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Obama may be avoiding this term so he doesn't offend Turkey, which sits on the same land as the former Ottoman Empire, which perpetuated the genocide against the Armenians.
"[Obama] has made unambiguous statements as a senator and in his presidential campaign to fully recognize the genocide .... But he has avoided using the actual word for obvious reasons: pressure from Turkey, whom the U.S. considers an important ally," Rouben Adalian, director of the Armenian National Institute, told Business Insider.
Considered one of the first mass-killings in the 20th century, the Armenian genocide took the lives of an estimated one and a half million Armenians living in present-day Turkey. It occurred in two phases: enslaving and massacring able-bodied males; and deporting women, children, and the elderly to the Syrian Desert to die of thirst and starvation.
The Young Turks, a Turkish nationalist party in the Ottoman Empire, perpetuated the killings. These radical leaders wanted a separate Turkish state, free of Armenians or any ethnic minority. While Turkey didn't technically exist during the genocide, many refer to the Ottoman Empire as the Turkish Empire because Turkish groups founded the territory, of which a large part became their present-day country.
The genocide officially began on April 24, 1915, now a day of worldwide commemoration. Then, the Turkish government arrested more than 200 Armenian community leaders and sent them to prison, where the majority were summarily executed. Even earlier though, reports of the Young Turks torturing and enslaving Armenians began circulating.
That first wave of killings lasted until 1918. But at the end of the World War I, peace took hold for little more than a year. In 1920, the Turkish Nationalists - who opposed the Young Turks but shared a common ideology - began persecuting the Armenians once more. The second period of the Armenian genocide last until 1923.
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Yet the Turkish government not only refuses to label the event as a genocide but also ignores many of the historical facts. In a statement Wednesday, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan used words like "inhumane" and "establishing compassion," The Globe and Mail reported. But Erodgan, like Obama, didn't use the word "genocide."
"I have consistently stated my own view of what occurred in 1915, and my view has not changed," Obama said today. As a senator and presidential candidate, he labeled the event a "genocide" multiple times. But as soon as Obama took office, that word disappeared from his statements.
Currently, 21 countries have passed legislation officially acknowledging the killings of the Armenian people during WWI as a genocide, according to the Institute. Even House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi "embraced the truth," as her statement today urged others to do, as well. Most importantly, virtually all the Armenian communities worldwide stem from survivors of this genocide. But it's important to continue spreading international awareness that the atrocity was indeed a genocide.
"The worldwide occurrences of these mass atrocities is incredibly worrisome .... "[Obama's acknowledgment] is an important step because it would hold government leaders responsible for their actions, especially when there have been gross violations of human rights," Adalian said.