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HOUSE RESOLUTION

 
2    WHEREAS, Illinois and the United States have been a refuge
3for those seeking protection from persecution and oppression,
4whether by reason of religion or nationality; and
 
5    WHEREAS, Those who cherish freedom can never take it for
6granted, and those who respect justice can never be completely
7secure in it; and
 
8    WHEREAS, Those who value freedom are duty-bound to promote
9it and to protect it by using their voices and influence to
10meet the challenges that might confront its sanctity and to
11help protect the life and liberty of those who depend upon
12freedom and human dignity; and
 
13    WHEREAS, No other human rights violation deserves greater
14vigilance, protest, and recognition while demanding the
15strongest condemnation by freedom loving people than the crime
16of genocide; and
 
17    WHEREAS, For the Greeks of Asia Minor, Pontos, and Eastern
18Thrace, the horror and inhumanity of this savagely brutal
19crime began as pogroms in 1913 to 1923 by the Ottoman and
20Kemalist governments, in what is today known as Turkey; and
 

 

 

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1    WHEREAS, In July and August 1914, months before the
2Ottoman entry into World War I, Greek Christian men between
3the ages of 18 and 48 years were drafted into the notorious
4labor battalions of the Ottoman army where most of them died
5due to brutal labor conditions, malnutrition, and extreme
6weather; and
 
7    WHEREAS, The Honorable George Horton, U.S. Consul General
8in Smyrna at the time of the genocides, affirmed that from 1914
9to 1923 Greeks of Asia Minor and Thrace endured immeasurable
10cruelty resulting in genocide during a systematic Ottoman
11government-sanctioned campaign to kill and to displace the
12Greek population; and
 
13    WHEREAS, The Asia Minor Greeks and the Pontian Greeks
14whose ancestors had lived for three millennia in communities
15in Anatolia and along the shores and in the mountains of the
16Black Sea coast, in what is today northern Turkey, were
17singled out by the Ottoman and Kemalist authorities for murder
18and expulsion from their ancestral lands, resulting in
19approximately one million deaths; and
 
20    WHEREAS, The biblical city of Smyrna, once called The
21Jewel of the Mediterranean, was a cosmopolitan hub settled by
22Greeks in 1200 BCE and populated by large, highly-educated
23Greek, Armenian, and Jewish communities with a flourishing

 

 

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1commercial and middle-class; and
 
2    WHEREAS, In September 1922, Smyrna was sacked, and the
3Greek and Armenian quarters were set on fire and destroyed by
4Kemalist forces; tens of thousands of Smyrna's Greek and
5Armenian inhabitants were then massacred, turning the pier of
6Smyrna into a scene of death and desperation, forcing many to
7jump to their deaths rather than be cut down by Kemal's
8soldiers or consumed by the flames; and
 
9    WHEREAS, The remaining Christian inhabitants of Anatolia
10were then forced to give up their homes, businesses, and their
11ancient connection to the land in a forced exchange of
12populations through the Lausanne Agreement, sanctioned by the
13U.S. and western nations, in order to safeguard their lives
14from future massacres; it marked the end of 3,000 years of
15Greek presence and historic contributions to the western
16world; and
 
17    WHEREAS, Silence is the final stage of genocide as it
18erases all memory of the victims of the crime as if they never
19existed; this silence can only encourage future genocides by
20other rogue nations that feel unbound by international laws;
21and
 
22    WHEREAS, In an historic 2007 resolution, the International

 

 

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1Association of Genocide Scholars (IAGS), representing hundreds
2of the world's leading genocide scholars, affirmed the fact of
3the genocide against the Pontian and other Asia Minor Greeks
4and Assyrians as comparable to the genocide of the Armenians;
5and
 
6    WHEREAS, Acknowledgment of these past crimes should serve
7as a deterrent to future aggressions by the Turkish government
8and all other governments around the world; therefore, be it
 
9    RESOLVED, BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE ONE
10HUNDRED THIRD GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that
11we recognize the genocide of the Greeks of Pontos, Asia Minor,
12and Eastern Thrace and urge the Turkish government to do the
13same as a means of bringing closure to the descendants of the
14victims of these genocides and preventing such atrocities in
15the future; and be it further
 
16    RESOLVED, That we act in the spirit of justice and
17humanity and recognize September 14, 1922 as the end of their
18presence in their homeland of 3,000 years.