Alik Ourfalian
Dear Armenian-American Millennials,
I’m sick and tired of Armenian-Americans, especially our generation
of millennials, thinking our biggest concern is genocide recognition
when it comes to supporting political candidates.
Over the past few days, I’ve seen a lot of “s/he isn’t going to
recognize the genocide”-type comments on social media, as well as people
criticizing others for voting with Armenian-American issues in mind
because “neither candidate will recognize the genocide anyway.” The U.S.
stance on Armenian-American issues extends far beyond genocide
recognition. This is not me making a case for any specific candidate.
All I’m asking is that you recognize that we have other concerns and
issues and to think about how those concerns are affecting our
community.
It’s not difficult to see why a U.S. foreign policy favoring Turkey
and Azerbaijan has the potential to have severe consequences for us as
Armenian-Americans. Think for a second about the worst-case scenario:
Azerbaijan declaring full-fledged war against Artsakh. Now think about
what the U.S. would do. Think about the effects of U.S. foreign policy
then, not only on our Armenian-American community, but on our brothers
and sisters in Artsakh and Armenia. These are the things we should
concern ourselves with and worry about. These are the concerns we should
make known to our representatives in government.
Our community no longer cares about a U.S. president’s use of the
word genocide. Aside from pissing off Turkey for a few days, that’s not
going to do much. Reagan used the word genocide in 1981, yet we’re still
in the same predicament today. When it comes to the Armenian Genocide,
our demands from Turkey and the international community are so much
bigger than that. We want reparations. We want our historic homeland
back. Until the United States, as in the U.S. Congress, recognizes the
genocide and works with the international community to demand
recognition and reparations from Turkey, a U.S. president’s words don’t
mean much.
So I beg you, in the future, read up on the issues we face.
Understand our community’s stance on these issues. Think about a
candidate’s policy and its potential effect. Don’t use genocide
recognition as the only criteria in evaluating Armenian-American issues.
Sincerely,
Alik Ourfalian, An Armenian-American Millennial
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