Expert Relates Armenian Genocide To Modern World

EXPERT RELATES ARMENIAN GENOCIDE TO MODERN WORLD
Sara Tracey

SU The Daily Orange
rmenian-genocide-to-modern-world-1.1339168
April 13 2010

A black-and-white photograph of Armenians surrounding a railway boxcar
sits in the archives in the Deutsche Bank in Berlin.

"These are boxcars made for 20 animals stuffed with more than 100
Armenian men, women and children," said Peter Balakian. "They are
being sent to their deaths in southeast Anatolia, to the desert. Half
of them would be dead before they were dumped out in the desert of
famine and disease."

Balakian, an award-winning author and professor at Colgate University,
used this photograph to show how new technology, such as railways,
affected the Armenian genocide of the early 1900s in his lecture,
titled "The Armenian Genocide and Modernity." Balakian’s lecture
began Syracuse University’s first Genocide Awareness Week. Balakian
spoke at the Winnick Hillel Center at 4 p.m. Monday.

Though the bodies of those lost in the genocide may be gone today,
Balakian said the damage inflicted on Armenian culture is still
prevalent. He also spoke about the coining of the word "genocide"
and compared Turkey’s then-government with today’s U.S. government.

"The buildings, the libraries, the synagogues, the churches, the
books, the texts, the cultural producers themselves, the writers,
the artists, the professors, the teachers, the religious leaders
–all of that has been very important to our understanding as the
genocidal crime," he said.

Raphael Lemkin was a Polish scholar and lawyer who coined the term
"genocide" after the crimes committed against the Armenian people
by the Turkish in the early 20th century, Balakian said. He said
Lemkin was adamant about calling the event genocide instead of a
"crime of war."

Lemkin, a Holocaust survivor, lost 49 family members in the tragedy.

His term for mass killing, genocide, was not accepted by the U.S.

government until after his death in 1959, Balakian said.

Balakian drew several comparisons between governmental acts of the
Turks during the genocide and the U.S. government of today. He said
security focuses after Sept. 11 were similar to Turkish government
arrests, made because of the temporary law of deportation employed
in 1913.

The law gave police the power to arrest "every Armenian citizen in
his village, city and town under the pretext that Armenians were
security threats," he said. "It’s under the total war environment. We
saw this in our own culture with the Bush administration, the Vulcans
running the State Department after 9/11. Security paranoia can become
a license for other kinds of abuses."

Today, Turkey is still feeling the effects of the Armenian genocide,
he said. In 2005, the European Union said Turkey must recognize the
genocide before it can be considered for admittance in the union. A
year later, EU dropped the requirement because of the Turkish
government haranguing the union, Balakian said.

Alan Goldberg, co-director of SU’s regional genocide and holocaust
initiative, ended the lecture by saying schools should also have
a hand in acknowledging the genocides. Only a handful of states,
including California and New Jersey, mention the Armenian genocides
in their curriculums.

"For many of us," Goldberg said, "our hope is that states will begin
to even recognize the importance of mandating or even encouraging the
inclusion of the Armenian genocide in its social studies curriculum."

http://www.dailyorange.com/expert-relates-a

May To Become Month Of Negative Trends In Armenian-Turkish Process

MAY TO BECOME MONTH OF NEGATIVE TRENDS IN ARMENIAN-TURKISH PROCESS

ArmInfo
2010-04-13 12:52:00

ArmInfo. May will become a month of negative trends in the
Armenian-Turkish process, NKR ex- Foreign Minister Arman Melikyan
told journalists today.

"This is indicated by the fact that no negotiating party made a
statement upon the results of the meetings in Washington. I think
the process will slow down more, and I do not rule out final failure
of the Armenian-Turkish process, since its logic is false", Melikyan
said. He emphasized that Sargsyan-Erdogan and Sargsyan-Obama meetings
in Washington were of the strategic importance for all the parties.

"They were important for Armenia in the context of our expectations
in the Armenian-Turkish settlement, while they had more global,
geopolitical significance for Turkey and the USA. I also think that
visiting Woodrow Wilson’s tomb by Serzh Sargsyan is very symbolic,
since it was just Wilson who outlined the borders of Armenia that
Armenian people dream of", Melikyan resumed.

Sargsyan, Erdogan To Meet At 06:30pm Yerevan Time

SARGSYAN, ERDOGAN TO MEET AT 06:30PM YEREVAN TIME

PanARMENIAN.Net
April 12, 2010 – 12:54 AMT 07:54 GMT

A meeting between Armenia’s President Serzh Sargsyan and Turkey’s
Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan will take place in Washington,
DC, at 06.30pm Yerevan time, diplomatic sources told PanARMENIAN.Net

President Serzh Sargsyan is in Washington for the Nuclear Security
Summit at the invitation of U.S. President Barack Obama.

ANTELIAS: HH Aram I meets with the new General Secretary of the WCC

PRESS RELEASE
Catholicosate of Cilicia
Communication and Information Department
Contact: V.Rev.Fr.Krikor Chiftjian, Communications Director
Tel: (04) 410001, 410003
Fax: (04) 419724
E- mail: [email protected]
Web:

PO Box 70 317
Antelias-Lebanon

Watch our latest videos on YouTube here:

HIS HOLINESS ARAM I MEETS WITH THE NEW GENERAL SECRETARY
OF THE WORLD COUNCIL OF CHURCHES

On Tuesday 6 April 2010, His Holiness Aram I met with the General Secretary
of the World Council of Churches (WCC), Reverend Dr. Olav Tveit, at the
Ecumenical Institute Bossey, Switzerland. Ms. Teny Pirri-Simonian,
Vice-President of the Ecumenical Relations Committee of the Catholicosate,
attended part of the meeting.

Being their first meeting, the former Moderator of the World Council of
Churches, and the new General Secretary spent more than an hour discussing
issues and concerns related to the Movement and the WCC.

His Holiness Aram I shared his ecumenical vision and experiences as
Moderator of the World Council of Churches, and Head of an Orthodox Member
Church. In his turn, Dr. Tveit shared his observations and plans in leading
the ecumenical boat. While the General Secretary was aware of the urgent
priorities and challenges of the fellowship, His Holiness Aram I reminded
him of the importance of interreligious dialogue and urged him to organize a
follow-up to the consultation of 2005, entitled "A Critical Moment in
Interreligious Dialogue.

##
View the photo here:
tos/Photos473.htm#4
*****
The Armenian Catholicosate of Cilicia is one of the two Catholicosates of
the Armenian Orthodox Church. For detailed information about the Ecumenical
activities of the Cilician Catholicosate, you may refer to the web page of
the Catholicosate, The Cilician
Catholicosate, the administrative center of the church is located in
Antelias, Lebanon.

http://www.ArmenianOrthodoxChurch.org/
http://www.youtube.com/user/HolySeeOfCilicia
http://www.ArmenianOrthodoxChurch.org/v04/doc/Pho
http://www.ArmenianOrthodoxChurch.org

Georgia’s Armenians Call On Saakashvili To Recognize The Genocide

GEORGIA’S ARMENIANS CALL ON SAAKASHVILI TO RECOGNIZE THE GENOCIDE

Asbarez
Apr 12th, 2010

TBILISI (Combined Sources)-Georgia’s Armenian minority has called on
President Mikheil Saakashvili and the Georgian Parliament to officially
recognize the Armenian Genocide.

The request, which came in a letter co-signed by the Armenian
Community of Georgia, The Armenian Cooperation Centre of Georgia
and the Association of Armenian Students of Georgia, asks that
a bill recognizing the Genocide be drafted. It was sent Monday to
Saakashvili, the chairpersons of Georgia’s parliament and the leaders
of its parliamentary fractions. Similar letters were also written to
ethnic Armenian members of parliament.

The letter also asks that the members of parliament issue a statement
on the Armenian Genocide during the parliamentary session before
April 24, and to request that the parliament commemorate the Genocide.

BAKU: EU Commish: Confident of solution to Nagorno Karabakh conflict

APA, Azerbaijan
April 9 2010

EU Commissioner: `I am confident that the process of solution to
Nagorno Karabakh conflict will produce results in the near future’

[ 09 Apr 2010 20:13 ]
Baku. Victoria Dementyeva ` APA. Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov
met with Commissioner for Enlargement and European Neighbourhood
Policy Åtefan Füle within the framework of his visit to Azerbaijan,
APA reports.

During the briefing after the meeting, Mammadyarov stated that
Azerbaijan- EU relations, further enhancement of these ties, next
steps to be taken within the framework of the Eastern Partnership
program and Nagorno Karabakh problem were in the focus of attention at
the talks. The Minister updated the guest about the Nagorno Karabakh
problem: `The position of Azerbaijan is that the sooner progress in
solution process to the conflict, the better it will be for both
sides’

Åtefan Füle in return noted that they had exchanged views on the
upcoming parliamentary elections in Azerbaijan.

Answering the question `Why EU establishes relations with aggressor
Armenia and why it doesn’t impose sanctions on this country?’, the
guest noted that these issues depended on the stage of conducted
negotiations. `As I know, the presidents are very active in this
process. I also met Armenian president in Yerevan some days ago. And I
see that both sides support peaceful solution of the conflict. The
European Union backs up the activity of the OSCE Minsk Group. I am
confident that the process of solution to Nagorno Karabakh conflict
will produce results in the near future’.

Aghet: Catastrophe: ARD-Docu Shows Genocide of Armenians (in German)

Die Welt, Deutschland
9 April 2010

Aghet: The Catastrophe: ARD-Docu Shows Genocide of Armenians

"Aghet" ` die Katastrophe
ARD-Doku zeigt Völkermord an Armeniern

9. April 2010, 14:29 Uhr .Mit 1,5 Millionen Todesopfern war es einer
der schlimmsten Genozide in der Menschheitsgeschichte: der Völkermord
an den Armeniern während des Ersten Weltkriegs. Bis heute erkennt die
Türkei diese Tatsache nicht an. Dafür arbeitet eine ARD-Dokumentation
das schreckliche Verbrechen jetzt noch einmal auf.

Es war eines der groÃ?en Menschheitsverbrechen im vergangenen
Jahrhundert: Bis zu 1,5 Millionen Menschen starben während des Ersten
Weltkriegs im Osmanisch-Türkischen Reich. Sie wurden Opfer des
Völkermords der Herrscher an den Armeniern. Noch heute wird der
Genozid von der Türkei jedoch nicht als solcher anerkannt. In ihrer
eigenen Sprache bezeichnen die Armenier dieses tragische Kapitel ihrer
Geschichte mit dem schlichten Wort ?Aghet` (deutsch: die Katastrophe).

Für Filmemacher Eric Friedler ein passender Titel für seine
90-minütige Dokumentation, die jetzt in der ARD läuft: ?Aghet ` ein
Völkermord`. Anhand zahlreicher historischer Quellen versucht
Friedler, den Verlauf des Völkermords zu rekonstruieren und auch zu
erklären, aus welchen politischen Gründen dieser Genozid bis heute
häufig totgeschwiegen wird.

Zahlreiche Zeitzeugen, mittlerweile längst gestorben, berichten von
den Greueln dieser Zeit. Schauspieler der ersten Garde leihen diesen
Menschen ihre markanten Stimmen, darunter Martina Gedeck, Ulrich
Noethen, Gottfried John, Joachim Król, Peter Lohmeyer und Burghart
Klau�ner. Am 24. April vor 95 Jahren begann der Völkermord, der ?heute
von Historikern als Blaupause für den Holocaust und viele darauf
folgende Völkermorde verstanden wird`, wie Thomas Schreiber, Redakteur
und Leiter des Programmbereichs Fiktion & Unterhaltung beim
verantwortlichen Norddeutschen Rundfunk (NDR) zum Film schreibt.

Er hebt zudem die filmische Qualität von ?Aghet` hervor. ?Diese beruht
auf der Qualität der journalistischen Recherche, auf der Herausbildung
einer spezifischen �sthetik in der Präsentation historischer
Augenzeugen und einem Spannungsbogen zwischen Vergangenheit und
Gegenwart, der die Bedeutung eines historischen Ereignisses bis in
unsere Tage mit gro�er Nähe lebendig werden lässt.`

Er wolle das Thema damit einem grö�eren Publikum bekanntmachen. Ob das
allerdings bei einem Sendetermin am späten Freitagabend klappt,
scheint sehr fraglich.

"Aghet ` ein Völkermord", Freitag, 9. April, 23.30 Uhr, ARD

WSJ: Erdogan Calls Israel ‘Threat’ To Peace

ERDOGAN CALLS ISRAEL ‘THREAT’ TO PEACE

Wall Street Journal
2702303591204575169980169518418.html?mod=WSJ_hpp_M IDDLENexttoWhatsNewsTop
April 8 2010

Turkish premier’s remarks further strain countries’ alliance as
analysts ponder nation’s foreign-policy leanings

By MARC CHAMPION

Relations between Turkey and Israel, already at a low point, took a
further battering Wednesday when Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
Erdogan described Israel as "the principal threat to peace" in the
Middle East.

The remarks, made to reporters on a visit to Paris, came after Israel’s
foreign minister had compared Mr. Erdogan to Venezuela’s Hugo Chávez
and Moammar Gadhafi of Libya earlier this week.

Israel responded quickly.

"We are interested in good relations with Turkey and regret that Mr.

Erdogan chooses time after time to attack Israel," said Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu after a news conference in Jerusalem, adding that
such remarks would do nothing for Middle Eastern stability.

This promises to be a tough month for Mr. Erdogan’s relationships with
some of his most important Western allies, as he seeks to balance
Turkey’s interests in boosting trade and political relations with
its immediate neighbors–including Iran, Syria and Azerbaijan–with
the conflicting goals of Western policy makers.

Mr. Erdogan’s clashes with Israel and rapprochement with Iran and
Syria have led some analysts to believe Turkey is making a fundamental
foreign-policy shift away from its Cold War partners in the West,
in particular the U.S., and toward Middle Eastern powers such as
Iran. At a recent meeting of foreign-policy analysts in Istanbul
held by the Turkish Policy Quarterly, Israeli and Turkish analysts
agreed on one point–the alliance those two countries built on shared
security concerns in the 1990s is probably unsalvageable.

But a 38-page report by the Brussels-based International Crisis
Group think tank on Turkey’s new role in the Middle East, released
Wednesday, said the belief Turkey is turning away from the West
is "incorrect." The report noted that Turkey’s trade with Europe
continues to outweigh its trade with the Middle East by a wide margin,
and European Union membership remains its core goal. But the report
also warned that Mr. Erdogan risks losing the trust of Western allies.

Mr. Erdogan was in Paris on Wednesday to boost a trade relationship
that has recovered from a brief setback caused by France’s recognition
of the 1915 slaughter of Armenians under Ottoman rule as genocide,
and to push for Turkey’s EU bid, which France opposes.

Next week, he heads to Washington for a conference on nuclear security
to be attended by leaders from some 40 nations–including Mr.

Netanyahu. There, he is likely to come under pressure to back
U.S. and French efforts to secure unanimous support at the United
Nations Security Council for further sanctions against Iran. Turkey
currently holds one of 10 rotating seats on the 15-nation Council.

So far, Mr. Erdogan shows no sign of backing down from his opposition
to imposing harsher sanctions on Iran, which together with his tough
rhetoric on Israel and support for Hamas in the Gaza Strip have
brought him popularity in many parts of the Middle East.

"I don’t think those [sanctions] being discussed can be effective,"
Mr. Erdogan told French daily Le Figaro in an interview published
ahead of his visit. "Sanctions have already been agreed on two
occasions. Those who took the decision to apply them were the first
to violate them," he said, specifying the French, Germans, English,
Americans and Chinese.

Mr. Erdogan also repeated his skepticism on whether Iran intends to
use its nuclear-fuel program to build nuclear weapons, saying there
is no such uncertainty concerning Israel’s undeclared arsenal.

Asked on Wednesday if he wasn’t concerned Israel could become the focus
of attack for proliferation during next week’s nuclear conference
in Washington, Mr. Netanyahu said, "I’m not concerned that anyone
would think that Israel is a terrorist regime," the Associated Press
reported.

Western governments and nuclear analysts say there is ample evidence
that Iran’s nuclear-fuel program, which can be used to enrich civilian
or weapons-grade fuel, is being developed to give Iran a military
capability.

Also on the agenda in Washington will be Turkey’s troubled initiative
to reopen its border with Armenia. This week, Mr. Erdogan sent a
senior diplomat to Yerevan to discuss how to keep alive an effort
that a growing number of Armenians see as a ploy to ensure President
Barack Obama doesn’t recognize the 1915 killings as genocide in an
annual statement to mark its April 24 anniversary.

Turkey was angered by the Obama administration’s failure to lobby
strongly against a resolution to recognize the genocide in the House
Foreign Affairs Committee last month. Its ambassador, withdrawn in
protest at the vote, returned to Washington this week. While there is
confidence in Ankara that President Obama won’t use the "genocide"
word, the White House continues to press for ratification of the
Armenia deal. Turkey says it won’t open the border until Armenia moves
toward settling a territorial dispute with neighboring Azerbaijan.

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1000142405

Un Sondage Armenien Montre Un Faible Appui Populaire Au Rapprochemen

UN SONDAGE ARMENIEN MONTRE UN FAIBLE APPUI POPULAIRE AU RAPPROCHEMENT AVEC LA TURQUIE

armenews
vendredi9 avril 2010

Seul un armenien sur trois soutient les accords de l’Armenie avec
la Turquie et l’ouverture possible de la frontière entre les deux
nations separees, selon un sondage d’opinion sorti lundi 28 mars.

Le sondage conduit par l’Association Armenienne de Marketing (AMA)
semble etre l’enquete la plus complète sur l’opinion publique
armenienne sur le degel des relations turco-armeniennes. L’ONG a
interviewe environ 2500 residants aleatoirement choisis a travers le
pays fin janvier et debut fevrier.

L’enquete que l’AMA dit n’avoir pas ete financee ou commissionne
par une autre organisation, a trouve non seulement un manque d’appui
populaire pour le rapprochement mais aussi un grand nombre d’armeniens
indecis sur les divers aspects et implications.

" Beaucoup de personnes sont embarrassees, ils ne savent pas que croire
" a declare le president de l’AMA, Aram Navasardian. Il a dit les
lignes des evaluations sont diametralement opposees suite aux analyses
faites par le gouvernement armenien et ses adversaires politiques.

Selon l’AMA, presque 31% des sondes supportent a des degres varies les
contacts entre l’Armenie et la Turquie. Presque le meme pourcentage
sont en grande partie oppose a de tels contacts, avec le maintien de
40% ou bien d’indecis ou bien ayant aucun avis defini.

En consequence, seulement 36,3% des sondes ont dit les protocoles
de normalisation signes par Ankara et Erevan en octobre dernier sont
bons pour l’Armenie. La plupart des gens etaient ou bien indecis ou
bien ont dit que les protocoles favorisent seulement la partie turque.

Le sondage de l ‘AMA suggère que l’opinion publique est presque
egalement partage sur l’ouverture de la frontière turco-armenienne, qui
est prevue selon les protocoles. Il montre que seulement un tiers des
armeniens veulent avoir une frontière ouverte avec la Turquie tandis
que ceux qui sont contre composent juste plus de 30% de la population.

Des gouvernements occidentaux disent que l’ouverture de la frontière
aurait un impact rapide et fortement positif sur l’economie
armenienne. Le gouvernement armenien a une vue semblable. L’AMA a
dit que ce point de vue est partage par seulement 41,2% des sondes,
36,3% etant "neutres" sur le sujet ou ne sachant pas si le commerce
international avec la Turquie apporterait des benefices economiques
a leur pays.

Navasardian a souligne que les enqueteurs de l’AMA n’ont pas cherche a
identifier les raisons de ses attitudes populaires envers les relations
de l’Armenie avec la Turquie et les protocoles en particulier. Il a
dit que cela doit etre le sujet d’une etude separee.

Edward Nalbandian, Abdou Diouf Meet

EDWARD NALBANDIAN, ABDOU DIOUF MEET

Aysor
April 7 2010
Armenia

Armenia’s Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian met Wednesday with
Secretary-General of the International Organization of la Francophonie
(IOF) Abdou Diouf, who is on a visit to Armenia.

Edward Nalbandian said he hopes Secretary-General’s visit to Armenia
will contribute to strengthening of relations between Armenia and the
IOF. Abdou Diouf, in his part, said that the relations have passed
a significant way of development since 2008, when Armenia became the
associate member of the IOF.

The parties talked about Days of Francophonie, which are being held
in Armenia, becoming a traditional event, and which coincided with
organisation’s 40th anniversary. Nalbandian and Diouf discussed items,
related to strengthening of relations between IOF member states, and
stressed the importance of cooperation between Armenian government
and its partner IOF structures. Edward Nalbandian said that Armenia
remains committed to organisation’s values and will make its efforts
for active involvement into IOF’s activities.