Tag: genocide

Christian Witness, Perspective,

Seyfo – The Genocide of Christians in Iraq

A trailer for the film Seyfo: The Year of the Sword, The Ongoing Genocide. 2010 winner – The Indie Fest. The film looks at the evil of the genocide being committed against the indigenous Christians of Mesopotamia: the Assyrians, Chaldeans and Syriacs. More information is available from the Iraqi Christian Relief Council.

“In the name of the father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit
Love is our anthem.
If we say something, No one would care…
If we ask about something, No one would Answer.

But I ask from God; I ask from God and I beg of him
And Our Prayers to the Messiah and God:
We are not enemies to anyone.
We did not do anything against anyone.
We built Iraq, and we will build it again.

What did we do? Why? Why are you coming after us?
Is this how you define sincerity?
We give them Respect and Love, And they give us bombs.
Where are they?
They say we will protect them,
but no one is here to protect us.

I am sorry,
The flowers in the garden
but they all stepped on them with their feet.
Why is it like that? Do they not have fear from God?
But we do not, do like them.
We have one word to them.
And that is that we forgive them and we thank them …”

Christian Witness, , , ,

95th Anniversary of the Armenian Genocide

Today, I stand with my Armenian brothers and sisters in New York’s Capital Region in recognition and memory of the Armenian Genocide of 1915.

To All Mothers By Kegham Sarian
Translated from Armenian by Daniel Janoyan

Our mothers preserved the Armenian language
And passed it to their children when breast feeding.
They also filled them up with the Fatherland
So that its people will live eternally.

Our mothers preserved the Armenian songs
While rocking their children all along their songs
With tears in their eyes and wounds in their hearts
They always kept dreaming of life that is free.

They never yielded our language and our songs
To traitors, the sultan, nor also to any tsar
Whose dream was only see us give up and retreat
And to enable them rule over our Armenian land.

Our mothers have never been slaves to foreigners,
Neither have they ever been disappointed.
Having hugged the Armenian book and their children
They’ve always lived proudly in this very world.

Even now it is the Armenian mothers
Who are keeping the legacy live
Preserving our songs, language and noble spirit
Having sacrificed themselves whole-heartedly for our Fatherland.

I am now embracing your hands, O mothers.
You are sacred and holy within my heart.
Keep preserving always our Armenian language
To enable us live forever in this world of ours.

Perspective, Poland - Polish - Polonia, Political, , ,

One honest statement

As the Young Fogey might point out, politics is about playing a game for influence and votes. It is rare to find politicos doing things for right and proper reason. He might also rightly point out that we should be careful so that we “don’t get played” in their political process.

Today’s vote by Congress on the Armenian Genocide was one of those rare moments when politicians (and yes I understand that some come from districts with large Armenian immigrant populations) did the right thing in the face of pressure.

They basically said to heck with lobbyists (paid for by the Turkish government), President Bush (it will hurt the “war on terror”), and tons of other politicos who pander to Turkey because they act as an errand boy between the Arabs and Israelis/Arabs and NATO.

Of course everyone realizes that Turkish “democracy” is a carefully contrived facade at best. Free speech – eh, no. Freedom of religion – eh, no. But for Mr. Bush at least, a half friend and untruth are more important than the truth – the ends justify the means.

From the NY Times: House Panel Raises Furor on Armenian Genocide

WASHINGTON, Oct. 10 —” A House committee voted on Wednesday to condemn the mass killings of Armenians in Turkey in World War I as an act of genocide, rebuffing an intense campaign by the White House and warnings from Turkey’s government that the vote would gravely strain its relations with the United States.

The vote by the House Foreign Relations Committee was nonbinding and so largely symbolic, but its consequences could reach far beyond bilateral relations and spill into the war in Iraq.

Turkish officials and lawmakers warned that if the resolution was approved by the full House, they would reconsider supporting the American war effort, which includes permission to ship essential supplies through Turkey and northern Iraq.

President Bush appeared on the South Lawn of the White House before the vote and implored the House not to take up the issue, only to have a majority of the committee disregard his warning at the end of the day, by a vote of 27 to 21.

—We all deeply regret the tragic suffering of the Armenian people that began in 1915,— Mr. Bush said in remarks that, reflecting official American policy, carefully avoided the use of the word genocide. —This resolution is not the right response to these historic mass killings, and its passage would do great harm to our relations with a key ally in NATO and in the global war on terror.—

The resolution, which was introduced early in the current session of Congress and which has quietly moved forward over the last few weeks, provoked a fierce lobbying fight that pitted the politically influential Armenian-American population against the Turkish government, which hired equally influential former lawmakers like Robert L. Livingston, Republican of Louisiana, and Richard A. Gephardt, the former Democratic House majority leader who backed a similar resolution when he was in Congress.

Backers of the resolution said Congressional action was overdue.

—Despite President George Bush twisting arms and making deals, justice prevailed,— said Representative Brad Sherman, a Democrat of California and a sponsor of the resolution. —For if we hope to stop future genocides we need to admit to those horrific acts of the past…—

In a similar vein, Polish-Americans and Poles recall that in 1951-52 a Congressional investigation (the Madden Committee) into the Katyn Massacre (also here), documented much of the truth surrounding the enormity of the Katyn crimes committed by the Russians after the coordinated Nazi German – Soviet invasion of Poland in 1939I realize that this was at the start of the Cold War, and served a purpose in rallying Polish-Americans to the Cold War cause, after they had been kicked around by Truman and company at Yalta. Still, it did recognize the fact that the massacres occurred and laid the blame on the perpetrators..

Sometimes Congress finds the wherewithal to shed some light on historic events.

Oh, and let the Turks react. What will they do? Kill more Christians, close more churches, invade Iraq, stop pretending to be a democracy…? They will bow because we can choke off those huge foreign aid payments that keep them quiet.