Henryk M. Broder 13.10.2007 17:24 +Feedback
Helen Epstein: Bush and the Armenian Genocide
A couple of years ago I gave a lecture at a French university on the
intergenerational transmission of historical trauma. After it, a group
of students from what seemed a variety of countries—gathered to ask
me questions. Was it important to me, they wanted to know, that the
government of Germany acknowledged the Nazi genocide of Jews?
Yes, I said. It was very important. I wondered which of the twentieth
century genocides –Armenian? Rwandan? Cambodian?—the families of
the students before me had survived and, not for the first time, was
astonished at the depth with which historic trauma marks its survivors
generations later.
It may be politically expedient to deny the Armenian genocide but
it’s morally wrong. As a writer, I support novelist Orhan Pamuk and
other courageous Turkish artists and writers who have paid dearly for
telling...
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