Armenian Revolutionary Federation

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    where the dangers lie in relying exclusively on memories to remember genocide. In both the Armenian genocide and the Holocaust, the use of memory can provide us with immense information and details on the events that happened to individuals. As opinions, experiences, and life can change, memory can change too; especially when the idea of collective memory is added in the mix. By analyzing both the Armenian genocide and the Holocaust we can evaluate how memory is used in our remembrance of the…

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    Bloxham, Donald. "Rethinking the Armenian Genocide." History Today, vol. 55, no. 6, June 2005, pp. 28-30. EBSCO MAS Ultra- School Edition, search.ebscohost.com.ursulinedallas.idm.oclc.org/login.aspx?direct=true&db=ulh&AN=17273544&site=ehost-live. This source explains what happened during and right before the Armenian genocide in Turkey. This article helps the reader discern and sort out differing viewpoints by giving facts about the genocide and the related complicated issues which surround this…

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    Armenian Genocide Denial

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    The Armenian Genocide “The fallout caused by denial was inherited by later generations of Armenians, linking them to the fateful days of 1915, and compelling them to set the record straight.” This was written by author Michael Bobelian, who wrote about not only the events of the Armenian genocide, but the continual denial of it that continues even today. Today, despite pressure from around the world, the Turkish Government still continues to deny the events that occurred against the Armenian…

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    can all agree on: the Holocaust definitely wasn 't the first genocide. Similar techniques and prejudices can be found in history before the Holocaust. These can be found most notably in the Armenian Genocide. The intentions, methods, and denial of both Genocides are very similar. The Holocaust and the Armenian Genocide are both considered genocides for a number of reasons. The two share a similar aspect when it comes to the intentions of extermination. The way the genocides began both started…

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    The Armenian Holocaust

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    The Armenian Holocaust was a time of pure and utter despair, it was a brutal genocide that killed approximately 1.5 million people. It took place in the Ottoman Empire; the Turkish Armenians wanted to make the empire thoroughly Turkish and they especially wanted to get the Christian Armenians out of the empire. As a result, there were massacres and deportations that ended in many deaths of horrific exterminations. The exterminations consisted of torturing, enslavement, and deportations with no…

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    What happened during the Armenian genocide still today affects those who survived that horrific experience and even the family members of those victims who didn’t make it through and of those who did survive the genocide. The reason for the genocide was that the Ottomans believed that the Armenians were a problem in Turkey ands they needed to get rid of them in order to save Turkey and also because they were non-Muslim and believed them to be second-level and this is what led to the mass murder…

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    Film review by Artem Palamarchuk PD120514 The Armenian Genocide is documentary film about cruel historic event that happened in 1915 where Turkish government committed that crime. The length of the film is one hour in which as in every documentary films the professors, writers, and simply people were sharing their knowledge about that event. In the introduction part of the film the look was taken on who was the Armenians and their ancient history as well as was explained their culture and…

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    Genocide Survivors

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    regards to the current state of research there has be no incentive to obtain personal information on Armenian Genocide survivors as the Turkish government has denied the atrocities in addition to the fact that many survivors have passed away long before Holocaust survivors. As such, the existing state of literature consists more information on trauma and its effects on Holocaust survivors compared to Armenian Genocide survivors. The research below consists of literature from psychologists and…

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    American Diplomat’s Report on the Armenian Genocide, 1915-1917” (Aristide D. Caratzas Publisher). It is considered the first unearthed eyewitness account from a neutral party, published by a diplomat about killing hundreds of thousands of Armenians who lived in the Ottoman Turkish Empire. The reports in the book were written by Leslie Davis, who was a lawyer and U.S. consul in Harput in eastern Turkey from 1914 to 1917. Susan Blair, a researcher compiling proof of the Armenian genocide found the…

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    To Kill A Mockingbird Essay Ever since people of different nationalities first came into contact with each other, there have been conflicts. Whether it be the Holocaust, Armenian genocide, white supremacy in the 18th century, ethnic cleansing in Africa, Manifest destiny, or the Balkan situation, they all have one thing in common: race. People have inexplicably not been able to see past their physical differences. They associate others’ race with their attributes, traits, and characteristics.…

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