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A STUDENT’S VIEW - For the Jewish people, memory is not optional it is sacred.
We are taught to remember not as an exercise in history, but as a moral obligation. We remember the Holocaust. We remember the six million. We remember what happens when the world looks away, when truth is denied, and when human suffering is reduced to political inconvenience.
That is why an uncomfortable question refuses to go away:
Why has the State of Israel still not formally recognized the Armenian Genocide?
In 1915, over 1.5 million Armenians were systematically exterminated by the Ottoman Empire. This is not a fringe claim. It is affirmed by historians, documented in archives, and recognized by dozens of nations around the world. The historical record is not in doubt.
What is in doubt is something else: moral consistency.
As Jews, we understand deeply the danger of denial. Holocaust denial is not just offensive; it is a continuation of the crime itself. It erases victims, distorts truth, and gives cover to hatred.
So what does it say when the Jewish state remains silent on another genocide?
If remembrance is conditional, it is no longer remembrance it is hypocrisy.
Some defend Israel’s position as a matter of geopolitics its relationship with Turkey, regional alliances, and strategic calculations. But since when does moral clarity depend on political convenience?
Every year Israel delays recognition; it weakens its own moral argument against denial elsewhere. It asks the world to confront truth without compromise while reserving for itself the right to hesitate. That contradiction is not lost on the global stage. And over time, it erodes the very moral authority Israel depends on.
A nation built in the shadow of genocide cannot afford selective memory.
If Israel can defend itself against existential threats, it can withstand telling the truth about history. Silence, in this case, is not neutrality it is complicity. And complicity, even when quiet, leaves a lasting stain.
Because “Never Again” was never meant to be a slogan reserved for one people.
It was meant to be a universal warning.
“Never Again” cannot mean “Never Again for us alone.”
If it does, it loses its moral force and becomes just another political phrase, invoked when convenient and ignored when it is not.
There is also a deeper truth that should not be overlooked. Jewish and Armenian histories are not strangers to one another. Both peoples carry ancient identities, diasporas shaped by trauma, and survival stories defined by resilience in the face of attempted erasure.
Recognition is not about comparison. It is about consistency.
It is about standing in truth even when it is uncomfortable.
As a Jewish student, I do not see recognition of the Armenian Genocide as a threat to Israel. I see it as a test of its integrity. The moral authority Israel carries as the homeland of a people who survived genocide is not automatic it must be upheld.
And it cannot be upheld selectively.
History has already rendered its verdict.
The question is no longer whether the Armenian Genocide happened.
The question is whether Israel will stand on the side of truth or continue standing in the shadow of its own silence.
(Shoshannah Kalaydjian is a young Jewish student who writes about education, identity, and the challenges facing the next generation. Growing up in today’s climate, she has witnessed firsthand how rising antisemitism affects young people in classrooms and on college campuses. Shoshannah is committed to sharing the perspectives of Jewish youth, amplifying student voices, and encouraging leaders to create safer, more inclusive environments for all students.)
