The Armenian Genocide Centennial Committee of Australia had invited
this writer to speak at commemorative events in Sydney and Melbourne,
and to deliver a formal address at the New South Wales Parliament during
the week of April 24.
On April 27, the Australian Turkish Advocacy Alliance sent a
three-page letter to all parliament members urging them to boycott my
presentation. A parliament member forwarded a copy of the letter to the
Armenian National Committee (ANC) of Australia in advance of my talk
on April 29. The cleverly worded letter, most likely written by the
Turkish Embassy’s professional lobbyists, made several false claims and
defamatory accusations.
The Turkish denialist group sought to import Ankara’s human rights
restrictions to a democratic country like Australia by trying to muzzle
not only this speaker’s right to free speech, but also the parliament’s
right to invite whomever it chose. Calling me a “propagandist” who
“benefits from conflict and hatred,” the Turkish letter “strongly”
advised parliament members not to attend my talk.
Gunes Gungor, the executive director of the Australian Turkish
Alliance, falsely reported that I am “related” to Hampig Sassounian,
simply because I shared his last name. Hampig was convicted of
assassinating the consul general of Turkey in Los Angeles in 1982. While
the life of any human being is precious, Gungor sheds crocodile tears
over the death of a single Turkish diplomat, ignoring the wholesale
killings of 1.5 million innocent Armenians! How would Gunes Gungor like
it if I were to accuse him of being related to several criminals I found
on the internet, just because they shared the same last name?
Gungor in his letter also badmouthed the distinguished jurist Raphael
Lemkin who coined the term “genocide” based on his detailed studies of
the extermination of Armenians by the Ottoman-Turkish government. In a
desperate search for any reason to tarnish Lemkin’s impeccable
reputation, Gungor claimed that “towards the end of the meetings because
of his aggressive comments he [Lemkin] was asked to leave the room.”
Gungor did not even know how to spell Lemkin’s first name.
The Turkish propagandist finally attempted to draw a distinction
between the Armenian Genocide and the Jewish Holocaust. After pretending
to be an expert on the Armenian Genocide, Gungor confessed his
ignorance by stating that “much about the late Ottoman Empire has yet to
be learned and many conclusions have yet to be drawn.”
Despite Gungor’s attempts to undermine my address, parliament members
and guests, including scholars, elected officials, and Jewish community
leaders, gave me a standing ovation. Surprisingly, Gungor showed up at
the parliament to hear me speak, not trusting his own ability to have
the event canceled. While members of the audience were given ample time
to ask any question they wished, Gungor and his two Turkish colleagues
did not ask a single question. More surprisingly, as the three Turks
were leaving the parliament hall, one of Gungor’s colleagues was
overheard saying, “On nights like these, I wonder what we are doing
here!”
My other talks took place with packed audiences without disruption.
According to the ANC of Australia, more than 1,100 people attended my
first talk on April 24 in Sydney. I gave a second talk the next night in
the same city. I then spoke at a similar event on April 27 in Melbourne
in the presence of around 500 guests.
The only sour note during my journey was Prime Minister Tony Abbott’s
message to the Sydney commemoration. Taking a page from President
Obama’s playbook, Abbott used every other word (horror, tragedy,
terrible events, lost lives) except for genocide in his brief message.
Vache Kahramanian, the executive director of the ANC of Australia, wrote
to the prime minister, telling him that his message would not be read
to the audience because it is “of great insult to the
Armenian-Australian community with its blatant omission of the Genocide
word.” Kahramanian reminded the prime minister of his previous year’s
message while he was the opposition leader, in which he had properly
characterized the Armenian Genocide. In contrast to the prime minister,
Australia’s treasurer, Joe Hockey, the country’s most senior government
minister, issued a formal statement clearly acknowledging the Armenian
Genocide.
I left Australia greatly impressed with the political activism of the
Armenian community of 50,000, which runs circles around the much larger
Turkish community of over 200,000.
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