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France: TELEVISION LCP Public Senat All History and broadcast a documentary on the Armenian Genocide

April 19, 2014 By administrator

Today Saturday, 19 April chain Whole Story 20:45 diffuse a program entitled “The Holocaust Denial: Incendiary memory.” A new documentary Chantal Picault (duration 52 arton99147-258x156minutes). “Incendiary evoked by the title, they are deniers, these states, these individuals, who deny the Holocaust or the Armenian genocide of Tutsis. How can we deny historical facts, if true, filmed? Why? What is the mechanism of denial? “. At 9:40 p.m., still string Any history documentary broadcast 55 minutes of Laurence Jourdan “Armenian genocide”. The Parliamentary Channel (LCP) and Public Senat also broadcast throughout the week documentary on the Armenian Genocide film.

Summary of the documentary film “Before 1894, three million Armenians and as many Turks formed half the population of the Ottoman Empire. In 1917, two thirds of Armenians have been exterminated. The elimination process was put into place gradually. In 1914, after the killings, exiles and forced conversions, the Armenians are already more than 2.25 million. When Turkey entered the war in November 1914, the Armenians were the first to step up to the 250 000 Armenian soldiers were disarmed and assigned in “labor battalions” that they will never return. On 24 April 1915 the arrest of 650 intellectuals and notables sounds kick appalling massacres that will continue until 1917. ” This latest documentary “The Armenian Genocide” will be rebroadcast several times. Reruns of “Armenian genocide”

– LCP Public Senat, April 25 / 2:00 p.m.
– All history, April 21 / 6:00 p.m.
– All History, April 22 / 24:55
– All History, April 24 / 11:25 p.m.
– All History, April 26 / 1:55 p.m.
– All History, April 30 / 7:50 p.m.
– All History, May 2 / 2:30 p.m.
– LCP Public Senat, May 4 / 2:00

Krikor Amirzayan

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: armenian genocide, France, TELEVISION LCP

France: Action shock Nor Seround in the Annex to the Turkish Embassy in Paris: Loris Toufanian arrested: last day 11:50

April 19, 2014 By administrator

Youth requires repair Armenian genocide

Friday, April 18, 2014 at 17h, a group of young Nor Seround protest before the Annex to the Turkish Embassy in Paris, the seat of the cultural department, asking for justice and reparations for the genocide suffered by the arton99144-480x327Armenian people.

Activists threw buckets of blood in the lobby of the building and manifested their anger at the State denial that exists in Turkey since 1915 on the issue of genocide. Holding placards with the inscriptions “Justice for the Armenian people”, “Turkey out Kessab” or “Justice, repairs! “The group is currently conducting a peaceful sitting in front of the building, 102 Avenue of Elysium fields.

“We will not give up, even after 100!” They chanted in heart. To symbolize their determination to stay on site to expose the responsibility of the Turkish state in the genocide of their people, young people chained themselves to each other, wearing the T-shirts with slogans such as “Turkish state guilty” and “Erdogan outside Kessab”.

Indeed, in recent weeks, jihadists from Turkey, attacked Kessab, a village in Syria which was a haven for families who survived the deportations of 1915. Logistic support Turkey in the willingness of ethnic cleansing practiced against Armenians Kessab is further evidence of the continuity of the Turkish state with his criminal past to remove the Armenian presence of its historic home.

At 1 year of the centennial commemoration of the Armenian Genocide, the Nor Seround came without violence, to remind the Turkish state the legitimate claims of the Armenian people due to the genocide which he was subjected. This page of history can not be turned when the national Armenian property have been returned, spoliation compensated the damage repaired and restored the dignity of the Armenians, this according to the principle of justice, the only guarantee of peace sincere and lasting.

National Bureau FRA Nor Seround – France

T1a-462x422he President of Nor Seround Loris Toufanian and members of Nor Seround were taken in a van to the Police, applauded by the crowd that had gathered behind cords CRS. Kurdish was also in custody. Passing by chance near the tourist office, he expressed his support for the Armenian cause. 8 youth Seround Nor were released an hour after identity checks. Loris only Toufanian was still in custody Saturday morning. One of the leaders of the Turkish Tourism Office, wanting to take young, was arrested by a policeman whom he dealt a blow.

 

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: armenian genocide, France, Nor Seround

Armenian Genocide commemoration events planned in Fresno area

April 19, 2014 By administrator

Fresno GenocideA series of events are planned this week in the Valley to mark the 99th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide, The Fresno Bee reports.

• Two showings of the movie, “Music to Madness: The Story of Komitas,” will be held Monday at the Tower Theater, 815 E. Olive Ave. in Fresno. One showing is at 2:30 p.m., the second at 7:30 p.m. The movie portrays an Armenian boy with a perfect singing voice who becomes a great performer as an adult, but who gets caught up in the genocide and ultimately falls into madness.

• On Wednesday at 5:30 p.m. at Ararat Cemetery, 1925 W. Belmont Ave. in Fresno, wreaths and flowers can be laid at the monument of the Remains of the Unknown Martyr of the Armenian Genocide. A requiem service will be officiated by Armenian clergy from throughout the San Joaquin Valley.

• At 9:30 a.m. Thursday, there will be a commemoration and flag raising at Fresno City Hall, 2600 Fresno St. Among the speakers will be Mayor Ashley Swearengin and Reps. Jim Costa, D-Fresno, and David Valadao, R-Hanford. Special attention will be paid to recent attacks by Syrian rebels on the city of Kessab, where many Armenians were living and have been uprooted in the fighting.

• A commemoration of the genocide will start at 7 p.m. Thursday at St. Gregory the Illuminator Armenian Church, 220 Third St. in Fowler. Fresno County Superior Court Judge Debra Kazanjian will be the featured speaker.

• And for the months of April and May, there is a photo exhibition at the UC Merced Center, 550 E. Shaw Ave. in Fresno, called “The Living Martyrs,” which shows children who survived the genocide.

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: 99, armenian genocide, Fresno

Armenian Genocide to be commemorated in Glendale, Pasadena, Los Angeles area

April 19, 2014 By administrator

Several local events commemorating the 99th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide will be held in Glendale over the next several days, according to Glendale News-Press.

Genocide CommemorationThe genocide resulted in the murder of 1.5 million Armenians at the hands of the Ottoman Turks from 1915 to 1918.

The main event of the week will be the city-sponsored Armenian Genocide commemorative event at 7 p.m. Thursday at the Alex Theatre, 216 N. Brand Blvd. Doors will open at 6:30 p.m.

The event will feature traditional Armenian dances and musical performances by local students and keynote speaker Maurice Missack Kelechian, who is a Silicon Valley engineer whose scientific research led to the unveiling of an Armenian orphanage in Antoura near Beirut-Lebanon which dated back to the time of the genocide.

Operated by Ahmad Jemal Pasha, the orphanage housed 1,000 Armenian orphans and served as a “Turkification” center.

The commemorative week will kick off with two events.

On Monday, the Armenian clubs from Glendale, Hoover, Crescenta Valley and Clark Magnet high schools will hold their 13th annual Armenian Genocide remembrance assembly at 7 p.m. in Glendale High’s newly named John Wayne Auditorium, located at 1440 Broadway. Doors will open at 6:30 p.m.

Students from each school will contribute to part of the assembly, ranging from instrumental musical compositions, poetry readings and video clips.

Also on Monday, the city of Glendale will host a night of poetry focused on inhumane events of the present and past at 6 p.m. in Parcher Plaza at City Hall, 613 East Broadway.

Unified Young Armenians will host a candlelight vigil in remembrance of the genocide at 7 p.m. on Wednesday at the corner of Verdugo Road and Mountain Street.

In Pasadena, the Armenian Community Coalition will host a commemoration event at 10 a.m. on Thursday at Pasadena City Hall, 100 N. Garfield Ave.

The event will feature several speakers including Very Rev. Father Andon Atamian and Rep. Judy Chu, D-Monterey Park.

Unified Young Armenians’ annual mass demonstration in Little Armenia will be held at 10 a.m. Thursday at Hollywood Boulevard and Hobart Street.

The Armenian Youth Federation plans its annual protest in front of the Turkish Consulate, 6300 Wilshire Blvd., Los Angeles, from 4 to 6 p.m. on Thursday.

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: 99, armenian genocide, Glendale, Los Angeles, Pasadena

Turkish Intellectuals Who Have Recognized The Armenian Genocide 13- Selim Deringil

April 18, 2014 By administrator

By Hambersom Aghbashian

Selim Deringil (born Ottawa, 1951) is a Turkish academic and professor of history at Boğaziçi University, Istanbul. He  earned his doctorate from the University of East Anglia in 1979 and joined Boğaziçi University the same selim-deringilyear ( The University of East Anglia -UEA- is a research-intensive public university located in the city of Norwich, England ). He is a notable lecturer on Late Ottoman History, Ottoman Islam and relationships between Ottomans and Europe. He has lectured in the United States, England, France, Lebanon and Israel. He has written several essays on the fall of the Ottoman Empire and the history of the Republic of Turkey. His book “The Well-Protected Domains: Ideology and the Legitimation of Power in the Ottoman Empire 1876-1909” was awarded the “Turkish Studies Association Fuad Köprülü” prize in 2001.(1)

According to http://outlookaub.com, “Selim Deringil is a Howell Chair visiting professor at the History Department from the Bogazici University where he is a full-time faculty member. He has held various academic positions in U.S., Britain and France, where he has taught late Ottoman History. Deringil is one of the few Turkish historians who openly accept the Armenian Genocide.”(2)

Presenting his analysis of Turkish- Armenian relations at Bosporus University in Istanbul, Prof.  Selim Deringil said, “This was the most difficult paper I have ever written in my life.” “Venturing into the Armenian crisis is like wandering into a minefield.” (www.hr-action.org, 15 May 2000). (3)

According to www.topix.com (April 1, 2010), under the head line (Selim Deringil, Turkish Historian Affirms Armenian Genocide),it mentioned that a prominent Turkish historian told Taraf newspaper in an interview published days before, that “the Young Turks planned to annihilate the entire Armenian population.” Historian Selim Deringil told Taraf that there was also a distinction between the aims of the Young Turks and their predecessor Sultan Abdul Hamid at the turn of the 19th century.(4)

During 25-27 May 2005, the first conference on the Armenian Issue was organized in Istanbul, Turkey. The conference was organized at Boğaziçi University. Selim Deringil was one of the chair persons and participated with his research “Archives and the Armenian Question: “Grabbing the Document by the Throat”(5). Asbarez.com mentioned that “According to organizers–the time has come–ninety years after 1915–that “this tragic event in the history of our country–for Turkey’s own academics and intellectuals to collectively raise their voices that differ from that of the official [state] theses and put forth their own contributions. (6)

——————————————————————————————————————————————

1- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Selim_Deringil

2- http://outlookaub.com/2013/03/12/faculty-profile-selim-deringil-visiting-professor/

3- http://www.zoominfo.com/p/Selim-Deringil/694724929

4- http://www.topix.com/forum/world/armenia/THHTJ79VS5UIL0F6K

5- http://h-net.msu.edu/cgi-bin/logbrowse.pl?trx=vx&list=h turk&month =0505&msg  =OhUMtrurxCUxe4jj4FVlKg

6- http://asbarez.com/52201/first-conference-on-the-armenian-issue-organized-in-turkey/

Also Published on

Nor Or, No 16, April 17, 2014

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: armenian genocide, Turkish Intellectuals

In 1915 a theater victims

April 18, 2014 By administrator

Those who knew him, enthusiastic, playful and optimistic Yenovk Şahe described as an actor, 24 April 1915, not yet 26 years old, along with other intellectuals in Istanbul were arrested and exiled to Ayas. Like many failed to nm_tiyatro_550_1915_JPG_1257return from this trip of Şahe.

EVOLUTION OF ROCK
My evrimrkaya@gmail.com

AGOS Those who knew him, enthusiastic, playful and optimistic Yenovk Şahe described as an actor, 24 April 1915, not yet 26 years old, along with other intellectuals in Istanbul were arrested and exiled to Ayas. Like many failed to return from this trip of Şahe. A passionate socialist Şahe’s much work fit the fleeting life story, from Istanbul, author, philologist and theater engagement Beşiktaşlıyan in 1969 penned ‘Taderag the Tempcore’ (‘the stage Faces’) in his work, summarize aktarıyoruz.

Yenovk scene by the name of Şahe İbranosyan artist’s real name was Yenovk. Theatre is one that Western Armenians killed. April 24, 1915, along with other intellectuals in Istanbul were arrested and exiled. According to the testimony of survivors of the days that pain, Yenovk, the jester, who were the most enthusiastic and the most optimistic.

I had a sister and a brother. Well-known Dashnak a math teacher and a former exile who was his brother Krikor Ankut and miraculously survived.

Yenovk, after reading the biography of Bedros Atamyan interest in the theater began to hear. However, the despotism of Sultan Hamid, the theater had become almost impossible to do. At that time, only the Turkish melodramas exhibits Mınaky still active in the troupe. Yenovk, comedian Çaprasdciyan through Mikael has managed to grab a role here.

Many around who are members of the Dashnak Party and socialist intellectuals Yenovk located, was filled voluntarily to fight for freedom.

Theatre lover, fiery political

Was enthusiastic; often had difficulty in controlling anger. In fact, those around him ‘to SOPAC’ were adjectives. So I had some difficulties at the party and were exported. However, this did not reduce his love for his party.

Yenovk, with a few friends on July 19, 1908, in Üsküdar, a concert consisting of Armenian tirades offered. Coppedé of François’ strike of blacksmith named ‘monologues and’ Othello monologue on stage three of the vehicles. This, as a player, family and friends outside the council, was the debut with a performance before a live audience in Armenian. Met with great enthusiasm immediately after the first show, with Aşod Madatyan’l, ‘Free Stage’ theater company founded from. Free Stage program booklet of “defending the cause of socialism and awareness of our people that will receive special attention to the works inspiring scenery” was written. Later in Beyoğlu, Üsküdar, Kadıköy and Kumkapıda, the Barony, Levon Shant, Molière, (Paolo) Giacometti, Dumas, Schiller, Octave Mirbeau of such authors as a series socialist in content game staged. A year later, in 1909, under the leadership of Aram Armenian Dram Vroyr troupe was founded, and in Kumkapıda Kapriyel Suntugyants the ‘Bebo’ play, Adana Massacre was staged to help the victims. Yenovk Şahe, then that Zarify, Mınaky and Feleky in the group also appeared on the scene.

The turning point in the fate of

Yenovk, as well as Bardizag various districts of Istanbul, Izmit, Izmir, Alexandria and Cairo and toured. Armenian Drama Troupe, Dikran Gamsaragan in Cairo’s ‘Liberation’ play staged. Gamsaragan, in fact, was in Cairo effort to create a permanent theater. However, Vartan Papazian was an obstacle to the realization of this project. Gamsaragan if there had this dream, Yenovk Şahe the fate of the whole would be different.

Shortly after his return to Istanbul Yenovk World War I broke out. Yenovk by organizing a show recently have come from Paris to Istanbul, Van, a young player who took to the stage with Levon Harutyunyan. Max Dreyer’s in a game, but with a father who loved her son revived. It was his last game in the Armenian stage. Before the first show, VERÇİN LR (Last Havadis) the first issue of the newspaper in its issue dated 4 January 1915, Yenovk under the photo, praising her expressions were used. Finally, with a representation of Turkish Armenians organized by the ‘Jews’ took part in a game. Was arrested at home and in Nisantasi Ayas was exiled to never to return again.

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: armenian genocide, Turkey

100 Years, 100 Facts Project to Launch April 24

April 18, 2014 By administrator

LOS ANGELES—On the threshold of the centennial of the Armenian Genocide, The 100 Years, 100 Facts Project will commemorate the genocide by publishing facts about Armenians twice a week, starting April 24, 2014 and 100yearsfacts-1culminating on April 24, 2015. These facts will be published on 100years100facts.com – linked through its social media accounts on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and Google+.

“The idea of using social media and the internet as a means to commemorate the Armenian Genocide and connect a population scattered around the world was inspirational to me,” said Lena Adishian, project lead, based in Los Angeles. “While curating one hundred facts about Armenia and Armenians is no easy task, we hope that audiences find the content educational and engaging.”

The goal of The 100 Years, 100 Facts Project is to highlight aspects of Armenian history and culture first of all for Armenians themselves, and also for a broad audience, ranging from the people of Turkey, to society at large wherever the Armenian Diaspora is found, to anyone curious about Armenia and the Armenian people.

Besides discussing the Armenian Genocide itself, the facts include lives of famous Armenian individuals, Armenian Diaspora communities, and other elements of culture, including religion, language, literature, and even sports and entertainment.

“I got very keen on the idea of 100 Years, 100 Facts when Lena approached me with it. This website can serve as a meaningful, enduring commemoration – even a celebration – of the Armenian nation,” said Nareg Seferian, researcher and writer for the project, based in Yerevan. “Some of the facts are very well-known, for example, the Armenians as the first Christians, or the efforts of Near East Relief after the genocide. But we have also found obscure, fun, and interesting tidbits about the history and culture of what is, by all accounts, a remarkable nation, such as a profile of the Zildjian family, or an entry on Armenians in Africa.”

The 100 Years, 100 Facts Project does not claim to be an academic endeavor. However, the effort has been made to present the facts in a scholarly manner, with references and resources listed for the benefit of additional research by the readership.

The team at the 100 Years, 100 Facts Project can be reached through 100years100facts@gmail.com.

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: 100 Facts, 100 Years, armenian genocide

Agos: Famous Armenians address Turkey ahead of Genocide anniversary

April 18, 2014 By administrator

April 18, 2014 – 16:05 AMT

Ahead of the 99th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide, Agos Armenian-Turkish weekly issued interviews with famous Armenians from around the world.

The article slams the treatment of Armenian Diaspora in Turkey, with the interviewees asked to address a message to Turkish people. 16 world-known Armenians whose ancestors were born in Maras, Adiyaman, Arapgir, Egin, Dersim, Diyarbakir, Van, Sivas, Mersin, Elazıg, Kilis, Erzurum, Kayseri, Tokat, Antep, Dortyol, Urfa shared their sentiments on the issue.

Rock-musician Serj Tankian, filmmaker Atom Egoyan were among those voicing their messages through the weekly.

“I thank all the wonderful people who shared their stories with me, giving me hope for justice. To Turkish people I wish that they find their true historic identity,” the Lebanese-born musician said.

Canadian filmmaker of Armenian decent, Atom Egoyan was born in Cairo. In 2002, Egoyan filmed Ararat, a drama depicting the efforts of an Armenian director, Edward Saroyan, to make a Hollywood-style film about the Armenian Genocide, from the fictionalized point of view of a genuine historical figure, Arshile Gorky.

Ararat won a number of accolades, once again bringing the issue of the Armenian Genocide on the international agenda.

“I’m tired of Turkey’s stubborn denial of the Armenian Genocide, with no progress seen on the issue. However, with no alternative left, all I can do is accept that weariness,” the filmmaker wrote.

Nancy Kricorian, the author of a novel Zabelle telling a story of a Genocide survivor, said she doesn’t want Turkey’s apologies. “But I want my question answered: what’s your aim in depriving Armenian people of their rights and justice?” she questioned.

Agos weekly newspaper, published in Istanbul, Turkey, was established on 5 April 1996 by Hrant Dink who was its chief editor from the newspaper’s start until his assassination outside of the newspaper’s offices in Istanbul in January 2007.

Dink was a prominent member of the Armenian minority in Turkey, best known for advocating human and minority rights in Turkey; he was often critical of both Turkey’s denial of the Armenian Genocide, and of the Armenian Diaspora’s campaign for its international recognition. Dink was prosecuted for denigrating Turkishness, while receiving numerous death threats from Turkish nationalists.

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: Agos, armenian genocide, Turkey

Eminent institution of Turkey decided: Mehmet Perinçek is not enough competent in Armenian case

April 17, 2014 By administrator

The leadership of one of the most famous universities in Turkey,”Kayseri-Erciyes”, believes that Mehmet Perinçek, the Turkish historian, author of the book “The Armenian Case in 120 documents of Russian State Archives,” is Mehmet Perinceknot competent enough in the Armenian Case. Perinçek himself told about this “Vesti.az”, reports the Azerbaijani news agency.

Azerbaijani agency calls Perinçek one “of the main exposers of the myth” on the Armenian Genocide.

Mehmet Perinçek stated that the “Kayseri” university has refused him to attend the Conference on “exposure” of the Armenian Genocide. “The reason for failure is simply ridiculous – they say as if “I am not enough competent in the Armenian Case. “But it did not stop me – the panel on the Armenian genocide will be held on April 25 in another place with the participation of Professor Yusuf Halacoglu,” said Mehmet Perinçek.

According to the agency, Mehmet Perinçek was born on September 19, 1978 in Istanbul. He graduated from the Law Faculty of Istanbul University and made a post-graduate study at the Istanbul University Institute of Ataturk’s Principles and History of the Revolution. In 2005 and 2006 he took postgraduate courses at MGIMO, and has become a scholar at the Russian Ministry of Education.

Note that Mehmet Perinçek’s father – Dogu Perinçek, who is the leader of the Working Party of Turkey, in August 2013 he was sentenced to life imprisonment on the case of the terrorist organization “Ergenekon”, but in March 2014 was released. Mehmet Perinçek was also arrested by the “Ergenekon” case in 2011, but was later released.

Source: Panorama.am

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: armenian genocide, Mehmet Perinçek, Turkey

Rep. Schiff: An Open Letter to the Turkish People on the Armenian Genocide (Video)

April 17, 2014 By administrator


On Wednesday, April 9, Rep. Adam Schiff (D-CA) delivered an open letter to the Turkish people on the House Floor, urging them to acknowledge and learn about the Armenian Genocide of 1915.

The full text is below.

REP-AdamAn Open Letter to the Turkish People:

Today, I write to you on a topic of great importance to both of our nations. It is on a subject that many of you, especially the younger generation, may know little about because it concerns a chapter of world history that your government has expended enormous efforts to conceal.

Turkey has been at the center of human civilization from Neolithic times to the present, and your arts, culture and science have enriched the world.

But interwoven with all of Turkey’s remarkable achievements is a dark chapter that too many of today’s Turks know little or nothing about.

Were you aware that your grandparents and great-grandparents had many Armenian neighbors and friends — that twenty percent of the population of today’s Istanbul was Armenian? Did you know that the Armenians were well integrated into Turkish society as celebrated intellects, artists, craftsmen and community leaders? Have you ever wondered, what happened to the Armenians? Have you ever asked your parents and grandparents how such a large, industrious and prosperous people largely vanished from your midst? Do you know why your government goes to such lengths to conceal this part of your history?

Let me tell you a part of their story. The rest you must find out for yourselves.
Ninety-nine years ago this month, in the dying years of the Ottoman Empire, the Young Turk government launched a campaign of deportation, expropriation, starvation and murder against the empire’s Armenian citizens. Much of the Armenian population was forcibly removed to Syria, where many succumbed during brutal forced marches through the desert heat. Hundreds of thousands were massacred by Ottoman gendarmes, soldiers and even ordinary citizens.

By the time the slaughter ended in 1923, one and a half million Armenians had been killed in what is now universally acknowledged as the first genocide of the Twentieth Century. The survivors scattered throughout the Middle East and the wider world with some making their way to the United States, and to Los Angeles.

It is their grandchildren and great grandchildren whom I represent as a Member of the United States Congress. Theirs is a vibrant community, many tens of thousands strong, with schools, churches and businesses providing a daily link to their ancestral homeland. And it is on their behalf that I urge you to begin anew a national conversation in Turkey about the events of 1915-23.

As a young man or woman in Turkey, you might ask: What has this to do with me? Am I to blame for a crime committed long before I was born. And I would say this: Yours is the moral responsibility to acknowledge the truth and seek a reconciliation with the Armenian people that your parents and their parents could or would not. It is an obligation you have inherited and one from which you must not shrink. For though we cannot choose our own history, we decide what to do about it — and you will be the ones to shape Turkey’s future.

At the end of World War II, Germany was a shattered nation — defeated in battle and exposed as history’s greatest war criminal. But, in the decades since the end of the war, Germany engaged in a prolonged effort to reconcile with the Jewish people, who were nearly exterminated by the Nazis during the Holocaust. The German government has prosecuted war criminals, returned expropriated property, allied itself with Israel, and made countless apologies to the victims and to the world. Most important, Germany has worked to expunge the cancer of dehumanizing bigotry and hatred that gave rise to the Holocaust.

This path, of reflection, reconciliation and repentance must be Turkey’s path as well. It will not be easy, the questions will be painful, the answers difficult, sometimes unknowable. One question stands out:

How could a nation that peaceably ruled over a diverse, multicultural empire for centuries have turned on one of its peoples with such ruthlessness that an entirely new word had to be invented to describe what took place? Genocide.

As in Judaism and Christianity, the concept of repentance or tawba is central to Islam. Next year will mark a century since the beginning of the genocide and Armenians around the world will mourn their dead, contemplate the enormity of their loss, and ask, why? Answer them, please, with words of repentance.

Sincerely,

Adam Schiff
Member of Congress

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: armenian genocide, Open Letter to the Turkish People, Rep. Schiff

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