Sunday, February 24, 2008

Turks, Armenia, Hitler, Poland

"Who now speaks of the Amenians?"

Adoph Hitler



An Armenian Mother and Child

At the end of this post I include pictures of impoverished,
starved, and dead Amenians, severed heads, bloated corpses.
Th e reason I have included these is that seeing is beleiving,
and there are people who will not beleive unless they see.

There were bluntly descriptive accounts of Torture in Guatemala in Reader's Digest. My mother figured that the editors of Readers Digest knew what should be included there.
Then there was the barrage of questions from me. Yhe agony and the ecstacy troubled me. Why was it neccessary for Michelangelo to cut up dead people in order to paint the Sistine Chapel, and did it make it right for the Priest in charge of the Morgue to leave the key where he could find it.

The Nueremberg Commission felt strongly that it was neccessary
for all but the youngest children to see what our soldiers saw
when they entered the camps and found executed or collapsed
bodies on the road. Maybe anyone old enough and with interest
enough to read this far ought to know and remember what happened to the Armenians. There was an Armenian Girl in our ward and I thought Armenia was a City in Utah because of the clear, Mountain irrigation water flowing through the houses.
Ours was full of pipegrass and horsetail and cooled the streets, watered the gardens.

I think we should be vigilant in all such discisions that our
prime motive should be to prevent such attrocities from occuring again. So here's the Article--


. . . In 1915, the Turkish government planned to eliminate the minority ethnic Armenians from the lands of the Ottoman Empire. An ancient people, with their own language and culture, the Armenians for the most part had tried to live peacefully with their Turkish rulers. But in the mass nationalism of World War I, the Turks planned and executed one of the most brutal genocides in history to achieve "Turkey for the Turks."

The leaders of the Armenian communities were executed suddenly and without cause. The remainder of the population was deported to Syria and Macedonia. They were force marched under horrible conditions with no provision for food and water. The plan was that few Armenians would reach their destination. Few did. Most of those who did not die of starvation, died of disease.

After their defeat in World War I, the new Ottoman government tried the leaders of the genocide and sentenced them to death in absentia. However within a few months the proceedings were suspended and the matter dropped. The survivors were not allowed to return to the Armenian plateau, and few Armenians live today in their traditional homeland. It was a "successful" genocide. Although many tried to help the Armenians, the international community failed to act to hold those responsible accountable.

In 1931 Hitler discussed with Richard Breiting the need for massive resettlements (deportations). He said "We intend to introduce a resettlement policy. Think of the biblical deportations and the massacres of the Middle Ages...and remember the extermination of the Armenians. One eventually reaches the conclusion that the masses of man are mere biological plasticine."

Again in 1939 Adolf Hitler, on his way toward the "final solution" for the Jewish people, made this statement of his plans in Poland:

I have placed my death-head formations in readiness - for the present only in the East - with orders to them to send to death mercilessly and without compassion , men, women, and children of Polish derivation and language. Only thus shall we gain the living space (lebensraum) which we need.Who, after all, speaks today of the annihilation of the Armenians? (italics added)

History does tend to repeat itself when we don't learn it's lessons, and sometimes someone like Hitler comes along who counts on us being "mere biological plasticine.












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