Vladimir Poutine Reaffirme Sa Position Concernant Le Genocide Des Ar

VLADIMIR POUTINE REAFFIRME SA POSITION CONCERNANT LE GENOCIDE DES ARMENIENS

RUSSIE

Coupant court aux speculations concernant son absence eventuelles
aux ceremonies du centenaire du genocide des Armeniens le vendredi
24 avril a Erevan dont il avait ete pourtant l’un des premiers chefs
d’Etat a annoncer sa venue, le president russe Vladimir Poutine a
reaffirme sa position concernant cet episode tragique de l’Histoire
armenienne, qualifiant les massacres dont ont ete victimes en 1915
les Armeniens de l’Empire ottoman comme un genocide, a la veille de sa
participation confirmees aux ceremonies du centenaire dans la capitale
armenienne. “Le 24 avril 1915 est une date douloureuse, qui renvoie
a l’un des episodes les plus dramatiques de l’histoire de l’humanite
: le genocide du peuple armenien” a declare M.Poutine le 22 avril
dans un message ecrit adresse aux participants d’une manifestation
commemorative du genocide armenien a Moscou. “Un siècle après,
nous nous recueillons en souvenir de toutes les victimes de cette
tragedie qui a toujours suscite dans notre pays peine et douleur”, a
poursuivi le president russe. “La position de la Russie a ete et reste
objective et coherente : il ne saurait y avoir aucune justification
pour une extermination et une purification ethniques. La communaute
international doit tout faire pour garantir que de telles atrocites
ne se repètent jamais nulle part >>.

From: A. Papazian

Bako Sahakyan: Azerbaijan Also Committed Genocide Against Armenian P

BAKO SAHAKYAN: AZERBAIJAN ALSO COMMITTED GENOCIDE AGAINST ARMENIAN PEOPLE IN BAKU, SUMGAIT, KIROVABAD

19:30 24/04/2015 >> POLITICS

On April 24, Artsakh Republic President Bako Sahakyan, accompanied by
top officials of the republic, visited the memorial complex of the
capital and attended the opening of the Memorial Belfry dedicated
to the 100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide, the President’s
press office reports.

In his speech, President Sahakyan said that on that day worldwide
Armenians and civilized mankind focused their attention on the Armenian
Genocide – the most tragic and darkest page of the Armenian history,
adding that all the Armenians, in whatever part of the globe they
were, deemed as their duty to pay tribute to the memory of innocent
victims of the Armenian Genocide.

According to the President, the enemy did not intend to satisfy with
the extermination of Western Armenia and had a goal to complete the
Armenocide, dooming Eastern Armenia to the same fate.

Bako Sahakyan specified that denial of such crimes, avoiding
responsibility and showing indifference generated new disasters,
and the fact that the international community did not immediately
recognize and condemn the Armenian Genocide had led to new genocides
in different regions of the globe.

“Inspired by the example of Turkey and encouraged with the prospect
of remaining unpunished, Azerbaijan also committed genocide against
the Armenian people in Baku, Sumgait, Kirovabad and various parts of
Artsakh. However, the enemy did not succeed in realizing this appalling
task. The entire Armenian nation united, our independent statehood was
restored, the national army was formed, and the aggressor suffered
a crushing defeat. The Karabagh movement, our national-liberation
struggle and the victory became a peculiar verdict against a genocidal
state and its inhumane policy,” underlined President Sahakyan.

The President expressed confidence that the memorial would become Á
pilgrimage center, where every visitor would have deep and cherished
feelings, live through the pain of our people, at the same time being
filled with hope and faith. Bako Sahakyan pointed out that sooner
or later the Armenian Genocide would be recognized and condemned
by the international community since such a crime could not remain
unpunished forever.

“The most important guarantee for gaining ultimate victory, recognizing
the Armenian Genocide and securing the future of the Armenian nation is
the independent Armenian statehood, our powerful and efficient army,
the Armenia-Artsakh-Diaspora unwavering trinity, reliance on our own
strength,” stressed Artsakh Republic President.

From: A. Papazian

http://www.panorama.am/en/politics/2015/04/24/nkr-commemoration/

Syria Voices Condemnation Of Armenian Genocide, Likens It To Terrori

SYRIA VOICES CONDEMNATION OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE, LIKENS IT TO TERRORIST CRIMES NOWADAYS

23 AprilØ~L 2015

Yerevan, SANA – Syria expressed Thursday at a global forum its
condemnation of the genocide which the Ottoman Turks committed against
the Armenian people in 1915.

The global forum “Against the Crime of Genocide” was held in the
Armenian capital Yerevan commemorating the Centennial of the well-known
genocide, which is marked on April 24 every year.

Delivering Syria’s speech, Speaker of the People’s Assembly Mohammad
Jihad al-Laham said history will not forgive those “who didn’t learn
the lessons of wars on other peoples.”

The current Turkish government, the successor of the Ottomans, has
thrust itself so deeply in the current crisis in Syria, opening its
land wide to terrorists coming from all corners of the world to cross
border into Syria and commit horrible crimes against its people.

“Any crime against humans must be condemned and rejected whoever the
perpetrator, and how if that crime was a genocide in which more than
a million and a half of the brotherly Armenian people were killed,”
al-Laham told the forum.

“We in Syria have always felt the Armenians’ sense of belonging is as
much to Syria as it is to Armenian and vice versa,” he said, affirming
that the Armenians in Syria are an integral part of its people.

Al-Laham drew parallels between the Armenian Genocide and the mass
crimes targeting the people in Syria and Iraq, saying the crimes
systematically committed by the terrorists in both countries target
all of the two peoples’ components and are aimed at cleansing areas
of their inhabitants.

These, and the deliberate damaging of the cultural heritage and the
archeological and historical sites in Syria and Iraq, all constitute
“a genocide against humanity” and crimes against the history and
culture, he added.

While stressing that the history of appalling criminality is repeating
itself now through the terrorists of today, al-Laham said this would
not have happened was it not for those states and sides that are
supplying the terrorists with whatever funds, arms, training and
political and media cover they need to commit crimes.

Armenian Premier: We support Syria in confronting terrorism, seek
more economic cooperation

Later, Armenian Prime Minister Hovik Abrahamyan said his country
supports Syria in its fight against the terrorism exported to it from
different countries.

During his meeting with Speaker al-Laham Abrahamyan stressed that the
historical relations between Syria and Armenia are firmly established.

He saw that the Syrian participation in the forum, which marks the
Centennial of the Armenian Genocide, committed by the Ottomans in 1915,
reflects how much deep is the friendship relations binding the people
of Syria and Armenia.

Out of Armenia’s interest in further activating the parliamentary,
political and economic relations with Syria, Abrahamyan used the
opportunity of his meeting with al-Laham to extend an invitation to
the Syrian Prime Minister to visit Armenia with a view of expanding
the areas of economic cooperation between the two countries.

Al-Laham renewed Damascus’s solidarity with Yerevan on the occasion,
calling for joint work on the international level to prevent such
crimes from being repeated through eliminating the terrorism ravaging
Syria and Iraq.

Qabas/Haifa Said

From: A. Papazian

http://sana.sy/en/?p=37445

Israel Sends Delegation To Armenian Genocide Ceremony

ISRAEL SENDS DELEGATION TO ARMENIAN GENOCIDE CEREMONY

Times of Israel
April 22 2015

‘As Jews, we must recognize the fact that an Armenian genocide
occurred,’ says Labor MK Nachman Shai

By JTA April 22, 2015, 9:22 pm 0

srael has sent an official delegation to ceremonies marking the 100th
anniversary of the mass murder of Armenians by Turkish forces during
World War I.

Armenia will hold ceremonies over the weekend to mark the tragedy,
which some call the Armenian Genocide. Israel has resisted calling
the event a genocide.

“Israel must reconsider its position on whether the time has come to
recognize the fact that an Armenian genocide occurred,” said Knesset
member Nachman Shai of the Zionist Camp, who will represent Israel
at ceremonies and events in Yerevan, Armenia’s capital.

“As Jews, we must recognize it,” he said. “This is especially true
during these days, when we mark Holocaust Remembrance Day.

Participation in the events in Armenia is a clear and strong statement
by the Israeli Knesset, which has repeatedly remembered the Armenian
victims, that it is obligated to reopen the matter.”

Anat Berko of the Likud party also will represent Israel at the
commemorations.

US President Barack Obama also has avoided calling the killings a
genocide, despite his 2008 pledged that he would.

Treasury Secretary Jack Lew, who is Jewish, will represent the United
States in Armenia for the commemoration.

From: A. Papazian

http://www.timesofisrael.com/israel-sends-delegation-to-armenian-genocide-ceremony/

Extending An Olive Branch: Rebuilding Turkish-Armenian Relations

EXTENDING AN OLIVE BRANCH: REBUILDING TURKISH-ARMENIAN RELATIONS

The National Interest Online
April 23 2015

Fiona HillKemal KirisciAndrew Moffatt

April 23, 2015

One hundred years after the Ottoman-era atrocities against the
Armenians, a fierce battle is still being fought between Turkey
and Armenia over historical truth. In this war, politicians and
lobbyists have replaced the generals, and international legislative
bodies serve as battlegrounds where history and politics are mixed,
often irresponsibly.

On April 24, Armenians around the world annually commemorate the
mass atrocities that were perpetrated against them by the Ottoman
Empire during World War I. Most historians put the number of Armenian
Christians who perished at between 1 million and 1.5 million and
consider the events to have been genocide. Turkish authorities,
however, have contested these figures and rejected the use of the term
genocide. The official Turkish position instead attributes the deaths
and displacements to the broader context of the war, during which many
Muslims, Turks, and other minority groups also perished. Although the
scholarly record is not ambiguous, Turkish officials have advocated for
the formation of an international commission of historians to study
the matter before a definitive conclusion is reached. For Armenians,
Turkey’s contestation of history and disavowals of responsibility
remain a source of deep bitterness.

This year’s remembrance of the Medz Yeghern (an Armenian term commonly
translated as “Great Catastrophe”) carries extraordinary weight and
expectations, as it is the centenary of the massacres. To commemorate
the events, Armenian leaders have invited world leaders to gather
later this week in Yerevan. Numerous ceremonies and other memorial
events have already been organized to bring international attention
to the tragic history. The Armenian diaspora’s campaign to achieve
genocide recognition from local, national and multilateral governments,
newspapers, academic organizations and other policy makers has grown
in intensity. In recent days, Pope Francis and the European Parliament
called upon the Turkish government to acknowledge the mass deportations
and killings as genocide. On Monday, the German government retreated
from its long-standing avoidance of the term.

For the Turkish government, the term genocide is neuralgic and fraught
with legal and financial implications. Not surprisingly, Turkey
responded to these calls for recognition in an instinctively defensive
and uncompromising way, recalling its ambassador to the Vatican for
consultations and warning that such calls would harm relations. In an
acrimonious war of words, Turkish leaders have branded the Pope as part
of “an evil front” that is stirring hatred and using “blackmail” to
plot against them, and they lashed out against the “unfounded claims.”

This harsh reaction was preceded by Turkey’s decision earlier this
year to move a commemoration of the World War I battle of Gallipoli
from its customary date on March 18 to April 24-25 in order to compete
with the genocide remembrance activities in Yerevan. This political
maneuvering stoked considerable resentment on the Armenian side and
has forced world leaders, who might otherwise have participated in
both commemorations, to make an uncomfortable choice between the two.

These developments are regrettable because they come after Turkish
officials have made steps in recent years toward reconciliation
with Armenia and its global diaspora. The uproar negates the
symbolic goodwill that might have come out of the statement last
year by then Prime Minister of Turkey Recep Tayyip Erdogan and this
year’s declaration by Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu, each of which
recognized the pain of the Armenians and extended condolences to the
descendants of those who perished. The revived discord also allows
hardline nationalists on both sides to persist in their categorical
demonization of the other.

Even more unfortunately, the tension overshadows the important
societal changes taking place in Turkey toward understanding the fate
of Ottoman Armenians. Less than a decade ago, the Turkish government
was still prosecuting citizens for describing the events of 1915
as genocide. Since that time, an awakening has begun regarding the
“Armenian issue”–several books have been published, international
conferences and televised debates have been held, and an online
apology campaign received over 30,000 signatures of support. Several
Turks have revealed long-hidden family secrets about their ancestors
being Armenians who were rescued from the death marches and taken
into their families. These developments have helped to stir this
particularly difficult and controversial history in the broader
Turkish consciousness.

It is now not uncommon for Turks, along with Armenians from around
the world, to assemble across Turkey on April 24 to commemorate the
fate of Ottoman Armenians. The anniversary date has also become an
occasion to remember the courageous Armenian-Turkish journalist,
Hrant Dink, for his struggle to get Turkish society to reconsider
its history and investigate how a once-thriving Armenian community in
Anatolia disappeared. Increasingly, the officially scripted narrative,
portraying Ottoman-era Armenians as traitors who were simply relocated,
is being questioned.

However, at the official level, the process of the “Turkish Thaw”–as
the author Thomas de Waal has labeled it–has been intermittent and
delayed at times by strong political winds. The genocide resolutions
come ahead of Turkey’s highly contested general elections in June. The
outcome of the elections will determine whether the governing
political party and its former leader, President Erdogan, can rewrite
the constitution and transform the long-established parliamentary
system into a presidential one. Polls suggest a tight race, which
is spurring the government’s need to woo nationalist votes. This
explains, in part, the harsh reaction in Turkey and the reflex to
see itself as the target of Western conspiracies. Furthermore, the
genocide statements come amid dire circumstances on Turkey’s border.

The displacement and death in Iraq and Syria brings an added source
of contestation for many in Turkey. Erdogan has recently accused
leaders of the Christian world for remaining silent and heedless to
the sufferings of Muslims. The events that have been unfolding in
the Middle East and the persecution of minority groups are in many
ways very much reminiscent of 1915.

In this charged atmosphere, categorical public calls on Turkey to
recognize the Armenian genocide risk undermining the modest gains
the nation, and especially its people, have made with respect to
reconciliation. As Hrant Dink argued, history should not be legislated
by the parliaments of third countries or imposed on Turks from abroad.

Dink acknowledged that Turks and Muslims also suffered during World
War One. Awareness of the broader context of the war is relevant,
as is recognition of what Turkish officialdom has called the “shared
suffering” of the Turks. However, Turkish officials have at times
tried to use the context to absolve the Turkish state of wrongdoing,
formulating a moral equivalency regarding the events and their
victims. Although there was widespread suffering, the atrocities that
befell the Ottoman Armenian communities cannot be contextualized away
as collateral damage amid the chaos of war. Context can help foster
empathy, but it cannot exculpate.

Turkey and its people need to face and accept their history fully
and fairly. As they do, the international community can assist
by also expressing empathy for the pain inflicted on Muslims and
other groups during and after World War I while commemorating the
genocide of the Armenians. Recognizing the indiscriminate nature of
the violence taking place in the Middle East today against Muslims,
Kurds and members of ancient Christian communities would also go a
long way toward ending the vicious cycle of recriminations.

For their part, Turkish politicians should avoid further inflammatory
reactions and language that fuels “clash of civilization”
misconceptions between Turkey and the West. Most importantly,
how Turkey deals with the present will contribute to how it
addresses the past. To this end, Turkey should lift its embargo
and open its international border with Armenia–unilaterally, if
necessary–which would constitute a powerful symbolic gesture in
support of reconciliation.

Fiona Hill is Center on the United States and Europe (CUSE) Director
and Senior Fellow in the Foreign Policy program at Brookings
Institution in Washington, DC.

Kemal KiriÃ…~_ci is the TUSIAD Senior Fellow in the Foreign Policy
Program at Brookings.

Andrew Moffatt is Associate Director of CUSE at Brookings.

Image: Brookings Institution

From: A. Papazian

http://nationalinterest.org/feature/extending-olive-branch-rebuilding-turkish-armenian-relations-12709

Le 100e Anniversaire Du Genocide Armenien Sera Celebre Vendredi A Ev

LE 100E ANNIVERSAIRE DU GENOCIDE ARMENIEN SERA CELEBRE VENDREDI A EVREUX

REVUE DE PRESSE
Le mot > n’est plus tabou dans la societe turque. Mais
Erdogan craint la remise en cause des bases du regime

vendredi aura lieu, au parc Francois-Mitterrand d’Evreux, une ceremonie
en memoire du genocide des Armeniens. Genocide, un terme que revendique
Jean Asadour, president de l’association armenienne d’Evreux. Il
rappelle qu’il y a eu, en 1915, un million et demi de pertes humaines
en Armenie, avec >.

Pourquoi avoir choisi de commemorer le genocide cette annee ?

>

Pourquoi le commemorer a Evreux ? Quel est le poids de la communaute
armenienne ici et dans l’Eure ?

>

Quelles sont vos revendications, vos attentes ?

. Le debat est relance… Programme

La commemoration du genocide armenien se deroulera demain vendredi,
dans le parc Francois-Mitterrand a Evreux.

À 11 h, accueil puis :

Fin de la ceremonie a 12 h.

discours de Guy Lefrand, maire d’Evreux

discours de Jean Asadour, president de l’association armenienne

temoignages

depôt de gerbe

minute de silence

vendredi 24 avril 2015, Stephane (c)armenews.com

From: A. Papazian

http://www.paris-normandie.fr/detail_communes/articles/3020043/en-memoire-du-genocide#.VTkh1JPS29c
http://www.armenews.com/article.php3?id_article=110845

Armenians In Kessab Commemorate Genocide Victims

ARMENIANS IN KESSAB COMMEMORATE GENOCIDE VICTIMS

17:35 | April 24,2015 | Politics

Armenians in Kessab today paid homage to the 1.5 million victims of
the Armenian Genocide in the city’s Holy Trinity Armenian Evangelical
Church.

The commemoration service for the Genocide victims began at 11am.

After the service, people laid flowers to the Armenian Genocide
Memorial and paid for the souls of Armenian martyrs.

From: A. Papazian

http://en.a1plus.am/1210366.html

ANKARA: Armenian Cleric Says Politicizing 1915 Adds To Pain

ARMENIAN CLERIC SAYS POLITICIZING 1915 ADDS TO PAIN

Anadolu Agency, turkey
April 24 2015

24 April 2015 17:45 (Last updated 24 April 2015 17:47)

‘Hurts that sorrow only discussed after hundred years,’ says acting
patriarch.

ISTANBUL

One of the most senior figures in the Armenian church on Friday spoke
out against the politicization of the deaths of Ottoman Armenians
during World War I.

In a sermon to mark the centenary of the 1915 tragedy, Acting
Patriarch Aram Ateshian seemed to refer to recent declarations made
in the European Parliament, Austria and the Vatican that marked the
deaths of Armenians as “genocide.”

“Armenians in Turkey are an inseparable and loyal part of this
country,” he told the congregation at the Armenian Patriarchate in
Istanbul. “They are aware of their citizenship responsibilities.”

“It hurts us that only after a hundred years is the sorrow of our
people being discussed like this.”

He added: “Under freedom of expression, everybody can say what they
want. Many countries are supporting our hurt nation in the name of
justice. However, it will hurt us many times more to see our pain
being politicized.”

Ateshian did not use the word “genocide” during his sermon, but said
that “children lost their lives during the exile and hurt so much
because of brutal politics.”

A revolt against the Ottoman Empire by some sections of the Armenian
population in eastern Anatolia in 1915 resulted in relocations that
led to deaths. Armenia claims that up to 1.5 million were killed
while Turkey disputes the figure, and the use of the word “genocide,”
and says both Armenians and Turks died in significant numbers.

Turkey has called a joint commission to uncover what happened in 1915.

From: A. Papazian

http://www.aa.com.tr/en/turkey/499124–armenian-cleric-says-politicizing-1915-adds-to-pain

UNDENIABLE – Thomas Hammarberg On Armenian Genocide

UNDENIABLE – THOMAS HAMMARBERG ON ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

14:40 24/04/2015 >> LAW

Thomas Hammarberg, former Human Rights Commissioner, Council of Europe,
wrote about the Armenian Genocide in a Twitter post.

“UNDENIABLE: Had UN Genocide Convention existed 1915 the mass killings
of Armenians in the Ottoman state could have been judged as GENOCIDE,”
Hammarberg tweeted.

From: A. Papazian

http://www.panorama.am/en/law/2015/04/24/hammarberg/

Words Of Remembrance At Ecumenical Service

WORDS OF REMEMBRANCE AT ECUMENICAL SERVICE

Berlin, 23 April 2015 Translation of advance text

This service commemorates the hundreds of thousands of Armenians who
fell victim to planned and systematic murder a century ago.

Men, women, children and the aged were deported, sent on death marches,
abandoned in the steppe and desert without any shelter or food, burned
alive, hunted down and beaten to death, and shot dead indiscriminately.

This planned and calculated criminal act was meted out against the
Armenians for one reason, and one reason only: because they were
Armenians. A similar fate befell their fellow sufferers – Pontian
Greeks, Assyrians and Aramaeans.

With our present day knowledge, and against the backdrop of the
political and humanitarian horrors of recent decades, it is to us
clear today that the fate of the Armenians exemplifies the history of
mass annihilations, ethnic cleansing, deportations, even genocides,
that marred the twentieth century in such a terrible way.

These crimes were committed in the shadows of wars; war also served to
legitimise these barbaric acts. This is what happened to the Armenians
in the First World War. This is what also happened elsewhere over the
course of the last century. And this is what sometimes continues to
happen to many other religious and national minorities today. They
were branded variously as spies, as the henchmen of foreign powers,
as troublemakers threatening national unity, as enemies of the people
or enemies by race, or as pathogens infecting the body politic.

We remember the victims so that they and their fate are not forgotten.

We remember them for their own sake. Above all, in doing so we call
to mind the inalienable dignity of every human being. While this
dignity cannot be destroyed, there is unlimited potential for running
roughshod over it by violating and crushing it underfoot.

We remember the victims so that they are once again given a voice,
so that their story is told – a story that was supposed to vanish
without a trace.

Yes, we remember the victims also for our own sake. We can only
preserve our humanity by ensuring that it is not only the victors and
the memory of the living that determine history, but that those who
were beaten, the missing, the betrayed and the annihilated, also have
a voice.

Commemorating the victims would only be half of the act of remembrance
if we failed to talk about the perpetrators. There are no victims
without perpetrators. The perpetrators, the then rulers of the
Ottoman Empire and their henchmen – as essentially all perpetrators
of racially, ethnically or religiously motivated mass murder – were
convinced, to the point of fanaticism, that what they were doing
was right.

The Young Turkish ideology saw in the concept of an ethnically
homogeneous nation state with a uniform religion an alternative to the
lost tradition of the coexistence of different peoples and religions
in the collapsing Ottoman Empire. Division along ethnic lines, ethnic
cleansing and expulsions often formed the darker side of the emergence
of nation states at the beginning of the 20th century. However,
ideologies preaching unity and purity often lead to exclusion and
expulsion and, ultimately, to murderous acts. In the Ottoman Empire,
this developed a genocidal dynamic to which the Armenian people
fell victim.

We are currently right in the middle of a necessary debate on which
term most appropriately describes events that took place one hundred
years ago. But let us ensure that this debate is not boiled down to
differences in terminology. What matters above all is – even after
one hundred years – to recognise, deplore and mourn the systematic
annihilation of a people in all of its terrible reality. If we fail to
do this, we will lose sight of the compass that guides our actions –
and also lose respect for ourselves.

If we achieve understanding in our assessment of history, if we
call injustice by its name even if our people were guilty of such
injustice, if we are united in our commitment to respecting rights
and human rights in our daily lives, then we will manage to preserve
the dignity of the victims and create a shared humane basis for
coexistence at home and beyond borders.

We are not putting anyone alive today into the dock by remembering
this. The perpetrators of this crime committed long ago are no longer
with us, and their children and their children’s children cannot
be found guilty. However, what the descendants of the victims are
rightfully entitled to expect is that historical facts, and thus
historical guilt, are recognised. It is part of the responsibility
of those living today to feel a sense of commitment to respecting
and protecting the right to life and human rights of each and every
individual, and also of each and every minority.

In the case of the Armenians, we therefore follow no other principle
than that of our deep-rooted human experience, which teaches us
that we cannot free ourselves from guilt by denying, suppressing or
trivialising it. We in Germany have painstakingly, and often after
shameful procrastination, learned to remember the crimes committed
in the National Socialist period – above all the persecution and
annihilation of Europe’s Jews. And, in so doing, we have also learned
to differentiate between the guilt of the perpetrators, which must be
recognised unconditionally, and the responsibility of their descendants
to engage in appropriate acts of commemoration.

It is utterly important and clearly justified to remember, also
here in Germany, the murder of the Armenian people. Descendants of
Armenians and Turks live here, and each has their own story to tell.

It is important, however, for the sake of peaceful coexistence, for
us all to follow the same objective principles when coming to terms
with the past.

In this case, we Germans as a whole must also take part in this
process insofar as we share responsibility, perhaps even guilt,
in the genocide committed against the Armenians.

German military officers were involved in planning, and to an extent
in carrying out, the deportations. Advice from German observers and
diplomats, who plainly recognised the destructive intent behind the
actions taken against the Armenians, was overlooked and ignored. At
the end of the day, what the German Reich wanted least was to damage
relations with their Ottoman ally. Reich Chancellor Bethmann Hollweg,
who had been informed about the persecution of the Armenians in
painstaking detail by a special envoy, remarked dryly in December
1915 that: “Our sole objective is to keep Turkey on our side until
the end of the war, irrespective of whether Armenians are killed in
the process or not.”

But there were also Germans, most notably the highly dedicated Johannes
Lepsius, whose publishing activities made the suffering of the Armenian
people known around the world.

It was the medic Armin Theophil Wegner who captured the fate of the
Armenians on camera and brought their plight to a German audience
at his slide shows in Germany after the war. And it was the Austrian
Franz Werfel who erected an artistic monument to the resistance of the
Armenians against their planned destruction with his novel The Forty
Days of Musa Dagh. The book was quickly banned in Germany following
its publication in 1933 – but it was read in the Jewish ghettos of
BiaÃ…~Bystok and Vilnius as an omen of what was soon to happen to
the Jews. Both the censors of the Third Reich and the Jews therefore
understood the book and the story it recounted entirely correctly.

When Adolf Hitler ordered the German army groups to attack Poland
and explained his plans to his military commanders in his operation
order of 22 August 1939, which urged them to “kill without pity or
mercy, all men, women, and children of Polish descent or language”,
he expected the reaction to be one of collective disinterest, which
is why he concluded with the rhetorical question: “Who, after all,
speaks today of the annihilation of the Armenians?”

We are speaking about them! Even today, one hundred years later, we
are still talking about this – about this and other crimes against
humanity and human dignity. We do this so that Hitler is not proved
right. And we do this so that no dictator, no tyrant and no one who
considers ethnic cleansing to be legitimate can expect their crimes
to be ignored or forgotten.

Yes, we are still talking about uncomfortable facts of history, a
denial of responsibility and past guilt. We do not do this in order to
shackle ourselves to the bleakness of the past, but rather in order
to be watchful and to react in time when individuals and peoples are
threatened by destruction and terror.

It is good when we do this together, and not separately according to
denominations and religions, languages and ethnic and state borders.

Today, we are thankful for signs of remembrance and reconciliation
from around the world. I am especially thankful for each and every
encouraging sign of understanding and rapprochement between Turks and
Armenians. No one must be afraid of the truth. Only together can we
overcome what divided and continues to divide us. Only together will we
be able to enjoy a bright future in this One World entrusted to us all.

From: A. Papazian

http://www.bundespraesident.de/SharedDocs/Reden/EN/JoachimGauck/Reden/2015/150423-Gedenken-Armenier.html