In Memoriam: Hagop Manjikian

Hagop Manjikian speaks at the 60th anniversary commemoration of the Armenian Genocide in 1975

Funeral services for the veteran Armenian Revolutionary Federation leader and community organizer Hagop Manjikian are scheduled for Saturday, November 2. Below are brief biographical notes from Manjikian’s storied life a servant of the Armenian Nation.

Born less than a decade after the Armenian Genocide, Hagop Manjikian heard the stories of the Turkish deportations and massacres of his people, and they left an indelible mark on his memory. So much so that he dedicated his life to making sure that the memory of the 1.5 million Armenians who perished during the Genocide would never be forgotten.

Manjikian was born to Garabed and Victoria Manjikian in 1924. After graduating from the Ousoumnasirats High School of Kessab and attending a French technical school in Lattakia, Manjikian worked in various countries in the Middle East in the business of construction machinery. In December 1950, he left his cherished parents and brother, Vahan, and his beloved Kessab and set sail for America, arriving in New York just before Christmas and setting foot in California on New Year’s Day 1951.

Hagop Manjikian at the opening of the Montebello Armenian Martyrs Monument in April, 1968

A skilled machinist, Manjikian started his own business, Armo Machine Company, in South Gate, California, in 1952, making precision parts for oil exploration machinery and the aerospace industry. During the 50 years he operated Armo Machine Co., he made precision parts for the Army, Navy and Air Force, including specialty parts for the Space Shuttle program.

While Manjikian worked as a precision parts subcontractor by day, every moment of his spare time was spent helping put together an organizational infrastructure for the burgeoning Armenian community in Southern California.

A member of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation, Manjikian’s first endeavor was serving as chairman of the board of Armenian Center Inc. at 1501 Venice Boulevard. That Armenian Center was the hub of activity for a newly growing community of Armenian immigrants that arrived from Germany and others who fled the Middle East after the Arab-Israeli conflict – until 1970, when the center was sold due to the changing demographics of the area where it was located.

Hagop Manjikian with his wife, Knar, and Rep. Adam Schiff

In 1953 Manjikian was appointed director of the American Committee for the Independence of Armenia in California. The ACIA, founded by Vahan Cardashian in 1919, was the precursor to the Armenian National Committee. In his position, Manjikian reached out to governmental officials to stand by the political needs of Armenians. In 1955, California Governor Goodwin Knight and his wife accepted Manjikian’s invitation to attend the New Year’s Eve Celebration at the Armenian Center, and in 1958, he and a small delegation of ACIA members met with gubernatorial candidate Pat Brown.

In late 1957, he returned to Kessab and during a visit with a close friend in Aleppo, he met his life’s partner, Knar Rita Avedian, and they married.

Returning to the U.S. in early 1958, Manjikian found Knar to be a ready, willing and capable partner in his “Hayrenaseeragan” endeavors. As one of the founders of the Kessab Educational Association of Los Angeles in 1957, he wrote the organization’s by-laws. The first KEA of L.A. yearbook was published in January 1960 with Knar handwriting all of the addresses on Thanksgiving in time to deliver to the printer the following day.

In 1958, the ARF created a central committee in the Western U.S., with Soghomon Tehlirian as vice chairman. Tehlirian, hailed as a hero for assassinating the mastermind of the Armenian Genocide, Talaat Pasha, in 1921, moved to San Francisco, California, after the courts found him not guilty. With his parents an ocean and a continent away, Manjikian, who was a member of the central committee, was particularly close with and very fond of Tehlirian, and the two worked together with great diligence.

After Tehlirian’s death, Manjikian directed the project to build the Soghomon Tehlirian Monument. The very first Armenian martyrs monument in the U.S., it was designed by architect Harmik Hagopian and built in Fresno, California.

Manjikian also is one of the founders of the Armenian Monument Council that built the Armenian Genocide Monument in Montebello’s Bicknell Park. “We wanted to present a united Armenian front to commemorate the Armenian Genocide and it took us some time to create a committee that included all factions of the Armenian community,” he says. “We recruited Saldana and Levy Public Relations to help us find a location, and they suggested Montebello.”

A nonpartisan Armenian was elected to chair the monument committee, and Manjikian and his 11 counterparts raised $120,000 to build the monument, which was designed by architect Hrant Agbabian. Through a stroke of good luck, Catholicos Vazken I announced he would be traveling to the U.S., and the committee asked him to participate in the unveiling of the monument in 1968. Addressing a crowd of 15,000, Manjikian introduced the Catholicos, who delivered a rousing speech that tore down the political barriers that had factionalized the Armenian community in the U.S.

In addition to the aforementioned committees, Manjikian made an impact in other realms of the Armenian community, including:

  • Armenian National Committee, Western Region, founding chairman in 1969
  • Hamazkayin Cultural Association in California, founding board member
  • Homenetmen Athletic Union in California, founding board member
  • Holy Martyrs Ferrahian High School in Encino, board member
  • Chairman of the Armenian Genocide Commemorative Committees for the 50th and 60th anniversaries of the 1915 massacre of 1.5 million Armenians

Not only did he serve on boards, but he rolled up his sleeves and worked in the organizations he helped launch. Manjikian founded the Armenian National Radio Hour in 1978, and for one-and-a-half years he and his wife, Knar, recorded the weekly show that consisted of news announcements, classical Armenian music and other cultural content. He and his wife have ardently supported the Asbarez Armenian newspaper by writing articles over the past 50 years.

Manjikian embarked on a massive project toward the close of the 20th century at the directive of the ARF. He and Knar traveled to Paris and to Boston to search through archives of thousands of pictures as they compiled the biographies of 650 key Armenian freedom fighters. In 1992 they produced the massive and epic Houshamatyan Commemorative Album-Atlas of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation, 1890-1914. The companion volume was published in 2001, and in 2006 the English-language version of volume 1 was printed.

After he worked on those volumes, Manjikian decided it was time to bring the tragic stories of the Armenian Genocide to the fore of the English-speaking world. He wanted to make the vivid eyewitness accounts of the horrific events of 1915 accessible to Armenian youth that did not know their mother tongue and to the English-speaking people of the world so that they could comprehend the injustice of the first genocide of modern times, the Armenian Genocide.

Manjikian remembered a particularly tragic memoir that he read as a youth written by a Genocide survivor named Armen Anoush, and he and Knar decided to have the book translated to English so that it would be accessible to a broad audience. Published in 2005, that book, Passage Through Hell, is in its third printing, and the Manjikians have published six memoirs in the Genocide Library Book Series that they started: Passage Through Hell by Armen Anoush, The Fatal Night by Mikayel Shamtanchian, Death March by Shahen Derderian, The Crime of the Ages by Sebuh Aguni, Defying Fate: the Memoirs of Aram and Dirouhi Avedian and Our Cross by M. Salpi.

Manjikian has received several honors for his life’s work:

  • Catholicos Aram I endowed Hagop Manjikian with the Mesrob Mashdotz Medal in 2001 for his dedication to serving his people.
  • The U.S. House of Representatives paid tribute on June 7, 2005 to Hagop and Knar Manjikian for publishing Passage Through Hell by Armen Anush. Congressman Howard Berman entered a resolution into the Congressional Record of the United States honoring them for their work.
  • On May 21, 2014, Congressman Adam Schiff honored Hagop and Knar Manjikian for publishing 5 additional Armenian Genocide memoirs, entering the names of each one into the Congressional Record of the United States.
  • On April 23, 2014, the Los Angeles City Council recognized Hagop Manjikian for his dedicated service to the Armenian-American community, most notably his endeavors to bring awareness and recognition of the Armenian Genocide by meeting with city, state and national leaders and by spearheading the building of the Armenian Genocide Martyrs Monument in Montebello.

ANCA’s Play by Play of Historic Vote to Recognize Armenian Genocide

WASHINGTON—With an overwhelming vote of 405 to 11, and 3 voting present, the U.S. House of Representatives cast a historic vote on October 29, ending Ankara’s 35 year veto on honest U.S. remembrance of the Armenian Genocide, rejecting U.S. complicity in Turkey’s denial of this crime, and calling for education about the Armenian Genocide aimed at helping prevent modern-day atrocities.

Introduced by House Intelligence Committee Chair Adam Schiff (D-CA) and Florida Republican Gus Bilirakis (R-FL) in April, 2019, the measure (H.Res.296) had been gaining momentum in recent weeks, particularly following Turkey’s invasion of northern Syria. By October 22nd, one week prior to the day of the vote, news about a possible House action on the measure began to surface. “I’m sure the government of Turkey is not happy with [these plans], but then again we’re not happy with the government of Turkey,” House Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Engel told reporters, according to an NPR report.

And the countdown to the vote began.

T-7 and Counting: ANCA Issues Call to Action; Congressional Armenian Caucus Rallies Support; Coalition To Adopt H.Res.296 Grows
On the Congressional front, with the House Majority Leader announcing that H.Res.296 would be on the House agenda the following week, Armenian Genocide Resolution lead sponsors Adam Schiff and Gus Bilirakis and the combined leadership of the Congressional Armenian Caucus started calling on their colleagues to end U.S. complicity in Turkey’s genocide denial and bring America back to the right side on the Armenian Genocide. Congresswoman Anna Eshoo (D-CA), whose Assyrian-American father and Armenian-American mother had both survived the Armenian Genocide, offered a very personal and passionate plea for immediate action on the measure.

The ANCA’s regional and local chapters stepped up district-by-district outreach to all 435 Congressional offices through calls, meetings, and letters. The ANCA Rapid Responder system – which allows advocates to take immediate action on pressing Armenian American concerns was working full swing, with over 10,000 letters sent to Congressional offices within the first 48 hours. Then the ANCA’s Quick Connect Call nationwide campaign directly connected thousands of constituents to their legislators, with the ANCA upgrading its servers to accommodate both email and phone traffic in the days leading up to the call. ANCA Western and Eastern U.S. spokespeople took to the Armenian news airwaves urging the broadest possible Armenian American civic participation. Armenian Youth Federation Eastern and Western U.S. mobilized on social media. The ANCA’s Aram Hamparian was offering daily updates from Washington.

By the weekend, some two dozen ANCA staff and volunteers were headed from states across the U.S. with a singular mission – to meet with all 435 Congressional offices, information in hand, to answer questions and gauge support for the October 29th vote – building on constituent input they had received not only over the past week – but over some 3 decades of steady grassroots effort.

By Monday morning, after a briefing at the ANCA headquarters, the ANCA Government Affairs Director Tereza Yerimyan led the action teams to Capitol Hill for non-stop Congressional outreach that lasted until the last vote was cast on H.Res.296.

In many cases, as team members were entering Congressional offices to offer their views, staffers were fielding calls from district constituents urging the legislator to “Vote Yes on H.Res.296”. There were meetings where teams were warmly greeted by the intern or staff assistant at the office and quickly directed to the respective staffer working on H.R. 296. In certain offices, within two minutes, multiple staff members assured them, “it will not be a problem and you should expect a yes.”

The flip side was true as well –with the office of Texas Congresswoman Eddie Bernice Johnson (D-TX) a classic example. ANCA Western Region Community Outreach Coordinator Simon Maghakyan reported via Twitter that Rep. Johnson’s Chief of Staff – Murat Gokcikdem – announced that the Congresswoman would definitely vote ‘no’ in solidarity with the staffer, “since he is a Turk.” Maghakyan told the staffer that during the Genocide, his great-grandmother was saved by a kind woman of Turkish origin – to which the staffer reportedly replied “she was a traitor.” Rep. Johnson, who voted ‘present’ would be the only U.S. House member submitting a statement opposing the measure.

As the number of meetings grew, team members were impatiently keeping a tally and reporting updates to our national, regional offices and local chapters for action. Constituents from districts where the U.S. Representative had not yet made a decision were encouraged to step up calls – to ensure the community’s voice is heard.

Allies in the Greek, Assyrian/Chaldean/Syriac, Christian communities including the Hellenic American Leadership Council (HALC), American Hellenic Institute, American Hellenic Educational and Progressive Association (AHEPA), In Defense of Christians, The Philos Project, A Demand for Action and so many others issued statements, op/eds, and their own community calls to action in support of the measure. Jewish American organizations – including the American Jewish Committee and the Anti-Defamation League – which had opposed similar legislation in the past, sent letters to Congressional offices and turned to social media to share their support for the legislation.

T-1: House Rules Committee Clears Path for House Consideration of H.Res.296
On Monday evening, October 28th, with phones still ringing in Congressional offices, the ANCA team split into two groups – those continuing Congressional visits and those attending the House Rules Committee meeting where Members of Congress would decide how the Armenian Genocide Resolution would be discussed.

All resolutions coming to the House floor must have a “rule” by which they would be considered. Rules Committee Chairman Jim McGovern (D-MA) opened the hearing with powerful opening remarks, stating that H.Res.296 “is an opportunity for the House to speak loudly about the Armenian Genocide and finally acknowledge what it actually was, a genocide. Although the executive branch has issued proclamations and Congress has passed measures over the years on this, none in modern times have actually relayed all the facts and called it what it really was. Enough with the euphemisms, facts are important, speaking the truth is important, and if dark chapters in our history are not acknowledged, they are doomed to be repeated.“

Chairman Engel, House Foreign Affairs Committee Senior member Chris Smith (R-NJ) and Rep. Eshoo offered powerful testimony as to why H.Res.296 should come directly to the House floor, without Committee consideration, for immediate consideration.

“Many of us are concerned with what’s going on in various parts of the world. The Armenian Genocide is a Genocide, and many of us are concerned with, frankly, others, including the Kurds. It is happening right now and Turkey is again in the thick of things. So, I think if there was never a right time to release this before, now is definitely the right time,” said Chairman Engel.

“They [Turkey] threaten other countries! They threaten us! When I had a hearing in 2000, the ambassador of Turkey, because I had both sides at the table – the Armenians and the Turks – he threatened us with Incirlik. Frankly, with a friend like that in NATO, who needs enemies?” said Rep. Smith.

Procedural opposition to the resolution was raised by Congressman Rob Woodall (R-GA) and Rules Committee Ranking Republican Tom Cole (R-OK), who noted that H.Res.296 is moving straight to the House floor without a Foreign Affairs Committee hearing. Chairman McGovern, Chairman Engel and Rep. Smith responded noting that multiple Congressional hearings about the Armenian Genocide had been held over the years, and that the resolution had the support of both Chairman Engel and the Ranking Republican of the House Foreign Affairs Committee Mike McCaul (R-TX).

Other Rules Committee members speaking in favor of the measure included Rep. Joseph Morelle (D-NY), who noted his support for Armenian Genocide legislation when he served in the New York State Assembly and Rep. Donna Shalala (D-FL), who is of Lebanese origin and who described how her Maronite family was displaced during the Armenian Genocide. Rep. Debbie Lesko (R-AZ) noted that she was an original cosponsor of the measure and supports its adoption, and Rep. Mary Gay Scanlon (D-PA), noted that she learned about the Armenian Genocide through archives in Pennsylvania and the Mher Statue in downtown Philadelphia.

In the end, the Rules Committee recommended a “closed” rule – meaning no changes would be offered on the House floor, with one hour of debate regarding the measure.

After the hearing, Rep. Eshoo and Rep. Smith, both decades long advocates of Armenian Genocide legislation, were in tears, hugging Armenian American advocates who praised their leadership on the issue – with anticipation high for a full House floor consideration of the measure.

T-0: Armenian Genocide Resolution (H.Res.296): The Debate on the Rule
The morning of October 29 – the day of full House floor consideration of the Armenian Genocide Resolution – volunteers and staff gathered at the ANCA office at 8:00 am for a final huddle with Hamparian and Yerimyan before heading to the Hill for a final series of visits to Congressional offices yet undecided on H.Res.296.

The constituent calls through the ANCA’s Quick Connect Congressional outreach portal got a sudden boost with Kim Kardashian tweeting her support for the Armenian Genocide Resolution and encouraging fans to visit anca.org/call to contact their legislators. ANCA IT Director Nerses Semerjian upgraded the ANCA’s contract for the remote servers handling the calls to accommodate the increased civic participation.

Rep. Brad Sherman (D-CA) offered a one minute morning statement before the House began its official order of the day. “It is time that we recognize the genocide because genocide denial is the last act of the genocide. First, you obliterate a people; then, you seek to obliterate their memory; and, finally, you seek to obliterate the memory of the obliteration. But genocide denial is also the first step in the next genocide,” stated Sherman.

Similarly, Rep. Katherine Clark (D-MA), stated, “Today, I stand with my constituents from across my district, but particularly from Watertown, Massachusetts, home to a thriving Armenian diaspora community, to urge this House to pass H. Res. 296 and recognize this crime against humanity for what it was, a genocide.”

By noon, the ANCA staff and teams of volunteers had gone up to the House Gallery to watch the Congressional debate live. It was a diverse crowd including Armenian Ambassador to the U.S. Varuzhan Nersesyan, Republic of Artsakh Foreign Minister Masis Mayilian, Republic of Artsakh Representative Robert Avetisyan, ANCA staff and volunteers, Armenian Americans from various organizations and backgrounds– veteran advocates to children 7 and up.

WATCH THE DAY’S EVENT

By 12:39 p.m. EST, Chairman McGovern began the debate on the “Rule”, to confirm the Committee’s recommendation from the night before. Adoption of the “Rule” would clear the way for U.S. House consideration of H.Res.296 later in the day; failure would kill the measure altogether. Veteran advocates knew that in 1985 and 1987, previous Armenian Genocide legislation had been defeated because the Rule was voted down – so this portion of the consideration was critical.

A shortened recap of the debate includes:
Rep. Michael Burgess (R-TX): While there is historic precedent for recognizing the Armenian genocide, passing such a resolution today could complicate the situation with a NATO ally. Previously, this has resulted in protests at and around the Incirlik Air Base that have affected our men and women in uniform who were stationed there. While the desire to recognize the Armenian genocide is laudable, these events took place over 100 years ago. It remains unclear why we are urgently considering this resolution.
Rep. Jim McGovern (D-MA): I am disappointed and somewhat offended at the implication that this is not an important matter. Let me remind him that 1.5 million Armenians died at the hands of the Ottoman Empire and the emerging nation of Turkey. Let me remind him of the countless hundreds of thousands of people who had to flee because of that oppression. Let me also remind him that it is not the official policy of the United States Government.

Rep. Donna Shalala (D-FL): My grandparents left the Ottoman Empire to escape that genocide just ahead, but their relatives were not as lucky. My grandparents were Maronites. I remember my grandmother’s tears as she spoke of their Armenian friends and the many Maronites and Amalekites who were slaughtered by the Ottoman Empire. As a child, I remember the tears and the suffering of our Armenian neighbors and the many members of the other communities whose tears I could not erase.

Rep. Judy Chu (D-CA): I have just returned from Armenia, where I went to the Armenian Genocide Museum. I cannot get the pictures that I saw out of my mind: Armenian women and children murdered in mass graves, Armenian leaders hung as examples to others, Armenians forced onto long death marches without food or water. This vote to finally acknowledge the Armenian genocide should have come sooner, because of people in my district like Joseph ‘‘Bebo’’ Manjikian. When I met him, he was 104, but from his wheelchair, he told me about the many family members he lost in the genocide. Bebo passed away before he could see this day. He didn’t forget them, and neither can we.

Rep. Frank Pallone (D-NJ): This crime against humanity would serve as the blueprint for other genocides in the Nazi concentration camps and massacres in Poland, Germany, and eastern Europe and, more recently, in Bosnia and Rwanda. The passage of this resolution is an important step in raising awareness and showing the world that we have a commitment to human rights and the dignity of every human life.

Rep. Linda Sanchez (D-CA): It is heartbreaking that some choose to deny our past rather than to learn from this painful moment in history. It is an insult to millions who died and the millions who risked their lives to escape violence. Denial is all too easy. It is harder to face the truth, and facing the truth is the right thing to do. When we rewrite the darkest chapters of our history, we open the door to them happening again. The United States cannot be complicit in that denial.

Rep. Earl Blumenauer (D-OR): Mr. Speaker, for years, we have danced around this. It is complex with the Turks, in terms of the relationship that we have tried to deal with. But denying genocide has not helped resolve those issues. It hasn’t changed the behavior of the Turks. Look at what is happening with the Kurds today. Failure to acknowledge this horrific episode is a burden for us all—standing up for human rights, acknowledging the truth, giving a sense of closure and solace to the people who endured this horrific activity, and making sure that we are united in our opposition to those genocidal activities.

The House adopted the “Rule” by a highly partisan vote of 223-191 – an expected outcome as “closed” rules are always highly politicized with the majority party (in this case, Democrats) voting in favor and the minority party (in the case, Republicans) opposing.

T-0: Armenian Genocide Resolution (H.Res.296): The Discussion on the Resolution
2:19 p.m. EST: This was the House floor debate everyone was waiting for – the main discussion of the Armenian Genocide Resolution, leading to a vote on the measure. Chairman Engel opened up the proceedings managing the discussion for Democratic speakers; Rep. Chris Smith managed the discussion for Republican speakers. A snapshot of the remarks follow:

Rep. Elliot Engel (D-NY): Many American politicians, diplomats, and institutions have rightly recognized these atrocities as a genocide, including America’s Ambassador to the Ottoman Empire at the time, Henry Morgenthau, and later, President Ronald Reagan. It is time that we set the record straight. Only by shining a light on the darkest parts of our history can we learn to not repeat them. And properly acknowledging what has occurred is a necessary step in achieving some measure of justice for the victims.

Rep. Chris Smith (D-NJ): The resolution also points out that the U.S. played a major role in the humanitarian relief efforts and, of course, the Near East Relief agency saved tens of thousands of Armenians and others. As a matter of fact, the historian, Howard Sachar, noted it ‘‘quite literally kept an entire nation alive,’’ and that is reflected in the resolution. Yet, today, the Armenian genocide is the only genocide of the 20th century where survivors, family, and all those who care about this important issue, have been subjected to the ongoing outrage of a massive, well-funded, aggressive campaign of genocide denial, openly sustained and lavishly funded by the State authority, in this case, the Government of Turkey.

Majority Leader Steny Hoyer (D-MD): This resolution, Mr. Speaker, recognizes the horrific and systematic efforts to commit genocide against the Armenian people a century ago. There can be no denial of the Armenian genocide, which is evidenced by historical documentation and the emotional scars still borne by the descendants of its survivors. It was a campaign of ethnic cleansing committed by the Ottoman Empire during and after the First World War, and it led to the deaths of 1.5 million Armenians alongside other targeted groups.

Rep. Adam Schiff (D-CA): It is always the right time to recognize genocide, but it is particularly so today. For when we see the images of terrified Kurdish families in northern Syria, loading their possessions into cars or carts and fleeing their homes headed to nowhere except from Turkish bombs and marauding militias, how can we truly say the crimes of a century ago are in the past? We cannot. We cannot pick and choose which crimes against humanity are convenient to speak about. We cannot cloak our support of human rights in euphemisms. We cannot be cowed into silence by a foreign power.

Rep. Anna Eshoo (D-CA): This is deeply personal for me. I am the only Member of Congress of Armenian Assyrian descent and one of only three of Armenian heritage in the House of Representatives—I think in the entire Congress, Senate and House. Some of you know that I had members of my own family who were among those that perished, and my parents fled with theirs to America. As my father said: The best idea that was ever born was America.

Rep. Carolyn Maloney (D-NY): 104 years ago, 1.5 million Armenians were murdered by the Ottoman Empire in the first genocide of the 20th century. Ever since, Armenian communities from across the world, including those in my district, have been forced to fight for recognition and justice for Turkey’s denial in so many ways, from the illegal invasion of Cyprus by Turkey to the vicious attacks on Kurds within and without the borders of Turkey.

Rep. Jackie Speier (D-CA): Even Russia’s President Putin had said the Armenian people ‘‘went through one of the greatest tragedies in human history.’’ Iran’s former Vice President stated: ‘‘The Ottoman Turkey Government perpetrated genocide in 1915.’’ If our rivals can talk about this, if they can take a stand, certainly we can. Armenian genocide, we must say it here: It happened, and it will never happen again. We must make that commitment.

Rep. Gus Bilirakis (R-FL): Genocides, wherever and whenever they occur, cannot be ignored, whether they took place in the 20th century by the Ottoman Turks or mid-20th century by the Third Reich and in Darfur. Genocide must be acknowledged for what it is: a scourge on the human race. Genocide is genocide, Mr. Speaker, even if our so-called strategic allies perpetrated it.

Rep. David Cicilline (D-RI): In order to prevent future genocides and mass atrocities, it is vital that we never forget those that have already occurred. For too long, we have allowed foreign interests to lobby the United States in favor of turning the other way and not wholly recognizing the truth of the Armenian genocide. That ends today.

Rep. Jim Costa (D-CA): Many of these survivors settled in my district in the San Joaquin Valley, where they lived and their children have enjoyed the blessings of liberty and lived the American Dream. This incredible, diverse valley that I have the honor to represent we sometimes refer to as the Land of William Saroyan, a noted Armenian author. And Fresno State University is the only university in the United States that has a memorial dedicated to the Armenian genocide, a very moving memorial to their ancestors.

Rep. Ted Lieu (D-CA): The United States of America should never be afraid to tell the truth, and yet, for too long, we did not recognize the Armenian genocide. That ends today. The House of Representatives is going to formally recognize the Armenian genocide.

Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi (D-CA): I rise to join my colleagues in solemn remembrance of one of the great atrocities of the 20th century, the systematic murder of more than 1.5 million Armenian men, women, and children by the Ottoman Empire.

Rep. John Sarbanes (D-MD): However, Turkey’s actions against the Kurds in Syria have reinforced what many of us have long known: Erdogan’s Turkey does not stand for human rights or religious freedom, but instead spreads authoritarianism wherever it goes. Erdogan’s disdain for democracy and contempt for an ally was on display 2 years ago when his bodyguards attacked peaceful demonstrators right here in our Nation’s Capital.

Rep. Brenda Lawrence (D-MI): To many Americans of Armenian descent who continue to strengthen our country today, we honor those contributions with an honest statement of history, recognizing the massacre of 1.5 Armenians as the 20th century’s first genocide.

Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee (D-TX): I rise in support of finally having this Nation take this stand. Bloodshed and genocide should not be tolerated no matter how long we have come to that. And so I stand with the words that we now, therefore, will commemorate as the United States of America the Armenian genocide through official recognition and remembrance. We will reject efforts to enlist, engage, or otherwise associate the United States Government with the denial of the Armenian genocide or any other genocide.

Rep. Eddie Bernice Johnson (D-TX): This counterproductive resolution does not tell the full story of the region during World War I and reopens a wound between Greeks, Turks, Armenians, Kurds, and other ethnic groups in the region. Favoring the preferred storyline of one of these groups without considering information provided by other ethnic groups in the region would serve as a failure on our part to do our due diligence and hear out all sides on this matter of historic significance. No hearings have been held on this resolution and it has come to the floor without being marked up by the House Committee on Foreign Affairs.

Rep. Grace Napolitano (D-CA): I am honored to have supported this resolution my entire tenure in Congress. Although it should not have taken this long, today is a historic day in that the House is finally acknowledging the Armenian Genocide, recognizing the heroic efforts of many in our government to help the Armenian people, and honoring the victims of this tragedy.

T-0: Armenian Genocide Resolution (H.Res.296): The Vote
5 p.m. EST: The presiding officer Rep. Jason Crow (D-CO) calls the U.S. House of Representatives to order, calls for the reading of the title of the Armenian Genocide Resolution (H.Res.296), and gives 15 minutes for Members of Congress to cast their votes.

Armenians in the House Gallery and across the U.S. were impatiently watching the vote tally to see the outcome. For a great portion of the 15 minutes, very few people had voted leaving followers concerned about the outcome. The 15 minutes came and went, with a majority of Members having still not voted. Since it was the first vote of that hour, the timeline was extended. Members of Congress could be seen on the House floor milling about waiting for the votes to come in. Two-hundred-eighteen would be the magic number for victory. As the number crept up – 210 – 216 – 218 – 221 – cheering could be heard from the gallery, with the children leading the way. Two Armenian American members of Congress – Rep. Jackie Speier and Rep. Anna Eshoo – could be seen hugging. Republicans and Democrats – often at odds on broader political issues – shook hands in celebration. As the number rises – 300 – 350 – 400… the gavel is struck and the vote is announced – 405 to 11 and 3 voting present.

A roaring cheer can be heard from the House Gallery, with members of the U.S. House – including Speaker Nancy Pelosi – waving to ANCA activists in acknowledgment. Cheers were shared by social media across the country and the world. Armenian school children – in the U.S. and Canada – who had set aside classwork to follow the proceedings were seen jumping for joy. The ANCA Facebook and Twitter feeds erupted in response to the U.S. House decision.

After 35 years – the U.S. House had spoken with overwhelming force in support of honest remembrance of the Armenian Genocide – breaking Turkey’s veto on U.S. policy regarding this crime.

As the Armenian Americans in the U.S. House Gallery were leaving, they were greeted by Rep. Eshoo and Rep. Shalala – hugging and celebrating the House’s principled position.

Many of those in the House Gallery would go to the Embassy of Armenia for a brief celebration. But the tens of thousands of ANCA supporters following the measure – on Capitol Hill and across the U.S. – had already set their sights on the next challenge – Senate adoption of the measure (S.Res.150).

And, the ANCA’s battle for truth and Armenian Genocide justice continues.

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 11/01/2019

                                        Friday, 

Karabakh Assembly Votes Against Ex-Commander’s Presidential Run

        • Artak Khulian

Nagorno-Karabakh -- The parliament building in Stepanakert, September 7, 2018.

Nagorno-Karabakh’s parliament has overwhelmingly voted against constitutional 
changes that would allow Samvel Babayan, the Armenian-populated territory’s 
former top military commander, to run in a presidential election slated for 
March.

The Karabakh constitution stipulates that only those individuals who have 
resided in Karabakh for the past 10 years can participate in the election. 
Babayan has lived mainly in Armenia and Russia since 2004.

Babayan expressed a desire to participate the forthcoming presidential race 
after being released from a prison in Armenia in June 2018. He subsequently 
collected over 21,000 signatures in support of a referendum on the abolition of 
the legal hurdle to his presidential run and presented them to the Karabakh 
parliament this summer. Such a referendum cannot be held without the 
parliament’s consent.

The Karabakh parliament rejected the petition on Thursday by 24 votes of 4, 
with one abstention. Hayk Khanumian, an opposition lawmaker who voted for the 
referendum, criticized the decision. But he acknowledged that that the 
constitutional changes sought by Babayan could not have come in to force before 
the March 31 presidential ballot even if they had been approved by lawmakers 
and put on the referendum.

“There is one good thing about this initiative,” Khanumian told RFE/RL’s 
Armenian service. “Campaigning for the initiative awakened people, especially 
in rural areas. The number of signatures [collected by Babayan] is a clear 
indicator of strong popular demand for change in Artsakh.”

Babayan did not comment on the parliament’s rebuff as of Friday afternoon.

Early this year the once powerful general reportedly threatened to stage street 
protests in Stepanakert if he is barred from running for president. But he has 
kept a low profile in the last few months.


Armenia - Samvel Babayan, a retired army general, is greeted by supporters in 
Yerevan after being released from prison, 15 June 2018.

Babayan, 54, was the commander of Karabakh’s Armenian-backed army during and 
after the 1991-1994 war with Azerbaijan. He was widely regarded as the 
unrecognized republic’s most powerful man at that time.

Babayan was arrested in 2000 and subsequently sentenced to 14 years in prison 
for allegedly masterminding a botched attempt on the life of the then Karabakh 
president, Arkadi Ghukasian. He was set free in 2004.

Babayan lived in Russia for five years before returning to Armenia in 2016. He 
was arrested in Yerevan in 2017 on charges of illegal arms acquisition and 
money laundering which he strongly denied. The arrest came two weeks before 
Armenian parliamentary elections. Babayan unofficially coordinated the election 
campaign of an opposition alliance challenging then Armenian President Serzh 
Sarkisian.

A Yerevan court sentenced the Karabakh general to six years in prison in 
November 2017. Armenia’s Court of Cassation overturned the verdict in June 2018 
less than two months after the “Velvet Revolution” that toppled Sarkisian.

Even without Babayan’s participation, the upcoming election promises to be the 
most competitive and unpredictable in Karabakh’s history. At least four local 
political heavyweights have already entered the fray. They include Arayik 
Harutiunian, a former prime minister leading Karabakh’s largest parliamentary 
party, parliament speaker Ashot Ghulian and Foreign Minister Masis Mayilian.

Also running for president is Vitaly Balasanian, another retired general who is 
extremely critical of Armenia’s current political leadership. Balasanian is 
also at loggerheads with Babayan.

Bako Sahakian, the incumbent president who has ruled Karabakh since 2007, is 
not eligible to seek another term in 2020.


Yerevan ‘Not Forced’ To Ratify Contentious European Treaty

        • Naira Nalbandian

Armenia -- A protester holds a poster during a demontration outside the 
Armenian parliament against the ratification of the Istanbul Convention, 
Yerevan, November 1, 2019.

The Council of Europe is not pressuring Armenia’s authorities to ratify a 
European treaty rejected by the Armenian Apostolic Church and other groups 
championing traditional family values, a senior lawmaker said on Friday.

The treaty signed in 2011 and known as the Istanbul Convention commits Council 
of Europe member states to combatting violence against women. Armenia has still 
not ratified it despite being among its signatories.

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s government indicated this summer its intention 
to ensure the treaty’s quick ratification by the Armenian parliament. It 
immediately met with resistance from socially conservative groups and 
individuals, including the chairman of Armenia’s national bar association.

While supporting the protection of women, opponents object to the Istanbul 
Convention’s definition of gender as “social roles, behaviors, activities and 
characteristics that a particular society considers appropriate for women and 
men.” They say this paves way for introducing transsexual or transgender as 
separate categories and legalizing same-sex marriage.

The top clergymen of the state-backed Armenian Apostolic Church added their 
voice to these objections in July. They said that the convention poses a threat 
to traditional marriage defined by Armenian law as a union between a man and a 
woman.

The outcry appears to have forced the authorities in Yerevan to at least delay 
the ratification until next year. In late August, they asked a Council of 
Europe body, the Venice Commission, for an advisory opinion on the treaty’s 
conformity with Armenia’s constitution. The commission is understood to 
strongly support its ratification.

Strasbourg-based members of the commission arrived in Yerevan this week to 
discuss the matter with Armenian officials and other stakeholders. They met 
with local lawmakers, including the chairpersons of three standing parliament 
committees, behind the closed doors on Friday amid fresh street protests staged 
by several dozen opponents of the convention.


Armenia -- A protester holds a poster during a demontration outside the 
Armenian parliament against the ratification of the Istanbul Convention, 
Yerevan, November 1, 2019.

Vladimir Vartanian, a senior member of Pashinian’s My Step bloc heading the 
parliament committee on legal affairs, was among those lawmakers. He insisted 
after the meeting that the Armenian parliament is not facing pressure from the 
Venice Commission to ratify the Istanbul Convention.

Vartanian stressed at the same time that the convention aims to protect women 
against domestic and other violence “especially in oriental societies.” “The 
convention does not obligate states to legalize same-sex marriages or adoptions 
of children and will not reflect in any way on issues relating to promotion of 
a non-traditional sexual orientation,” he told reporters.

Gevorg Petrosian, an outspoken opposition parliamentarian strongly opposed to 
the treaty as well as LGBT rights in Armenia, also took part in the meeting.

“With all due respect for our colleagues from the Venice Commission, I believe 
that they did not present any convincing arguments as to why we should ratify 
that convention,” said Petrosian. He claimed that they also failed to say which 
national legal mechanisms Armenia lacks in order to tackle violence against 
women.

The Venice Commission officials declined to comment after the discussion.

For the same reasons the convention has also sparked controversy in several 
other Council of Europe member states. Two of them, Bulgaria and Slovakia, 
rejected it last year.

In Croatia, the parliament ratified the treaty in April 2018 amid protests by 
local social conservatives. To placate them, the Croatian government adopted a 
separate statement saying the treaty will not change Croatia’s legal definition 
of marriage as a union between man and woman.




Karabakh Talks Not Deadlocked, Says Mnatsakanian

        • Ruzanna Stepanian

U.S. -- Armenian Foreign Minister Zohrab Mnatsakanian, his Azerbaijani 
counterpart Elmar Mamadyarov and international mediators pose for a photograph 
in New York, September 23, 2019

Foreign Minister Zohrab Mnatsakanian insisted on Friday that long-running 
efforts to resolve the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict are not in deadlock, citing 
more high-level talks planned by Armenia and Azerbaijan.

“At least with regard to things relating to us, we do not see a deadlock,” said 
Mnatsakanian. “We are continuing to work very calmly because this work needs to 
be done as it concerns our security, regional security and peace.”

“There is a dynamic in the negotiations and I hope that we can move forward 
quickly if there is mutual constructiveness,” he told reporters.

A senior official from the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe 
confirmed on Thursday that Mnatsakanian and Azerbaijan’s Foreign Minister Elmar 
Mammadyarov will meet again on the sidelines of an OSCE ministerial gathering 
to be held Slovakia’s capital Bratislava on December 5-6.

The two ministers most recently met in New York in late September. Mammadyarov 
said afterwards that he was “a bid disappointed” with the results of those 
talks held in the presence of the U.S., French and Russian co-chairs of the 
OSCE Minsk Group. He complained about the mediators’ focus on 
confidence-building measures, rather than “substantive negotiations” sought by 
Baku.

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev 
reportedly talked to each other at great length on the sidelines of an October 
11 summit of former Soviet republics held in Turkmenistan. Mnatsakanian 
described their conversation as “very useful” earlier this week.

The top Armenian diplomat said on Friday that Aliyev and Pashinian are “not yet 
planning” to meet again. “But anything can happen and develop in any direction, 
if necessary, and there are some understandings, ideas at the level of the two 
leaders regarding how meetings could be organized,” he said.

“There are good ideas which I hope will be put into practice,” Mnatsakanian 
added without going into details.

The mediators met with Pashinian and Aliyev during their October 14-17 tour of 
the Karabakh conflict zone. In a joint statement, they said the two leaders 
promised to make more efforts to “prepare the populations for peace and reduce 
tensions.”



Armenian Tycoon Expands Textile Business


Armenia -- Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian (C) visits new textile factories 
opened by businessman Samvel Aleksanian (R), Yerevan, November 1, 2019.

Samvel Aleksanian, a wealthy businessman who was for years closely linked to 
Armenia’s former leaders, inaugurated three new textile factories in the 
presence of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian on Friday.

Pashinian toured their premises in Yerevan, welcoming the expansion of 
Aleksanian’s textile business first launched a few years ago. He said the 
Armenian government is ready to assist in its further growth “within the 
framework of its legal instruments.”

A government statement on Pashinian’s participation in the ceremony said that 
the new factories employ around 1,000 people and that Aleksanian plans to 
create 2,000 more jobs there. The tycoon will also open to two similar plants 
outside Yerevan next year, said the statement.

Aleksanian, 51, is one of Armenia’s richest men who has long controlled 
lucrative imports of sugar, cooking oil and other basic foodstuffs to the 
country. He also owns the country’s largest supermarket chain.

Aleksanian, who is commonly known as “Lfik Samo,” used to have close ties to 
former President Serzh Sarkisian and his Republican Party of Armenia (HHK). He 
was a parliament deputy representing the HHK from 2003-2018, playing a major 
role in the party’s election campaigns.


Armenia - President Serzh Sarkisian (L) awards a state medal to businessman 
Samvel Aleksanian in Yerevan, 26 September 2015.

Opposition politicians and media for years claimed that he enjoys privileged 
treatment by the government in return for earning the HHK and Sarkisian many 
votes in Yerevan’s Malatia-Sebastia district, his stronghold. The blue-collar 
district was notorious for vote buying, violence and other election-related 
irregularities reported by the Armenian media.

Pashinian repeatedly lambasted the “oligarch” when he was in opposition to the 
former regime. In March 2016, for example, he charged on the parliament floor 
that Aleksanian may be evading “tens of millions of dollars” in taxes through a 
fraud scheme allowed by Sarkisian. Aleksanian denied those claims.

Aleksanian defected from the HHK faction in Armenia’s former parliament in June 
2018 just over a month after Sarkisian was overthrown in the “Velvet 
Revolution” led by Pashinian. He has not been openly involved in any political 
activities since then.




Press Review


“Hraparak” says that most Armenians are now more “tolerant” and lenient towards 
the current authorities than the previous ones because they are the ones who 
brought those “young people” to power last year. The paper says their main 
expectation from the government is integrity and dedication. “We are sick and 
tired of crooks, hypocrites and those who place their personal interests above 
public interests,” it writes.

“Chorrord Ishkhanutyun” scoffs at former President Serzh Sarkisian’s declared 
readiness to be arrested if that will make the people “glad and happy.” The 
paper says that Sarkisian already made them happy when he decided to resign in 
April last year. It claims that the resignation of Constitutional Court 
Chairman Hrayr Tovmasian is also a forgone conclusion. The paper also takes a 
swipe at the current authorities, denouncing Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s 
confidential decision to double his ministers’ salaries and his possible plans 
to buy a new state aircraft for him. “They have decided to buy a new airplane 
for $55 million just for travelling to the United States on a single flight,” 
it says, decrying this “unmatched extravagance.”

“Haykakan Zhamanak” is also scathing about Sarkisian’s latest public remarks. 
The pro-government paper says Sarkisian did not say that there are no legal 
grounds for his arrest because he never committed any crimes. “Instead, Serzh 
Sarkisian is saying that the people and the state will gain nothing from his 
arrest,” it says, adding that there is no reason why he must not be prosecuted 
if there emerges evidence of his involvement in corruption or other crimes. In 
that case, it says, “future leaders of the state will always bear in mind that 
such a prospect also awaits them and will act only in conformity with the law.” 
The paper controlled by Pashinian notes at the same time that “the imprisonment 
of former heads of state is not a good thing in itself, hampers government 
continuity in some way and even affects the international reputation of the 
state and trust in state institutions.”

(Lilit Harutiunian)


Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2019 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
www.rferl.org

Fresno’s Honorary Consul of Republic Armenia responds to historic genocide resolution vote and how the Senate will react

Your Central Valley, CA
Nov 1 2019
Fresno's Honorary Consul of Republic Armenia responds to historic genocide resolution vote and how the Senate will react          

Nov 1, 2019 / 03:08 AM PDT

Fresno's Honorary Consul of Republic Armenia responds to historic genocide resolution vote and how the Senate will react


Watch the repot at


Letter to the Editor of Minneapolis Star Tribune: Armenian Genocide

Minneapolis Star Tribune
Oct 31 2019
LETTER to the EDITOR

ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

Next, do we condemn ourselves?

U.S. Rep. Ilhan Omar is getting beat up from all sides for her “present” vote on the Armenian genocide resolution (“Armenians disappointed in Omar on genocide vote,” Oct. 30). Regardless of her motivations for so voting, maybe there’s some real wisdom for refusing to take a stand on this.

As horrible as the (century ago) killing of 1.5 million Armenians was, it is just one of numerous genocide/democide events in modern history. I don’t know that Congress has condemned other genocides with similar resolutions.

Before we so righteously condemn Turkey for this atrocious act (which, by the way, occurred before Turkey was Turkey), we should look at ourselves and contemplate our own record. We killed off most of the American Indian population as we stole its land. We played the central role in the much more recent killing of around 2 million civilians in the Vietnam War and, incidentally, poisoned the land there with Agent Orange. The war we started under false pretenses in Iraq killed hundreds of thousands and only succeeded in replacing a bad, corrupt, stable Iraqi government with another bad, corrupt, but unstable government, all while ruining Iraq’s economy and further destabilizing the entire Mideast. And all while squandering trillions of dollars.

We are obviously using the genocide resolution as a political lever to bash Turkey for taking advantage of President Donald Trump’s recent blunder in Syria. Maybe Omar thinks we don’t hold the moral high ground from which to condemn Turkey. Maybe she’s right.

Lewis Wolf, Bloomington


U.S. Rep. Ilhan Omar’s ‘present’ vote on recognizing Armenian Genocide is distressing

Minneapolis Star Tribune
Oct 31 2019
 
 
U.S. Rep. Ilhan Omar's 'present' vote on recognizing Armenian Genocide is distressing
 
As leaders of the Armenian and Jewish communities, we regret her decision and the logical fallacy of the explanation of her vote.
 
By Alejandro Baer , Tadeos Barseghyan and Steve Hunegs
                                                                                                                                   
— 5:45pm
 
As leaders of Minnesota’s Armenian and Jewish communities, joined by the director of the Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies at the University of Minnesota, we applaud the U.S. House for this week overwhelmingly approving H.R. 296 affirming that it should be the policy of the U.S. to “commemorate the Armenian Genocide through official recognition and remembrance.”
 
We are grateful to Rep. Betty McCollum for co-sponsoring this resolution, and for the support of every other member of Minnesota’s delegation — other than Rep. Ilhan Omar, who inexplicably voted “present.”
 
As far back as 2007, both our local Armenian and Jewish communities have supported passage of this resolution.
 
Praising the vote, Gov. Tim Walz rightly tweeted that “the #ArmenianGenocide is historical fact, and the denial of that fact is a continuation of the genocide. As a member of Congress, I sponsored this legislation. The memory of the victims and the commitment to the survivors demands that history acknowledge the lives lost.”
 
Armenians first came to St. Paul in the 1890s, as Jews had done in the 1840s. The Armenian and Jewish communities share a love of family and education. We are committed to our respective churches and synagogues and dedicated to the greater community. We are diaspora communities who are loyal Americans and care deeply about events abroad.
 
We also share in the suffering from terrible atrocities of the 20th century. That said, whether it is the Armenian Genocide or the Holocaust, genocide does not define us peoples. It does, however, provide us parallel and intersecting responsibilities to teach our histories so that the horrors of the past are not repeated.
 
Even the term “genocide” binds us together, as it was coined by Jewish Holocaust survivor Raphael Lemkin in part to describe what had happened to Armenians in 1915 and in part as a response to the murder of his own family at the hands of Nazi Germany.
 
This is why our communities, along with the center, partner to remember our tragedies, as well as to support each other at our times of need. For example, our local Armenian community’s traveling exhibit “Treasures of Memory and Hope,” which features ordinary belongings of survivors of the Armenian Genocide who resettled in Minnesota, was inspired by the Jewish Community Relations Council’s “Transfer of Memory” project, a touring exhibit of portraits and stories of Holocaust survivors who rebuilt their lives here.
 
We’ve partnered to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide in 2015 at St. Sahag Armenian Church in St. Paul and through programming organized by the center.
 
In sharp contrast to this reaffirming work and the broad bipartisan consensus in Congress and our Minnesota delegation, stands Omar’s explanation for her vote. In a statement released on Twitter, which failed to explicitly mention Turkish responsibility even once, Omar stated, in part, that “accountability and recognition of genocide should not be used as a cudgel in a political fight. It should be done based on academic consensus outside the push and pull of geopolitics.”
 
Such comments echo a century of Turkish denialism.
 
The facts are beyond dispute. Broad academic consensus regarding the Armenian Genocide already exists and has long been recognized by the International Association of Genocide Scholars. Forty-nine U.S. states, including Minnesota, have officially recognized the Armenian Genocide by legislative resolution or gubernatorial proclamation. The Armenian Genocide is thoroughly documented in the U.S. and international archives, including statewide news coverage that documented the Armenian Genocide as it was happening. Minnesota citizens, both Armenian and non-Armenian, played an active role in assisting Armenian Genocide survivors through the congressionally mandated Near East Foundation from 1915 to 1930.
 
Minnesota Historical Society archives reveal that in 1919 Charles Evans Hughes warned Minnesota Gov. J.A.A. Burnquist that “Armenia is threatened with the imminent danger of extermination.”
 
The Republican nominee for president in 1916, Hughes wrote in his capacity as the honorary chair of the American Committee for the Independence of Armenia. Hughes would later serve as secretary of state, then rejoin the U.S. Supreme Court as chief justice.
 
Rep. Omar pointed to the “transatlantic slave trade and Native American genocide” as reasons why she couldn’t vote to recognize the Armenian Genocide. The logical fallacy is that somehow recognition of the Armenian Genocide precludes recognition of other heinous misdeeds. Global awareness of the Holocaust proves exactly the contrary.
 
The eminent Holocaust historian Deborah Lipstadt ruefully observed that “never again has meant again and again.” The first and most important step in ensuring that the most painful chapters of our history do not repeat themselves is to honestly acknowledge the past.
 
 
 
Alejandro Baer is director of the Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies at the University of Minnesota. The Rev. Tadeos Barseghyan is pastor at St. Sahag Armenian Church in St. Paul. Steve Hunegs is executive director of the Jewish Community Relations Council of Minnesota and the Dakotas.
 
 
 
 
 
   

Armenian Genocide Vote: Ilhan Omar Reveals Foreign Policy Blind Spot

The Pavlovic Today
Oct 31 2019
 

10/31/19 | By Liam Glen | The Pavlovic Today      

The influential progressive congresswoman ignited a firestorm of criticism after refusing to support a resolution recognizing the Armenian Genocide. Liam Glen writes on the inconsistencies of Ilhan Omar’s stance.

 
       The Armenian Genocide Memorial on the hill of Tsitsernakaberd (Yerevan)

Ilhan Omar, the Congressional representative from Minnesota’s 5th district, has been at the center of attention since she entered office in January.

Between her left-wing views, her status as one of the first two Muslim women in Congress, and her propensity for gaffes and misstatements, she has ignited countless controversies. In turn, her critics’ tendency to turn to smears and conspiracy theories have led the phrase “I stand with Ilhan Omar” to become a common sentiment in progressive circles.

This goodwill was called into question, however, after a vote on a resolution affirming the United Sates record on the Armenian Genocide, the systematic murder of deportation of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire in the 1910s.

In the final tally, 405 representatives voted yea on the resolution, 11 voted nay, and three, including Omar, simply voted present.

As she is one of the most high-profile politicians in the country, this sharp break with her colleagues should draw attention. Given Omar’s claimed commitment to social justice, this vote is especially troubling.

While Omar did not explicitly deny the Armenian Genocide, her public statement on the issue can best be described as strategically evasive.

One of her claims is that “A true acknowledgment of historical crimes against humanity must include both the heinous genocides of the 20th century, along with earlier mass slaughters like the transatlantic slave trade and Native American genocide,” but this is nonsensical.

Omar is a vocal advocate of Palestinian rights. Surely no one would suggest that she cannot bring up the topic unless she also addresses the Uighurs, Kurds, Kashmiris, and the countless other groups who lack self-determination.

More insidious is her assertion that acknowledgement of genocide “should be done based on academic consensus,” implying that such is not the case here.

In fact, historians have long recognized the Armenian genocide as the systematic slaughter of Armenians within the Ottoman Empire. The only reason that it has not been officially recognized sooner is because of persistent lobbying by the Turkish government.

There is no telling exactly what is motivating Omar’s actions. Many of her critics have come to believing that she is beholden to the Turkish government, but the evidence for this is relatively scant – a single 2017 meeting with Turkish strongman Recep Erdoğan and a $1,500 donation from a pro-Erdoğan activist, who has also given to various other politicians.

This does, however, reveal a disturbingly close relationship between the Omar and Erdoğan, a right-wing autocrat and religious fundamentalist.

One ridiculous, but persistent, narrative is that Omar – a staunch supporter of progressive causes such as LGBT rights – is in fact a secret Islamist. Her critics claim that she is soft on human rights violations committed by Muslims, but she has in fact been a sharp critic of some Islamist regimes, such as Saudi Arabia.

A more valid criticism is that she has fallen into the trap of simply opposing whatever is the current US foreign policy, without regard to the actual fact of the case. For instance, she condemned suffering in Venezuela without mentioning the Maduro regime’s contribution to it and even mischaracterized the big-tent opposition as “far-right.”

Other statements, however, have been more nuanced. Dogmatic anti-Americans were quite upset when she denounced the Assad regime in Syria. Others claimed that this is proof of her devotion to the anti-Assad Erdoğan government.

There is a tendency to categorically interpret politicians as heroes or villains, but this is an unhealthy way to view the world. It is possible to praise representatives for their accomplishments while reprimanding them when they do ill.

Those like Omar, however, who has made herself the head of a progressive movement, should be held under special scrutiny. Any commitment to peace, justice, and humanity must be consistent. So far, she is leaving behind a questionable legacy.

https://www.thepavlovictoday.com/armenian-genocide-vote-ilhan-omar-reveals-foreign-policy-blind-spot/

Star Tribune Cartoon Rips Ilhan Omar On Armenian Genocide Vote

The Patch, Minneapolis
Nov 1 2019
 
 
Star Tribune Cartoon Rips Ilhan Omar On Armenian Genocide Vote
 
The Minnesota Democrat's "present" vote this week was widely criticized.
 
By William Bornhoft, Patch Staff
 
Nov 1, 2019 7:58 am ET
 
MINNEAPOLIS — Steve Sack takes on Minnesota's Rep. Ilhan Omar in his latest political cartoon for the Star Tribune. Omar, a Democrat, was widely criticized after she did not vote in favor of a congressional resolution that recognized the Armenian genocide.
 
The bill denounced "the killing of 1.5 million Armenians by the Ottoman Empire from 1915 to 1923." Omar voted "present."
 
In a statement to CNN, Omar said she voted "present" because she believes the United States must also condemn "earlier mass slaughters" including "Native American genocide" and the "transatlantic slave trade."
 
She also said genocide "should not be used as a cudgel in a political fight."
 
Omar sparred with MSNBC host Chris Hayes about her vote on Twitter.
 
The resolution easily passed with support from both Democrats and Republicans, with a vote of 405-to-11 Tuesday.
 
"Members of my own family were among those murdered, and my parents fled with my grandparents to America," tweeted Rep. Anna Eshoo, a Democrat from California. "What all of the persecuted had in common was that they were Christians."
 
Omar was also the only Democrat to vote against a bill to impose sanctions on Turkish President Recep Erdoğan. That bill also passed in the House.
 
Among the harshest critics of Omar's actions is Enes Kanter, a Swiss-born NBA player who is of Turkish descent. Kanter accused Omar of possibly being on the "payroll" of Erdoğan.
 
Sophia Armen, chairwoman of the Feminist Front group, called Omar's explanation for her vote "awful."
 
 On the right, conservatives accused Omar — one of two Muslim women ever elected to Congress — of singling out Israel and not similarly condemning the actions of other nations.
 
In February, Omar apologized after receiving criticism from leaders in her own party over tweets about Israel. Omar had said that members of Congress support Israel because they're paid by the American Israel Public Affairs Committee.
 
 
 Read the tweets at
 
 

U.S. House Acknowledges Armenian Genocide, the ‘Most Colossal Crime of All Ages’

PJ Media
Oct 31 2019

An ugly truth of history has just been acknowledged. On October 29, the U.S. House of Representatives voted overwhelmingly (405 to 11) in favor of Resolution 296, which officially acknowledges the Armenian genocide perpetrated by Ottoman Turks during WW1.  (Unsurprisingly, Ilhan Omar was among the very few to abstain; her disingenuous logic will be addressed later.)

In order to become official policy, however, the resolution needs to be approved by both houses of Congress, and then signed by the president.  The Senate is currently not scheduled to vote on the measure.

It is at any rate a step in the right direction. According to the book Remembrance and Denial: The Case of the Armenian Genocide,

At the beginning of 1915 there were some two million Armenians within Turkey; today there are fewer than 60,000….  Despite the vast amount of evidence that points to the historical reality of the Armenian Genocide, eyewitness accounts, official archives, photographic evidence, the reports of diplomats, and the testimony of survivors, denial of the Armenian Genocide by successive regimes in Turkey has gone on from 1915 to the present.

Indeed, Turkey is currently outraged at this resolution; its president, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, called it “worthless” and the “biggest insult” to the Turkish people.

Such willful denial borders on the surreal, considering how well-documented the Armenian genocide is. As the International Association of Genocide Scholars says, “the Armenian Genocide is not controversial, but rather is denied only by the Turkish government and its apologists.”

Nor is this a new issue. The Honorable Henry Morgenthau, U.S. Ambassador to Turkey from 1913-16, wrote the following in his memoir:

When the Turkish authorities gave the order for these deportations, they were merely giving the death warrant to a whole race; they understood this well, and, in their conversations with me, they made no particular attempt to conceal this fact. . . I am confident that the whole history of the human race contains no such horrible episode as this. The great massacres and persecutions of the past seem almost insignificant when compared to the sufferings of the Armenian race in 1915.

In 1920, U.S. Senate Resolution 359 heard testimony on the “mutilation, violation, torture, and death” of countless Armenians, to quote American Lieutenant General James Harbord, who further referred to the genocide as the “most colossal crime of all the ages.”

In her memoir, Ravished ArmeniaAurora Mardiganian described being raped and thrown into a harem (consistent with Islam’s rules of war). Unlike thousands of other Armenian girls who were discarded after being defiled, she managed to escape. In the city of Malatia, she saw 16 Christian girls crucified: “Each girl had been nailed alive upon her cross,” she wrote, “spikes through her feet and hands, only their hair blown by the wind, covered their bodies.” Such scenes were portrayed in the 1919 documentary film Auction of Souls, including the above still frame of crucified girls.

Whereas the genocide is largely acknowledged in the West—long before this new resolution over 40 American states had formally recognized it—one of its primary, if not fundamental, causes is habitually overlooked: religion (Muslim Turks vis-à-vis Christian Armenians).

The genocide is unfortunately articulated through a singularly secular paradigm that focuses almost exclusively on nationalism, identity, territorial disputes, etc.—thereby projecting modern, secular Western sensibilities onto vastly different characters and eras.

War, of course, is another factor that clouds the true essence of the genocide. Because these atrocities mostly occurred during World War I, so the argument goes, they are ultimately a reflection of just that—war, in all its chaos and destruction, and nothing more. But as Winston Churchill, who described the massacres as an “administrative holocaust,” correctly observed, “The opportunity [WWI] presented itself for clearing Turkish soil of a Christian race.” Even Adolf Hitler had pointed out that “Turkey is taking advantage of the war in order to thoroughly liquidate its internal foes, i.e., the indigenous Christians, without being thereby disturbed by foreign intervention.”

Even the most cited factor of the Armenian Genocide, “ethnic identity conflict,” while legitimate, must be understood in light of the fact that, historically, religion often accounted more for a person’s identity than language or heritage. This is daily demonstrated throughout the Islamic world today, where Muslim governments and Muslim mobs persecute Christian minorities who share the same race, ethnicity, language, and culture; minorities who are indistinguishable from the majority—except, of course, for being non-Muslims or “infidels.”

As one Armenian studies professor asks, “If it [the Armenian Genocide] was a feud between Turks and Armenians, what explains the genocide carried out by Turkey against the Christian Assyrians at the same time?” The same can be said about the Greeks (some 750,000 of whom were liquidated during WWI). From a Turkish perspective, the primary thing Armenians, Assyrians, and Greeks had in common was that they were all Christians—“infidels.”

And the same can be said of all those Christian and other non-Muslim minorities who were most recently targeted for genocide by ISIS  — another genocide recognized by the U.S., also conducted during the chaos of war, and against those whose only crime was, again, simply to be “infidels.”

Note: Chapter 4 of the author’s recent book, Sword and Scimitar: Fourteen Centuries of War between Islam and the West, documents how the first “genocide” of Armenians at the hands of Turks actually began precisely one millennium ago, in the year 1019.