By Stephen Ghazikhanian and Matthew King
This Saturday, a prominent Armenian Genocide denier will deliver a lecture on campus. This event stands at odds with Dukeâs leadership on human rights issues, especially the legacy of Raphael Lemkin, a Jewish lawyer who fled his native Poland in 1939, started teaching international law at Duke in 1941, and forever changed his field by coining the term âgenocide.âWhat do you think?
The young Lemkin closely followed the events of World War I. In the spring of 1915, grisly accounts started to emerge out of eastern Turkey. These horrific events began on April 24, 1915 when, as Samantha Power recounts in her Pulitzer Prize-winning book “A Problem from Hell”, the Ottoman Minister of the Interior ordered the arrest and execution of 250 Armenian intellectuals.What do you think?
In the following months, the New York Times detailed the mass atrocities against the minority Armenians, charging that the Ottoman Empire was âacting deliberatelyâ to implement a âpolicy of extermination.â Properties were confiscated. Men were either immediately executed or used as laborers until their death. Women, children, and the elderly were forced on deportation marches through the Syrian desert to the concentration camps of Deir ez-Zor. Along these routes, as Donald Bloxham describes in his book “The Great Game of Genocide”, the Armenians were âsubject to massive and repeated depredationsârape, kidnap, mutilation, outright killing, and death from exposure, starvation, and thirstâat the hands of Ottoman Gendarmes.â Up to 1.5 million Armenians, many of them women and children, perished.What do you think?
From this point on, Lemkin sought to understand, research and combat this âcrime without a name.â In 1944, with the publication of Lemkinâs “Axis Rule in Occupied Europe”, he coined a name that captured the horror of the crimeâgenocide. Race murder. Genocide, in Lemkinâs view, referred not only to Hitlerâs Final Solution, but also to the fate of the Armenians that had first inspired Lemkinâs research. Twenty-two countries, 43 U.S. states, including North Carolina, a vast majority of genocide scholars and countless human rights organizations have since agreed with Lemkin, and recognized the heinous crimes against the Armenians as genocide. What do you think?
Today, Lemkin must be turning in his grave.What do you think?
The same university that once welcomed Lemkin will soon play host to Tennessee Tech Professor Michael Gunter, whose works dismiss the âalleged genocideâ of the Armenians. Professor Gunter will present a lecture, âTurkish-Armenian Conflict: A Historical Perspective,â on Saturday, January 24th.What do you think?
Gunterâs timing could not be more inauspicious. We will commemorate the 100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide on April 24th, three months to the day of Gunterâs visit.What do you think?
Specious arguments abound in Gunterâs works. For example, he argues that because some Armenians living in western Turkey were spared deportation, what happened to the Armenians in the east could not have possibly been genocide. âIs it possible,â Gunter writes, âto imagine Hitler sparing any Jews in Berlin, Munich, or Cologne from his genocidal rampage…?â Here Gunter makes the fallacy of assuming that every genocide must match the logistical caliber of Hitlerâs Final Solution. Gunter also elects to ignore the UN Genocide Conventionâs official definition of genocide as an act with the âintent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial, or religious group.â What do you think?
Denial marks the ultimate stage of genocide, a victory lap for genocideâs perpetrators. Denial is not limited to erasing victimsâ names from the history booksâit also means sweeping their footprints from the sands of Deir ez-Zor, denying their suffering a place in our collective memory.What do you think?
Inviting a prominent genocide denier to our campus goes against Dukeâs stated âcommitment to learning, freedom and truth.â It gives Professor Gunterâs positions legitimacy they do not deserve, spreads misinformation about one of the greatest atrocities of the 20th century and tarnishes Dukeâs proud legacy of human rights scholarship and activism.What do you think?
Elie Wiesel once said of his experience in the Holocaust, âIn the place that I come from, society was composed of three simple categories: the killers, the victims, and the bystanders.â By hosting Gunter and legitimizing his denialist viewsâwarped interpretations of history that re-frame a one-sided extermination campaign as the ambiguous âTurkish-Armenian ConflictââDuke is acting as a bystander to genocide.What do you think?
Therefore, we ask Duke to rescind Gunterâs invitation. Furthermore, we call on the university to issue a statement formally recognizing the Armenian Genocide. Duke must honor Lemkinâs legacy.What do you think?
Otherwise, Dukeâs indifference will make it an accomplice in one of the 20th centuryâs greatest crimes. What do you think?
Stephen Ghazikhanian is a Trinity junior. Mathew King is a Trinity freshman.
Genocide Denial is Alive and Well
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