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Spanish city of Aldaia officially recognizes Armenian Genocide

October 28, 2015 By administrator

spain-aldaiaThe Spanish city of Aldaia (Valencia) officially recognized the Armenian Genocide yesterday on October 27. Aldaia thus joined the list of dozens of Spanish cities that have officially recognized and condemned the Armenian Genocide, the press service of Armenian Foreign Ministry said.

The resolution introduced by the Armenian “Ararat” Union was put to a vote at the City Council by Spokesman for the Left Union Juanjo Llorente.

All the four parties represented in the City Council unanimously voted to call the massacres of Armenians in the Ottoman Turkey “genocide” and to condemn its denial policy.

Among those present at the sitting of the City Council were representatives of the Armenian community and public and political figures of Spain.

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: Aldaia, Armenian, Genocide, recognize, Spain

Recep Marasli Turkish Intellectuals Who Have Recognized The Armenian Genocide

October 22, 2015 By administrator

Turkish itlectBy: Hambersom  Aghbashian,

Marashli, His Eminence Archbishop Barkev Mardirossian, Primate of Artshakh and Ali Erdem
Recep Maraşli (the son of a Kurdish father and a Turkish mother, born 1956 in Erzurum-Turkey), is a journalist, writer, author, publisher and political activist. He was detained during the 1980’s in the Diyarbekir prison, infamous for the brutal torture of political prisoners.( He was arrested for the first time at the age of 17  and spent 16 months in prison). Upon his release, he founded the “Komal” publishing house, where he published works on the history and situation of the Kurds. Turkish authorities closed his publishing house several times. In total, Recep Maraşli was detained in Turkish prisons for more than 15 years. Maraşli and his future wife Nuran, a journalist were both in a prison in Diyarbakir in 1985. Once again in freedom, they met and married. In 1999 Recep Maraşli fled from Turkey to Germany, and Nuran managed to follow a year later together with their little son. Maraşli published a book on the history of the Armenians in 2008, “The Armenian National Democratic Movement and the 1915 Genocide,”  and  now lives with his family in Berlin. Next to his work as an author, he is also active as an artist and graphic designer; and his wife Nuran Maraşli works as an intercultural assistant.
According to ” The Ukrainian Weekly, May 31, 1998 “,  “The Vasyl Stus Freedom-to-Write Award has been inaugurated to recognize an international writer who has been imprisoned for the peaceful expression of his or her views, and whose courage in the face of censorship and oppression has been exemplary. The award is named in honor of Ukrainian poet Vasyl Stus, who was the last Ukrainian writer to die in the Soviet gulag. The first recipient of the Vasyl Stus Award, is Recep Marasli, who has suffered a long history of persecution, censorship and imprisonment in Turkey, and has a long list of detentions. Mr. Marasli has written extensively about Kurdish and Armenian issues. (1)

In her long article “Critical Interventions: Kurdish Intellectuals Confronting the Armenian Genocide” ( The Armenian weekly – April 29, 2009), Bilgin Ayata wrote, ” A number of Kurdish intellectuals and activists articulated their objections to the use of the term Great Catastrophe in the apology campaign (released in 2004 in Turkey- HA) with a joint declaration that stated “It’s not a catastrophe, but genocide—this is the entire matter at heart,”  a dozen Kurdish intellectuals and activists sharply criticized the failure of not calling the events genocide. One key figure behind both the Dialogue and Solidarity with the Victims of Genocide initiative of 2004 and the declaration “Great Catastrophe or Genocide?” is the Kurdish publisher Recep Marasli. ” Marashli  forcefully argues that ‘genocide is not a matter of documentation forgery’ (evrak sahtekarligi), and criticizes the ongoing debate about archives and documents in order to find  a proof.” (2)
Ayse Gunaysu, a contributor to the same Weekly, wrote the following in November 8, 2009, in her article headlined ” Kurdish MP challenges Turkish Parliament on Armenian Genocide,”  ” Speaking about the Kurdish intellectuals and activists who first talked and wrote about the Armenian Genocide in Turkey, I have to mention the book of Recep Marasli, who was one of the victims of the horrible tortures at Diyarbakir Prison in the 1980’s and who served 15 years in various prisons. In the preface to his book (Ermeni Ulusal Demokratik Hareketive 1915 Soykirimi), Marasli writes how he first wrote about the Armenian Genocide in 1982, when he was in the Alemdag Prison. It was the first and worst years of the military rule.(ASALA also was active). During these days, Recep Marasli with a number of his fellow prisoners secretly prepared and circulated a pamphlet about the Armenian Genocide in the Alemdag Prison. He thinks it may well be the first structured writing about the Armenian Genocide in Kurdish circles. Some of the inmates thought that Marasli was of Armenian origin.(3)
According to ” http://www.kurdishaspect.com” Recep Marasli and Dr. Choman Hardiwas, were the speakers at a “Seminar on Nationalism and Genocide: The Case of Turkish Nationalism and the Armenian Genocide” which was chaired by Dr. Surhan Cam of Cardiff University and was organized by Kurdish Studies and Students Organisation and the Kurdish Society at SOAS, on 22nd April 2010, at KLT, School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS), University of London. (4)
According to “http://news.am”, May 3, 2010, ” Recep Marasli, a renowned Kurdish public figure and historian, told at the conference organized by Armenian democrats of Belgium that ‘Germany is partially guilty in perpetration of Armenian Genocide in 1915,’ and added ‘Germany was closely cooperating with Young Turks then. While planning genocide, they got major support from Germany. Germany could not be unaware of the preplanned genocide.’ A passage from his book about the Armenian Genocide reads: ‘Massacre perpetrated by Turkey against Armenians is genocide and Turkish government is in charge of it. It is an undisputable fact. Genocide recognizes no motivations. Genocide, perpetrated against Armenians is the major crime against humanity and it should be condemned.'”  (5)
“Armenian Genocide Research Center” wrote on May 6, 2010, about  “Ankara Symposium on Genocide, Consequences” which was held on April 24, 2015, in Ankara. The Symposium was attended by many Turkish intellectuals, who had the chance to express their opinions. Among them were Sait Cetinoglu, Fikret Baskaya, Baskin Oran,  Adil Okay, Ismail Besikci, Ragip Zarakolu, Henry Theriault, Eilian Williams, Recep Marasli  and others.
Recep Marasli discussed the role of the Kurds in the Armenian Genocide. Even though the Kurds did not participate in the planning and decision-making process, he said, they were not mere collaborators, but part of a strategic alliance with the genocide committers. (6)
On 25 January 2011, “hayastaninfo.net,” quoted Pervin Buldan, a member of the Kurdish Peace and Democracy Party from Igdir, addressing Turkish parliament members, she said  “Rafael Lemkin says genocide is not only about the extermination of the representatives of a nation but also annihilation of its cultural and national values. Today, of the 913 Armenian monuments remaining after 1923, 464 have been totally destroyed, 252 left to a state of dilapidation, and 197 in urgent need of restoration. Many of the Armenian religious buildings are being used as stables or storehouses, and many others have been turned into mosques.” She continued  and mentioned that “The Kurds were the first who publicly recognized the Armenian and Assyrian Genocide of 1915-16, long before Turkish intellectuals and Recep Marasli, a Kurdish intellectual, writer, and political activist, was the first. (7)
According to “Public Radio of Armenia”, February 15, 2013, ” Recep Marasli is also a member of the Frankfurt-based organization struggling against genocides. Members of the organization visit Armenia every year on April 24 to pay tribute to the memory of the Armenian Genocide victims. Marasli told reporters in Yerevan “Turkey will not recognize the Armenian Genocide before 2015, as it is aware the issue is political, and the consequences may be very serious, and Ankara is wary of this.” The radio added that “According to Marasli, the issue of the Armenian genocide has become a topic of discussion in Turkey after Hrant Dink’s assassination. Turkish intellectuals, NGOs and the youth are interested in the issue and are ready to face it. (8)
On March 5, 2015, “artsakhpress.am” wrote,  ” As part of the commemorations of the Armenian Genocide centenary, an exhibition entitled “My Beloved Brothers, Armenians in Turkey 100 Years Ago”, portraying the lives of Ottoman-Armenians, was recently held in the Alevi Center of Hamburg (Germany). The cultural event was organized by the well known Turkish writer Osman Koker. A debate held on the exhibition’s last day was attended by Wolfgang Goust, a journalist who worked for 25 years for the German exhibition Spiegel, and Martin Dolzer, an ethnic Turkish parliament member  from Hamburg and many other intllectuls. Turkish writer Recep Marasli said many Armenian churches on Turkey’s territory are now used as mosques. “Apologizing is not enough; [descendents of the perpetrators] ought to be ashamed,” he said, adding that the grandchildren and grand-grand-children of the genocide orchestrators and perpetrators have not abandoned the wealth accumulated illegally by their ancestors. (9)
On April 23, 2015, Recep Maraşli was hosted in Armenia by “Western Armenia” state owned TV Chanel, and during the interview that  was  translated by Sarkis Hatspanian,
he mentioned that the first time he seriously was interested in the Armenian genocide was in 1981, in the prison, while (ASALA) was an active organization and his friends started  talking about the Armenian Genocide. Later on, during his imprisonment period in those years in Turkey, he was more interested and  it took him four years to study the Armenia Genocide issue. According to him, he had mentioned about the Armenian Genocide in the court during his trial in 1985 and that was the first time where this issue was publicly spoken about. He published his book “The Armenian National Democratic Movement and the 1915 Genocide,” in 2008, (650 page- in Turkish), the 4th edition of it will be published in1915. (10)
According to “Public Radio of Armenia” , April 27, 2015, ” Members of the Frankfurt-based “Union Against Genocide” and the Berlin-based “Support for Genocide Victims”, Turkish organization visited the Stepanakert Memorial, Gandzasar and other places of interest and had meetings with the leaders and journalists in Artsakh.” “On a first visit to Artsakh, the Turk visitors were aware that they will be blacklisted by Azerbaijan, but were not worried about it. Recep Marasli considered that being included in Azerbaijan’s “black list” should be treated as an honor, and added that he and Ali Erdem, another member of the organization are ‘Personae Non Grata’  in Turkey, as well. Years ago they fled Turkey to survive. At Stepanakert memorial, the Turkish activists paid tribute to the memory of the Armenian Genocide victims and visited the graves of the freedom fighters. According to Marasli, the struggle of Artsakh is a just cause. They pledged to raise the issue in Europe upon their return. (11)

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1- http://www.ukrweekly.com/old/archive/1998/229821.shtml
2- http://armenianweekly.com/2009/04/29/kurdish-intellectuals-confronting-the-armenian-genocide/
3- http://armenianweekly.com/2009/11/08/gunaysu-kurdish-mp-challenges-turkish-parliament
4- http://www.kurdishaspect.com/doc041410KSSO.html
5- http://news.am/eng/news/20559.html
6- http://armenians-1915.blogspot.com/2010/05/3068-minutes-of-ankara-symposium-on.html
7- http://hayastaninfo.net/39-autoren/ayse-guenaysu/556-kurds-turkey-armenians-genocide
8- http://www.armradio.am/en/2013/02/15/consequences-of-genocide-recognition-may-be-grave-f
9- http://artsakhpress.am/eng/news/13719/apology-not-enough-for-genocide-
10- http://westernarmeniatv.com/en/media/english-recep-marasli-sarkis-hatspanian/
11- http://www.armradio.am/en/2015/04/27/europe-based-turkish-activists-visit-artsakh/

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: Genocide, intellectual, recognize, Turkish

Jewish organization urges to recognize Armenian Genocide

October 22, 2015 By administrator

JCPA councilThe Jewish Council for Public Affairs at its annual meeting last week called on Jewish community organizations to lobby Congress and the White House to formally recognize the Armenian genocide. A JCPA spokesman on Wednesday confirmed that the resolution was the umbrella group’s first recognition of the Armenian genocide.

The Reform movement has called the massacres a genocide, but many other organizations have resisted such moves, Asbarez reported.

The resolution calls for the Jewish community to work with Armenian-American groups to advance recognition of the genocide.

“We must not let the politics of the moment, or the U.S. government’s relationship with Turkey, sway our moral obligation to recognize the suffering of the Armenian people,” it says.

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: Armenian, Genocide, Jewish, organization, recognize, Urges

Rio de Janeiro recognizes #ArmenianGenocide

October 2, 2015 By administrator

f560ec0b9af01d_560ec0b9af057.thumbThe State of Rio de Janeiro recognized the Armenian Genocide on Friday, July 24 through a law that establishes all April 24 as “Day of recognition and memory of the victims of the Armenian Genocide”.
The law was enacted by the governor of Rio de Janeiro, Luiz Fernando Pezão, Prensa Armenia reports.

Rio de Janeiro is the fourth State in Brazil that recognizes the Genocide, along with Parana, Ceara and Sao Paulo. Months ago, the Brazilian Senate passed a vote of solidarity with the Armenian people for the centenary of crime against humanity.

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: armenian genocide, recognize, Rio de Janeiro

Betül Tanbay: Turkish Intellectuals Who Have Recognized The Armenian Genocide

October 1, 2015 By administrator

Betul TanbayBy: Hambersom Aghbashian

Betül Tanbay (born 1960) is a Turkish professor of mathematics at Bogaziçi University, Faculty of Arts and Science, Department of Mathematics-Istanbul, Turkey. She holds a B.S. in Mathematics, from Université Louis Pasteur, Strasbourg, (1982), M.S. (1984) and Ph.D.(1989) degrees in Mathematics, both from University of California, Berkeley. Her areas of interest are Functional Analysis, Operator Algebras and Set Theory and has published books in mathematics.(1) Betül Tanbay is member of the Raising Public Awareness Committee and of the Ethics Committee of the European Mathematical Society.  She is also the president of the Turkish Mathematical Society (founded in 1948). As well as her active scientific career, she is also married with children. (2)
On December 15, 2008, Associated Press Writer  Suzan Fraser  wrote from Ankara  that a  group of about 200 Turkish intellectuals issued an apology for the World War I-era massacres of Armenians in Turkey.”My conscience does not accept that (we) remain insensitive toward and deny the Great Catastrophe that the Ottoman Armenians were subjected in 1915,” read the apology. “I reject this injustice, share in the feelings and pain of my Armenian brothers, and apologize to them.” The apology is a sign that many in Turkey are ready to break a long-held taboo against acknowledging Turkish culpability for the deaths. Historians estimate that, in the last days of the Ottoman Empire, up to 1.5 million Armenians were killed by Ottoman Turks in what is widely regarded as the first genocide of the 20th century. Armenians have long pushed for the deaths to be recognized as genocide. Betül Tanbay was one of the intellectuals who signed the apology. (3)
The temporary exhibition titled “Armenian Genocide and Scandinavian Response” was opened on November 6, 2012,  in Copenhagen Royal Library. The Turkish government demanded the Royal Library to open “an alternative” exhibition. And in response to the official statements that it was agreed, a group of Turkish citizens–including academics, writers, former members of parliament, and mayors–have signed an open letter to the Royal Library, in which they have mentioned” By giving the Turkish government the opportunity to present an’alternative exhibition’ you support their policy of suppression and intimidation. The support that you are extending to a regime that has made opposition to confronting history and denial of the truth a fundamental principle is equivalent to supporting a regime of apartheid. We want to remind you that your support constitutes an obstacle to democratization efforts in Turkey today.” Betül Tanbay was one of the signees. (4)
On September 30, 2014, The Armenian Weekly wrote “Turkish scholars, artists, and writers harshly condemned primary and middle school textbooks that are replete with anti-Armenian rhetoric in Turkey, and demanded that the books be pulled from circulation.” the signatories wrote, “After immediately pulling the ‘History’ and ‘History of the Turkish Revolution’ textbooks from circulation, apologies should be issued to all students, particularly to Armenian ones. As we approach 2015, the road to Turkish-Armenian peace that we long for passes through here.” The textbooks portray Armenians as traitors who plotted with foreign enemies to tear apart the Ottoman Empire and Turkey, and as mass murderers of innocent Turkish and Muslim women and children while Muslim men were waging a war of survival. The textbooks, all published over the past few years and approved by a special commission of Turkey’s Ministry of Education, are also mandatory in Armenian schools in Turkey. Two newspapers in Turkey, Agos and Taraf, had published a series of articles by Taner Akçam on the anti-Armenian hate-filled rhetoric in Turkish textbooks earlier in September. Betül Tanbay was one of the signees of the statement. (5)
———————————————————————————————————————–
1- http://www.math.boun.edu.tr/index.php?option=com_content&task=section&id=26&Itemid=321
2- http://www.europeanwomeninmaths.org/women-in-math/portrait/betul-tanbay
3- http://www.foxnews.com/printer_friendly_wires/2008Dec15/0,4675,EUTurkeyArmenians,00.html
4- http://www.genocide-museum.am/eng/19.12.12.php
5- http://armenianweekly.com/2014/09/30/textbooks-vilifying-armenians/

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: Armenian, Betül Tanbay, Genocide, recognize

Spanish city of Silla recognizes Armenian Genocide

September 30, 2015 By administrator

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERAYEREVAN. – Spanish city of Silla has officially recognized the Armenian Genocide.

The decision was unanimously made during the meeting of the municipality council on Tuesday, Armenian Foreign Ministry reported.

The motion was presented by Valentin Mateo who briefed the participants on the causes and consequences of the first genocide of the 20th century.

Silla has joined other Spanish cities that have recognized the Armenian Genocide.

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: Armenian, Genocide, recognize, Silla

Fikret Baskaya: Turkish Intellectuals Who Have Recognized The #ArmenianGenocide

September 17, 2015 By administrator

Fikret Baskaya

Fikret Baskaya

By: Hambersom Aghbashian

Fikret Baskaya, is a Professor of Economic Development and International Relations and the founder and chairman of the “Turkey and Middle East Forum Foundation”. He is the author of several books and articles on development economics. He also wrote a regular newspaper opinion column. Dr. Baskaya was imprisoned from March 1994 to July 1995 under Article 8 of Turkey´s Anti-Terror Law for writing a book titled “The Bankruptcy of [the] Paradigm”.
On  June 1, 1999, Prof. Fikret Baskaya published an article entitled “A Question of History?” in the daily newspaper Özgür Bakis, in which he questioned the viability of the Turkish state’s approach towards the Kurdish problem following the arrest of Abdullah Öcalan.
As a result, he was indicted under the same article of the Anti-Terror Law for “disseminating separatist propaganda through the press”, and was sentenced  to 16 months’ imprisonment and a fine on 13 June 2000. He was released from prison in June 2002 after serving one year. He was finally acquitted in 2005. (1)
A day after journalist Hrant Dink’s murder on 19 January 2007, writer Temel Demirer read a press statement in central Ankara, saying that the journalist had not only been killed for being Armenian, but also because he had spoken of an “Armenian genocide.” He continued saying  “There is a genocide in our history, it is called the Armenian genocide……”. The statement was signed by  Fikret Başkaya, İsmail Beşikçi, Yüksel Akkaya, Mehmet Özer, Necmettin Salaz, Ahmet Telli and  more than forty other Turkish intellectuals.

(2) Writer Dr. Fikret Baskaya, journalists Barcin Yinanc, Ahmet Altan of Radikal Newspaper, Ali Bayramoglu of Yeni Safak newspaper, Orhan Kemal Cengiz, Mustafa Aykol, Cengiz Candar, Ismail Besickci, Baskin Oran, Yavuz Baydar, Ayse Gunaysu, Zeunep Tozduman, and many others , criticized the government for not dealing with the Armenian Genocide.

(3)  In December 2008, two hundred prominent Turkish intellectuals released an apology for the “great catastrophe of 1915”. This was a clear reference to the Armenian Genocide. The text of the apology was  “My conscience does not accept the insensitivity showed to and the denial of the Great Catastrophe that the Ottoman Armenians were subjected to in 1915. I reject this injustice and for my share, I empathize with the feelings and pain of my Armenian brothers and sisters. I apologize to them.” Fikret Baskaya was one of the prominent Turkish intellectuals who signed the apology.

(4) According to “http://armenians-1915.blogspot.com”, On April 24, 2010, as genocide commemoration events were being held one after the other in different locations in Istanbul, a groundbreaking two-day symposium on the Armenian Genocide began at the Princess Hotel in Ankara. The conference did not simply deal with the historical aspect of 1915; for the first time in Turkey, a substantial part of the proceedings was dedicated to topics such as confiscated Armenian property, reparations, and the challenges of moving forward and confronting the past in Turkey, etc . . Sait Cetinoglu, Mahmut Konuk, Fikret Baskaya, Baskin Oran, Ismail Besikci, Ragip Zarakolu and many others participated and had expressed their ideas. (5)
According to “The Armenian Observer” editorial, “As We See It”,  June 9, 2013, by Prof. Osheen Keshishian, “After almost a century of silence, dying the past few decades, some Turkish historians, writers and journalists have seen the light and have become much more vocal and have come out to correct Turkish history, some cautiously and other more abrasively, starting a movement to write unwittingly the facts, the truth of their history, which was altered and disoriented, and to seek justice for the Armenians, the Kurds, and Assyrians.” Fikret Baskaya is listed as one those intellectuals who had the courage to write about those issues. (6)
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1- http://www.englishpen.org/campaigns/dr-fikret-baskaya/
2- http://bianet.org/english/minorities/105355-writer-demirer-on-trial-for-armenian-genocide
3- www.thearmenianobserver.com, 9 June 2013
4- http://www.armeniapedia.org/index.php?title=200_prominent_Turks_apologize_for_great_
5- http://armenians-1915.blogspot.com/2010/05/3068-minutes-of-ankara-symposium-on.html
6- http://www.thearmenianobserver.com/?p=1822

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: Armenian, Genocide, recognize, Turkish Intellectuals

Engin Akarli  Turkish Intellectuals Who Have Recognized The Armenian Genocide

September 10, 2015 By administrator

Engin AkarliBy: Hambersom Aghbashian,

Dr.Engin Akarli, is a professor of modern Middle East studies at Brown University, Rhode Island, USA.  He is one of the  Turkish scholars who publicly acknowledge the Turkish extermination campaign against the Armenians. Especially in light of recent events, he cautions against interpreting genocide itself in racist terms. Professor  Akarli studied economics at Robert College, Turkey, (BA  degree in 68), Southeast European history at University of Wisconsin (MA  degree in 72), and Middle East history at Princeton (MA  degree in 73, and Ph.D degree  76). He taught at Bosphorus University in Istanbul (1976-83), Yarmouk University in Jordan (1983-89), and Washington University in St. Louis (1989-96) before joining Brown University. He held research fellowships at Wissenschaftskolleg zu Berlin (1985-86), and at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton (2003-04), then at the Islamic Legal Studies Program of Harvard Law School (2005-06). He taught courses in economic history of the world and the Middle East and wrote on Ottoman demographic, fiscal and political history earlier in his career. His later works explore the history of geographical Syria under Ottoman rule. His book on Ottoman Lebanon in 1860-1920 won the Best History Book Prize of the Missouri Historical Society. Currently, he works on themes related to the legal history of the region. (1)(2)

A PBS program hosted Dr.Engin Akarli. He was asked about the Armenian Genocide and his answer was : “We have to put things in their appropriate historical context; yes, these things happened…, ” and as an answer to (off- screen filmmaker’s question): What are these things? He said: “Genocide, okay? The genocide, in the sense, that attacks against a distinctive, specific part of the population. In this sense, that’s what I understood of genocide. It happened. We need to face it, to understand why it happened, under what circumstances it happened, and what are its moral implications, what does this event tell us about the times, what does this event tell us about great power politics, problems of nationalism in this part of the world, there are many issues that this particular sheds light on.” (3)
“aghet1915.wordpress.com” wrote the following under the title “Recognition of the Armenian Genocide”: “The fact of the Armenian Genocide by the Ottoman government has been documented, recognized, and affirmed in the form of media and eyewitness reports, laws, resolutions, and statements by many historians, states and international organizations.” It listed the names of the Turkish historians who have recognized the Armenian Genocide. Halil Berktay, Taner Akçam, Murat Belge, Ahmet Insel, Ercin Kursat Ahler, Ali Ertem, Engin Akarli, Koray Caliskan, Dilek Kurban, Yunus Tuncel, Ugur Ümit Üngör and many others are mentioned in the list. (4)
In response to Michael  Gunter’s review of ” The Armenian Massacres in Ottoman Turkey: A Disputed Genocide ” book  by  Guenter Lewy,  Joseph Kechichian wrote: “the book and the reviewer pose serious problems.” Among those points he mentioned that “Guenter Lewy has placed himself in the forefront of a parallel campaign to promote directly and indirectly and with remarkable zeal, the ‘official’ Turkish line of denial  of the Armenian Genocide. This is more significant when one consider that a host of Turkish historians, free from the shackles of the official line, are not only refusing to deny the Genocide, but in one way or another are also recognizing the occurrence.”  Then he mentions Fatima Muge Gocek, Hilal Berktay , Engin Akarli, Selim Deringil and Taner Akcam as examples with quotations. As for Engin Akarli he mentioned that Akarli concludes that the relevant facts ” invite the term Genocide”. (5)
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*PBS : The Public Broadcasting Service is an American public broadcaster and television program distributor. Headquartered in Arlington, Virginia, PBS is an independently operated non-profit organization and is the most prominent provider of television programs to public television stations in US, distributing series such as NOVA, Sesame Street, PBS NewsHour, Masterpiece, Nature, American Masters, Frontline, and Antiques Roadshow.

1- http://www.zoominfo.com/p/Engin-Akarli/207445638
2- http://www.brown.edu/Departments//Modern_Greek_Studies/people/facultypage.php?id=10074
3- http://www.tallarmeniantale.com/PBS-Armenian-survival.htm
4- https://aghet1915.wordpress.com/recognition/
5- http://www.jstor.org/discover/10.2307/30069560?uid=3739920&uid=2&uid=4&uid=3739256&sid

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: a survivor of the Armenian Genocide in The World, Armenian, Engin Akarli, Genocide, recognize

ARMENIA The Jewish community of Armenia calls on the Knesset to recognize Armenian Genocide

August 18, 2015 By administrator

arton114964-480x335The president of the Jewish community in Armenia Rima Varzhapetian sent a message to the Israeli parliament (Knesset) on a forthcoming discussion on recognition of the Armenian genocide.

The message says:

Dear Mr. Edelstein!

Dear members of the Knesset!

Members of the Jewish community of Armenia learned with great enthusiasm and hope the next discussion on recognition of the Armenian Genocide in the Knesset session.

The Knesset embodies a set of wise people to look and morally rights of the Jewish diaspora.

We place great hopes on the positive decision of the Israeli parliamentarians to recognize the tragedy of the Armenian people as genocide.

If we want to build a future, we must honor the past and represent an example to the new generation.

From the onset of Genesis to the creation of the State of Israel and until now, our people, the cost of enormous sacrifices, suffered the greatest moral challenge to meet the main requirements of the Almighty – the principle of justice.

Aware of this, the world’s peoples, governments and parliaments in many countries are closely watching the position of the State of Israel and the Jewish Diaspora on this thorny issue – the recognition of the Armenian genocide.

We, the Jews, have made the historic choice to make our universal moral principles that can not bend to political contingencies of the moment and an “opportunistic” misleading.

Looking straight into the eyes of Armenians, undergoing immense suffering, we Jews, see, like in the mirror, the suffering of our people. The hearts of most Jews and Armenians are waiting with trepidation the most important decision for the future of both peoples.

Tuesday, August 18, 2015,
Stéphane © armenews.com

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: a survivor of the Armenian Genocide in The World, Armenia, Genocide, Israel, recognize

Armenian Genocide recognition by Latin American Parliament is message to civilized world

August 2, 2015 By administrator

Armenian-FMYEREVAN. – The adoption of the resolution acknowledging the Armenian Genocide on the 100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide by the Latin American Parliament uniting 23 legislative authorities of Latin American and Caribbean basin is solidarity and supportive message to the civilized world in its struggle against denial, Armenian FM Edward Nalbandian’s statement on the adoption of the resolution reads.

According to the statement, “The process of acknowledgement is irrevocably underway at state, public and multi-lateral levels. It can be said with confidence that the expression of the principle stance over Armenian Genocide by such an authoritative institution is a forcible contribution to the prevention of genocides and crimes against humanity.”

The Latin American Parliament unanimously passed a resolution acknowledging the Armenian Genocide on Friday.

Source: NEWS.am

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: a survivor of the Armenian Genocide in The World, Armenian, Genocide, latin-America, recognize

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