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Remember The First Holocaust

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  • #11
    Originally posted by Alucardian
    This doesn't make any sense. There are many articles as well as historians and scholars that call it the Armenian Holocaust. Am I to understand that no articles that refer to it as the Armenian Holocaust are to be allowed in this forum simply because it contains the word Holocaust? You would do well to remember that it was called Holocaust first and that term was used extensively for a very long time until Lemkin invented the term genocide in the late forties.
    not all...just most...those that go into the ovens willingly...we like them...

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    • #12
      Originally posted by 1.5 million
      not all...just most...those that go into the ovens willingly...we like them...
      Whatever are you on about?


      We are talking about the Armenian Holocaust. What are you talking about?

      Comment


      • #13
        Originally posted by 1.5 million
        not all...just most...those that go into the ovens willingly...we like them...
        What kind of stupid reply is this?

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        • #14
          Originally posted by Hovik
          What Armenian Scholars? Sources?
          Hovik, first I would like to know what difference it really makes whether Hitler actually said it or didn't say it. Does it really change anything? Do we really need Hitler to prove that there was a genocide? There can be no doubt that Hitler knew of what had happened to the Armenians, but whether he actually said it is something that can't really be proven one way or the other and that's one reason I couldn't possibly insist that he actually said it anymore than the Turks can insist that he didn't. Supposing Hitler is quoted as saying there was no Armenian Genocide Holocaust or whatever, would this be enough to prove that there wasn't? I feel that this Hitler quote is nothing but a minor detail which doesn't change anything one way or another.

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          • #15
            Originally posted by Maggie Simpson
            Whatever are you on about?


            We are talking about the Armenian Holocaust. What are you talking about?
            "we" ? I don't recall you posting in this thread before...oh...perhaps it was one of your alter-egos, or under one of your many other log - in names...or are you just going on with that "we" thing again...anywa...blah blah blah...yeah your really making a difference...really advancing the cause...such a proud Armenian you are...aren't you?

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            • #16
              It is rare to see either a Turk or an Armenian accuratly discuss the Hitler quote - what he actually said and why, its relevance (at the time and historically), and why one should really care. First of all - of course he said it - it (the notes of such) was reported/coveyed to the West in 1939 (and this has been coroborated and verified). It is just not credible that there was any kind of Armenian Conspiracy at the time to create these lines if they were never said. There is no rational reason or explanation for such. Second - it has nothing whatsoever to do with proving or disproving that the Armenian Genocide occured. And finally what is important in the quote is not that it proves anything - we already know for a fact that Hitler was well aware of the Armenian Genocide and had absorbed important lessons from it - what is important IMO - is the fact that he understood that such deeds were possible - that it was also very possible to do such without any consequence whatsoever - and that these facts led to an environment where it was possible to consider both the tranplantation of Germans into non-German lands with the expulsion of the native inhabitants and that it was also possible to contemplate and even plan and execute such a barbaric and otherwise unthinkable set of actions to willfully destroy large groups of people for no other reason because of who they were and because it could be done. The fact that the Turks were never properly called to task for what they did (and that they fully suceeded in their attempts to wipe Armenians from the lands) are precisely the lessons that Hitler learned, that he clearly knew and that he clearly conveyed to his officers and this knowledge exactly led to the Nazi plan and eventual execution of the Holocaust.

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              • #17
                Originally posted by Pipoyan
                I think it is totaly wrong to use this quote. I agree with your quote in can't be proven one or another and only distracts from the issue.
                Well Ok - I suppose you are the expert. ..l..

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                • #18
                  Originally posted by 1.5 million
                  Well Ok - I suppose you are the expert. ..l..
                  No, you're the expert, but in order to show your expertice, you have to repeat my words as if they're your own.


                  What I wrote: "Does it really change anything? Do we really need Hitler to prove that there was a genocide?... There can be no doubt that Hitler knew of what had happened to the Armenians...I feel that this Hitler quote is nothing but a minor detail which doesn't change anything one way or another."

                  What you wrote: "it has nothing whatsoever to do with proving or disproving that the Armenian Genocide occured. And finally what is important in the quote is not that it proves anything - we already know for a fact that Hitler was well aware of the Armenian Genocide"

                  Comment


                  • #19
                    Originally posted by Ohannes Kuyumcu
                    Thanks for your government propaganda esek. See ya, wouldn't wanna be ya.
                    General Antranik (1865-1927): “I am not a nationalist. I recognize only one nation, the nation of the oppressed.”

                    Comment


                    • #20
                      Polish-Jewish Relations and the Armenian Genocide

                      Polish-Jewish Relations and the Armenian Genocide

                      Armenian News Network / Groong
                      July 30, 2001

                      By Jonathan Eric Lewis


                      When I attended former Turkish Ambassador Sukru Elekdag's denialist
                      talk at Columbia University this spring, I was struck by one of the
                      comments by an audience member. Rather than engage Elekdag in a false
                      debate, the gentleman reminded the audience that Poland is only just
                      now undergoing a painful soul-searching about the roles played by
                      ordinary Poles in the implementation of the Final Solution. He cited
                      the controversy surrounding the publication of Jan T. Gross's
                      Neighbors: The Destruction of the Jewish Commmunity of Jedwabne,
                      Poland (Princeton University Press, 2001) and argued that it is up to
                      the younger generation in Turkey to similarly admit the sins of their
                      forefathers.

                      In this slim and highly readable volume, Gross, a professor of
                      European Studies at New York University, demonstrates that the
                      massacre of the Jews of the said town during the Holocaust was not
                      committed by Germans, but rather by Poles. The Jewish citizens of this
                      small town in central Poland were not killed by faceless, anonymous
                      German soldiers or by a cold bureaucratic system in July 1941, but
                      rather by their neighbors, persons with whom they had lived for
                      years. The crime was extremely brutal, with the vast majority of the
                      town's Jews burned alive in a townsman's barn. `Not anonymous men in
                      uniform, cogs in a war machine, agents carrying out orders, but their
                      neighbors, who chose to kill and were engaged in a bloody pogrom -
                      willing executioners.' Despite the trials of some of the perpetrators
                      in the decade after the war, it was not until the year 2000 that
                      Polish officialdom finally recognized the crime and sought
                      forgiveness.

                      Gross' work, although specifically dealing with the Jedwabne massacre
                      and the Holocaust, has a lot to offer to students of the Armenian
                      genocide. While the crime he studies is specific, its implications
                      are universal. How does one segment of a given town's population turn
                      on its other half and commit atrocities in front of all to see? Why
                      does it take years for the crime to be fully studied and acknowledged?
                      And what can the actions of the Polish population tell us about the
                      roles played by Kurds and Circassians in the Armenian genocide?

                      While scholars have rightly demonstrated that the Armenian genocide
                      was a centralized and highly organized event, with orders coming from
                      Constantinople, the local populations in Eastern Anatolia played a
                      pivotal role in the destruction of the Armenian communities. The
                      willing executioners of the Armenians were not just members of the
                      Ottoman gendarmerie, but also local Turks, Kurds, and Circassians -
                      persons who might have known and might have seen their victims on more
                      than one occasion prior to their crimes. Both the Poles of Jedwabne
                      and the local populations in Eastern Anatolia engaged in a wholesale
                      plunder of their victims' property. The prior humiliation of the
                      victims and the subsequent expropriation of their property were
                      fundamental components of the crime.

                      In his book, Gross asks us to view the Holocaust as a heterogeneous
                      phenomenon, at the same time part of a master plan and subject to
                      local circumstances. He argues that `we must also be able to see [the
                      Holocaust] as a mosaic composed of discrete episodes, improvised by
                      local decision-makers, and hinging on unforced behavior, rooted in
                      God-knows-what motivations, all of those who were near the murder
                      scene at the time.' Both the Nazis and the Ittihadists would not have
                      been able to carry out their genocidal plans without the explicit
                      support of local populations, ordinary townsfolk, peasants, and in the
                      Armenian case, Kurdish tribesmen.

                      One of the reasons that Turkey is so hesitant to admit the horrific
                      crimes perpetrated against the Armenians is that it was not just the
                      Ottoman government that committed the crime. For without the active
                      complicity of local populations in Eastern Anatolia and Cilicia, the
                      genocide of the Armenians could not have happened as it did. The
                      crime is still very much alive, for Kurds, Turks, and other Muslims
                      now live on the property of murdered Armenians. While the government
                      was officially responsible, the ordinary people were highly complicit.

                      In the case of Jedwabne, Gross thinks `it's very probable that the
                      desire and unexpected opportunity to rob the Jews once and for all -
                      rather than, or alongside with, atavistic antisemitism - was the real
                      motivating force that drove Karolak [the main criminal] and his cohort
                      to organize the killing.' The property and homes of Jedwabne's Jews
                      did not die with the victims; these homes and goods became part of the
                      collective plunder. However, one must not overstate the degree to
                      which sheer criminality was the motivating factor in either the murder
                      of Jedwabne's Jews or the Armenians of Anatolia. Indeed, one should
                      never forget that both anti-Armenian racism and anti-Semitism were
                      deep-rooted phenomena in both Anatolia and Eastern Europe.

                      It was not as if Jedwabne's residents did not know what happened in
                      their town; they knew all too well. Similarly, it is not as if the
                      Turkish government doesn't know what happened to the Armenians; they,
                      too, know all too well. Admitting the crime means admitting the
                      present; it means admitting that the present is based on the crimes of
                      the past. This may explain why there are still voices in Poland that
                      refuse to accept the fact that Poles killed Jews during the Holocaust.
                      Before the Second World War, one-third of the urban population of
                      Poland was Jewish. One can hardly understand the dynamics of the
                      post-war Polish urban economy without taking into account the fact
                      that it was based on the murder of much of the pre-war urban population!
                      As Gross reminds us with particular emphasis: `how can the wiping out
                      of one-third of its urban population be anything than a central issue
                      of Poland's modern history?'

                      The crimes of the Ottoman past are Turkey's present. Echoing Gross,
                      how can the destruction of a huge portion of the Ottoman Empire's
                      merchant class be anything other than a central issue in Turkey's
                      modern history? The lands, homes, and property of the Armenians are
                      now in the hands of those who have benefited from past crimes. The
                      fear of having to pay reparations is but one of the many reasons why
                      the Turkish government refuses to acknowledge the genocide. National
                      pride is a factor as well, for it would mean having to admit that
                      Turkish history is not the glory that many have been taught that it
                      is. It would likewise mean having to admit that the Ottoman Empire
                      committed crimes similar to, although not completely identical with,
                      Nazi Germany. And, after all, what state would want its past to be
                      compared with Nazi Germany?

                      But all hope should not be lost. Difficult as it is for them, the
                      Polish public is now engaging in a healthy debate and reassessment of
                      their country's past. Younger Polish citizens demonstrate a great
                      curiosity in all things Jewish and the study of Yiddish is flourishing
                      on university campuses in Poland. Some Poles are even `rediscovering'
                      the fact that one grandparent was Jewish. I myself have witnessed
                      first hand attempts at both Polish-Jewish and German-Jewish
                      reconciliation and must admit that immense progress is being made in
                      both areas. Who would have thought that, some sixty years after the
                      Holocaust, there would be a sovereign Jewish state and that a
                      democratic Germany would be one of its closest allies? I myself have
                      no doubt that the current German government, as well as the Polish
                      Foreign Ministry, are extremely sincere in their attempts to foster
                      reconciliation.

                      Both the government and people of Turkey can learn from the Polish
                      experience. The fact that occasional apologies to the Armenian people
                      are appearing in the mainstream Turkish press and that Taner Akcam's
                      books are being sold in Turkish bookstores are signs that the wall of
                      silence is slowly beginning to erode. One would have to be terribly
                      naive to assume that the authorities in Ankara are unaware that the
                      Turkish population is beginning, slowly, to be sure, to question their
                      government's denial of the Armenian genocide.

                      One of the main denialist tactics is to emphasize that Turks and
                      Muslims died during the war and were victims of war crimes. Yes, many
                      Turks died during the First World War and yes, many Poles, especially
                      the urban intellegentsia, were victims of the Nazi war machine.
                      However, neither the sufferings of the Turks nor of the Poles during
                      wartime nullifies the fact that both peoples engaged in horrific
                      crimes against humanity and then expropriated the properties of their
                      victims.

                      A full accounting of the collapse of the Ottoman Empire would take
                      into account both the Armenian genocide as well as the forced
                      resettlement of Muslims onto their lands. The fact that many Poles
                      were brutalized by National Socialism in no way excuses or explains
                      away the massive brutality that Poles inflicted on their Jewish
                      neighbors in Jedwabne. By the same logic, the fact that Turks were
                      expelled from Southeastern Europe in the late nineteenth-century and
                      early twentieth-century in no way, shape, or form, negates the
                      Armenian genocide.

                      Admitting the past and asking for forgiveness are very difficult
                      things indeed. It has taken Americans years to come to terms with
                      their genocidal policies against the Native American populations. But
                      in order to build a morally just present, it can and, indeed, must be
                      done. Just ask the Poles who have courageously begun to reassess
                      their own history. Perhaps the Turkish-Armenian reconciliation
                      committee can learn something from the ongoing projects that involve
                      German-Jewish and Polish-Jewish reconciliation.

                      However, there can be no reconciliation without a fair, accurate, and
                      historically just accounting for past crimes. Without Willy Brandt's
                      courageous decision to kneel at the site of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising,
                      Jews would likely have not been as willing to come to terms with the
                      fact that there is indeed a new Germany. In the long run, Poland's
                      coming to terms with its own past will pave the way for better
                      Polish-Jewish relations. Ankara should take notice of the debate
                      surrounding Jedwabne and act accordingly.


                      --
                      Jonathan Eric Lewis is a Ph.D. candidate in history at Emory University
                      and Research Affiliate at the Remarque Institute, New York University
                      "All truth passes through three stages:
                      First, it is ridiculed;
                      Second, it is violently opposed; and
                      Third, it is accepted as self-evident."

                      Arthur Schopenhauer (1788-1860)

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