w v w w ,w i i ! The Michi-an Daily Wednesday, April 9, 2008 Statement Two allegiances, one truth BsHaiostian n ninth grade, my world stud- ies teacher was delivering a requisite "We are the melt- ing pot of the world" lecture when he said something that jarred me away from my old-school Nokia cell phone game. "I mean, if there was a war, most immigrants in this country would fight for America's army," he said, or something along those lines. Not so fast, I thought. It can't be that clear-cut. As a third-generation Armenian, and ever since I spent my first sum- mer transitioning abruptly from country club tennis matches to sing- ingthe Armenian anthem at culture camp, I've been playing some sort of identity hopscotch game, never quite knowing on exactly which square to land. It's no surprise that there's a blurring of national loyalties for someone who grew up, as I did, with steadfast ties to an ancestral home- land, but who also waves the Ameri- can flag, as I do, as high as the rest on the Fourth of July. But for many Armenians, there's an especially strong devotion to our ethnicity because of an unrec- ognized, unaddressed and often unknown genocide that's been stinging our people for more than 92 yeafs. While the passing of almost a cen- tury might seem to dim the catastro- phe for most, it only sharpens it for Armenians of my generation. The survivors and-witnesses to the sys- tematic killings are all but gone, and most countries still won't go on the record to call it a genocide. Many young Armenians feel it now falls to them to make sure the atrocities aren't blotted out of history forever. By now, I hope you've heard. Between the Otto mated 1. were eit died of while on tration c that moss It con Seei th ti ri dents wo in textbt consens and fir atroci claim "ethn WarI have Arme It's relate dottin count dred: savin WI cially the years of 1915 and 1918, in Darfur as genocide, the United man Turks killed an esti- States has yet to condemn the Arme- 5 million Armenians. Many nian killings as such. her brutally murdered or In October, the U.S. got sort of starvation or exhaustion close when the House of Represen- forced marches to concen- tatives nearly brought to a vote a amps in the Syrian Desert resolution condemning the Otto- t never reached. man Turks' actions against Arme- icerns me that most stu- nians as genocide. But for me, the resolution repre- sented both a step toward the ful- .t e fillment of a longtime hope and a ng both sides, personal identity crisis. Immediately after the U.S. House en realizing Committee on Foreign Affairs -ere's still a passed the resolution, there was backlash from President Bush, ght answer prominent politicians and others who insisted that, while what hap- pened was regrettable, relations with Turkey were too crucial to be nt read about the genocide harmed. And relations with Turkey ooks. Despite the scholarly were what mattered. us, overwhelming evidence This isn't the right time, they rst-hand , accounts of the insisted. Not when Turkey is an ally ties, Turkey's government in an ongoing war, they decreed. s the mass killings were At the risk of making the Arme- ic conflicts" due to World nian community's collective jaw . Only 22 countries to date drop, I found myself a bit conflicted officially recognized the while sifting through the many nian genocide. news articles and columns on the impossible for me not to issue..I'd been grappling with the the "Save Darfur" e-mails genocide since I was five years old, ig my inbox to my own eversincemySundayschoolteacher ry, which, almost a hun- explained it as I crafted a cross out years later, still needs some of dry macaroni noodles. I'd written g of its own. the letters to my congressmen. I'd hile President Bush has offi- held my candle during the vigils on acknowledged the killings the Diag. But I'm an American, too, I thought. As government official after government official warned of violence and a ricochet of conse- quences felt round the world, I won- dered whether it would be best if we waited just a few more years. Maybe this isn't the right time. What if the resolution was adopted and the next day, Turkish syndicates launched an attack on the U.S.? I felt un-Arme- nian and un-American at the same tim', and suddenly I wasn't even on the 1,opscotch board at all. But soon I understood that I was ir such a state of flux because I wasi 't looking at the situation properly. I realized that it does more harm than good for the U.S. to con- tinue denying that the massacres were genocide and to condoning the millions of dollars the Turkish gov- ernment spends trying to convince people it never happened. Sitting center stage in the global arena, the U.S. can send a message to the world that there are actual consequences for committing genocide. It doesn't matter that ours was in the past. Genocide is still happening today. I also realized that it's OK to have twohomesandsportbothanAmeri- can flag and an Armenian key chain. There's no need to pick between countries, and if there was, I'd fight for whichever needed me most. -Lisa Haidostian is an associate news editor for The Michigan Daily for more information call 7341615-6449 The University of Michigan College of Literature, Science, and the Arts presents a public lecture and reception Angus Campbell Collegiate Professor of Sociology and Survey Research WRITE FOR THE STATEMENT E-mail theStatement@umich.edu SELF STO AGE FOR THE SUMMER!! 5 Ann Arbor locations Pay for 3 months, get the . 4th month FRiEoe (must show ynur sordeel id atltmenlfsgning lease in orderets recease disont)ll MARTIN From PAGE 7B like Iowa and Rutgers. For a few weeks, it was at best a circus. Many alumni and people on campus still fault Martin for not getting Miles, and some attribute the problem to Martin's relative inexperience with athletics. Martin may be remembered for the way he balanced the department's finances. He may be remembered for renovating the Big House, fixing Crisler Arena (if he does) and building the Stephen M. Ross Academic Center. He may also be remem- bered for some unforeseen scan- dal, the kind that tend to pop up every so often in the Michigan Athletic Department. But the irony is that the businessman, for better or worse, will likely be widely judged by the success or failure of two coaches. Wednesday, April 9, 2008 Rackham Amphitheater 4:10pm LSA