A genocide is considered as any of these acts: killing members of a group, causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of a group, deliberately trying to make the members of a group lives harder, imposing measures to prevent births in a group, and forcibly moving children out of a group and into another. All of these acts need to have the intent to destroy a national, ethnical, racial or religious group. Although more than one of these acts were brought upon the Armenians by the Ottoman Empire, the Turkish government still refuses to accept that these massive killings were a genocide. The Turkish government also denies the Armenian Genocide by blaming the Armenians themselves. They claim that “the killings were in self-defense against people who were disloyal to the Ottoman Empire during a World War” (Stanton). Although this could be true, this doesn’t account for the hundreds of thousands of women and children that were murdered. Another claim by the Turkish government is that not only Armenians died, but many Muslim Turks also died. This statement is true, but these deaths were in battles in World War I, not by the hands of the Armenian people. The final claim by the Turkish government is that the deaths of the Armenians were “inadvertent, due to lack of
A genocide is considered as any of these acts: killing members of a group, causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of a group, deliberately trying to make the members of a group lives harder, imposing measures to prevent births in a group, and forcibly moving children out of a group and into another. All of these acts need to have the intent to destroy a national, ethnical, racial or religious group. Although more than one of these acts were brought upon the Armenians by the Ottoman Empire, the Turkish government still refuses to accept that these massive killings were a genocide. The Turkish government also denies the Armenian Genocide by blaming the Armenians themselves. They claim that “the killings were in self-defense against people who were disloyal to the Ottoman Empire during a World War” (Stanton). Although this could be true, this doesn’t account for the hundreds of thousands of women and children that were murdered. Another claim by the Turkish government is that not only Armenians died, but many Muslim Turks also died. This statement is true, but these deaths were in battles in World War I, not by the hands of the Armenian people. The final claim by the Turkish government is that the deaths of the Armenians were “inadvertent, due to lack of