Trivializing Genocide

TRIVIALIZING GENOCIDE
By Garin Hovannisian

Washington Times
/article?AID=/20070730/EDITORIAL/107300007&tem plate=nextpage
July 30 2007

Riding a strong summer wave of good press just before Congress
takes a holiday, the Armenian National Committee of America is
sparing no trick in effecting a vote on House Resolution 106: The
Armenian genocide resolution is, quite simply, the raison d’etre of
the Armenian-American lobby – the horizon event that has, since the
genocide in 1915, animated and inspired the million-strong crew of
our clipper ship. Yet on the eve of our final paddle, this lonely
sailor is harboring some doubts.

At least France’s resolution in 2001 delivered the message straight:
"France recognizes the Armenian Genocide of 1915." This was a humble
nod to history. But just the title of its American counterpart, the
"Affirmation of the United States Record on the Armenian Genocide
Resolution," is more breathtaking. As for the text, we jog through
1,600 words and a few dozen "findings" before we reach the actual
declaration, which is addressed to the president "to ensure that the
foreign policy of the United States reflects appropriate understanding
and sensitivity" concerning the Armenian Genocide.

The marathon span is unbecoming of the resolution; as it replaces the
elegant nod with a parade of winks and waves, it makes one suspect that
it is Congress that craves a nod from history. Some of the findings
are clearly irrelevant; number 11 reads that the U.S. Senate once
resolved that the president "be respectfully asked to designate a
day on which citizens of this country may give expression to their
sympathy" for Armenians.

Others seem counterintuitive: numbers 28 and 29 record presidential
statements of remembrance that make no mention whatsoever of
"genocide." Much of the rest pads a catalogue of historical facts
about the first mass slaughter and displacement of the 20th century.

We learn, for example, that the United Nations, international archives
and even the man who coined the word "genocide" defend the term’s
applicability to the events of 1915. Except these aren’t billed as
facts or axioms or details of reality or historical discoveries;
they are presented as "findings" of the U.S. Congress.

As the great grandson of genocide survivors, the grandson of genocide
historians, and the son of Armenian repatriates – though writing,
I’m afraid, without the sanction of the generations – I am insulted
by that sticker. That Congress "finds" the genocide to be a fact
makes the tragedy no more real than its refusal, so far, has made it
unreal. Truth does not need a permission slip from the state.

As an heir, moreover, of an American tradition of limited government,
I am annoyed that the legislature is poking into a sphere in which
it has neither business nor experience: the province of truth. It is
bad enough that a committee of aristocrats governs the conventions
of politics, economics and human rights. We the citizens scarcely
need to sign over the laws of nature, too, lest gravity be repealed
and the whole race goes floating about the universe.

Of course, as its eventual declaration suggests, the Armenian
genocide resolution is aimed at the right bullseye: the repair of
a foreign policy that is rooted in de facto denial. No account of
Turkey’s "strategic importance" justifies why John Evans, the last
U.S. ambassador to Armenia, was fired for asserting (never mind in a
"personal capacity") the reality of the Armenian genocide. And no
reference to neutrality explains why President Bush insists, against
the sabotaging endeavors of the Armenian lobby, on giving the post
to Richard Hoagland, an avowed genocide denier.

Congressional symbols of good faith will not do the job. When
Turkish foreign minister Abdullah Gul flies into Washington to
smear the resolution as a "real threat to our relationship" and
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice slobbers back that Turkey is a
"global partner (that) shares our values," it isn’t House Speaker
Nancy Pelosi’s problem. U.S. foreign policy should be sobered up and
called to honesty by the institution that directs foreign policy:
the president of the United States. Only his leadership, and not
the dubious decrees of congressmen with Armenian constituencies,
can beget real victory for Armenian hopes and American principles.

But should the Armenian genocide resolution pass, we will at least
enjoy the consolation of some high comedy. As imperious Turkey
runs away from the West and then reluctantly returns, and as the
Armenian lobby revels in its final success before the inevitable
existential crisis, bad congressional resolutions might well begin
to sound like good Philip Larkin: "Sexual intercourse began / In
nineteen sixty-three…/ Between the end of the Chatterley ban /
And the Beatles’ first LP."

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://www.washingtontimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll

Emil Lazarian

“I should like to see any power of the world destroy this race, this small tribe of unimportant people, whose wars have all been fought and lost, whose structures have crumbled, literature is unread, music is unheard, and prayers are no more answered. Go ahead, destroy Armenia . See if you can do it. Send them into the desert without bread or water. Burn their homes and churches. Then see if they will not laugh, sing and pray again. For when two of them meet anywhere in the world, see if they will not create a New Armenia.” - WS