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Recognition: The mere thing 1,5 million Armenian Genocide victims deserve - Israel's News Agency

armenpress.am04/24th/2020, 4:42
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Recognition: The mere thing 1,5 million Armenian Genocide victims deserve - Israel's News Agency

The TPS - Israel's News Agency has published the article of the Director of ARMENPRESS news agency Aram Ananyan. The article runs as follows,

''Ovsanna Mirkhanyan, Mary Kirakosyan and Yepraksi Gevorgyan are the last eyewitnesses of the Armenian Genocide of 1915 currently living in Armenia. For them, the Armenian Genocide isn’t only the most tragic chapter of the Armenian people’s history, it is the family they lost, their home and childhood, a scar running throughout their entire lives.

For these women the cynical question posed by Hitler “Who remembers the annihilation of Armenians” does not even exist. These words are engraved on a terrifying plaque placed in The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, which serves as a reminder that silence, oblivion and denial create ominous opportunities for the repetition of heinous crimes against humanity.

Today marks the remembrance of the Armenian Genocide perpetrated in the Ottoman Turkey. Historians and genocide scholars agree that the Armenian Genocide was a masterminded act to solve a number of issues. The Ottoman leadership exterminated the Armenian political, economic and intellectual elites; deported the Armenians from their ancestral homeland, with a reason not only to avoid implementing the Ottoman Empire’s international obligations, but also the comprehensive political and social reforms to protect fundamental rights and universal freedoms of Christian minorities. That was the inalienable right of the Armenian people, which remained undelivered. Turkey preferred eradicating the Armenian issue by annihilating and deporting the Armenian people.

On April 24, for decades the Armenian people in all corners of the world have been paying tribute to the memory of 1,5 million Armenians, who became victims of the inhumane crime orchestrated by the Turkish state. We remembered them even in those difficult times, when due to geopolitical realities, there was an attempt to prohibit remembrance. We remember them now, when humanity is focused on the pandemic the world has to face with. We will remember them tomorrow. We’ll remember them, because we are convinced that forgetting can again pave the way for new crimes nurtured by xenophobia, misanthropy and hatred in any part of the world.

We don’t stay silent, although many people understand our pain even without words. We don’t keep silent, because silence is dangerous; friends of justice also don’t keep silent, because they understand that silence is way more dangerous than any political outcome; they don’t stay silent, as silence creates room for denial and illusion of impunity.

Elie Wiesel, Nobel Peace Prize laureate, Holocaust survivor and staunch advocate of the Armenian Genocide recognition, once famously said “to forget would be not only dangerous but offensive; to forget...

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