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Kim Kardashian takes out New York Times ad calling for recognition of ‘Armenian genocide’

September 19, 2016 By administrator

Photo: US reality television star Kim Kardashian and her sister Khloe visited the genocide memorial last year. (AFP: Karen Minasyan)

Photo: US reality television star Kim Kardashian and her sister Khloe visited the genocide memorial last year. (AFP: Karen Minasyan)

Kim Kardashian, the world’s most famous Armenian, has taken out a full-page ad in The New York Times calling for the massacre a century ago of up to 1.5 million Armenians to be recognised as genocide.

It was in response to the Wall Street Journal publishing an advertisement earlier this year, which supported the denial of the event.

The United States and Australia are among the nations that do not recognise the event as a genocide. Reality television star Kardashian has long campaigned for that to change, and visited its memorial last year.

What did the ad say?

On Saturday, Kardashian’s advertisement read:
“For the Wall Street Journal to publish something like this is reckless, upsetting and dangerous.

“It’s one thing when a crappy tabloid profits from a made-up scandal, but for a trusted publication like WSJ to profit from genocide – it’s shameful and unacceptable.”

She went on to ask:

“If this had been an ad denying the Holocaust, or pushing some 9/11 conspiracy theory, would it have made it to print?

“Many historians believe that if Turkey has been held responsible for the Armenian genocide, and reprimanded for what they did, the Holocaust may not have happened.

“In 1939, a week before the Nazi invasion of Poland, Hitler said, ‘Who, after all, speaks today of the annihilation of the Armenians?’

“We do. We must We must talk about it until it is recognised by our government because when we deny our past, we endanger our future.”

What do we know about the event?

One-and-a-half million Armenians and other minorities were forcibly expelled from Ottoman Turkey and went on to die during the so-called death marches between 1915 and 1917.

Armenians recognise this as a genocide, a term which Turkey has outright rejected.

Turkey accepts that many Armenians died in partisan fighting which started in 1915, but denies that up to 1.5 million were killed and the deaths constituted an act of genocide.

Who recognises it and who doesn’t?

Pope Francis inflamed the debate last year describing it as the ‘first genocide of the 20th century’ during a mass to mark the centenary of the Ottoman killings of Armenians during World War I.

Countries like France and Germany both recognise the event as a genocide, France even has a law against denying the event.

Australia and the United States do not recognise the event as a genocide at a federal level.

https://twitter.com/mbradylynch/status/777183937621876737

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: 25 governors replaced across Turkey, armenian genocide, Kim Kardashian, Turkey, WSJ

GERMANY Armenian Genocide: Can Dündar a parallel between the situation in 1915 and currently in Turkey

September 19, 2016 By administrator

genocide-and-today-turkeyIn an article published Saturday, September 17 Turkish journalist Can Dündar made in the German newspaper Die Zeit a parallel between the situation in 1915 and currently in the relations between Turkey and Germany.

Can Dündar, former editor of the Turkish daily Cumhuriyet was arrested in November 2015 after the publication of his newspaper pictures showing the Turkish intelligence services providing arms to Syrian rebels. Can Dündar was sentenced to five years and ten months in prison for “divulging state secrets”. He survived an assassination attempt and now lives in exile in Germany.

Can Dündar in particular evokes the book of Jürgen Gottschlich who discovered that Hans Freiherr von Wangenheim, German Ambassador to the Ottoman Empire from 1912 to 1915, knew that the Turks were planning the Armenian Genocide. In the book “Help genocide” ( “zum Beihilfe Völkermord”) Gottschlich showed that the ambassador was not the only one to know but that German leaders have not responded saying instead, “No, we need Turks. “

Can Dündar continues: “Recent tensions between Ankara and Berlin because of the military base of Incirlik remake arise this story. Germany has stationed Tornado combat aircraft and 250 soldiers to Incirlik. Berlin wants to invest in the construction of military facilities in the amount of 58 million euros. With training programs and joint exercises Germany supports the modernization of the Turkish army. And Germany is seeking to have a say in the Middle East.

But in June, the Bundestag passed the Armenian resolution (…) Promptly Ankara denied the German MPs permission to visit Incirlik. Tensions have risen so far and Foreign Minister Steinmeier has threatened that if no authorization German units withdrew Incirlik and reconnaissance flights of NATO. His Turkish counterpart Çavuşoğlu said: “If Germany take the necessary measures, we will allow the visit” Chancellor Merkel was stuck in a dilemma. On the one hand of the public in its own country, on the other the ” ‘alliance of convenience between Germany and Turkey. “ They chose the latter. Immediately before leaving for the G20 summit in China, they said on television that the decision of the Bundestag has no binding force. The spokesman Seibert reiterated government (…) what has to be considered a genocide, the courts should decide. This is also the position of Turkey. Turkish Foreign Minister Çavuşoğlu also announced the good news: “Germany met our requirements.” The crisis is resolved. Next month will be the trip of a German delegation at Incirlik. Meanwhile, Turkey has accused Syria that its entry is not directed against the Islamic State but against the Kurds. (…) I can not imagine that the German ambassador wrote to the Foreign Ministry in this world torn by a state of emergency and the situation in Syria and the response from Berlin. “We need the Turks’.”

Monday, September 19, 2016,
Stéphane © armenews.com

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: 1915, armenian genocide, between, Can Dündar, parallel, situation, Turkey

Los Angeles Armenian Genocide Monument Unveiled in Grand Park

September 18, 2016 By administrator

genocide-memorial-gThe first permanent monument in the city of Los Angeles to memorialize the Armenian genocide was unveiled Saturday at Grand Park.

County Supervisor Michael Antonovich and Armenian community and clergy leaders marked the installation of the sculpture, created by Vahagn Thomasian, during a 5 p.m. ceremony.

The monument is sculpted out of black volcanic tuff rock from the Ararat Valley of Armenia. It will be placed permanently at Olive Court in Grand Park, to remember the Armenians killed by Ottoman Turks in a massacre that began April 24, 1915.

“This remarkable memorial honors the 1.5 million victims of the Armenian Genocide and Grand Park is a superb venue for reflection and solemn contemplation,” Antonovich said in a statement.

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: armenian genocide, grand park, monument

Argentina’s Catamarca province recognizes Armenian Genocide

September 17, 2016 By administrator

catamarca-recognizeThe province of Catamarca, Argentina, on Friday, September 16 joined the National Law 26,199 declaring April 24 every year as the “Day of Action for Tolerance and Respect between Peoples” in commemoration of the Armenian Genocide, Prensa Armenia reports.

“The breakthrough that led to the Law was ratified in Catamarca and demonstrates the national and federal perspective acquired in Argentina in the struggle against denial,” said Nicolas Sabuncuyan, director of the Armenian National Committee of Buenos Aires.

Article 4 of Law 26,199, enacted on December 13, 2006 and promulgated on January 15, 2007, invites provincial governments to “adhere to the provisions,” something that has already been done by 17 Argentine provinces along with the City of Buenos Aires.

The provinces that have already joined the National Law are Buenos Aires, Catamarca, Chaco, Chubut, Córdoba, Corrientes, Entre Rios, Jujuy, La Pampa, Mendoza, Misiones, Neuquen, Rio Negro, Salta, San Juan, Santa Cruz, Santa Fe, Santiago del Estero and Tierra del Fuego.

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: Argentina, armenian genocide, Catamarca, recognize

Filmmaker Terry George: Denial of Armenian Genocide justification for new slaughter “the Promise movie”

September 13, 2016 By administrator

tery-armenian-genocideFilmmaker Terry George, director of the Promise movie, believes that denial of the Armenian Genocide became justification for other slaughters.

During a press conference following the premiere of the Promise film, Terry George spoke of political influence of the Turkish government and denial of the event amid strategic importance.

“For me and for the world this is not a question did it happen or if it happened, vast majority of historical studies firmly established this was a planned attempt to wipe Armenian nation,” he said.
The first screening of “The Promise,” a movie about Armenian Genocide, took place Sunday at the Toronto International Film Festival.

Oscar-winning filmmaker Terry George, actors Christian Bale, Oscar Isaac, and Charlotte Le Bon as well as famous musician Serj Tankian, who is lead singer of the world-renowned American Armenian rock band System of a Down (SOAD) and composer of the soundtrack of this movie, “shone” on the red carpet event for the premiere of “The Promise.”

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: armenian genocide, file, Terry George, The Promise

Pan-Turanism, not Islam, motivated the Armenian Genocide

September 12, 2016 By administrator

harut-sassounian-740-newBy Harut Sassounian

Publisher, The California Courier

www.TheCaliforniaCourier.com

A recently published book “Remembering for the Future: Armenia, Auschwitz, and Beyond,” edited by Michael Berenbaum, Richard Libowitz, and Marcia Sachs Littell, is a collection of scholarly papers delivered at a conference held at the American Jewish University in Los Angeles, March 8-11, 2014.

In his paper, “The Armenian Genocide as Jihad,” Prof. Richard Rubenstein attributes the Armenian mass killings to Islamic fanaticism against Christians. This is an often misunderstood topic even by Armenians who proudly proclaim that they were the first nation to adopt Christianity as state religion in 301 A.D. There is a whole folklore based on the misconception that Armenians were martyred because of their faith and refusal to convert to Islam. Given the current anti-Islamic fervor in the United States and elsewhere, some people are misled by these false claims.

Prof. Rubenstein starts his paper on the wrong footing when he describes a gruesome scene from “Ravished Armenia,” a 1919 Hollywood silent film which showed several naked Armenian women nailed to wooden crosses. Believing that “the Turks” intended to send a particular anti-Armenian and anti-Christian message with such horrifying images, Prof. Rubenstein mistakenly claims that the movie “could not have been filmed without the involvement and consent of Turkish authorities.”

Prof. Rubenstein bases his assumptions of the religious motive behind the Armenian Genocide on the fact that “the Ottoman Empire was governed as a theocratic state at the apex of which stood the Sultan, both the supreme head of state and, for Sunni Muslims, the Caliph and, as such, the successor to the Prophet and supreme protector of Islam.”

The Professor insists on stipulating a religious causal factor for the Armenian Genocide, even after quoting from the eminent scholar Dr. Vahakn Dadrian, who contradicts him. According to Dadrian, the members of the Committee of Union and Progress or Ittihad who gained power in 1908 and masterminded the Armenian Genocide, were not “followers of the tenets of Islam…. While the Ittihad continued to run the State largely as a theocracy, its leaders were personally atheists and agnostics.” It is difficult to believe that a devout Muslim would murder a single human being, let alone millions!

Dr. Rubenstein emphasizes the central role of Islam in the Turkish mass killings of Armenians, even though he acknowledges that “[Ronald] Suny and other scholars have argued that the predominant motive for the murderous homogenization project was nationalism and there is no doubt that radical nationalism played a part.” Rubenstein dismisses the issue of Pan-Turkish nationalism, arguing that “the most important motivation for the monumental ‘ethnic cleansing’ projects was religious and specifically a consequence of the unchanging nature of certain aspects of Islam.”

To demonstrate that religion was a major determinant in the Turkish leaders’ designs, Prof. Rubenstein states: “on November 2, 1914, the Ottoman Empire declared war on the Entente powers, Britain, France, Russia, and their allies. OnNovember 13, the Ottoman Sultan, in his capacity as Caliph, issued an appeal for jihad. The next day, Mustafa Hayri Bey, the Sheikh-ul-Islam, and as such the chief Sunni religious authority in the Ottoman world, issued a formal (and inflammatory) declaration of jihad ‘against infidels and enemies of Islam.’ Jihad pamphlets in Arabic were also distributed in mosques throughout the Muslim world that offered a detailed plan of operations for the assassination and extermination of all ‘unbelievers’ except those of German nationality, the Empire’s wartime ally. Killing squads and their leaders were ‘motivated by both the ideology of jihad and Pan-Turkism influenced by European nationalism.’ While the practical influence of the jihad on the masses was limited, ‘it later facilitated the government’s program of genocide against the Armenians.’”

Prof. Rubenstein misses the point that religious fervor, rather than being the cause of the Armenian Genocide, was exploited to inflame the passions of the fanatical Turkish mobs in order to provoke them against the Armenians.

Instead of religion, the primary motivation for the destruction of Armenians was their removal as an impediment to Turkification and an obstacle to the Turkish leaders’ grand scheme of establishing a Pan-Turanist empire reaching Central Asia. Even though they were Muslims, a large number of Kurds were also killed, simply because they were not Turks!

Christian Armenians had no conflict with devout Muslims and their faith. In fact, large numbers of survivors of the Armenian Genocide were sheltered by Muslims in, Egypt, Iran, Iraq, Jordan, Lebanon, Palestine and Syria. Armenians remember well The Sharif of Mecca, Al-Husayn ibn Ali, who issued an edict in 1917 ordering Muslims to defend Armenian survivors of the Genocide, as they would defend their own families.

The Young Turks’ plan to eliminate Armenians from Ottoman Turkey was motivated by Pan-Turkish fanatical nationalism rather than Pan-Islamic fervor!

Filed Under: Articles, Books Tagged With: armenian genocide, not islam, pan-turanism

The film “The Promise” by director Terry George, who largely evokes the Armenian genocide at the Toronto Film Festival

September 9, 2016 By administrator

film-the-promise-armenian-genocide

The film “The Promise” by director Terry George, who largely evokes the Armenian genocide at the Toronto Film Festival

The American film “The Promise” by British director Terry George will be presented on September 11th at Toronto International Film Festival Film (Canada). “The Promise” released in theaters in the fall. It tells the story of a young woman covered by an American journalist and a medical student in the last days of the Ottoman Empire in 1922. “The Promise” which was produced with the financial support of the Armenian-American billionaire Kirk Kerkorian -disparu in June 2015-, also discusses extensively the issue of the Armenian genocide. A film with many well-known actors such as Christian Bale, Oscar Isaac, Jean Reno, Angela Sarafyan or James Cromwell. The famous musician Serge Tankian has also contributed to the film “Hollywood”.

Krikor Amirzayan (Գրիգոր Ամիրզայեան)

Filed Under: Events, Genocide, News Tagged With: "The Promise" British director, armenian genocide, Terry George, The American film, TORONTO

Documentary trailer “Havresc: Stand on Courage” historical village was started after the 1915 #ArmenianGenocide,

September 6, 2016 By administrator

Armenian Village north of Iraq,

Armenian Village north of Iraq,

**PRESS RELEASE**
by David Ritter and narration by Michael Schmidt.

The last remaining Armenian Village of Iraq, is featured in a documentary by David Ritter and narration by Michael Schmidt. This historical village was started after the 1915 Genocide of Armenians by the families that took refugee from Ottoman era Turkey to Iraq. Today 150 brave families remain,(500+ Armenians) a few Yezidi and Assyrian families.
“Havresc: Stand on Courage” explores the visit of Orange County native Michael Schmidt to N. Iraq, who only knew that Christians needed help in Iraq. What Michael discovered was this historical village “Havresc”.

This great documentary will show at the Glendale International Film Festival (September 28-October 5th) expanded 8 days and 2 theaters. “Havresc: Stand on Courage” scheduled show times are Saturday 10/1 @10:00 pm with a informal discussion beforehand with Michael Schmidt (half Armenian) and fundraiser for our brave Armenian brothers who fight off ISIS. It will be at the MGN 5 Star Cinema @128 N. Maryland Ave., Glendale, CA. “Havresc: Stand on Courage” will play a second time on Tuesday , October 4th @ 8:00 pm.

Tickets can be purchased online
Saturday, October 1, 2016 @10:00 pm goo.gl/cMxHzx
Tuesday, October 4, 2016  @8:00 pm  goo.gl/OwDWSt

Documentary trailer “HAVRESC: Stand On Courage”:  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iLSD0QfMV8E
Michael Schmidt:  ph. 949-294-1978  (MSHbot@aol.com)
David Ritter          ph. 978-835-9678

https://youtu.be/_eA4Wh71Me8

Also Available for interviews
Other films of interest to Armenian viewers:

“Killing Ed” – Sunday, October 2, 2016 @ 7:00 pm (Story of the Gulen Turkish Movement and charter schools in the USA)

“Aram Aram” – Friday, October 1, 2016 @ 8:00 pm (About a young Armenian boy who leaves Lebanon to live in Little Armenia, USA)

“Our Last Stand” – Tuesday, October 4, 2016 @8:00 pm (Helma a Assyrian American teachers venture to Syria and Iraq)
Article here from the National Catholic Registry http://www.ncregister.com/daily-news/100-years-of-genocide-christians-under-siege-in-iraq-and-syria-featured-in/

http://www.glendaleinternationalfilmfestival.com/
Preview and list of 100+ films selected: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ofQ-3mSORRQ

To help fund this project go to – https://www.gofundme.com/xkptuc
website – havresc.com
facebook page – https://www.facebook.com/havresc/?not…
Havresc: Stand on courage is a documentary on the struggles of Armenian and Assyrian Christian Iraqis and the village they have formed on the edge os ISIS controlled territory.
Standing in the face of adversity, bigotry, hatred and oppression they have protected themselves from the Islamic state and created a community that is a home to all Christians facing persecution.
Directed by David Ritter.

https://youtu.be/iLSD0QfMV8E

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: armenian genocide, HAVRESC, Iraq, Stand On Courage

Germany Armenians outraged by Berlin view on genocide

September 3, 2016 By administrator

outrageChancellor Angela Merkel stated that the German government does not distance itself from the Bundestag resolution on Armenian Genocide recognition.

Merkel noted this on Friday, speaking with the German RTL Television. She “categorically denies” all other allegations, reported the German Deutsche Welle (DW) TV and radio company.

But moreover, according to the Chancellor, no resolution should be considered “legally binding,” as they are solely political positions.

Samwel Lulukyan, a representative of the Central Council of Armenians in Germany, however, harshly criticized this stance of Berlin.

“This is even beyond refusal,” Lulukyan told the Rheinische Post newspaper. “This is disgraceful and chaotic.”

He also asked how can an Armenian Genocide resolution not be legally binding, and he called this “wordplay.”

Raffi Kantian, Chairman of the German-Armenian Society, also expressed a similar view. Among other things, he expressed concern that, now, German schools will have less chance to discuss the Armenian Genocide, whereas the said Bundestag resolution advises the contrary.

This view of Berlin, however, has received a positive reaction within the Turkish government circles.

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: armenian genocide, Germany, Merkel, Turkey

Germany: Berlin not distancing itself from Armenia Genocide resolution

September 2, 2016 By administrator

genocide and turkeyA German government spokesman denied claims made in a news report that Berlin was going to tone down a resolution calling the murder of Armenians a genocide. Leaders pointed out, however, that it is not legally binding.

The German news magazine “Der Spiegel” had reported on Friday that Berlin planned a gesture to appease Turkish government anger over the Bundestag’s Armenia resolution. That report, however, was denied by German government spokesman Steffen Seibert.

He said there could be no talk of Germany distancing itself from the parliamentary resolution.

The report in “Der Spiegel” said Chancellor Angela Merkel’s government hoped to resolve a dispute that has seen German parliamentarians barred from visiting Bundeswehr troops stationed at the Incirlik airbase in eastern Turkey.

Germany’s lower house unanimously backed a resolution in early June that explicitly declared the ethnic slaughter of Armenians by the Ottoman regime during World War I to have been a genocide.

In response, Ankara blocked German parliamentarians from visiting German troops stations at Incirlik, where the Bundeswehr is engaged in operations against “Islamic State” (IS). Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan denounced the vote, recalled his ambassador to Berlin for consultations and threatened further action.

The head of Merkel’s Christian Democratic Union in parliament said the chancellor would not distance herself from the resolution. Volker Kauder told a committee meeting on Friday that she had called him personally to make it known that she was in favor of the resolution.

Diplomatic hot potato

Germany’s Foreign Ministry has sought to resolve the dispute in recent weeks, with officials reportedly being told that Ankara wanted the German government to distance itself from the legislature’s vote. According to “Der Spiegel,” a spokesman would reiterate that the resolution had no legal effect on the actions of the German government.

German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier pointed out on Friday that the Bundestag resolution was non-binding.

“The German Bundestag naturally has every right and the freedom to express itself on political issues,” Steinmeier said. “But the Bundestag itself said that there is not a legally binding basis for every resolution.”

Even when it passed the Bundestag, it was clear to lawmakers that the resolution was non-binding.

Both Steinmeier and Merkel are reported to privately support the parliament’s position.

Seibert said on Friday, however, that there could not be any talk of Germany distancing itself from the Armenia resolution.

Call for redeployment

Steinmeier is a member of Germany’s Social Democratic Party (SPD), which has said Germany should redeploy its troops to another support base in the Middle East, should German parliamentarians continue to be barred from visiting personnel.

Although Germany is not directly engaged in combat operations against IS, it has deployed a number of surveillance aircraft to assist the US-led coalition. The German parliament is scheduled to decide on a mandate to extend the mission in December.

The topic of the murder of some 1.5 million Armenians and other Christians by the Ottomans during 1915-16 is a particularly sensitive one in Turkey, which claims the figures are inflated and that the killings do not constitute genocide.

Source: http://www.dw.com/en/berlin-not-distancing-itself-from-armenia-resolution/a-19521960

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: A conference in Turkey dedicated to 100th anniversary of Armenian Genocide, armenian genocide, distancing, german, government, No, Turkey

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