Amended in Assembly April 12, 2016

California Legislature—2015–16 Regular Session

Assembly Joint ResolutionNo. 34


Introduced by Assembly Members Achadjian,begin insert Bonta, Brown, Calderon, Chu, Dababneh, Dahle, Beth end insertbegin insertGaines, Cristina end insertbegin insertGarcia, Gatto, Grove, Jones, Levine, Lopez,end insert Nazarian,begin insert Olsen, Patterson, Steinorth, Wagner,end insert and Wilk

(Principalbegin delete coauthor: Senator De Leónend deletebegin insert coauthors: Senators Anderson, De León, Gaines, Hall, Lara, Leno, Liu, Nielsen, and Panend insert)

March 16, 2016


Assembly Joint Resolution No. 34—Relative to the Armenian Genocide.

LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL’S DIGEST

AJR 34, as amended, Achadjian. Armenian Genocide.

This measure would, among other things, designate the year of 2016 as “State of California Year of Commemoration of the Anniversary of the Armenian Genocide of 1915-1923,”begin insert wouldend insert designate April 24, 2016, as “State of California Day of Commemoration of the 101st Anniversary of the Armenian Genocide of 1915-1923,” and would call upon the President of the United States and the United States Congress to formally and consistently reaffirm the historical truth that the atrocities committed against the Armenian people constituted genocide.

Fiscal committee: no.

P1    1WHEREAS, Armenians have resided in Asia Minor and the
2Caucasus for approximately four millennia, and have a long and
3rich history in the region, including the establishment of many
4kingdoms, and despite Armenians’ historic presence, stewardship,
P1    1and autonomy in the region, Turkish rulers of the Ottoman Empire
2and the Republic of Turkey subjected Armenians to severe and
3unjust persecution and brutality, including wholesale massacres
4beginning in the 1890s; and

5WHEREAS, The Armenian nation was subjected to a systematic
6and premeditated genocide officially beginning on April 24, 1915,
7at the hands of the Young Turk Government of the Ottoman Empire
8from 1915-1919 and continued at the hands of the Kemalist
9Movement of Turkey from 1920-1923 whereby over 1.5 million
10Armenian men, women, and children were slaughtered or marched
11to their deaths in an effort to annihilate the Armenian nation in the
12first genocide of modern times, while thousands of surviving
13Armenian women and children were forcibly converted and
14Islamized, and hundreds of thousands more were subjected to
15ethnic cleansing during the period of the modern Republic of
16Turkey from 1924-1937; and

17WHEREAS, During the genocides of the Christians living in
18the Ottoman Empire and surrounding regions, which occurred
19during the first one-half of the 20th century, 1.5 million men,
20women, and children of Armenian descent, and hundreds of
21thousands of Assyrians, Greeks, and other Christians, lost their
22lives at the hands of the Ottoman Turkish Empire and the Republic
23of Turkey, constituting one of the most atrocious violations of
24human rights in the history of the world; and

25WHEREAS, These crimes against humanity also had the
26consequence of permanently removing all traces of the Armenians
27and other targeted people from their historic homelands of more
28than four millennia, and enriching the perpetrators with the lands
29and other property of the victims of these crimes, including the
30usurpation of several thousand churches; and

31WHEREAS, In response to the genocide and at the behest of
32President Woodrow Wilson and the United States State
33Department, the Near East Relief organization was founded, and
34became the first congressionally sanctioned American philanthropic
35effort created exclusively to provide humanitarian assistance and
36rescue to the Armenian nation and other Christian minorities from
37annihilation, who went on to survive and thrive outside of their
38ancestral homeland all over the world and specifically in this state;
39and

P3    1WHEREAS, Near East Relief succeeded, with the active
2participation of the citizens from this state, in delivering $117
3million in assistance, and saving more than one million refugees,
4including 132,000 orphans, between 1915 and 1930, by delivering
5food, clothing, and materials for shelter, setting up refugee camps,
6clinics, hospitals, and orphanages; and

7WHEREAS, The Armenian nation survived the genocide despite
8the attempt by the Ottoman Empire to exterminate it; and

9WHEREAS, Adolf Hitler, in persuading his army commanders
10that the merciless persecution and killing of Jews, Poles, and other
11people would bring no retribution, declared, “Who, after all, speaks
12today of the annihilation of the Armenians?”; and

13WHEREAS, On November 4, 1918, immediately after the
14collapse of the Young Turk regime and before the founding of the
15Republic of Turkey by Mustafa Kemal Ataturk in 1923, the
16Ottoman Parliament considered a motion on the crimes committed
17by the Committee of Union and Progress (CUP) stating: “A
18population of one million people guilty of nothing except belonging
19to the Armenian nation were massacred and exterminated,
20including even women and children.” The Minister of Interior at
21the time, Fethi Bey, responded by telling the Parliament: “It is the
22intention of the government to cure every single injustice done up
23until now, as far as the means allow, to make possible the return
24to their homes of those sent into exile, and to compensate for their
25material loss as far as possible”; and

26WHEREAS, On August 1, 1926, in an interview published in
27the Los Angeles Examiner, Mustafa Kemal Ataturk admitted:
28“These left-overs from the former Young Turk Party, who should
29have been made to account for the lives of millions of our Christian
30subjects who were ruthlessly driven en masse, from their homes
31and massacred, have been restive under the Republican rule. They
32have hitherto lived on plunder, robbery and bribery and become
33inimical to any idea or suggestion to enlist in useful labor and earn
34their living by the honest sweat of their brow”; and

35WHEREAS, The Parliamentary Investigative Committee
36proceeded to collect relevant documents describing the actions of
37those responsible for the Armenian mass killings and turned them
38over to the Turkish Military Tribunal. CUP’s leading figures were
39found guilty of massacring Armenians and hanged or given lengthy
40prison sentences. The Turkish Military Tribunal requested that
P4    1Germany extradite to Turkey the masterminds of the massacres
2who had fled the country. After German refusal, they were tried
3in absentia and sentenced to death; and

4WHEREAS, Unlike other people and governments that have
5admitted and denounced the abuses and crimes of predecessor
6regimes, and despite the Turkish government’s earlier admissions
7and the overwhelming proof of genocidal intent, the Republic of
8Turkey inexplicably and adamantly has denied the occurrence of
9the crimes against humanity committed by the Ottoman and Young
10Turk rulers for many years, and continues to do so a full century
11since the first crimes constituting genocide occurred; and

12WHEREAS, Those denials compound the grief of the few
13remaining survivors and deprive the surviving Armenian nation
14of its individual and collective ancestral lands, property, cultural
15heritage, financial assets, and population growth; and

16WHEREAS, The Republic of Turkey has escalated its
17international campaign of Armenian Genocide denial, maintained
18its blockade of Armenia, and increased its pressure on the small
19but growing movement in Turkey acknowledging the Armenian
20Genocide and seeking justice for this systematic campaign of
21destruction of millions of Armenians, Greeks, Assyrians, and other
22Christians upon their biblical-era homelands; and

23WHEREAS, Those citizens of Turkey, both Armenian and
24non-Armenian, who continue to speak the truth about the Armenian
25Genocide, such as human rights activist and journalist Hrant Dink,
26continue to be silenced by violent means; and

27WHEREAS, There is continued concern about the welfare of
28Christians in the Republic of Turkey, their right to worship and
29practice freely, and the legal status and condition of thousands of
30ancient Armenian churches, monasteries, cemeteries, and other
31historical and cultural structures, sites, and antiquities in the
32Republic of Turkey; and

33WHEREAS, The United States is on record as having officially
34recognized the Armenian Genocide in the United States
35government’s May 28, 1951, written statement to the International
36Court of Justice regarding the Reservations to the Convention on
37the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide, through
38President Ronald Reagan’s April 22, 1981, Proclamation No. 4838,
39and by congressional legislation including House Joint Resolution
P5    1148 adopted on April 9, 1975, and House Joint Resolution 247
2adopted on September 12, 1984; and

3WHEREAS, Prior to the Convention on the Prevention and
4Punishment of the Crime of Genocide, the United States had a
5record of seeking just and constructive means to address the
6consequences of the Ottoman Empire’s intentional destruction of
7the Armenian people, including through United States Senate
8Concurrent Resolution 12 adopted on February 9, 1916, United
9States Senate Resolution 359 adopted on May 11, 1920, and
10President Woodrow Wilson’s November 22, 1920, decision
11begin delete entitled,end deletebegin insert titled,end insert “The Frontier between Armenia and Turkey,” which
12was issued as a binding arbitral award, yet has not been enforced
13to this date despite its legally binding status; and

14WHEREAS, President Barack Obama entered office “calling
15for Turkey’s acknowledgment of the Armenian Genocide” and on
16April 24, 2013, and similarly on April 24, 2014, he further stated,
17“A full, frank, and just acknowledgment of the facts is in all of
18our interests. Peoples and nations grow stronger, and build a more
19just and tolerant future, by acknowledging and reckoning with
20painful elements of the past”; and

21WHEREAS, California is home to the largest
22begin delete Armenian-Americanend deletebegin insert Armenian Americanend insert population in the United
23States, and Armenians living in California have enriched our state
24through their leadership and contribution in business, agriculture,
25academia, government, and the arts, many of whom have family
26members who experienced firsthand the horror and evil of the
27Armenian Genocide and its ongoing denial; and

28WHEREAS, Every person should be made aware and educated
29about the Armenian Genocide and other crimes against humanity;
30and

31WHEREAS, The State of California has been at the forefront
32of encouraging and promoting a curriculum relating to human
33rights and genocide in order to empower future generations to
34prevent the recurrence of genocide; and

35WHEREAS, April 24, 1915, is globally observed and recognized
36as the commencement of the Armenian Genocide; and

37WHEREAS, Armenians in the State of California and throughout
38thebegin delete world,end deletebegin insert worldend insert have not been provided with justice for the crimes
39perpetrated against the Armenian nation despite the fact that over
40a century has passed since the crimes were first committed; and

P6    1WHEREAS, The Armenian people in the State of California
2and throughout thebegin delete world,end deletebegin insert worldend insert remain resolved and their spirit
3continues to thrive more than a century after their near annihilation;
4now, therefore, be it

5Resolved by the Assembly and the Senate of the State of
6California, jointly,
That the Legislature hereby designates the year
7of 2016 as “State of California Year of Commemoration of the
8Anniversary of the Armenian Genocide of 1915-1923” and in
9doing so, intends, through the enactment of legislation, that the
10Armenian Genocide is properly commemorated and taught to its
11citizens and visitors through statewide educational and cultural
12events; and be it further

13Resolved, That the Legislature hereby designates April 24, 2016,
14as “State of California Day of Commemoration of the 101st
15Anniversary of the Armenian Genocide of 1915-1923”; and be it
16further

17Resolved, That the Legislature commends its conscientious
18educators who teach about human rights and genocide, and intends
19for them, through the enactment of legislation, to continue to
20enhance their efforts to educate students at all levels about the
21experience of the Armenians and other crimes against humanity;
22and be it further

23Resolved, That the Legislature hereby commends the
24extraordinary service which was delivered by Near East Relief to
25the survivors of the Armenian Genocide and the Assyrian
26Genocide, including thousands of direct beneficiaries of American
27philanthropy who are the parents, grandparents, and
28great-grandparents of many Californian Armenians and Assyrians,
29and pledges its intent, through the enactment of legislation, to
30working with community groups, nonprofit organizations, citizens,
31state personnel, and the community at large to host statewide
32educational and cultural events; and be it further

33Resolved, That the Legislature deplores the persistent, ongoing
34efforts by any person, in this country or abroad, to deny the
35historical fact of the Armenian Genocide; and be it further

36Resolved, That the Legislature respectfully calls upon the
37President of the United States and the United States Congress to
38formally and consistently reaffirm the historical truth that the
39atrocities committed against the Armenian people constituted
40genocide; and be it further

P7    1Resolved, That the Legislature calls on the President of the
2United States to work toward equitable, constructive, stable, and
3durable Armenian-Turkish relations; and be it further

4Resolved, That the Chief Clerk of the Assembly transmit copies
5of this resolution to the President and Vice President of the United
6States, to the Speaker of the House of Representatives, to the
7Majority Leader of the Senate, to each Senator and Representative
8from California in the Congress of the United States, to the
9Governor of California, to every member of the California State
10Legislature, and to the Superintendent of Public Instruction.



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