An Armour of Lies

World Sikh News, CA
June 9 2007

An Armour of Lies

Written by I.J. SINGH
Friday, June 08, 2007

For once, I am utterly confused.

Many historians say that in 1915, the Ottoman Empire was responsible
for the death of a million Armenians in an organized campaign of
genocide. But there are important voices, admittedly just a few,
that deny any such happenings or mass killings ever occurred.
Most recently, at a Barnes & Noble bookstore last month, when
Margaret Ajemian Ahnert read from her book, "The Knock on the Door",
about her mother’s survival during those days, some people in the
audience heckled her, holding up signs that proclaimed, "It Never
Happened."

This history is less than a hundred years old. Could records be so
difficult to interpret? Could memory become degraded so quickly?

Then I am reminded of the Holocaust and Nazi Germany’s efforts to
eliminate the Jews. I can understand disagreements over the fine
points and details of exactly what was done to whom and under what
circumstances, but the basic facts and the larger framework are
established beyond doubt.

Yet, only a few months ago, the Iranian President, Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad, opened a conference in Teheran, whose sole focus was
denial of the Holocaust as a historical event.

And the history of the Holocaust is young – barely sixty years old.

The glaring distortions that emerge from such attempts to rewrite
history become obvious from ironic twists – like the fact that
mentioning the Armenian genocide in Turkey is a crime, but denying it
would be illegal in France. Denying the Holocaust would be
unacceptable in Israel; in Iran, insisting that it occurred would be
equally unacceptable.

Then my mind goes to a gathering that I attended just days ago. It
was a largely Indian group, with only a sprinkling of Sikhs. The
focus was to take note of the events of June 1984, and rejoice in the
fact that India and Indians were moving forward.

Yes, we are moving ahead, as we should.

(For the uninitiated, I summarize the events here: Between June 2
and 5, 1984, a massive force of the Indian army invaded the Golden
Temple (Darbar Sahib) at Amritsar, wreaking extensive havoc on the
premises and killing countless numbers of pilgrims. Five months
later, in precisely orchestrated attacks on Sikh homes and
businesses, thousands of innocent men, women and children were killed
in several cities across India, including its capital, New Delhi.

Much of Punjab was sealed off from the outside world and, over the
next decade, thousands of young Sikh men disappeared. Ten judicial
commissions and investigative reports later, there is no accounting
of the dead, and justice is still pending.)

One way to move forward would be to remember what happened, so as not
to repeat history. By nurturing and preserving the history in our
cultural memory, we would honor it so that our goal would become,
"Never Again."

The alternative would be to bury the painful and the unpleasant by
denying it ever happened, and that is precisely what many speakers,
even some Sikhs, attempted to do at this conference that I attended.

Speaker after speaker insisted that the damage to the Darbar Sahib
was minimal, there were only scattered, random killings of Sikhs, and
no fake encounters or extra-judicial killings ever occurred.
To be fair, a few speakers did present evidence against such a rosy
view, but the prevailing, most powerful, voices dismissed such claims
as sporadic events of no consequence. Claims of organized mayhem
against the Sikhs were clearly unfounded, they argued, because such
brutality would never occur in a civilized society like India. So,
they said, these atrocities never happened as alleged.
I heard this Kafkaesque reasoning and I thought my head would spin.
It is like the claim that President Bush or his aides might make that
our army never brutalizes prisoners in Iraq.

I know that "History has cunning passages and contrived corridors….
And deceives us by vanities," as T.S. Eliot reminds us, but the
events of 1984 happened only 23 years ago. That is not even a full
generation ago. The evidence is still available; it is degraded
somewhat, but not entirely.

Oral history can still be preserved. And already we have deniers of
this history. If we fail to preserve it, fifty or a hundred years
from now, its deniers will be seen as reputable scholars.

Then I remind myself that the mind is the most powerful organ of the
human body. It is both a shield and a weapon. Perhaps the deniers of
history are trying to protect themselves from it. Denial then can
become both a powerful armor, as well as a sharp lance, when offense
serves as the best defense.

Affirming painful history can be cataclysmic and shattering to one’s
sense of self. It is more comforting sometimes to tell a lie than to
confess a painful truth. Self-preservation and self-protection are
universal human needs. The harsher the truth, the greater the need to
lie.
All religions revere the Truth.

Hinduism, for example, tells us that truth is ever triumphant. "Ye
shall know the Truth and the Truth shall make you free," promises
the Bible.

Guru Nanak, the founder of the Sikh faith, too, reminds us that
"Truth is the panacea of all ills," and that "Truth is high, but
higher still is truthful living." Truth is God and is eternal,
according to Sikhi. This sentiment lives through the daily greeting
of the Sikhs, "Sat Sri Akaal."
Other religions speak similarly.

The other side of the coin highlights the quiet desperation of our
lives. T.S. Eliot reminds us that, "Between the conception and the
reality, falls the shadow." It is eloquently captured by the
celebrated Modern Greek poet, C.P. Cavafy:

"With words, countenance and manners,
I shall make an excellent suit of armor …
None will know where my wounds are, my vulnerable parts,
Under all the lies that will cover me."

(Courtesy )

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