Guest Column Dove Award Recognizing Genocide la n April 24,1915, the Turkish Ottoman Interior Ministry issued an order for the arrest of Armenian political and com- munity leaders in Turkey. On that day, approximately 1,800 intellectuals and community leaders, mostly in Istanbul, were arrested and eventually put to death. It is the start of the Armenian Genocide. The long, wretched cara- vans from the provinces of Sebastia, Moush, Erzerum, Kharpert and Der Zor were horrific journeys of disease, starvation or attacks that led to con- centration camps or the Syrian desert, and ended in the destruction of 1.5 million people. By 1919, for every Armenian who survived, two did not. The "aban- doned" assets and prop- erties were seized by the state or by Turks, under new laws of appropriation and formed part of the wealth on which the modern Turkish state is founded. My grandfather Hagop Oshagan, one of the leading writers of Armenian literature, would tell of a knock on his door on the night of April 23 by an unknown young man who warned him not to stay there that night. On the run for the next two years, he finally made his way to Bulgaria and was able to survive. Almost all Armenians liv- ing in the diaspora today have a story of relatives who were able to escape. The individual stories of survival weave together the narrative of the nightmare for all the voices that were silenced. In the past 100 years, scholars in genocide and Holocaust studies have amassed an impressive record of research into the Armenian Genocide, from archival documents to forensic evidence, to oral histories. Even as it was occurring, German, French, British and Russian diplo- mats referred to it as a crime against humanity, often imploring their gov- ernments to intercede. After World War I, U.S. President Woodrow Wilson was personally involved in drafting official compensa- tion to Armenians, while the British set up a tribunal to punish the Turkish perpetrators. That it all came to naught is a testament to political expediency. Turkey's geopolitical posi- tion has served it well. The Armenian Genocide was planned in detail and executed with precision, and the evidence of geno- cide is indisputable. Truth and politics, however, do not always go together. Over the past few decades, Turkey has engaged in a state-funded and organized official campaign of denial of the genocide. And many of its political allies, including the U.S., have gone along under constant threats of Turkish reprisal. The euphemisms of "con- flict," "controversy" and "massacres" have long become the language of our State Department. Senators John Kerry, Joe Biden and Barack Obama all acknowl- edged the genocide, but in brazen displays of moral fail- ing, the secretary of state, vice president and president avoid it. The amnesia extends into Turkey itself, where denial is state rhetoric, part of official school curricula, and where Section 301 of the criminal code tries to jail any Turk publicly affirming the genocide (as Nobel Prize winning Turkish novelist Orhan Pamuk found out in 2005). This month, Armenians worldwide commemorate the 100th anniversary of the genocide. It is both a solemn moment of remembrance as well as a political moment of activism. It should not be this way. It is difficult enough to remember one's lost family, to see old photos of smiling faces who were never to grow up, to hear the heartbreaking stories of loss and the silent moments of quiet longing. It is all the more difficult when we also have to struggle for truth and justice. Along with the memorials will be demonstrations, marches and protests in front of Turkish embassies, consulates and in Turkey itself as well as in Times Square in New York City and cit- ies across the world. There will be resolutions and declarations in parliaments and governments worldwide, and in the European Union, to recognize the geno- cide. The genocide recognition bill in Congress is Resolution 154. We should all support it. This is also the time when Jews commemorate the Holocaust. Our two peoples are joined by our national experi- ences of tragedy, barely 20 years apart. We all know of Susan Brown Lewis to be feted May 5. Hitler's Obersalzberg speech to the Wehrmacht commanders on Aug. 22, 1939. Arguing for living space (leb- ensraum), Hitler ends his speech by asking rhetorically, "Who, after all, speaks today of the annihilation of the Armenians?" And it was the Jewish jurist Raphael Lemkin who coined the word "geno- cide" in 1944, in reference to the Armenian and Jewish mass killings, for which there was no word. But in truth, we are joined by a great many people, for what happened starting in 1915 and 1933 were crimes against all of humanity. And we have all learned something since. We have learned that there is no peace without justice, that there can be no lasting peace anywhere where there is injus- tice, where there is no accountability and no responsibility. This is impunity. And this has become the basis of an entire system of transnational justice, whereby all the nations and peoples of the world share a responsibility to each other to prevent genocides and to punish perpetrators of gross viola- tions of human rights. Turkey's impunity for the crime of genocide will eventually come to an end. Turkey needs to accept its history, recognize the genocide, apologize for it and come to a dis- cussion of reparations. This is what Armenians demand. We should all demand it. ❑ Hayg Oshagan is president of New Michigan Media and director of Media Arts & Studies at Wayne State University, Detroit. Dry Bone UN SAYS ISRAEL, NOT NORTH KREA, OR VIOLA T OR IRAN, WORST SYRIA OF HUMAN RIGHTS IN THE WORLD! e001 111 c Atfoi Ted had no doybt that watching the news was driving him crazy. www.drybones.com he Jewish Hospice and Chaplaincy Network will pres- ent the Grand Circle of Women's 2015 Dove Award to community activist and JHCN board member Susan Brown Lewis on Tuesday, May 5, at the Berman Center for the Performing Arts in West Bloomfield. The tribute will take place at 7:30 p.m., followed by a special screening of The Embrace of Dying, How we deal with the end of life. This is the final film in an explorative series on aging and dying created by 10-time Michigan Emmy Award Susan Brown recipient Executive Lewis Producer Keith Famie. Lewis is a commu- nity philanthropist whose commitment to elderly Jews was instilled in her by her parents, the late Dorothy and Peter Brown. When her parents founded the Dorothy and Peter Brown Jewish Community Adult Day Care Program, Susan and her husband, Bart, also par- ticipated. The Lewises continue to endow the Brown Adult Day Care Program, and Susan sits on its board. Dorothy, Susan and Bart founded and dedicated the Dorothy and Peter Brown Memory Care Pavilion in memory of Peter Brown at the Fleischman Residence, a home for Jewish elderly with demen- tia or memory impairments. A lifelong Detroiter, Susan Lewis is also active in Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit, AIPAC and ADL in Florida. The Grand Circle of Women's purpose is to develop and sponsor educational programming on Jewish hospice issues for women by women. Andi Wolfe is the group's founder and first recipient of the GCOW Dove Award. Dana Burnstein is the current GCOW chair. The evening will also celebrate the many women professionals and volun- teers who work with the JHCN team to serve the community's terminally ill. Gail Danto is the event chairperson. Tribute co-chairs include Gloria Colton, Ellen Kirsch, Lainie Lipschutz, Elizabeth Giller, Rose Rita Goldman, Barbara Nemer, Marilynn Weiss, Julie Winkelman and Nancy Zide. A patron-only pre-screening dinner is scheduled. Patron tickets range from $180-$3,600. A dessert afterglow is also planned. Tickets begin at $36 for the film screening, program and afterglow. For patron or film screening tickets, call (248) 592-2687. ❑ JN April 23 • 2015 47