Gagrule.net

Gagrule.net News, Views, Interviews worldwide

  • Home
  • About
  • Contact
  • GagruleLive
  • Armenia profile

‘Operation Nemesis: The Assassination Plot That Avenged the Armenian Genocide’ – The Washington Times

May 13, 2015 By administrator

nemesis.thumbVengeance is born when justice dies. “Operation Nemesis” is the gripping tale of how a small, ruthlessly determined group of Armenians hunted down the architects of the Ottoman Empire’s World War I program of organized mass murder, specifically intended to eliminate a people, the Armenians, who had lived in Anatolia and other parts of the Ottoman Empire for thousands of years.

Many governments, spiritual leaders (including the current pope), and most independent historians and legal analysts agree that what began in Istanbul a century ago on April 24, 1915, was the first modern genocide. By the time it was over, best estimates are that 1 million Ottoman Armenians had been killed, starved or driven to their deaths — as many women and children as able-bodied men. Trials in Istanbul immediately after World War I convicted and condemned to death in absentia key members of the responsible Young Turk leadership, but political upheaval erupted before most sentences could be carried out. While Kemal Ataturk, founder of the modern Turkish republic, personally denounced the mass murder of Armenians as “a shameful act,” his and other successor governments never officially acknowledged what happened. In the perilous early days of the Turkish republic — a poor, war-ravaged country — denial was understandable if not justifiable. The first and only priority was to establish a cohesive Turkish identity to replace the conflicted racial and religious melange that was the Ottoman Empire.

This meant creating a cadre of Muslim Turkish doctors, engineers, artists, intellectuals, architects, bankers and entrepreneurs to replace the Christian Armenians, Greeks and other minorities who had dominated those fields throughout the Ottoman centuries. It also meant avoiding restoration of valuable farmland, commercial property and seized or looted personal wealth to the families of murdered or exiled Armenians at a time when the Turkish economy was struggling to survive. This, in turn, led to rewriting history and demolishing ancient churches and other traces of Armenian civilization that had stood for centuries before the first Turks set foot in Anatolia.

Today, Turkey is a prosperous regional superpower, but its government is still in deep denial. It is as if every postwar German government, from Konrad Adenauer to Angela Merkel, had denied the existence of Nazi atrocities and passed laws banning the discussion of Hitler’s crimes against humanity. Of course, no analogies are perfect. Even as the Young Turk leadership organized and carried out its program of mass extermination, a few Christian Armenians were exempted. A great uncle of mine, a palace architect to the sultan, was already serving as an Ottoman engineer officer when the mass murders — unbeknownst to him — began. His wife, as a senior officer’s spouse, was spared. Uncle Mihran ended up a British POW on the Arab front and would build a new life — and a distinguished architectural career — in America. To his dying day, he had nothing but respect for Kemal Ataturk as a brilliant soldier and nation-builder. Obviously, you wouldn’t have found any Jewish officers in senior German ranks under the Third Reich, and wives of purged Jewish officers would probably have perished in concentration camps.

But that hardly alters the big picture. The mass murders of defenseless Armenian civilians, deportations, abductions of children, unrecompensed confiscation of possessions, and deliberate failure to provide food or medical treatment to Armenian death marchers clearly qualify as genocide. Small wonder then, that in the absence of justice in the early 1920s, a handful of Armenian conspirators took the law into their own hands and hunted down several of the convicted mass murderers living comfortably in cities like Berlin. Sadly, theirs is a story with more villains and victims than heroes. In “Operation Nemesis,” Eric Bogosian, a successful playwright and novelist, portrays the revenge killers warts and all; they included at least one neurotic and one braggart who clearly enjoyed his work a little too much. Worse was to follow. As late as the 1980s, a handful of radical Armenian nationalists with Middle East terrorist links carried out murders of innocent Turkish diplomats, possibly with encouragement from behind the Iron Curtain.

Meanwhile, the bloody shirt of Talaat Pasha, one of the architects of the Armenian genocide — a man who gloated about it and even pressured U.S. Ambassador Henry Morgenthau to turn over any American life insurance benefits paid on the deaths of his victims — was placed on display at the Turkish Army Museum inIstanbul as evidence of Armenian atrocities against Turks; the equivalent would be a contemporary German museum displaying clothing worn by Adolf Eichmann at his execution as evidence of Jewish atrocities against Germans.
Justice has yet to replace revenge, but growing numbers of Turks are seeking — and speaking — the truth, even at the risk of jail. When Hrant Dink, a courageous Turkish-Armenian journalist I was privileged to know, was gunned down by an extreme Turkish nationalist in front of his Istanbul office in 2007, 200,000 mourners, overwhelmingly Muslim Turks, filled the streets carrying signs declaring “We Are All Hrant Dink” and “We Are All Armenians.” What better reminder that the sense of justice is often stronger in ordinary citizens than in politicians?

Filed Under: Articles, Books, Genocide Tagged With: arminian, book, Genocide, Nemesis, operation

Armenian Genocide resolution introduced to Germany federal state parliament

May 13, 2015 By administrator

Germany-recognize-genocideOn the occasion of the Armenian Genocide Centennial, the parliament of the federal state of Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany, on Tuesday submitted a joint resolution condemning the genocide.

In the Rhineland-Palatinate capital city of Mainz, all parliament factions used the term “genocide” to describe what occurred in the Ottoman Empire in 1915.

“We [i.e. Germans] all have to bear the historic accountability for this Genocide (…). That is why we introduce this joint resolution.

“This is not solely about remembering the victims, but the need to look ahead. Our joint objective is to achieve reconciliation, mutual understanding, and recognition. That is why we support the development of Armenian-Turkish relations.

“The resolution calls on to remember the Armenian Genocide that occurred 100 years ago. The [Rhineland-Palatinate] parliament factions condemn the Ottoman Empire’s actions that led to the extermination of 1.5 million Armenians.

“The parliamentary forces remain faithful to their decision of Armenian-Turkish reconciliation,” the joint resolution specifically reads, reported Rhein-Zeitung.

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: Armenian, Genocide, Germany, resolution

Cross-stone dedicated to Armenian Genocide Centennial placed in Germany’s Halle

May 12, 2015 By administrator

Armenain-crossA cross-stone made from Armenian tuff has been placed in the Halle city of Germany’s Saxony-Anhalt state. The cross-stone is dedicated to the Centennial of the Armenian Genocide, yerakouyn.com reports.

According to Hye Tert, the cross-stone was officially unveiled with the blessing and consecration with the participation of Primate of the Armenian Diocese of Germany, His Grace, Father, Archbishop Garegin Bekchyan, President of the Inter-Church Cooperation of Saxony-Anhalt Jurgen Titrich, Temporary Charge d’Affaires of the Republic of Armenia in Germany Ashot Smbatyan, Mayor of Halle Bernd Vigand and others. The ceremony included a performance by the local women’s choir.

 

Source: Panorama.am

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: Armenian, Cross-stone, Genocide, Germany

The Jerusalem Post: Knesset Speaker calls to rethink Israel’s stance on Armenian genocide

May 12, 2015 By administrator

Yuli Edelstein

Yuli Edelstein

Knesset Speaker Yuli Edelstein on Tuesday called to rethink Israel’s stance on the Armenian genocide, calling the murders a “moral stain” on humanity.”

“History cannot be changed,” he said during a speech in the Knesset. “The disaster can’t be obscured by diplomacy anymore.”

Armenia recently marked the centenary of a mass killing of up to 1.5 million Armenians by Ottoman Turks in 1915, at the height of World War I.

“It is no secret that Israel has taken an ambivalent position about the genocide,” Edelstein said, calling Israel’s reaction “too hesitant and too restrained.”

“As the Jewish people, we cannot stay silent,” he addressed MKs in the plenum. “We cannot turn a blind eye or lessen the extent of the Armenian tragedy,”

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: Armenian, Genocide, Israael, Knesset, rethink, Speaker

Documentary Film on the Assyrian Genocide Shown in Sweden

May 12, 2015 By administrator

By Bar Daisan, AINA News

20150511184805Sodertalje, Sweden (AINA) — A documentary film on the Turkish genocide of Assyrians in World War One premiered yesterday in the city of Sodertalje, 36 kilometers south of Stockholm. The documentary, titled Seyfo 1915 – The Assyrian Genocide was directed by Assyrian filmmaker Aziz Said, who lives in Berlin. The film was produced by the Assyrian Federation of Sweden. Nearly 600 people attended the premiere.

The documentary tells the story of the genocide perpetrated by the late Ottoman government against the Assyrians, Greeks and Armenians — the Christian population of Turkey.

“Many of those who came to see the movie are people who themselves have lost relatives who were murdered a hundred years ago,” said Afram Yacoub, the President of the Assyrian Federation in Sweden.

The story of the film starts in Sweden. A Sweden-born journalist of Assyrian origin travels with a film crew to her parent’s homeland in Tur Abdin in southeastern Turkey in order to follow remaining traces of the crimes committed there during the year 1915. Assyrians call the year 1915 Seyfo, meaning sword. The film crew visited the cities Mardin, Diyarbekir, Midyat, Siirt and multiple other locations of where the genocide occurred.

The film includes testimony from several European, Turkish and Assyrian historians, as well as genocide researchers, including Professor Taner Akcam, Dr. Gabriele Yonan and Professor David Gaunt. The film includes testimony from survivors of the genocide.

750,000 Assyrians (75%) were killed in the genocide, as well as 500,000 Greeks and 1.5 million Armenians.

Related: Assyrian Genocide 100

The viewer of the documentary is transported into the villages in southeastern Turkey and confronted with images of devastation, where once proud houses and churches stood. The area looks like abandoned. The evidence of the past horror visible in many stone and wall ruins. The statements of the descendants of the victims of the genocide are heart-wrenching, indicating the scale of the tragedy.

Speaking at the premiere, director Aziz Said said the project was “a very emotional experience…I wanted to share with you this story and what I’ve learned with this film…its objective is to serve as a bridge of reconciliation, acceptance and peaceful coexistence between Turks, Kurds and Assyrians not only in Turkey but also in the European Diaspora. I hope it helps understand history of the region.”

The film contributes 100 years later to the memory of the greatest catastrophe in modern history of the Assyrians. This is particularly important for today’s young Assyrian people in the Diaspora and the interested European co-citizens and Kurdish and Turkish neighbors in Turkey. Such a documentary thus helps to keep the memory of the victims of the genocide alive, because Turkey as the formal successor state of the Ottoman Empire has not recognized this genocide and even vehemently denies it.

“Under the directorship of Aziz Said an impressive and professional document has been created,” said Dr. Gabriele Yonan, author of the very first book published 1989 in German about the Assyrian Genocide and who was among the invited guests in Berlin. “At the same time it is evidence that even after four generations Seyfo is alive among the descendants of victims and perpetrators. Also, it is shows that historical research focused on the Assyrian genocide has made progress in recent decades. Seyfo 1915 – Assyrian Genocide will be certainly an important film for the next generation.”

Two weeks ago the documentary was shown at a private screening in Berlin. While the German Parliament was discussing whether to recognize the genocide, the documentary was shown on Monday, April 22nd to an invited audience at the town hall of Berlin’s Schoneberg, a location famous for hosting John F. Kennedy on June 26th, 1963, when he said “Ich bin ein Berliner.”

Berlin’s audience of about 100 invited spectators were Germans, Turks, Kurds and Assyrians. Also present was the film crew that accompanied Aziz Said for several months in Turkey and Sweden.

“I was deeply touched and my heart was full of compassion for the Assyrian families, victims and relatives alike,” said Imogen Schafer, following the end credits of the documentary while the passionate beautiful music of the film was fading away at the background.

 

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: assyrians, documentary, Film, Genocide, Sweden

Australia’s Willoughby City Council recognizes Armenian Genocide

May 12, 2015 By administrator

191933Willoughby City Council, in Sydney’s North Shore, has passed a motion recognising the Armenian Genocide, reported the Armenian National Committee of Australia (ANC Australia).
On Monday, May11, Willoughby City Council – the municipality that is home to many thousands of Sydney-Armenians, as well as to Armenian churches and community centres – considered the motion, which reads: “Willoughby City Council recognises the genocide of the Armenian, Greek and Assyrians peoples by the then Ottoman Government between 1915 and 1922 and condemns these and all other acts of genocide and crimes against humanity as the ultimate act of intolerance”.
The motion was introduced in what is the Armenian Genocide’s Centenary year by long-standing friend of the Armenian-Australian community, Councillor John Hooper, and was seconded by Councillor Judith Rutherford. It passed unanimously, making Willoughby City Council the second Australian local government to recognise the Armenian Genocide after Ryde City Council.
ANC Australia’s executive director, Vache Kahramanian, addressed the Council meeting to speak in favour of the motion and on the importance of Armenian genocide recognition as a mechanism to prevent future instances of genocide being perpetrated.
Upon passage of the motion, Kahramanian remarked: “I thank Councillor Hooper and Willoughby City’s Councillors for adding their formal recognition of the Armenian genocide. Such motions send the clearest signal that genocide denial has no place in the twenty first century.”
“There is a national movement in Australia towards recognition which will ultimately lead to the Commonwealth Parliament also affirming the historical reality of the Armenian genocide,” Kahramanian added.
The motion adopted by Willoughby City Council comes only weeks after Ryde City Council reaffirmed its long standing position on the Armenian Genocide.
The text of the Willoughby City Council motion reads:
That:
Willoughby City Council recognises the genocide of the Armenian, Greek and Assyrians peoples by the then Ottoman Government between 1915 and 1922 and condemns these and all other acts of genocide and crimes against humanity as the ultimate act of intolerance.Z
Willoughby City Council endorses the resolution of the NSW Parliament on 17 April 1997 that it:
recognises and condemns the Genocide of the Armenians by the then Ottoman Government between 1915 and 1922, and designated 24 April of every year thereafter as a day of remembrance of the 1.5 million Armenians who fell victim to the first genocide of the twentieth century;
recognises that Assyrians and Greeks were subjected to qualitatively similar genocides by the then Ottoman Government between 1915 and 1922;
reaffirms its condemnation of the genocide of the Assyrians, Armenians and Greeks, and all other acts of genocide as the ultimate act of intolerance;
recognises the importance of remembering and learning from such dark chapters in human history to ensure that such crimes against humanity are not allowed to be repeated;
acknowledges and pays tribute to the contribution of the Anzac servicemen who aided the survivors of the genocide; and acknowledges the significant humanitarian relief contribution made by the people of New South Wales to the victims and survivors of the genocide.
Related links:
Ավստրալիայի Ուիլոուբի քաղաքի խորհուրդը ճանաչել է Հայոց ցեղասպանությունը․ Tert.am
ANC Australia. WILLOUGHBY CITY COUNCIL IN AUSTRALIA RECOGNISES THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: Armenian, Australia's, Genocide, Recognizes, Willoughby

1915-2015: Looking Back and Going Forward Armenian Genocide

May 12, 2015 By administrator

By David Boyajian,

armenian-genocide-1024x683There is a cynical saying that contains a kernel of truth: “One death is a tragedy, a million deaths is a statistic.”
This may apply to the Armenian genocide committed by Turkey from 1915 to 1923.  It truly is hard to conceive of 1,500,000 murders unless you or your family experienced this genocide.
And it wasn’t only the murders of the men, women, and children — the clergy, community leaders, intellectuals, doctors, extended families, housewives, peasants, teachers, students, businesspeople, merchants, farmers, craftspeople, writers, poets, artists, musicians, and resistance fighters. Nor was it only that many Armenian women and children were abducted by Turks, forcibly Islamized, and worse.
No, the ancient Western Armenian culture was virtually destroyed: Our people’s way of life, traditions, folklore, Bibles, ancient manuscripts, books, maps, historical artifacts, family histories, birth records, stories, art, music, dance, and traditional clothing, as well as homes, farms, orchards, schools, monasteries, and thousands of churches belonging to the three Armenian denominations.
Even the Western Armenian language — somewhat different than the Eastern Armenian dialect of present-day Armenia — was dealt a severe blow.  It is officially considered endangered by the United Nations.
Against All Odds
Yet, against all odds, the survivors — our parents, aunts, uncles, cousins, grandparents, great-grandparents and you — rose from the ruins and built lives, families, communities, and churches. But then, isn’t starting over what we Armenians have done many times for thousands of years?
The survivors found refuge in many other countries, such as America, helped by their generosity and that of the Near East Relief and churches worldwide.
Other Armenian survivors fled east to the Armenian region of the Russian Empire and the then Republic of Armenia, which was reborn in 1918. These, too, were invaded and targeted for genocide by Turkey during and after WW1, until the Armenian Republic was taken over by the Soviet Union in 1920.
The genocide of 1915 was preceded by what the world today would also call genocides: Massacres in the Cilicia region in 1909 and on the Armenian Plateau — now referred to as eastern Turkey — in the 1890s. Some Armenians who lived through those bloodbaths escaped abroad before 1915.
During the period of the Armenian genocide, Turkey also perpetrated genocides against Assyrian and Greek Christians.
Though we may think of its occurring only in 1915, the Armenian genocide continued until at least 1923, five years after WW1 ended.
Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, the first president of the so-called Turkish Republic founded in 1923, is still continually praised in the U.S., Europe, and elsewhere as some kind of hero. They are really just parroting Turkish propaganda.
Atatürk continued the genocide begun by his predecessors. And in 1920, he ordered his generals to “destroy Armenia politically and physically.” They failed, otherwise today there would no Armenia whatsoever.
Atatürk brought Turkish officials who had carried out genocide, such as Abdülhalik Renda and Şükrü Kaya, into his new government.
Though Turkey and its defenders deny that it committed genocide, they acknowledge that many Armenians died in that period. Turkey alleges that Armenians rebelled and so had to be “deported” and that famine, disease, inclement weather, and Turkish and Kurdish bandits, not the Turkish government itself, took Armenian lives.
The real reasons are otherwise.
Pan-Turkism and Turkification
In 1914, Turkey entered WW1 to enlarge its empire, which already encompassed much of the Middle East, including today’s Lebanon, Syria, Iraq, Palestine, Jordan, Israel, and more.
Turkish foreign policy was based on Pan-Turkism. Turkey aimed to expand eastward, toward the Turkic-speaking Muslim regions, what are now Azerbaijan and countries such as Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan.
The political philosophy known as Turkification had also taken hold. Non-Turkish and non-Muslim peoples of the Turkish Empire were considered undesirables. Moreover, the Armenian regions of the Turkish and Russian empires stood in the path of Turkey’s eastward thrust. Armenians had to be eliminated.
What historian Vahakn Dadrian refers to as “a culture of massacre” also played a major role.
Acknowledging and punishing the crime of genocide are, of course, central to preventing present and future genocides in the world. But is the Armenian Genocide relevant to Armenia today? It is.
The Genocide Matters
First, the reduced population of today’s Armenia makes it more vulnerable and can be traced in large part to the genocide.
Due to broken promises by the world powers in the 1920s, Armenia became landlocked and greatly limited in size. As a result, Armenia now lacks direct access to the Black Sea and, therefore, to Europe and Russia. Armenia must depend on problematic routes, notably through Georgia, for all overland imports and exports. Of course, Turkey and Azerbaijan’s borders with Armenia remain closed.
Moreover, Pan-Turkism poses largely the same dangers now as during the genocide. Turkey is extending its reach into Azerbaijan and Central Asia’s newly independent Turkic-speaking states.
Pan-Turkism may be even more of a threat today because the United States, Europe, and NATO actually support the spread of Turkish influence to the east. For example, they’ve built pipelines to pump oil and natural gas from Azerbaijan and Central Asia through Turkey into Europe, and more are planned. The West also seeks to remove Russian influence from the region. This would deprive Armenia of its only ally.
Greek, French, and other intelligence agencies say that in 1993 Turkey would have invaded Armenia during the Artsakh/Karabagh war had a coup d’état against Russian President Boris Yeltsin succeeded.
Whether we like it or not, Armenia’s military alliance with Russia is a natural one because, like Armenia, Russia opposes Pan-Turkism.
Some Armenians believe that Armenia is not an important country. The contrary is true: Armenia is pivotal in the continuing confrontation between Western countries and Russia.
Without Armenia, Russia’s position in the Caucasus would collapse since Georgia and Azerbaijan are essentially anti-Russian. That makes Armenia not only an essential ally for Russia but also a potential prize for the U.S., Europe, and NATO. This is why both sides have been courting Armenia.
Unfortunately, it’s impractical for Armenia to join the West’s military alliance, NATO. That’s because Turkey, a NATO member with 80 million people and a large land mass, would carry much more weight than Armenia.
Of course, the U.S. and Europe have always had excellent relations with Armenia. History tells us, sadly, that Western countries would probably not restrain Turkey should it try to dominate or invade Armenia.
The Diaspora must continue to support Armenia in every way possible, something that you and our many friends continue to do. If Armenia is overrun, which is possible, the genocide will be virtually complete.
Moreover, many Armenian communities of the Middle East are under attack and endangered in ways not unlike in 1915.  We must continue to support them too. Each of our Diasporan communities is precious.
The 100th Commemoration
Many in the Armenian Diaspora have wondered if it would rise to the occasion on the 100th commemoration. Armenians worldwide have responded magnificently, beyond expectations.
So far this year, literally thousands of events and activities have taken place with huge crowds, including many supportive non-Armenians, in Boston, Chicago, Los Angeles, Paris, and elsewhere: Commemorations, demonstrations, marches, conferences, lectures, concerts, art exhibitions, billboards, books, films, radio and TV programs, and very supportive editorials and articles.
The Vatican has re-affirmed the Armenian genocide.  So have Chile, the Czech Republic, and the European Union Parliament. Austria and Bulgaria have formally recognized the genocide.  It again shows just how essential the Diaspora is.
Yes, Armenia must survive and prosper, but so must the Diaspora. Without the Diaspora, Armenia will face the future alone. Without Armenia, what is the Diaspora?
Ultimately, our response to the genocide is for Armenians and Armenia to survive and prosper. Only we can do this.
The author is a freelance Armenian American journalist. Many of his articles are archived at Armeniapedia.org.
# # #

 

 

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: 1915-2015, Armenian, back, Forward, Genocide, Going, Looking

Egyptian composer Samir Aiad has dedicated a song to the Armenian Genocide centennial. (Video)

May 11, 2015 By administrator

samir aiadSamir Aiad is the author of both the music and lyrics.
The composer left the following note on his Facebook page:

“Many are aware of the tragedy that befell this great nation – the Armenians.
I have heard these stories from my teacher of violin, who worked in my school. 
She was Armenian, one of those Armenians, who reached Egypt with her mother through the Syrian deserts.
Peace to the souls of all victims and shame on the people that perpetrated this crime.”

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide, Videos Tagged With: Armenian, composer, Egyptian, Genocide, Samir-Aiad, song

Recognition of the Armenian genocide: how celebrities were on the forefront

May 9, 2015 By administrator

arton111293-480x221System of A Down, Kim Kardashian, Amal Clooney … As the world commemorates the centenary of the first genocide of the twentieth century, the Armenian Diaspora mobilizes its forces media to raise public awareness.

The American hip-hop star Kanye West jumping into a lake during a surprise concert. His wife, the more people that Kim Kardashian, creating a riot on social networks and posting on his Instagram account:

“Thousands of people were there! Kanye jumped into the lake to get closer to the crowd stationed on the other side and full of people then also jumped! It was such a crazy and exciting night! “

The scene could have taken place almost naturally in New York, London or Paris. She has performed in Yerevan, capital of Armenia, a small country of 3 million people wedged between Turkey, Iran, Azerbaijan and Georgia. The Kardashian family, consisting of Kim, Khloe’s sister, husband and their daughter Kanye North, organized a surprise trip to Armenia memory. The occasion of a meeting with Armenian Prime Minister Hovik Abrahamian, before taking off for Jerusalem and their children baptized in an Armenian cathedral. Kim Kardashian, reality TV producer, born in Los Angeles in 1980, is indeed the daughter of Robert Kardashian, American lawyer and descendant of the deported Armenian genocide of 1915.

read more …

http://www.slate.fr/story/100717/reconnaissance-genocide-armenien-celebrites

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: Armenian, Celebrities, forefront, Genocide, Recognition

Output of the collective book “Genocide of Armenians. A century of research (1915-2015)

May 8, 2015 By administrator

arton111534-240x369The book “The Armenian Genocide. A century of research (1915-2015), “a collective work that integrates dozens of texts related to the Armenian Genocide, signed by dozens of historians including Yves Ternon Annette Becker, Hamit Bozarslan, Vincent Duclert, Gaïdz Minassian, Claire Mouradian , Michael and Raymond Kevorkian Nichanian. “The genocide of Armenians. A century of research (1915-2015) “published in late March by Armand Colin (368 pages, 23 €) with the support of the Mission Centenary, was published on the occasion of the holding in Paris from 25 to 28 March 2015 , the international conference “The Armenian Genocide in the Ottoman Empire in the Great War. 1915-2015: one hundred years of research. “ This important book to learn about advanced research on genocide, brings together scientific contributions presented at the Sorbonne, in the Memorial of the Shoah, in the School of Higher Studies in Social Sciences and the National Library of France. This conference introduced by the President of the Republic is organized by the International Scientific Council for the study of the Armenian Genocide (CSI) chaired by Yves Ternon with the support of the Mission’s centennial in 2015 and many academic institutions.

“A century after the outbreak in Constantinople on 24 April 1915, the extermination of Ottoman Armenians by the Unionist government, international research in this publication demonstrates the extent of scientific knowledge on the first contemporary genocide. This book is part of the motion studies of genocide, in full development in France and in the world. The 1915 centenary marks a turning point in the public resonance of the highest scientific knowledge and the affirmation of international awareness of genocide prevention. “Writes the editor. The book should take place in all the libraries of all those interested in news of the Armenian Genocide.

- “The genocide of Armenians. A century of research (1915-2015) “(Armand Colin, 368 pages, € 23 March 2015).

Krikor Amirzayan

Filed Under: Articles, Books, Genocide Tagged With: Armenian, book, Genocide

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 43
  • 44
  • 45
  • 46
  • 47
  • …
  • 65
  • Next Page »

Support Gagrule.net

Subscribe Free News & Update

Search

GagruleLive with Harut Sassounian

Can activist run a Government?

Wally Sarkeesian Interview Onnik Dinkjian and son

https://youtu.be/BiI8_TJzHEM

Khachic Moradian

https://youtu.be/-NkIYpCAIII
https://youtu.be/9_Xi7FA3tGQ
https://youtu.be/Arg8gAhcIb0
https://youtu.be/zzh-WpjGltY





gagrulenet Twitter-Timeline

Tweets by @gagrulenet

Archives

Books

Recent Posts

  • Pashinyan Government Pays U.S. Public Relations Firm To Attack the Armenian Apostolic Church
  • Breaking News: Armenian Former Defense Minister Arshak Karapetyan Pashinyan is agent
  • November 9: The Black Day of Armenia — How Artsakh Was Signed Away
  • @MorenoOcampo1, former Chief Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court, issued a Call to Action for Armenians worldwide.
  • Medieval Software. Modern Hardware. Our Politics Is Stuck in the Past.

Recent Comments

  • Baron Kisheranotz on Pashinyan’s Betrayal Dressed as Peace
  • Baron Kisheranotz on Trusting Turks or Azerbaijanis is itself a betrayal of the Armenian nation.
  • Stepan on A Nation in Peril: Anything Armenian pashinyan Dismantling
  • Stepan on Draft Letter to Armenian Legal Scholars / Armenian Bar Association
  • administrator on Turkish Agent Pashinyan will not attend the meeting of the CIS Council of Heads of State

Copyright © 2025 · News Pro Theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in