabbinical guidance on the rules of engagement.
According to the authors, all enemy civilians—including women and
children—can be killed. The rabbis also justify the murder of Jewish
dissidents, a philosophy which emerged from the settlement of Yitzhar
in the occupied West Bank, where Shapira helps lead Od Yosef Chai
yeshiva.

Shapira studied under Rabbi Yitzchok Ginsburgh, who defended seven of
his students who murdered an innocent Palestinian girl by asserting
the superiority of “Jewish blood.” In 1994, when the American-born
Jewish extremist Baruch Goldstein massacred 29 Palestinian worshippers
at the Cave of the Patriarchs in Hebron, Ginsburgh lionized Goldstein
in a lengthy article entitled “Baruch Hagever” (“Baruch, The Great
Man”).

Funds From Israeli Government

These views are not those of just a few extremists. Instead, Od Yosef
Chai has received funds from both the Israeli Ministry of Education,
as well as from a U.S. tax-exempt group called the Central Fund for
Israel.

Extremist rabbis, it seems, are part of Israel’s religious
establishment. Dov Lior, the chief rabbi of Hebron, for example, has
achieved considerable influence inside the military. In 2008, when the
Israeli army’s chief rabbi, Brig. Gen. Avichai Ronski, brought a group
of military intelligence officers to Hebron for a special tour, he
concluded the day with a private meeting with Lior, who presented his
views on modern warfare, which includes collective punishment of
Palestinians. Ronski himself has overseen the distribution of
extremist tracts to soldiers, including “Baruch Hagever,” and a
pamphlet stating, “When you show mercy to a cruel enemy, you are being
cruel to pure and honest soldiers.”

Ovadiah Yosef, the Shas party spiritual leader and Israeli chief
rabbi, declared, “It is forbidden to be merciful to Arabs. You must
send missiles to them and annihilate them. They are evil and
damnable.”

There is much turmoil in contemporary Israel as the state plans to
remove Bedouin from their traditional lands, continues to build
settlements in the occupied territories and confronts black African
asylum seekers, largely from Eritrea and Sudan, who had heard that
there was a Jewish state across the Sinai peninsula that claimed to
embrace the lessons of the Holocaust. One of those lessons was that
you don’t turn away refugees when they might be slaughtered when they
return home.

55,000 Asylum Seekers

Today, there are 55,000 asylum-seekers in Israel. Knowing how bad
deporting them all would look, Israel instead is “inviting” them to
Holot, a desert facility built to “concentrate” refugees claiming
status in Israel. At anti-refugee rallies, right-wing politicians have
called them a “cancer” who threaten “the white man’s country.” Since
last December, Israel has ordered more than 3,000 asylum-seekers, all
of whom have resided in the country for more than four years, to
report to Holot.

Because it is not described as a prison, regular rules involving
trials, judges and juries do not apply. According to Allison Deger’s
report in MONDOWEISS (March 28, 2014), however, “The facility is a
wasteland encircled in a trench of sun-dried sewage, off a dirt road
where the only nearby structures are another prison, an army base and
a crumbling abandoned gas station…Africans are allowed to leave the
jail—comprised of small temporary structures made from shipping
containers, resembling trailer-offices on construction sites—for a
few hours. Still, the inmates must check in with guards three times a
day and are locked in at night.”

American Jewish groups in the forefront of promoting immigration
reform in the U.S. have been silent. As journalist David Sheen, a
Canadian living in Israel whose stay there has led to his
disillusionment with Zionism, points out, “In all of 2013…the
Anti-Defamation League did not have one word to say about Israel’s war
on African refugees. It wasn’t just ADL—it was every single Jewish
American mainstream group across the board. None of them had anything
to say in criticism of the Israeli government as it moved to kick out
all African asylum-seekers. And it’s so ironic because here in the
U.S., these mainstream Jewish groups, there’s wall-to-wall support for
immigration reform.”

Ignoring Plight of Palestinians

Peter Beinart, a liberal Zionist who is concerned about American Jews
ignoring the plight of Israel’s non-Jewish population, notes that,
“Groups like AIPAC and the Presidents’ Conference patrol public
discourse, scolding people who contradict their vision of Israel. Not
only does the organized American Jewish community mostly avoid public
criticism of the Israeli government, it tries to prevent others from
leveling such criticism as well.”

But if the organized Jewish community persists in its defense
attorney-like relationship with Israel, more and more American Jews
are disassociating themselves from that posture.

In its religion column by Mark Oppenheimer, THE NEW YORK TIMES (Feb.
14, 2014) highlights a group of men and women it describes as “devoted
to Jewish observance, but at odds with Israel.”

In the case of Charles H. Manekin, an Orthodox Jew who is philosophy
professor at the University of Maryland, Oppenheimer finds one who
“believes that his Orthodox faith calls him to take stands against
Israel. Prof. Manekin, 61, became Orthodox in college and became an
Israeli citizen in the 1980s. Yet…he denounced Israel’s occupation
of the West Bank. Although not a member of the American Studies
Association, he was pleased when the group voted in December not to
collaborate with Israeli academic institutions…’As a religious Jew,’
he said, ‘I am especially disturbed by the daily injustices
perpetrated against the Palestinians.”

“They Are Human Too”

Another person featured is Stefan Krieger, who teaches law at Hofstra
University. He refrains from work on the Sabbath, keeps kosher, and
studies pages of the Talmud every day. When it comes to Israel, he
recalls that, “My parents were very sensitive to the issue of
Palestinians. My mom had a book called ‘They Are Human Too,’ and my
memory is she would take it off the bookshelf, as if this was some
sort of scandalous tract she was showing me, and show me pictures of
Palestinians in refugee camps…I think nationalism and religion
together are toxic.”

Daniel Boyarin, who teaches Talmud at the University of California,
Berkeley, attended Orthodox synagogues for 30 years. He believes that
Zionism was always flawed: “The very concept of a state defined as
being for one people was deeply problematic and inevitably going to
lead to a moral and political disaster. Which I think it has.”

Corey Robin, who teaches political science at Brooklyn College and is
a regular at a Conservative synagogue, says that, “There are lots of
ways to be Jewish, but worshiping a heavily militarized state seems
like a bit of a comedown from our past. I love being Jewish. I just
don’t love the state of Israel.”

Skepticism Toward Zionism

Columnist Mark Oppenheimer points out that, “Skepticism toward Zionism
used to be common. Before World War II, Reform Jews tended to believe
that they had found a home in the United States, and that Zionism
could be seen as a form of dual loyalty. Orthodox Jews generally
believed, theologically, that a state of Israel would have to wait for
the Messiah’s arrival (a view some ultra-Orthodox Jews still hold). In
the 1930s and 40s, the persecution of European Jews turned many
American Jews into Zionists…’When Hillel was founded, it took a
clear non-Zionist position,’ said Noam Planko, who teaches Jewish
history at the University of Washington. ‘What you see is a shift in
the American spectrum: from non-Zionism with a few Zionists, to a
situation, by the 1960s, where the assumption is that any American
Jewish organization is also going to be clearly Zionist.”

As the 21st century proceeds, Oppenheimer believes, that assumption is
more and more open to question. In the case of Hillel Foundations on
college campuses, censorship of views critical of Israel has led to an
open rebellion. Hillel CEO Eric Fingerhut declares that,
“Anti-Zionists will not be permitted to speak using the Hillel name or
under the Hillel roof, under any circumstances.” Mr. Fingerhut seems
unaware of the long history of Jewish opposition to Zionism and seems
not to understand that Hillel was established to promote Judaism—not
Zionism.

Early in 2013, the Progressive Student Alliance at Harvard University
launched an effort, Open Hillel, to challenge Hillel’s guidelines.
It’s petition was signed by more than 800 Jewish students from diverse
perspectives. In December, Swarthmore College Hillel declared itself
to be the first “Open Hillel”—that is, the first Hillel to reject
the guidelines established by Hillel International concerning
discussions about Israel. These guidelines, students at Swarthmore
asserted in a resolution passed Dec. 8, 2013, present a “monolithic
face pertaining to Zionism” and “stifle healthy debate.”

Burg Barred At Harvard

Even Israeli speakers who are critical of that government’s policies
have been barred from Hillel. At Harvard, in November 2013, Avraham
Burg, former speaker of Israel’s Knesset and now a sharp critic of its
occupation policies, spoke in an undergraduate dormitory after being
barred from speaking at Harvard Hillel. “It’s such a shame that
Harvard Hillel would not allow an open discussion about Israel to take
place within its walls,” said Sandra Korn, who helped organize the
talk. “Hillel should be a space for students to engage with Jewish
issues regardless of religious or political beliefs.”

Jewish Community leaders at Wesleyan University issued a statement on
April 2, 2014 standing with the Open Hillel movement. Hillel’s
policies of censoring dissenting views, they declared, “have resulted
in barring speakers from groups such as Breaking the Silence and the
Israeli Knesset from speaking at Hillels and has resulted in Jewish
Voice for Peace and other Jewish organizations not being welcome under
the Hillel umbrella…At Wesleyan, values of inclusion are central to
our identity both as Jews and as participants in the larger Wesleyan
community..In Hillel’s guidelines, Jewish plurality gives way to
Zionist unanimity, and we are acutely aware that many individuals have
formed robust, meaningful Jewish identities that do not comport with
traditional Zionist ideas.”

The students argue that efforts at censorship violate basic Jewish
values: “We believe that dialogue and critical engagement are central
Jewish values. Our community is founded on texts that are meant to be
interpreted, argued over, and debated endlessly… Hillel draws its
name from the great rabbinical sage who believed that all should be
able to learn, and that discourse should be free and unbound by
guidelines imposed from above…We believe Hillel International’s
deviation from these principles alienates members of our community and
strays from Jewish tradition.” Among those signing this statement were
former Wesleyan Jewish Renaissance Fellows Danny Blinderman, Becca
Caspar-Johnson, Sydney Lewis and Hannah Plum.

Resignation From Hillel

In Florida, in March, Rabbi Bruce Worshal, writing in the FLORIDA
SUN-SENTINEL/JEWISH JOURNAL, announced his resignation from an
honorary Hillel board to protest the bar on free speech. He declared:
“It is with a heavy heart that I write this column. I have long been a
supporter of the Hillel movement on college campuses…I also played a
significant role in obtaining funding for the Hillel building on the
Florida Atlantic University campus. I have served on the board of
directors of my local Hillel of Broward and Palm Beach…I am publicly
declaring that I am getting off the Hillel bandwagon.”

Rabbi Worshal noted that, “Hillel is no longer the Hillel of yester
years. In 2010 the national Hillel issued guidelines as to what is
permissible dialogue at Hillel…This has essentially banned all
liberal Jews who love Israel but disagree with the current Netanyahu
government from Hillel involvement…I refuse to let my Zionism
dominate my Judaism. The love of Israel is only part of Judaism. The
Zionist movement is only 150 years old; Israel is only 65 years old.
Judaism has existed for thousands of years without both.
Unfortunately, for too many years, American Jewry has made Israel the
major part of its Judaism. It’s a part, but not the major part.”

Voices of dissent within the Jewish community are increasingly vocal.
In his book, “Breakthrough: Transforming Fear Into Compassion,” a
former militant Zionist, Rich Forer, writes that, “Zionism, in its
current manifestation, is out of control….It is the ideological
force that enables the stealing of another people’s land and enslaving
them in a virtual prison…Israel does not represent Judaism or
traditional Jewish values. Its Zionist foundation distorts the very
essence of Judaism…The dynamic of the victim mutating into the
victimizer has been a frequent feature of conflict throughout history.
After the trauma of their European experience, it is a tragic irony
that the Jewish people did not guard against this paradigm, that their
leaders would become committed to safeguarding their people’s future
through a movement that required the subjugation of another people.”

Reverence For Human Life

Forer expresses the hope that, “One day…Jews will realize that
Judaism’s most sacred tenets extol reverence for human life more than
an emotional attachment to land, no matter how holy they believe that
land to be.” He cites Rabbi Schlomo Yitchaki, better known by the
acronym Rashi, the most famous biblical commentator of the Middle
Ages, who taught: “Where the Torah tells about the creation of the
first human being…the earth from which Adam was formed was not taken
from one spot but from various parts of the globe. Thus, human dignity
does not depend on the place of one’s birth nor is it limited to one
region.”

Anna Baltzer, author of “Witness in Palestine: A Jewish American Woman
In The Occupation,” grew up in a secular, unaffiliated Jewish
household. She recalls that, “I knew where my allegiance lay. I saw
Israel as a victimized country that simply wanted to live in peace but
couldn’t because of its aggressive, Jew-hating Arab neighbors…I
first confronted an alternative narrative while traveling through the
Middle East. I was taken in by families of Palestinian refugees, who
told me their stories, They recounted tales of displacement, destroyed
villages, land confiscation, imprisonment without trial and torture.
When I first heard these accusations, I didn’t want to believe them.
In fact, at first I didn’t…I set out to do some research to prove
them wrong and quickly realized how little I actually knew about the
situation.”

What she discovered, notes Baltzer, “shocked me beyond anything I had
read or heard. I witnessed a system of complete segregation. There was
one kind of road for Jews living in the West Bank and another for
Palestinians. I saw Jewish Israelis paid to leave Israel and move to
the West Bank, pushing off my Muslim and Christian neighbors simply
because of their ethnicity and religion. I visited a Palestinian
village that had been intentionally covered in raw sewage, forcing
inhabitants to leave and clearing the surrounding area for subsequent
Jewish-only settlement…The human rights violations I witnessed in
Israel/Palestine are profoundly contrary to the basic tenets of
Judaism. There is nothing Jewish about occupation and discrimination,
and there’s nothing anti-Jewish or anti-Semitic about recognizing and
examining these practices; in fact, it’s in line with a Jewish
tradition of social justice.”

Passivity and Indifference

Poet and essayist Irina Klepfisz was one of the organizers of the
Jewish Women’s Committee to End the Occupation of the West Bank and
Gaza. Her father, Michal Klepfisz, belonged to the Jewish Fighters
Organization in the Warsaw Ghetto. He was killed in 1943 while
protecting other Jewish fighters who were trying to escape during an
uprising against the Nazis. Explaining why she was driven to seek
justice for the Palestinians, Klepfisz said: “Knowing that the world
was passive and indifferent while six million Jews died, I have always
considered passivity and indifference the worst of evils. Those who do
nothing, I believe, are good German collaborators. I do not want to be
a collaborator.”

In April, THE FORWARD asked its readers if the spending priorities of
American Jewish charities match those of American Jews. The paper
reported (April 18, 2014): “Judging by an informal but highly
revealing poll of Forward readers, the answer is no. As in NO. As in:
spend more money on education, culture and community, about the same
on general advocacy and much less on Israel. The Forward’s poll grew
out of our groundbreaking series on the Jewish charitable network, in
which we analyzed newly released tax documents filed by 3,600
not-for-profit organizations to better understand an ecosystem with
assets of roughly $26 billion. The largest share of donor money
outside the federation system goes to organizations that focus on
Israel, with health care and social services second and education
third. But when we asked readers to register their choices…(they)
responded with a dramatically different list of priorities. Education
leaped to the top, while Israel dropped to fourth place.”

A long time donor to Jewish causes who has chaired federation and
Israel Bond campaigns expresses concern about efforts to silence
critics of Israel within the Jewish community. Larry Gellman, in an
article headlined “A Donor Laments the Dwindling Size of the Tent”
(Forward, April 11, 2014) writes: “I am saddened and frustrated by the
recent decision of Federation and Hillel of Greater Philadelphia to
co-sponsor a divisive film screening that demonizes a fellow Jewish
group—in this case, J Street…The film ‘The J Street Challenge,’ is
nothing more than a lengthy political advertisement, featuring
testimony from like-minded right-wing pundits, and funded by
well-known J Street detractors who are trying to move from the fringe,
to defining the parameters of what can be discussed in our community.”

Gellman points to the fact that, “Our community has a vibrant
diversity of opinion, and we should embrace that…If we disagree
about the proper course for Israel to take, we should debate those
differences openly instead of slinging mud…As a person who has
worked so hard and invested so much in building our Jewish
communities, it saddens me profoundly to see so many of the very
organizations and people whom I believed shared common Jewish values
and a commitment to open respectful conversation suddenly behaving in
such destructive ways.”

“Israel Right Or Wrong”

Those who have sought to enforce a code of “Israel, right or wrong”
within the American Jewish community appear to be in retreat, which
may be the cause of their increasingly desperate attempts to enforce a
standard of orthodoxy upon all discourse regarding Israel. They are
being challenged by those who believe that free speech and open
discussion is an important Jewish value. Many of those engaged in that
challenge may not be aware that Zionism—and the notion that Israel
is, somehow “central” to Judaism—is a somewhat recent phenomenon.
Historically, Zionism has been a minority view within Judaism, and is
likely to become a minority view in the future.

In 1841, at the dedication ceremony of Temple Beth Elohim in
Charleston, South Carolina, Rabbi Gustav Poznanski declared: “This
country is our Palestine, this city our Jerusalem, this house of God
our temple.”

In 1885, under the leadership Rabbi Isaac Mayer Wise, the Union of
American Hebrew Congregations, meeting in Pittsburgh, issued a
statement of principles which declared: “We consider ourselves no
longer a nation, but a religious community, and therefore expect
neither a return to Palestine, nor a sacrificial worship under the
sons of Aaron, nor the restoration of any laws concerning the Jewish
state.”

As one of the leading Jewish theologians and philosophers of the 20th
century, Abraham Joshua Heschel, said: “Judaism is not a religion of
space and does not worship the soil. So, too, the State of Israel is
not the climax of Jewish history, but a test of the integrity of the
Jewish people and the competence of Judaism”

American Council for Judaism

Since 1942, the American Council for Judaism has advanced the
philosophy that Judaism is a religion of universal values, not a
nationality, and has maintained that Americans of Jewish faith are
Americans by nationality and Jews by religion, just as other Americans
are Protestants, Catholics or Muslims. Current developments and trends
show us the prophetic vision of its founders.

Among the Council’s founders was Rabbi Morris Lazaron of Baltimore. He
had been an early Zionist, captured by the romantic vision of the
movement. After visiting Nazi Germany and seeing the effects of its
nationalism, Lazaron became convinced that nationalism, a force
leading the world to destruction, could not serve as an instrument for
Jewish salvation. For Lazaron, the mixture of religion and state
spelled disaster.

Judah Magnes, chancellor of the Hebrew University in Jerusalem, wrote
a letter endorsing the Council’s statement of principles: “It is true
that Jewish nationalism tends to confuse people not because it is
secular and not religious, but because this nationalism is unhappily
chauvinistic and narrow and terroristic in the best style of Eastern
European nationalism.”

Challenging The Zionist Consensus

The intolerance of the organized Jewish community was reaffirmed in
April when the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish
Organizations voted to deny membership to J Street, the dovish
lobbying group which has been critical of some Israeli policies. THE
NEW YORK TIMES (May 1, 2014) noted that, “A poll conducted last year
by the Pew Research Center found that a plurality of American Jews did
not believe the Israeli government was making a sincere effort to
reach a peace settlement….The president of J Street, Jeremy Ben-Ami,
said the vote sent a ‘terrible message’ to those who have concerns
about aspects of Israeli policy…’It sends the worst possible signal
to young Jews who want to be connected to the Jewish community, but
also want to have freedom of thought and expression.'”

Recently, the number of Jewish voices challenging the Zionist
consensus which has emerged in organized American Jewish life is
growing. There is a new understanding that the idolatry of the state
of Israel has led to the distortion of a rich religious heritage. The
founders of Reform Judaism, in particular, rejected the notion of a
God confined to a particular “holy” land, embracing instead a
universal God, the Father of all men, and a religion of universal
values as relevant in New York, London or Paris as in Jerusalem.

Universal Faith

The Prophets preached a universal faith of ethical values for men and
women of every race and nation. Narrow nationalism, in recent years,
has corrupted this humane Jewish tradition. Today, more and more
American Jews are seeking to return to that tradition, a vindication
of the vision of those who have worked so hard to keep that philosophy
alive. The Zionist moment in American Jewish life seems to have
passed, although its retreat will be divisive and its assault upon
those who challenge its premises will be harsh. That, after all, is
how movements in retreat traditionally conduct themselves.

————————-

Allan C. Brownfeld is a nationally syndicated columnist and serves as
Associate Editor of The Lincoln Review and Editor of Issues. The
author of five books, he has served on the staff of the U.S. Senate,
House of Representatives and the Office of the Vice President.

http://www.salem-news.com/articles/may012014/zionist-corruption-ab.php

Local Organization Commemorates Armenian Genocide

El Vaquero: Glendale Community College
May 1, 2014 Thursday

Local Organization Commemorates Armenian Genocide

by: Tamara Hacopian, Staff Writer

In observance of the 99th year of the Armenian Genocide, Homenetmen
Glendale Ararat Chapter Cultural Division held a panel titled “Red
Poppy,” commemorating the brutal events that took the lives of 1.5
million Armenians. The red poppy has been used as a symbol of
remembrance since 1920, honoring those who have lost their lives in
battle.

Multiple members of the Armenian community participated in a visually
interactive forum, which was held on April 12 and 13 at the Glendale
Ararat Chapter main building.

The room was adorned with museum-like images and maps of Armenian
villages, including a 40 by 60-foot map of the countless deportation
centers within the Armenian homeland and surrounding countries. A
large screen displayed a slideshow of haunting images of those
victimized by the 1915 genocide.

Before the panel officially began, two musicians used the duduk, a
traditional Armenian wind instrument, to build a sense of eerie
nostalgia, while guests observed the life-sized visual displays from
their homeland.

Among the panelists were Barbara Mulvaney, a senior trial counsel
leading the prosecution team against the military officials
responsible for the Rwandan Genocide; Anthony Portantino, board member
for the Pasadena Armenian Genocide Memorial Committee; and Gevork
Nazaryan, creator of , a website dedicated to
Armenian history and studies.

Notable attendees included Glendale Mayor Zareh Sinanyan; Consulate
General of Armenia in Los Angeles, Suren Vardanyants; GUSD Board
member Dr. Arminah Gharpetian; and Glendale City Clerk Ardashes
Kassakhian.

David George Gevorkyan, the audit commissioner for the city of
Glendale, hosted the event.

The panel began with Nazaryan providing context for the series of
events that led to the first genocide of the 20th century. After the
Ottoman Empire was defeated in the Balkan Wars, the Turkish national
reform party, known as the Young Turks, wanted to preserve the Ottoman
Empire and hang on to as much land mass as they could.

After Turkey joined the Central Powers during the first World War, the
three ring leaders, Talaat, Enver, and Djemal Pasha wanted to
implement Pan-Turkism to unite all Turkish-speaking peoples to rebound
from the crumbling Ottoman Empire. The Armenians were the largest
group that stood in the way of this Turkification ideology. Thus, by
the command of Talaat Pasha, the death marches and massacres of
Armenians began.

According to Nazaryan, the term “genocide” was not coined until 1943,
when Polish-Jewish lawyer Raphael Lemkin combined the Greek word
“genos,” meaning race or tribe, and the Latin word “cidere” or “cide,”
meaning to kill.

The Pasadena memorial committee created an Armenian Genocide
remembrance in Memorial Park. It is surrounded with ornamental
pomegranate trees, which stands as the symbolic fruit tree of Armenia.
The central feature of the memorial is known as “The Teardrop.”

“At the center, a teardrop will fall every 21 seconds and every 21
seconds in a year is 1.5 million,” said Portantino.

Each teardrop represents one life lost. They plan to have it fully
constructed by the 100th anniversary, according to Portantino.

“We have to point out that this is a global issue,” said Nazaryan.
“This is not specifically related to Armenians, and that’s the way
forward.”

Major genocides of the 20th century include the Rwandan Genocide, the
Bosnian Genocide, the Holocaust, and the Cambodian Genocide, among
others.

“This project has really become a benchmark on how we advocate,
commemorate, remember, and reflect about the atrocities of the
Armenian Genocide,” said Gevorkyan.

www.armenianhighland.com

L’exposition de 99 portraits des survivants du génocide

Diyarbakir
L’exposition de 99 portraits des survivants du génocide

A l’initiative de l’Association ARAM et Yerkir Europe, en accord avec
la municipalité de Diyarbakir, Christian-Varoujan Artin et Armen
Ghazarian ont inauguré, le 24 avril 2014, l’exposition dédiée à 99
survivants du génocide, dont les portraits étaient précieusement
conservés à Marseille par ARAM. L’occasion de saluer feu Garbis Artin
et féliciter son fils pour ce retour virtuel de 99 rescapés. Un voyage
riche de symbolique que chacun souhaiterai voir se multiplier par les
uns et les autres, dès lors que l’État turc reconnaîtrait sincèrement
la responsabilité du gouvernement des jeunes Turcs dans
l’extermination planifiée des deux tiers de la population arménienne.

vendredi 2 mai 2014,
Jean Eckian ©armenews.com

http://www.armenews.com/article.php3?id_article=99564
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6SQ_bg6E6as

Ahead Of Yom Ha’Atzmaut, Israel Welcomes 104 Lone Soldiers, 90 Other

AHEAD OF YOM HA’ATZMAUT, ISRAEL WELCOMES 104 LONE SOLDIERS, 90 OTHER NEW OLIM

By JPOST.COM STAFF
05/01/2014 19:57

Among the olim was London native Josh Steele, a finalist from Israel’s
Master Chef TV cooking competition.

New olim Photo: Courtesy Thirty new Olim from North America arrived
today at Ben Gurion airport and 60 others already here became new
citizens through Nefesh B’Nefesh, in conjunction with Israel’s
Ministry of Aliya and Immigrant Absorption, The Jewish Agency for
Israel, Keren Kayemeth LeIsrael and JNF-USA.

At the same time, at the IDF’s Tel Hashomer base in the country’s
central region, 104 lone soldier olim – those who immigrate to Israel
without family and enlist – officially became IDF soldiers as part
of the Friends of the IDF/ Nefesh B’Nefesh Lone Soldiers Program.

Among the olim who became citizens today was London native Josh Steele,
a finalist from Israel’s Master Chef TV cooking competition, who is
the show’s first Anglo participant. He and the other 59 new Israeli
citizens made aliya as part of the Nefesh B’Nefesh Guided Aliya
program. The 104 lone soldiers that enlisted today came from over
20 countries, including Armenia, Belarus, Bolivia, Brazil, Canada,
Chile, Columbia, Ethiopia, France, Georgia, Italy, India, Mexico,
the Russian Federation, Uzbekistan, the US, UK, Ukraine and Venezuela.

“The fulfillment of the Zionistic aspirations of these 194 olim while
Israel gears up for its 66th Day highlights the integral role of
aliya in strengthening the State of Israel,” said Rabbi Yehoshua Fass,
founder and executive director of Nefesh B’Nefesh. “With 90 new olim,
and 104 new young IDF lone soldier olim coming from over 20 countries
from around the world, I couldn’t think of a better gift the State
of Israel can receive for its 66th birthday.”

The Guided Aliya program allows citizens of the US, Canada, and the
UK currently residing in Israel the opportunity to make aliya through
Israel’s Ministry of the Interior, while receiving the full array of
Nefesh B’Nefesh services. These services include assisted government
processing, financial aid and post-aliya assistance.

http://www.jpost.com/Jewish-World/Jewish-Features/Ahead-of-Yom-Haatzmaut-Israel-welcomes-104-lone-soldiers-90-other-new-olim-351086

We’ll Not Stop Advancing Our Demands Until Those Guilty Are Punished

WE’LL NOT STOP ADVANCING OUR DEMANDS UNTIL THOSE GUILTY ARE PUNISHED

Tuesday, 29 April 2014 17:14

The crime against Armenians committed in 1915, which years later
found its true wording under international law – genocide, is one of
the most tragic pages in the history of mankind.

The population of entire Western Armenia became victim of the
state-level policy of exterminating a whole nation; the major part of
the Armenian State was turned into ruins. The nation, which had lived
on this land for thousands of years, was exiled from its homeland,
tormented and tortured in deserts.

And those few, who managed to escape, scattered around the world.

Every year on April 24, the Armenian people paid tribute to the memory
of the innocent victims of the Armenian Genocide of 1915 and various
promotions and events reminds the world about the incident, demanding
recognition and condemnation of this large-scale international crimes.

Every year on April 24, the Armenian people pays tribute to the
memory of the innocent victims of the Armenian Genocide of 1915 and
reminds the world about the event with various actions and events,
demanding the recognition and condemnation of this large-scale
international crime.

By the established tradition, the events dedicated to the victims
of the genocide started in Artsakh in the evening of April 23 with
a protest action – a torchlight procession. The event, which was
initiated by the Artsakh youth wing of the ARFD and Aram Manukyan
Student Union, was attended by the younger generation of Armenians.

Today, they are to resolve the Hay Dat issues. The procession started
from the churchof St. Hagop in Stepanakert, passed through the main
streets of the capital, and reached the Memorial Complex. And before
that, a funerary prayer in memory of the innocent victims of the
Armenian Genocide was served in the St. Hagop Church.

Artsakh ARF Central Committee Chairman David Ishkhanyan began his
speech with the response to the recent message from Erdogan: “We do
not believe. Do not believe, it’s not condescending, no apology and
no step to worship before the Armenian people. This is an attempt to
retreat, to oppose the demands put forward by the Armenian people and
the mighty wave of protests that has arisen on the eve of the 100th
anniversary of the Armenian Genocide.”

The speech by NKR Minister of Culture and Youth Affairs Narine
Aghabalyan was addressed to today’s younger generation: “You are the
generation born on the land liberated and sanctified by the blood
of your fathers, brothers, and sisters – in the free and independent
Republic of Artsakh. To spite our old enemy and all those who dreamed
and cherished the hope to organize massacres of Armenians in Artsakh.

The impunity of genocidal Turkey encouraged Azerbaijan for the slogan
approved in the early 20th century: no Armenians – no problem.

However, our neighbors miscalculated and failed to consider one
important fact – the genocide taught Armenians to be always alert, to
never relax, not to wait obediently for death and extermination and to
be ready to struggle courageously, to fight and perish heroically. Not
to ask for compassion and assistance and to rely on their own forces,
to fight and win. We have learned this lesson, and the 20th century,
which started with the Armenian Genocide, ended with our glorious
victory. Remember, you have given a sacred vow to preserve inviolable
the Armenian land and the boundaries of the Armenian state, to maintain
the steadfast strength of our spirit, our unity and to resist with
dignity all the difficulties and challenges of the time – whether at
home or abroad .”

The choir Mrakats performed works by Komitas. At the Memorial Complex,
the procession participants watched a documentary about the Genocide.

Early in the morning of April 24, an endless stream of people marched
to the Memorial Complex. Workers of enterprises and institutions,
educational establishments, Defense Army servicemen, members of NGOs
and political parties, individuals came here not only to commemorate
the victims of the Genocide, but also to raise their voice of protest
and to demand to recognize and condemn the crime against humanity –
primarily in order that it does not happen again.

At 11 o’clock, the leaders of the Nagorno Karabakh Republic, headed by
President Bako Sahakian, came to the Memorial Complex. The officials
of Artsakh paid tribute to the memory of the victims of the Armenian
Genocide of 1915 with a minute of silence. The authorities and
representatives of various institutions and departments laid flowers
and wreaths on the monument to the victims of Sumgait. Primate of the
Artsakh Diocese of the Armenian Apostolic Church Archbishop Pargev
Martirosyan served a mourning service.

Invoking the memory of the Genocide victims, we realize that we can
overcome the greatest sorrow – the pain of Genocide – only by our
long life. We must go forward and meet bravely the future. This was
noted also by members of the mourning procession.

Answering the questions of journalists, Artsakh Parliament Speaker
Ashot Ghulyan presented his view on Erdogan’s statement made a
day before the 99th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide. “Time has
confirmed that, in spite of any reservations, the fact of the Armenian
Genocide is recognized over years by many in the world and Turkey is
not an exception. If common people of different nationalities gather
together in Istanbul and Ankara, trying in their own way to remember
the victims of 1915 and to honor their memory, it means that the
Turkish leadership must sooner or later recognize and repent.

Breakthrough is already available, and it should be followed by more
accurate and relevant formulations and full realization that the
author of this Genocide was exactly the Ottoman Empire and today’s
Turkey has only one way – to present all this rightly to the world.

These are political processes of recognition and condemnation of
the Genocide.

But I’d like that we accept the 100th anniversary of the Genocide
conditionally – it is a border, on this side of which enormous
efforts were, surely, made in order that the historical fact becomes
perceivable and acceptable. Since all that has been done for these
99 years has been done not only to honor the memory of the Armenians,
but also to warn the world that such genocides can occur in different
countries and be committed against various nations. And what we tried
to do is a big and important contribution to international relations
and to the contemporary political events, as the relentless and
constant reminder over 99 years is also an important cautionary
political act, thanks to which many attempts of genocide were
prevented. And this process will continue after the centennial
anniversary, as the work isn’t completed with mere recognition of the
crime; in fact, the recognition of this important fact and condemnation
of the Genocide must have political consequences”, said the Speaker.

“Every year on April 24, we wake up with the thoughts that today is
a memory day, which the humanity must not forget. And with that in
mind we come to this shrine and remember all the innocent victims of
the Armenian Genocide. People say that who does not remember the past
he has no right to be called a man. And we are happy to the extent
that our younger generation is also aware that we should demand
and let the world realize that it’s time to do away with all sorts
of people killing and genocide. And if we don’t do this, we’ll be
condemned by God”, said Director of Stepanakert secondary school 1,
NKR MP Romella Dadayan.

Laura GRIGORIAN

http://artsakhtert.com/eng/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=1448:-well-not-stop-advancing-our-demands-until-those-guilty-are-punished&catid=1:all&Itemid=1

Press Freedom Suffers Setback In Armenia, According To Freedom House

PRESS FREEDOM SUFFERS SETBACK IN ARMENIA, ACCORDING TO FREEDOM HOUSE

19:11 â~@¢ 01.05.14

The latest press freedom index, published by the international human
rights watchdog Freedom House, has rated the Armenian media non-free,
recording a slight setback in the country compared to last year.

In the report entitled, Freedom of the Press 2014, Armenia ranks the
134th in the list of 197 world countries. Its score is 62 in the index
(instead of the 61 in 2013).

Turkey, which has the same score, ranks as the 42nd country this year.

Russia and Azerbaijan are also among the non-free states, with 81
and 84 points, respectively. The authors have pointed out to the
deteriorating situation with the freedom of press in the country.

Iran, with 90 points, has shown the poorest record in the region. The
situation is better with Georgia which has been classified as a
“partly free” country with 47 points.

Media freedom hits decade low, according to the Freedom House website.

The authors have attributed the situation to the Arab Spring that
saw dramatic developments in Egypt, Libya, and Tunisia.

“The year’s declines were driven by the desire of
governments–particularly in authoritarian states or polarized
political environments–to control news content, whether through
the physical harassment of journalists covering protest movements or
oth¬er sensitive news stories; restrictions on foreign reporters;
or tightened constraints on online news outlets and social media. In
addition, press freedom in a number of countries was threatened by
private owners–especially those with close connections to governments
or ruling parties–who altered editorial lines or dismissed key staff
after acquiring previously independent outlets,” reads the document.

The full report can be accessed here.

http://freedomhouse.org/sites/default/files/FOTP_2014.pdf
http://www.tert.am/en/news/2014/05/01/freedom-house/