A step forward, two steps back
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The fight to prevent future genocide
es lost one of its greatest crusaders this week, but inched
forward as a bill acknowledging the genocide of 1.5 million Armenians
passed the House International Relations Committee.
Simon Wiesenthal, the Holocaust survivor who relentlessly tracked
down Nazi war criminals after World War II, once said that “When
history looks back, I want people to know the Nazis weren’t able to
kill millions of people and get away with it.”
Wiesenthal died Tuesday, but his message should resonate in
Glendale and Burbank and beyond to Washington D.C., where last week a
resolution to recognize the Armenian Genocide, moved on to the House
of representatives.
Embedded in Wiesenthal’s message was a need to establish justice
and moral values for humanity.
That is why it is so hard to come to grips with why the United
States government has yet to acknowledge the Armenian Genocide,
brought on at the hands of the Ottoman Turks, although the answer is
easy to come by: Politics.
Even with the mark-up last week, passing this resolution will be
an uphill battle, just like past efforts to push such a resolution
through.
The next step in that fight is convincing House leadership to
commit to moving the resolution forward, Rep. Adam Schiff said.
The resolution’s backers will have to convince House Majority
Leader Tom DeLay (R-Texas) to allow the resolution on the House floor
for a vote. That will be difficult given what we know about the
politics of officially recognizing the genocide.
It was DeLay who once released a statement with Reps. Dennis
Hastert (R-Ill) and Roy Blunt (R-Mo.), saying that such an
acknowledgment would upset the U.S. relationship with Turkey, which
has been a reliable ally of the United States for decades.
Germany, too, has been an ally. Yet, the Holocaust, is recognized,
much because of Wiesenthal’s dogged efforts to bring its perpetrators
to justice, as a specific historical moment with devastating
consequences.
Why is it that this nation’s leaders -- who tout freedom of
religion, speech and the need to transform despotic nations states
into democracies -- cannot collectively agree that the Armenian
Genocide is just that: a genocide?
What good are Wiesenthal’s efforts against prejudice against all
people if because of politics, the killing of 1.5 million people
cannot be officially recognized by the United States?
Rep. Brad Sherman, who sits on the committee, said the denial of a
genocide is a genocide’s last act.
Wiesenthal must have known that. Why doesn’t our government?
Maybe this time, the push of local representatives, the e-mails,
the faxes and the letters to legislators will make a difference.
Let’s hope so. Unfortunately, no timetable has been set for even
the possibility of a floor vote, leaving the possibility of yet
another push for recognition falling through the cracks.
Recognition of the Armenian Genocide should not be a game of
politics, up for a battle every so often. These killings were real.
And it is a horrific moment in history that needs to stay in living
memory, just as Wiesenthal kept the horrors of the Holocaust in the
collective memory.
“If we pardon this genocide, it will be repeated, and not only on
Jews,” Wiesenthal said of the Holocaust. “If we don’t learn this
lesson, then millions died for nothing.”
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