Armenian Genocide Essay

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    Cloistered Genocide When we hear the word genocide most everyone thinks of famous genocides such as the Holocaust. What if there was a genocide that occurred that was hidden by a government and never recognized like famous genocides, but equally horrendous? There was such an event that took place, The Armenian Genocide. The Armenian Genocide was one of the worst genocides in world history, and also one of the most downplayed events in world history. The first reason is that The Armenian Genocide is not

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    According to Google, a genocide is the deliberate killing of a large group of people, especially those of a particular ethnic group or nation. The Holocaust and Armenian Genocide are both considered genocides. Both of these genocides compare in many ways. They both had a belief that a race was superior to another race and they were both starved. They are also different in many ways. They were killed in different ways, and the roles of women were different. The Armenian Genocide was planned ahead of

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    The Armenian Genocide was a catastrophic event that was caused by the intolerance of Armenians by the Turkish government. From 1514 to 1918 the majority of Armenians lived in the Ottoman Empire under a treaty which allowed the to continue practicing their religion even though the Ottoman Empire was mostly muslim. For many years the Armenians flourished in the Ottoman Empire, but due to their tendency of being better educated and wealthier than the Turks, speculation grew that the Armenians would

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    Genocide. The killing of hundreds of people. The extermination of a nation. Such a thing may sound too horrible to be true, but it happens right under our very noses. And what is even worse, is when such tragic events are not recognized as what they are, or simply forgotten. Such is the case of the Armenian Genocide, also referred to as the Forgotten Genocide, the Hidden Holocaust, the Secret Genocide, or the Unremembered Genocide (Balakian xvii). The Jewish Holocaust is well known

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    The Armenian genocide left the community with many devastating tragedies, such as death and destructions of their home and culture. The Armenian’s process survival and rebuilding from such atrocities can be found in their memoirs, monuments, and museums. The role of these three aspects is important for giving those who have been affected a voice, for other cultures to pay tribute to them, and to educate people about the truth of what occurred. These three aspects, combined, also help fight against

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    earliest scholars of academic study on genocide and is recognized as one of the key thinkers on Holocaust and Genocide. His book The History of The Armenian Genocide: Ethnic Conflict From The Balkans to Anatolia to The Caucasus take a look at the perpetrators actions toward the Armenians through the examination of the relationship between the Ottomans and the Armenians and by exploring the Turks use as war as a cover and their violent actions for dealing with the Armenian Question. Dadrian's book differs

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    The Armenian Genocide Since a hundred years ago, the discussion over the barbarous actions of the Ottoman Empire murdering and deporting of its Armenian community has come down to one question. Was the viscous acts of the Ottoman Empire considered Genocide or not? This is the real global issue that has been debated for so long throughout the world. While the vast American-Armenian community truly believes the word Genocide should be openly used to describe the massacre that took place a hundred

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    Millions of lives are taken as a result of Genocide. Genocide happens in result of many differential causes, two of which being the most important; dehumanization and extermination, Dehumanization helps to portray the enemy as evil and not human. Meanwhile extermination lets them kill masse of people at once. Together, they are very powerful in genocide. They make it easier to kill the enemy. Genocide occurs due too many ,up leading factors; One of which, being the most important, is Dehumanization

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    didn’t do. In Turkey, however, regarding the Armenian Genocide, this was not the case. In 1915, there were 2 million Armenians living in the Ottoman Empire. Using World War I as a cover, the Turkish government systematically killed 1.5 million of them (“The Armenian Genocide”). Although systematically killing an entire population is the definition of a genocide, turkey will still not own up to the the word, genocide. Their excuse was that the Armenians were considered an enemy of turkey in the war

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    into why genocides cannot be avoided at this time. I do think that man’s inherit sin makes us fall to hate crimes. Genocide is not a term to be used loosely, and few murders can count as genocides. One of the most frustrating things is that sometimes, after a group of people commit these horrid slaughters of millions upon millions of people, they have the nerve to outright ignore the people affected by it and will say the genocide never happened. This has happened very famously to the Armenian Genocide

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