Recognition of the Armenian genocide is a paramount moral and educational act. While Israelis commemorated the second Holocaust of the 20th century this
week, I was in the Gulbenkian library in Jerusalem, holding the printed and
handwritten records of the victims of the century's first Holocaust. It was
a strange sensation. The Armenians were not participating in Israel's official ceremonies to
remember the six million Jewish dead, murdered by the Germans between 1939
and 1945, perhaps because Israel officially refuses to acknowledge that
Armenia's million and a half dead of 1915-1923 were victims of a Turkish
Holocaust. Israeli-Turkish diplomatic and military relations are more
important than genocide. Or were.