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Page 2. OPINIONS Jfyif Qharzhoom December I9fip, Jewish Armenian Genocide Resolution assessed By Dickran Kouymjian Haig and Isabel Berberian Professor of Armenian Studies There are some lessons to learn, questions to think about, as a result of the passage of an "Armenian Genocide Resolution" by the Union of American Hebrew Congregations spearheaded by Rabbi Kenneth Segel of Fresno's Temple Beth Israel. First, international minority groups, in this case the Armenians, are not always alone in their fight for correcting past injustices inflicted by larger states. American Jews have spoken out clearly in support of a strong stand on the question of the Armenian Genocide, just when the Israeli government seemed to have bowed to official Turkish pressure to work against the current U.S. Senate Joint Resolution 212 on the Genocide. The major obstacle to get any group to Involve itself in the problems of another is ignorance. This.was clear from Rabbi Segcl's report on the Fresno delegation's lobbying activities at the Now Orleans convention of the UAHC: Most of the 4,000 or so ■delegates were just not familiar with the details of the Armenian Genocide. Second, the success of the five member delegation from Fresno's Reform Congregation in getting some 800 other delegations to accept a resolution, which at best was a matter of indifference, and at worst an annoyance, proves again that individuals are not powerless before large bodies. One man can make a differencejn this case Rabbi Segel, even on an international issue that is both morally and politically sensitive. Armenians, Jews, Amer¬ icans, people should not despair or be discouraged when the odds are against mem, even overwhelmingly. Third, in order to act resolutely and unhesitatingly for a cause you most have absolute faith in the right and justice of the cause. It is this total moral resoluteness that was the solid foundation on which Rabbi Segel anchored himself to demand with his Temple Beth Israel that Jews, survivors of the Holocaust, help Armenians in their struggle for recognition, of their genocide. Th*c rabbi said repeatedly before and after his victory' that he was fighting for the rights of a non-Jewish group because it was the right thing to do. Never once did Rabbi Segel suggest that there was anything Armenians need do or might do for Jews whether in Fresno or Israel. There was never a- suggestion of a quid pro quo, an exchange. Every lime the Rabbi referred to the reason of his and his congregation's actions for the Armenians it was always because it was the moral thing to do. There was almost a global apology from his lips when more than once he said that Jews should have spoken out on the Genocide long ago. Fourth, morality has a place in our lives, even though we seem from time to time to forget that simply because we have seen that right does not often prevail in our materialistic society. The joy openly expressed by the 2,500 Jews present when the Genocide Resolution was unanimously adopted by the Union of American Hebrew Congregations in New Orleans was possible because they understood that they had allowed moral justice to vanquish questions of political expediency. Fifth, media arc still a strong instrument of asserting moral right. The impressive coverage by the Fresno Bee of the Genocide Resolution through John Taylor, its special correspondent in New Orleans, allowed all citizens of the San- Joaquin Valley to properly understand the historical importance of what the Jews of America, driven by the Fresno congregation, were doing. Sixth, historical revisionism, the rewriting of history by governments to suit their own needs, can be blunted by dedicated individuals, organi¬ zations and the press. With the official recognition of the Armenian Genocide by the largest religious group among the Jews of the United States, the Turkish state will have an infinitely more difficult time in its attempt to falsify what happened *C to the Armenians in 1915. The pain we all suffered this past summer as we collectively watched the Chinese government doggedly attempt to establish, and with some success, a different truth from the one we watch unfold in Tiananmen Square, is slightly diminished as we see that at least one courageous group, the Jews of America, are not going to let the Turkish government succeed in its denial of Genocide. Finally, our world is truly interdependent. Actions of one group can help or harm those of another group. There is a renewal that takes place when peoples or nations who have kept a distance between themselves come together on an issue that is humanitarian. There is in fact a certain exhilaration in discovering the genuine love, friendship, and brother hood thaf\ is pent up in all peopk- waiting for an appropriate vehicle of release. "Ehis has been so over¬ whelmingly' felt between Jews anii Armenian in Fresno that more than once in these first two weeks of November it has led to tears of happiness. A remarkable thing has happened in our community. As victims of the Holocaust, Jews have stepped back from their suffering to alleviate the sufferings of another group. Let us all •< ' try to emulate this example and look beyond our own problems to see how we can help bring justice to others. Letters to the Editor Opinion article on Turks in Bulgaria questioned Dear Prof. Der Mugrdechian, I have enjoyed reading Hye Sharzhoom for the past ten years. I received my first copy of the newspaper during my tenure as President of the Armenian Club of Columbia University. On many occasions, I have expressed my admiration for the newspaper to my friend. Dr. Dickran Kouymjian, who deserves so much credit for inspiring the student body at California State University, Fresno. Indeed as a former judge for the Columbia Scholastic Press Association, I applauded Hve Shaj?hoom not so much for its valuable contribution to Armenian culture, but in large measure for its excellent journalistic content. I recendy read with great distress the opinion article by one of the newspaper's staff writers, Ms. Seda Melkonian, "Three Cheers given to Bulgaria," September, 1989. While I appreciate the fact that you are not responsible for the views expressed on the opinion page, I feel compelled to write you in your capacity as advisor to the newspaper to express ny serious reservations over the decision to air <£uij SuipdnLif Hye Sharzhoom Editor: Paultue Kasparian Staff Writers: Scott Asmar Janice Caprelian Deborah Garabedian Jpnelle Goto Sfieri Hokokian Peggy Momjian Sato Ohannessian Jacqueline Sislian Advisor: Barlow Der Mugrdechian Armenian Page Editor: Serop Torosstan Armenian Page Writer: Matthew Jendian Layout: Sheri Hokokian Paultue Kasparian Photographer: Scott Asmar Jon P. Maroot Advertising Manager: Sheri Hokokian Circulation Manager: Matthew Jendian Hye Sharzhoom is a supplement of the Daily Collegian and the newspaper of the CSUF Armenian Students Organization and the Armenian Studies Program and is fimdedby the Associated Students. Articles may be reprinted provided that Hye Sharzhoom is acknowledged. Hye Sharzhoom welcomes prose, poetry, articles, manuscripts, and other material from its readers. For further inforniation concerning the newspaper or * dfcArmcmanStudiesProgram.calltheASPoffi * - such venom and hatred toward the Turkish minority in Bulgaria. I literally had to read Ms. Melkonian's article several times to make sure that it wasn't satire or black comedy. The forced deportation and persecution of the Turkish minority in Bulgaria is hardly something over which Armenians should rejoice; it is a major human rights issue which brings into focus the systematic annihilation of. the Armenian minority of the Ottoman Empire during and after World War 1. Ms. Melkonian's article was immature, irresponsible and had no literary value whatsoever. I have discreetly shown the article to several of my close Armenian friends who were uniformly embarrassed and shocked over the newspaper's poor exercise of discretion in choosing to publish such material. I do not want you to misconstrue my letter as a challenge to the newspaper's right to publish. As an attorney, I am sensitive to restrictions placed on First Amendment freedoms of expression. However, a newspaper's right tcf publish is a liberty which brings with it an equally important responsibility to publish material which has some semblance of sophistication, integrity and literary value. For instance, I would imagine that Hve Sharzhoom would not publish an_ editorial from a right-wing or fascist organization denouncing the Jewish Holocaust as a gigantic hoax. Moreover, I would like to think the Hve Sharzhoom would refuse to publish racist or sexist material. Ms. Melkonian's article is not just anti-Turkish; it is anti-ethnic. Hve Sharzhoom committed a great disservice to its reputation by trivializing human rights abuses which have been denounced by, among other organizations, US Helsinki Watch and Amnesty International. Ms. Melkonian not only- disgraces the newspaper for which she writes, bui attacks the integrity of the Armenian people who are interested in justice and the preservation of truth, and noi the glorification of another group's repression and demise. * The newspaper I have read over the years was dedicated to denouncing crimes against humanity. It is my sincere hope that this reputation will reemerge ifr future editions of the Hye Sharzhoom. Very truly yours, Mark Momjian Philadelphia, PA To the Editor: With reference to the staff member article by Seda Melkonian in the September 1989 issue of Hye Sharzhoom, I do not believe it is appropriate for rejoicing at the oppression and persecution of any nationality-not even our histoe<cal ncmesis-u)c Turks. The current crime is by the Turkish government that see LETTERS, page 6 Corrections On page 2 of the September issue of Wye Sharzhoom, the headline Tables turn on Turks" was an error andclidnotttKrespond article about Aj nenian athletic games. XO
Object Description
Title | 1989_12 The Daily Collegian December 1989 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1989 |
Description | Daily (except weedends) during the school year. Microfilm. Palo Alto, Calif.: BMI Library Microfilms, 1986- microfilm reels; 35 mm. Vol.1, no.1 (Feb 8, 1922)- |
Subject | California State University, Fresno -- Periodicals. |
Contributors | Associated Students of Fresno State. |
Coverage | Vol.1 no.1 (Feb 8, 1922)- to present |
Format | Microfilm reels, 35 mm. |
Technical Information | Scanned at 600 dpi; TIFF; Microfilm ScanPro 2000 "E-image data" |
Language | eng |
Description
Title | December 7, 1989, Hye Sharzhoom Page 2 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1989 |
Description | Daily (except weedends) during the school year. Microfilm. Palo Alto, Calif.: BMI Library Microfilms, 1986- microfilm reels; 35 mm. Vol.1, no.1 (Feb 8, 1922)- |
Subject | California State University, Fresno -- Periodicals. |
Contributors | Associated Students of Fresno State. |
Coverage | Vol.1 no.1 (Feb 8, 1922)- to present |
Format | Microfilm reels, 35 mm. |
Technical Information | Scanned at 600 dpi; TIFF; Microfilm ScanPro 2000 "E-image data" |
Language | eng |
Full-Text-Search |
Page 2. OPINIONS
Jfyif Qharzhoom
December I9fip,
Jewish Armenian Genocide Resolution assessed
By Dickran Kouymjian
Haig and Isabel Berberian
Professor of Armenian Studies
There are some lessons to learn,
questions to think about, as a result of
the passage of an "Armenian Genocide
Resolution" by the Union of American
Hebrew Congregations spearheaded by
Rabbi Kenneth Segel of Fresno's
Temple Beth Israel.
First, international minority
groups, in this case the Armenians, are
not always alone in their fight for
correcting past injustices inflicted by
larger states. American Jews have
spoken out clearly in support of a
strong stand on the question of the
Armenian Genocide, just when the
Israeli government seemed to have
bowed to official Turkish pressure to
work against the current U.S. Senate
Joint Resolution 212 on the Genocide.
The major obstacle to get any group to
Involve itself in the problems of
another is ignorance. This.was clear
from Rabbi Segcl's report on the
Fresno delegation's lobbying
activities at the Now Orleans
convention of the UAHC: Most of the
4,000 or so ■delegates were just not
familiar with the details of the
Armenian Genocide.
Second, the success of the five
member delegation from Fresno's
Reform Congregation in getting some
800 other delegations to accept a
resolution, which at best was a matter
of indifference, and at worst an
annoyance, proves again that
individuals are not powerless before
large bodies. One man can make a
differencejn this case Rabbi Segel,
even on an international issue that is
both morally and politically
sensitive. Armenians, Jews, Amer¬
icans, people should not despair or be
discouraged when the odds are against
mem, even overwhelmingly.
Third, in order to act resolutely and
unhesitatingly for a cause you most
have absolute faith in the right and
justice of the cause. It is this total
moral resoluteness that was the solid
foundation on which Rabbi Segel
anchored himself to demand with his
Temple Beth Israel that Jews,
survivors of the Holocaust, help
Armenians in their struggle for
recognition, of their genocide. Th*c
rabbi said repeatedly before and after
his victory' that he was fighting for the
rights of a non-Jewish group because
it was the right thing to do.
Never once did Rabbi Segel suggest
that there was anything Armenians
need do or might do for Jews whether
in Fresno or Israel. There was never a-
suggestion of a quid pro quo, an
exchange. Every lime the Rabbi
referred to the reason of his and his
congregation's actions for the
Armenians it was always because it
was the moral thing to do. There was
almost a global apology from his lips
when more than once he said that Jews
should have spoken out on the
Genocide long ago.
Fourth, morality has a place in our
lives, even though we seem from time
to time to forget that simply because
we have seen that right does not often
prevail in our materialistic society.
The joy openly expressed by the
2,500 Jews present when the Genocide
Resolution was unanimously adopted
by the Union of American Hebrew
Congregations in New Orleans was
possible because they understood that
they had allowed moral justice to
vanquish questions of political
expediency.
Fifth, media arc still a strong
instrument of asserting moral right.
The impressive coverage by the
Fresno Bee of the Genocide Resolution
through John Taylor, its special
correspondent in New Orleans, allowed
all citizens of the San- Joaquin Valley
to properly understand the historical
importance of what the Jews of
America, driven by the Fresno
congregation, were doing.
Sixth, historical revisionism, the
rewriting of history by governments
to suit their own needs, can be blunted
by dedicated individuals, organi¬
zations and the press. With the official
recognition of the Armenian Genocide
by the largest religious group among
the Jews of the United States, the
Turkish state will have an infinitely
more difficult time in its attempt to
falsify what happened *C to
the Armenians in 1915. The pain we
all suffered this past summer as we
collectively watched the Chinese
government doggedly attempt to
establish, and with some success, a
different truth from the one we watch
unfold in Tiananmen Square, is
slightly diminished as we see that at
least one courageous group, the Jews
of America, are not going to let the
Turkish government succeed in its
denial of Genocide.
Finally, our world is truly
interdependent. Actions of one group
can help or harm those of another
group. There is a renewal that takes
place when peoples or nations who
have kept a distance between
themselves come together on an issue
that is humanitarian. There is in fact a
certain exhilaration in discovering the
genuine love, friendship, and brother
hood thaf\ is pent up in all peopk-
waiting for an appropriate vehicle of
release. "Ehis has been so over¬
whelmingly' felt between Jews anii
Armenian in Fresno that more than
once in these first two weeks of
November it has led to tears of
happiness.
A remarkable thing has happened in
our community. As victims of the
Holocaust, Jews have stepped back
from their suffering to alleviate the
sufferings of another group. Let us all •< '
try to emulate this example and look
beyond our own problems to see how
we can help bring justice to others.
Letters to the Editor
Opinion article on Turks in Bulgaria questioned
Dear Prof. Der Mugrdechian,
I have enjoyed reading Hye
Sharzhoom for the past ten years. I
received my first copy of the
newspaper during my tenure as
President of the Armenian Club of
Columbia University. On many
occasions, I have expressed my
admiration for the newspaper to my
friend. Dr. Dickran Kouymjian, who
deserves so much credit for inspiring
the student body at California State
University, Fresno. Indeed as a former
judge for the Columbia Scholastic
Press Association, I applauded Hve
Shaj?hoom not so much for its
valuable contribution to Armenian
culture, but in large measure for its
excellent journalistic content.
I recendy read with great distress the
opinion article by one of the
newspaper's staff writers, Ms. Seda
Melkonian, "Three Cheers given to
Bulgaria," September, 1989. While I
appreciate the fact that you are not
responsible for the views expressed on
the opinion page, I feel compelled to
write you in your capacity as advisor
to the newspaper to express ny serious
reservations over the decision to air
<£uij SuipdnLif
Hye Sharzhoom
Editor:
Paultue Kasparian
Staff Writers:
Scott Asmar
Janice Caprelian
Deborah Garabedian
Jpnelle Goto
Sfieri Hokokian
Peggy Momjian
Sato Ohannessian
Jacqueline Sislian
Advisor:
Barlow Der Mugrdechian
Armenian Page Editor:
Serop Torosstan
Armenian Page Writer:
Matthew Jendian
Layout:
Sheri Hokokian
Paultue Kasparian
Photographer:
Scott Asmar
Jon P. Maroot
Advertising Manager:
Sheri Hokokian
Circulation Manager:
Matthew Jendian
Hye Sharzhoom is a supplement of the Daily Collegian and the newspaper of the
CSUF Armenian Students Organization and the Armenian Studies Program and is
fimdedby the Associated Students.
Articles may be reprinted provided that Hye Sharzhoom is acknowledged.
Hye Sharzhoom welcomes prose, poetry, articles, manuscripts, and other
material from its readers. For further inforniation concerning the newspaper or
* dfcArmcmanStudiesProgram.calltheASPoffi * -
such venom and hatred toward the
Turkish minority in Bulgaria. I
literally had to read Ms. Melkonian's
article several times to make sure that
it wasn't satire or black comedy.
The forced deportation and
persecution of the Turkish minority in
Bulgaria is hardly something over
which Armenians should rejoice; it is a
major human rights issue which brings
into focus the systematic annihilation
of. the Armenian minority of the
Ottoman Empire during and after World
War 1. Ms. Melkonian's article was
immature, irresponsible and had no
literary value whatsoever. I have
discreetly shown the article to several
of my close Armenian friends who
were uniformly embarrassed and
shocked over the newspaper's poor
exercise of discretion in choosing to
publish such material.
I do not want you to misconstrue my
letter as a challenge to the newspaper's
right to publish. As an attorney, I am
sensitive to restrictions placed on
First Amendment freedoms of
expression. However, a newspaper's
right tcf publish is a liberty which
brings with it an equally important
responsibility to publish material
which has some semblance of
sophistication, integrity and literary
value. For instance, I would imagine
that Hve Sharzhoom would not publish
an_ editorial from a right-wing or
fascist organization denouncing the
Jewish Holocaust as a gigantic hoax.
Moreover, I would like to think the
Hve Sharzhoom would refuse to
publish racist or sexist material.
Ms. Melkonian's article is not just
anti-Turkish; it is anti-ethnic. Hve
Sharzhoom committed a great
disservice to its reputation by
trivializing human rights abuses
which have been denounced by, among
other organizations, US Helsinki
Watch and Amnesty International. Ms.
Melkonian not only- disgraces the
newspaper for which she writes, bui
attacks the integrity of the Armenian
people who are interested in justice
and the preservation of truth, and noi
the glorification of another group's
repression and demise. *
The newspaper I have read over the
years was dedicated to denouncing
crimes against humanity. It is my
sincere hope that this reputation will
reemerge ifr future editions of the Hye
Sharzhoom.
Very truly yours,
Mark Momjian
Philadelphia, PA
To the Editor:
With reference to the staff member
article by Seda Melkonian in the
September 1989 issue of Hye
Sharzhoom, I do not believe it is
appropriate for rejoicing at the
oppression and persecution of any
nationality-not even our histoe |