Believing In Something Without Questioning Is Never Right

BELIEVING IN SOMETHING WITHOUT QUESTIONING IS NEVER RIGHT
By Kerem Sahin

Tufts Daily
hing-without-questioning-is-never-right-1.2185346
March 9 2010

It’s hard to start an article about a very sensitive issue. You may go
against the world and be right, but still people will get angry. Then
how can I approach this? Outright denial is never constructive, even
when you have enough solid evidence to know that what you believe
is the truth. I am writing because I feel the responsibility to
represent a different angle to Tufts students: one that is being
ignored, either deliberately or out of ignorance.

The issue at hand is the so-called "Armenian Genocide." Throughout the
years that have passed since World War I (WWI), the issue has become
a much more of a political and emotional issue rather than that of
a historical one. It’s used against Turkey in its attempts to join
the European Union or with regards to other political issues. Many
nations such as France and Greece, and 44 U.S. states which have
considerable Armenian minorities or value the opportunity to get
leverage against Turkey, have acknowledged that such a genocide
occurred. It is no surprise that the most vocal U.S. state about this
issue is California, which has a sizeable Armenian minority. On the
other hand, nations such as Israel, Denmark and the United Kingdom
are not among the countries to acknowledge the genocide claims.

The international knowledge of the issue is close to minimal, if
not nonexistent. Almost all of the people that are voting for the
recognition of the so-called "Armenian Genocide" appear to only know
one side of the story while ignoring many facts in order to keep this
story intact. In fact, there are many facts that Western nations are
either ignoring or these facts are denied to them.

The reason I bring this issue up is because I came upon an "Armenian
Genocide Commemoration" event on TuftsLife last semester. I attended
this event to ask two questions, but seeing that the majority of the
attendees were elders, I didn’t want to disrespect their emotions. In
addition, the other half of the people in the room were sleeping
because the lecturer of the event was practically reading her
presentation from a paper which was hardly based on the events of WWI.

I left early because I thought that having a poorly presented lecture
in a commemoration ceremony is worse than someone confronting it.

I realized that people take this claim of genocide as the truth without
questioning its credibility or even trying to learn something about
it. I have two very simple questions that alone shake the credibility
of the issue and demonstrate that it is not as apparent as the
Holocaust is, a claim many "Armenian Genocide" defenders make.

My first question is about the base of the genocide argument. In 1920,
Aram Andonian, a French-Armenian, published a book called "The Memoirs
of Naim Bey". This book contained the "Talat Pasha telegrams" partially
based on the Armenian argument that the Ottoman government ordered the
killings of Armenians. These documents, which are purported to be the
proof that the Ottoman government executed Armenians, were suggested
to be forgeries by Å~^inasi Orel and Sureyya Yuca in 1983. In Orel
and Yuca’s book called "The Talaât Pasha Telegrams: Historical Fact
or Armenian Fiction?" they analyze the documents on the basis of
signature types, dating and language and found them to be forgeries.

Simply put, why would the Armenians feel the need to forge documents
to back up their argument if it’s so compellingly recorded and proven
to be true?

The second question regards the history of Armenians themselves. The
first Prime Minister of the Democratic Republic of Armenia, Hovhannes
Katchaznouni, was a member of Armenian Revolutionary Federation,
which served a key role in the formation of Armenia as a separate
state. He published a critical report in 1923 called "The Federation
Has Nothing More To Do." In his report, he claims that Armenians had a
part in the escalation of the violence throughout the empire and points
out the massacres done by Armenians against Turks. Unfortunately, his
report was banned and collected to be destroyed in Armenia. In 2005,
this book was found in Russian archives by Mehmet Perincek and started
to be published in many languages. Quite simply, why would the very
man who fought for Armenia’s existence undermine the "genocide" claim?

I have no doubt that there are more things that are being mistakenly
left out. A very brief research on the issue from the Internet and
written sources would show that small but important facts like those
that I have mentioned in this article are not pointed out at all. This
summarizes the overall treatment of the issue in the Western nations.

Only one side is heard, and only one side is remembered. It is
important to remember contentious events like this one, but we should
remember all sides of an issue. We’re living in a world where only
the loudest voices are heard. Until all are, I will keep raising
questions that need answering.

Kerem Sahin is a junior majoring in electrical engineering.

http://www.tuftsdaily.com/believing-in-somet

"Armenia 2010" Joint Exercise With NATO To Be Conducted This Year

"ARMENIA 2010" JOINT EXERCISE WITH NATO TO BE CONDUCTED THIS YEAR

Noyan Tapan
March 9, 2010

YEREVAN, MARCH 9, NOYAN TAPAN. All the measures under the
Armenia-NATO Individual Partnership Action Plan (IPAP) were carried
out efficiently in 2009. This was announced during the March 9 sitting
of the interdepartmental commission coordinating the implementation
of such measures. The sitting was conducted by the Chairman of the
Interdepartmental Commission on Coordination of Armenia’s Cooperation
with the NATO, Secretary of the RA National Security Council Arthur
Baghdasarian.

The press service of the Secretary of the RA National Security
Council reported that the members of the interdepartmental commission
presented the activities carried out in 2009 under the action plan
by the ministries of foreign affairs, defence, justice, healthcare,
and emergency situations, as well as by the national security service
and the police.

It was stated that during its visit to Armenia, the NATO evaluation
group expressed a positive opinion about the measures taken under
the IPAP.

Speaking about the work done, A. Baghdasarian said that 122 measures
envisaged by the IPAP were implemented. He pointed out the importance
of cooperation within the framework of the defence strategic review
process and the implementation of the envisaged programs on emergency
situations. In the words of A. Baghdasarian, this year "Armenia 2010"
exercise on emergency situations will be conducted jointly with the
NATO so it is necessary to complete the development of the national
concept of civil protection and the strategic training doctrine. He
noted that in case of successful implementation of all the programs
envisaged, it will become possible to establish higher standards
during the development of a new program with NATO in late 2010 and
to carry out the programmed reforms most efficiently.

Aliyev – Gul Telconversation

ALIYEV – GUL TELCONVERSATION

Panorama.am
15:58 06/03/2010

Politics

President of Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev made a telephone call Friday
to President of Turkey Abdullah Gul, according to Azerbaijani media
reports. During the conversation, Aliyev condemned the Armenian
Genocide Resolution endorsed by the US House Foreign Relations
Committee.

He emphasized Azerbaijan had always been alongside Turkey and would
continue to support this country.

In turn, the Turkish President hailed his counterpart`s stance on
the issue.

To give a less solemn note to the conversation, the Presidents also
discussed bilateral and regional issues.

ANCA Challenges Obama Administration’s Attack On Genocide Resolution

ANCA CHALLENGES OBAMA ADMINISTRATION’S ATTACK ON GENOCIDE RESOLUTION

Tert.am
14:06 ~U 09.03.10

Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA) Chair Ken Hachikian
gave voice to the profound moral outrage of Armenian-American voters
over the decision last week by President Obama, who had earlier this
year abandoned his own pledge to recognize the Armenian Genocide, to
launch a White House drive to block proper Congressional commemoration
of the Armenian Genocide, reads an ANCA press release.

In a letter sent today to the White House, Hachikian noted: "Mr.

President, in attempting to enforce Ankara’s gag rule on US recognition
of the Armenian Genocide – both within your Administration and now
in Congress – you have, very sadly, signaled to all the world that
our silence on genocide can be bought in exchange for perceived
geopolitical advantage or compromised under threat from a foreign
power. Your policy is now fully complicit in Turkey’s campaign of
Genocide denial."

Hachikian’s letter, in part, reads:

"Your Administration’s efforts to undermine the adoption of the
Armenian Genocide Resolution, coming, as they do, in the wake of
both your broken pledge to recognize the Armenian Genocide and
your abandoned promise to "strongly support" the Armenian Genocide
Resolution, represent a stark departure from the commitments you made
to the American people during your campaign for office.

"Rather than honouring your words, you are, today, using the full
force of your Administration to attempt to block members of Congress
from doing exactly that which you yourself promised, namely properly
commemorating this crime against humanity.

"As you recall, as US Senator, you sharply criticized President Bush’s
policy of non-recognition and opposition to Congressional commemoration
as ‘inexcusable.’ In fact, while in Congress you were joined by
then-Senators Joe Biden and Hillary Clinton in formally calling on
President Bush to properly mark this crime against humanity, noting
that full US recognition of the Armenian Genocide serves ‘the best
interest of our nation and the entire global community.’

"I would like to take this opportunity, once again, to encourage you
to honour your as-yet unfulfilled pledge to remain actively engaged
with Armenian-American leaders.

"As it stands now, more than a year into your Administration, despite
the considerable personal attention you have devoted to Armenian
issues and your multiple discussions with Turkey’s leaders about
the Armenian Genocide, you have not even once met with the American
citizens descended from the survivors of this crime.

"As a first step toward addressing this imbalance, I would respectfully
recommend that you call a meeting, at your first opportunity, with
our broad-based community leadership."

Armenian Death March In Ottoman Turkey

ARMENIAN DEATH MARCH IN OTTOMAN TURKEY

p?article=12017
March 8th 2010

Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan jas lambasted U.S. lawmakers
for pursuing a resolution that would label his country’s treatment
of Armenians after World War I as a "genocide." That declaration,
approved Thursday by the House Foreign Affairs Committee, could only
serve to damage U.S.-Turkish relations, the prime minister said.

Erdogan later decried the effort as a "parody," and he stressed his
country would in no way be "deterred" by U.S. lawmakers’ forthcoming
proclamation. "Let me say quite clearly that this resolution will
not harm us," he told a business group. "But it will damage bilateral
relations between countries, their interests and their visions for the
future. We will not be the losers." Despite the issue’s high profile,
there been little movement in the United States to recognize the
killing of almost 1.5 million Armenians between 1915 and 1917 as
a genocide.

The delay stems in part from the belief that such a proclamation would
deter Turkey from cooperating further with the White House in the fight
against regional terrorism. Former President George Bush campaigned
against the resolution on those grounds in late 2007, imploring the
House Foreign Affairs Committee to reconsider a label that would only
serve to do "great harm to relations with a key ally in NATO."

Interestingly enough, then-Sen. Barack Obama signaled on the 2008
campaign trail that, "as president I will recognize the Armenian
genocide." But this week, the Obama administration has tried to derail
that effort, citing concerns that the resolution will only reverse
months of progress in Turkish-American relations. It is unclear
whether lawmakers share that view. Turkey, however, signaled this
week that it certainly does: Erdogan recalled Turkey’s ambassador to
the United States on on March 4, 2010.

Tony Romm writes for The Hill, from which this article is adapted.

http://www.thecuttingedgenews.com/index.ph

Court Denies Appeal in Ararat Center vs. Director of Caucasus Inst.

Court Denies Appeal in Ararat Center vs. Director of Caucasus Institute

15:40 – 06.03.10

On March 5, the RA Civic Court of Appeal upheld an earlier ruling made
by Court of First Instance of Center and Nork-Marash Communities of
Yerevan on the Ararat Center for Strategic Research lawsuit against
Caucasus Institute Director Alexander Iskandaryan.

In 2008, the Caucasus Institute published a book in Yerevan titled
`Caucasus Neighborhood: Turkey and The South Caucasus,’ which
consisted of papers presented at a conference, organized by the
Caucasus Institute, in Istanbul. The book, edited by Iskandaryan,
included an article by one of the presenters at the conference, Aybars
Görgülü, in which he used the term genocide in quotation marks.

As a result, the Ararat Center filed a lawsuit against Iskandaryan,
and on December 3, 2009, the first court hearing was held.

Tert.am

Turkey Warns Ties With US Will Worsen Over Genocide Vote

Antiwar.com
March 5 2010

Turkey Warns Ties With US Will Worsen Over Genocide Vote

Turkish FM Slams Obama For Failing to Sway Congress
by Jason Ditz, March 05, 2010

Tensions with Turkey continue to rise in reaction to yesterday’s House
Foreign Affairs Committee vote, which 23-22 affirmed that the Ottoman
era killing of Armenians amounted to genocide.

Ahmet DavutogluTurkey withdrew its ambassador to the United States
yesterday in protest, and Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu declared
today in a press conference that long-term relations with the US going
forward will not be `positive’ as a result.

Davutoglu also angrily condemned President Obama for his failure to
sway the House committee, saying Obama had not done a good enough job
of explaining the importance of US-Turkey relations. President Obama
had campaigned in support of the measure before his election, but has
since adopted the stance demanded by the Turkish government.

The vote reportedly has several major US military contractors
concerned, as they stand to lose major weapons contracts if relations
with Turkey continue to worsen. Turkey may also take a stronger
position on other matters, including the vote against Iran in the UN
Security Council. Turkey’s longstanding relations with Iran already
made such a vote difficult.

key-warns-ties-with-us-will-worsen-over-genocide-v ote/

http://news.antiwar.com/2010/03/05/tur

Nagorno-Karabakh Republic And Abkhazia Have De Facto Recognized Each

NAGORNO-KARABAKH REPUBLIC AND ABKHAZIA HAVE DE FACTO RECOGNIZED EACH OTHER

ArmInfo
2010-03-04 17:58:00

ArmInfo. The congratulatory message sent by President of
Nagorno-Karabakh Republic Bako Sahakyan to President of Abkhazia
Sergey Bagapsh on the occasion of his re-election proves that the two
states have de facto recognized each other, Chairman of the Standing
Committee of the National Assembly of NKR Vahram Atanessyan said
during a press-conference today.

In due time this mutual recognition may be given a diplomatic form.

To remind, in his message sent to Bagapsh Dec 16 2009 Sahakyan
congratulated the Abkhazian president on his re-election.

Feb 12, on the invitation of the Abkhazian authorities, Sahakyan
attended Bagapsh’s inauguration.

Armenian Genocide Museum To Exhibit Exclusive Materials By 95th Anni

ARMENIAN GENOCIDE MUSEUM TO EXHIBIT EXCLUSIVE MATERIALS BY 95TH ANNIVERSARY OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

PanARMENIAN.Net
03.03.2010 17:35 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Museum-Institute of Armenian Genocide in
collaboration with the Ministry of Diaspora will organize a two-day
international conference timed to 95th anniversary of the Armenian
Genocide. The main topic of the conference will be the question of
cultural genocide, Hayk Demoyan , director of the Museum-Institute
of Armenian Genocide told a news conference in Yerevan.

On April 23 the museum will exhibit some 50 exclusive materials
collected over the past two years. "At the moment we are working
on a major project to expand the building, and to organize a new
exhibition," the museum’s director said. Originals of the newspapers
featuring the massacres of Armenians published in other countries
will also be exposed.

" We intend to provide grants to foreign students who want to
specialize in the field of Armenian studies, particularly in Armenian
Genocide," Hayk Demoyan said.

The Armenian Genocide (1915-23) was the deliberate and systematic
destruction of the Armenian population of the Ottoman Empire during
and just after World War I. It was characterized by massacres, and
deportations involving forced marches under conditions designed to
lead to the death of the deportees, with the total number of deaths
reaching 1.5 million.

The date of the onset of the genocide is conventionally held to be
April 24, 1915, the day that Ottoman authorities arrested some 250
Armenian intellectuals and community leaders in Constantinople.

Thereafter, the Ottoman military uprooted Armenians from their homes
and forced them to march for hundreds of miles, depriving them of
food and water, to the desert of what is now Syria.

To date, twenty countries and 44 U.S. states have officially recognized
the events of the period as genocide, and most genocide scholars
and historians accept this view. The Armenian Genocide has been also
recognized by influential media including The New York Times, BBC,
The Washington Post and The Associated Press.

The majority of Armenian Diaspora communities were formed by the
Genocide survivors.

AAA: US Court of Appeals Hears Oral Arguments in Massachusetts

PRESS RELEASE
Assembly
March 2, 2010
Contact: Press Department
Email: [email protected]
Phone: (202) 393-3434

U.S. COURT OF APPEALS HEARS ORAL ARGUMENTS IN MASSACHUSETTS ON
ARMENIAN GENOCIDE DENIAL CASE

Boston, MA. – The United States Court of Appeals for the First Circuit
in Boston, Massachusetts, heard oral arguments today in the Theodore
Griswold, et al. vs. David Driscoll, et al. case. The case centers on
the teaching of the Armenian Genocide and a challenge filed by a
Turkish-American denialist organization under the guise of a First
Amendment defense for the inclusion of denialist literature in public
school instructional material. The lawsuit was filed in October 2005
by Griswold, others, and the Assembly of Turkish American Associations
(ATAA) against Driscoll in his official capacity as Commissioner of
Education for the Massachusetts Department of Education, as well as
the Department and the Board of Education.

The case was argued today in front of a three judge panel consisting
of Michael Boudin, Jeffery R. Howard, and retired Associate Justice of
the United States Supreme Court David H. Souter. The Commonwealth’s
Assistant Attorney General William W. Porter defended the
Massachusetts Department of Education. Harvey A. Silverglate, the
lead attorney for the plaintiffs, spoke on behalf of his clients.

The panel of judges actively questioned both attorneys, while pointing
out that this case did not parallel the issues surrounding the removal
of books from a library based on political pressure. Justice Souter
asked specifically whether the Massachusetts legislature had mandated
the teaching of the Armenian Genocide and not the point of view
denying it, which Silverglate acknowledged was the case. Questions
were also raised as to what would happen if any and all groups were
allowed to insist that the government adopt their views, and whether
that would open the door to Holocaust deniers.

Assistant Attorney General Porter asserted that Massachusetts had the
right to teach about the Armenian Genocide and to exclude denial
literature from instructional materials. He argued as well that the
plaintiffs lacked standing, that no constitutional right was impaired
by adoption of the curriculum, that the teaching guide was protected
government speech, and the statute of limitations had expired three
years before the claim was filed. Porter asserted as well that the
democratic and legal process had worked to result in the Massachusetts
curriculum guide as promulgated.

Armenian Assembly of America Board of Trustees President Carolyn
Mugar, who attended today’s hearing, applauded Assistant General
Attorney Porter for speaking forcefully in defense of the department
of education’s rights and duties for teaching history accurately and
responsibly. "What could be more important than teaching about human
rights and the value of tolerance?" asked Mugar. "The historic
examples of genocide stand as warnings to all future generations about
the critical need to confront the hatreds that threaten to undo
efforts at peaceful co-existence. I am particularly proud of the
record of the state of Massachusetts for setting and defending
standards for the teaching for human rights in public schools."

Attending the hearings were also Arnold R. Rosenfeld of K&L Gates LLP,
Anthony Barsamian and Van Z. Krikorian of the Armenian Assembly, Mark
Mamigonian of the National Association for Armenian Studies and
Research, and Sonya Nersessian and Mark Fleming of the Armenian Bar
Association.

Rosenfeld, who along with Duke University School of Law Professor
Erwin Chemerinsky, and Van Krikorian filed amicus briefs on behalf of
Armenian Genocide survivors, descendants of survivors, and the
Armenian Assembly, stated after the oral argument that he "heard no
legal or factual arguments presented by the plaintiffs that would
justify the Appeals Court overruling Chief Judge Wolf’s well written
opinion that the case should be dismissed."

Contradictory filings by the ATAA and the Turkish American Legal
Defense Fund (TALDF) had exposed the hypocrisy at the heart of their
arguments in this lawsuit. Seemingly posturing in defense of the
public interest in its appeal, ATAA’s attorney Silverglate had argued
that "the plaintiffs have never in this litigation posited a view –
any view -on the question of whether the events at issue do or do not
constitute the crime of genocide as defined by historians or by
international law."

Yet at the same time Silverglate took the position that
"contra-genocide" websites should be included in the curriculum,
overlooking the inherent contradiction of "contra-genocide"
information, which does hold a position on the Armenian Genocide by
disputing or denying it. Silverglate also failed to advise the court
that the websites in question, whether of the ATAA or the Turkish
Embassy, display brazenly denialist pages on the Armenian Genocide,
therein holding yet again a very distinct view of history,
disqualifying them as either pedagogically objective or scholarly.

Meanwhile their supporting organization, the TALDF, in an amicus
brief, resorted to invoking a recent California court decision that,
ignoring the position of the current Obama administration as well as
the historic record of the United States on the Armenian Genocide,
ruled, according to TALDF, that "state laws officially recognizing or
affirming the Armenian genocide thesis are constitutionally preempted
by the express foreign policy of the United States." Repeating this
argument of the federal pre-emption doctrine of state legislation,
Silverglate revealed that ATAA’s arguments were disguised as a freedom
of speech case in order to advance the denialist agenda that objects
to all forms of Armenian Genocide recognition.

Indicative of the type of whitewashed history the ATAA would prefer
taught in public schools, it argued on the one hand in its amicus
brief that "the clear intent of the [Massachusetts curriculum] statue
is to leave the teaching of the these topics and the formulation of
the [human rights and genocide teaching] Guide to educators, in
consultation with academic experts." All the same, it also attacked
the very experts who can best inform on the subject matter by accusing
the International Association of Genocide Scholars (IAGS) of "smear
tactics" and "calumny." Silverglate even disputed the IAGS’s
comparison of Armenian Genocide deniers with "Holocaust deniers," when
membership of the IAGS is mostly composed of Holocaust experts.

The real intentions of the TALDF, however, were revealed by the
activities of Bruce Fein, whose June 4, 2009 article in the Huffington
Post is headlined "Lies, Damn Lies, and Armenian Deaths." Fein,
however, has not confined his campaign of denial to commentary alone.
He is also the lead attorney in what is tantamount to a harassment
suit filed by TALDF against the Southern Poverty Law Center for
revealing how Guenter Lewy, the author of a spurious book on the
Armenian massacres, is part of the overall Turkish campaign to deny
and cover up the Armenian Genocide.

Effectively Fein and his cohorts have made themselves the instruments
of the Turkish government’s standing policy of suppressing discussion
of the Armenian Genocide and exporting to the United States Article
301 of the Turkish penal code intended to discourage mention of the
Armenian Genocide in Turkey by threatening prosecution. Rarely has a
practicing attorney so blatantly misused the courts to suppress
freedom of speech by pretending to be defending it. This brazen
attack on academic freedom has not gone unnoticed and Fein’s tactics
were reported by the prestigious trade publication Inside Higher Ed
that headlined its story "Going After a Scholar’s Critic,"
demonstrating how the lawsuit violated the very spirit of academic
inquiry because, once again, the hypocrisy of the Turkish position was
exposed and challenged.

In a further shocking display of ignorance about the atrocities
committed during the Armenian Genocide and insensitivity about the
scale of the accompanying destruction of Armenian educational
institutions and libraries in 1915, the TALDF characterized the
court’s decision supporting the inappropriateness of including
contra-genocide websites in the Massachusetts curriculum as equivalent
to "electronic book burning." In a further ludicrous and offensive
argument implicitly equating the Armenian-American community of
Massachusetts to the Ku Klux Klan, TALDF attorneys and denialists
extraordinaire Bruce Fein and David Saltzman asked for "heightened
constitutional protection" for the Turkish-American community "from
government overreaching, subjugation, or discrimination."

The appeals argued today resulted from the major blow dealt to
Turkey’s global campaign to suppress the truth about the Armenian
Genocide when U.S. District Court Chief Judge Mark Wolf ruled in June
2009 in favor of the Massachusetts Department of Education, allowing
it to continue teaching the facts of the Armenian Genocide, and other
crimes against humanity, in public schools across the Commonwealth as
constitutionally protected government speech. Shortly after this
landmark decision, as part of its ongoing campaign to derail human
rights education, the ATAA and its attorney Silverglate filed an
appeal in July 2009.

The court’s ruling preserved the teaching of accurate history, which
is part of the official "Massachusetts Guide to Choosing and Using
Curricular Materials on Genocide and Human Rights," prepared in 1999.
In 2005, the Assembly of Turkish American Associations (ATAA), along
with others, filed the suit against the Massachusetts Department of
Education arguing that the Commonwealth violated the plaintiffs’ First
Amendment rights by removing materials from the curriculum that deny
the events of 1915.

The Armenian Assembly immediately responded when the suit was filed,
hiring Professor Chemerinsky, one of the nation’s leading First
Amendment experts, and co-counsel Rosenfeld. Over the past five years,
the Assembly and others have challenged the ATAA at every turn by
filing a series of pleadings including amicus curiae (friend of the
court) briefs intended to assist the Court in bringing the case to a
conclusion in favor of the Commonwealth. Presenting their amicus
brief before Judge Wolf, attorneys Rosenfeld and Krikorian had warned
that if the court accepted the plaintiffs’ First Amendment claims, it
would open the door for any extremist group, such as Holocaust
deniers, to challenge curriculum matters in court.

In December 2009 the Armenian Assembly filed again an amicus curiae
(friend of the court) brief in support of the Commonwealth, when the
ATAA and its supporters appealed the June 2009 decision by Judge Wolf.

In its brief, the Armenian Assembly stated that: "This lawsuit is an
unprecedented attempt by the plaintiffs to utilize the federal courts
as a vehicle for their unconstitutional intrusion into educational
policy in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. It is motivated by the
plaintiffs’ claim based on its historically and educationally
unsupported assertions, that there is a credible position that the
Armenian Genocide did not occur, and therefore that view point should
be part of the Curriculum Guide on teaching about the Armenian
Genocide issued by the state Department of Education."

The brief also stated: "The amicus curiae are interested in ensuring
that the Massachusetts Curriculum Guide, prepared by responsible
educators, not be altered by lawsuit by those who seek to use the
federal courts to advance their own view of history, the denialist
view," and made the case that the plaintiffs lacked standing to
dispute government speech and had suffered no damages, questioning how
the accurate teaching of history could result in damages. The brief
further stated: "First plaintiffs suffer no injury from the content of
the Curricular Guide promulgated by the Department of Education.
Their only injury is that they disagree with what might be taught in
the public schools. But such an ideological disagreement is not a
cognizable injury."

The Assembly also expressed its disappointment with the American Civil
Liberties Union decision to file an amicus brief in support of ATAA,
which completely ignored the real intent of the lawsuit and the long
history of the ATAA as the foremost denialist organization in the
United States with a record of disputing the facts of the Armenian
Genocide, a crime against humanity which it continues to describe as
allegations and falsehoods. ACLU’s position supported a one-way
street that paradoxically would deny the freedom of speech to
instructors, scholars and others who want the Armenian Genocide
subject taught accurately and objectively.

In view of the importance of the case, many other organizations have
joined in supporting the Massachusetts Department of Education by
filing amicus briefs. Besides the International Association of
Genocide Scholars, the Armenian Bar Association took the lead in
filing jointly on behalf of the Armenian National Committee of
America, the Irish Immigration Center, the Jewish Alliance for Law and
Social Action, the Genocide Education Project, and the Zoryan
Institute for Contemporary Research and Documentation. The Assembly
thanked all of them for addressing this serious challenge to freedom
of expression, human dignity, and educational integrity.

Assembly Board of Trustees Counselor Van Krikorian, repeating his
remarks welcoming the court’s June decision, restated: "In light of
the fact that Turkey criminalizes honest discussion of the Armenian
Genocide, it is especially ironic that Turkish denialists and their
supporters turned to U.S. courts in an attempt to twist freedom of
speech in America. Even though the court viewed this case ‘in the
light most favorable to plaintiffs,’ it still ruled in favor of truth,
history and the U.S. Constitution. The sooner Turkey comes to terms
with its past, the better it will be for everyone."

Assembly Board of Trustees Chairman Hirair Hovnanian and Assembly
President Mugar also restated: "At a time when Armenia has taken bold
steps to normalize relations with Turkey, a process that is strongly
supported by the United States, it is deeply troubling that Turkey has
escalated its global campaign of genocide denial."

Krikorian added: "We want to thank all the lawyers that supported the
Commonwealth of Massachusetts in this case, including Massachusetts
Attorney General Martha Coakley, Assistant Attorney General William
Porter, David Gruberman, Professor Erwin Chemerinsky, Arnold
Rosenfeld, Mark Fleming, Gabrielle Wolohojian, Sheri Rosenberg, and
all others, and especially Aram Kaloosdian."

Established in 1972, the Armenian Assembly of America is the largest
Washington-based nationwide organization promoting public
understanding and awareness of Armenian issues. The Assembly is a
501(c)(3) tax-exempt membership organization.