Ottoman Empire At Baruch College

OTTOMAN EMPIRE AT BARUCH COLLEGE
By: Gregory Zarefes

Baruch College The Ticker, NY
April 30 2007

Bruce Fein is a constitutional and international lawyer who was
a deputy attorney general in the Reagan administration. He is an
experienced columnist for The Washington Post and The Washington Times,
and has appeared multiple times on CNN and C-Span. He spoke at Baruch
College on March 27, regarding the alleged Armenian genocide of 1918
by Ottoman Turks.

Fein began the program by discussing the history of the Ottoman Empire
and the legacy of racial tolerance it had towards minorities.

Although certain taxes were levied against non-Muslims, the Ottoman
Empire had a good human rights record, and in some cases was even a
refuge for Christians from civil war in neighboring countries. This
much is acknowledged by most scholars. Next, Fein argued against
an inaccurate revisionist history. He cited a quote that is often
misattributed to Marie Antoinette, and the death of two princes in
Richard III as two examples of myths that have become ingrained in the
popular consciousness. By repeating these myths, the public at large
is done a disservice, and the full implications of an event cannot
be reasonably assessed. By referring to the massacres as genocide, we
"cheapen" the Holocaust, and do a grave disservice to a real genocide.

A point that Fein made multiple times is that genocide is a systematic
"attempt to exterminate a race or people." Given the Ottoman Empire’s
liberal stance towards minorities, it seems unlikely that such an
Empire would lend itself to the perversion of genocide.

However, given the far-reaching political implications that genocide
would carry, Armenians have a clear motive for portraying the massacres
as genocide.

In 1820, when the Greek War was being fought, Armenians sought the
support of the West, and sought to provoke Turks into fighting a
war for independence. Similarly, on the eve of World War I in 1914,
tensions between Armenians and the rest of the Ottomans were high.

During World War I, in which Armenians fought against the Ottomans,
this was a form of treason, as Armenians were Ottoman subjects.

Given obvious security risks, the Ottomans relocated Armenians, which
was clumsily done. Fein compared this event to the internment of
Japanese Americans during World War II, except that it was hastily
and poorly executed, and resulted in mass casualties. However,
a comparable number of Turks were killed, which substantiates that
this was fighting and massacre, but not genocide.

Fein continued by addressing the evidence that Armenians offer. Much of
it is from either Ambassador Henry Morgenthau (who was, in fact, far
removed from actually witnessing the events firsthand,) or Secretary
of State William Bryan, who was in the United States.

Another piece of evidence that corroborates the Turkish claim is that
Turks have declassified their archives of the period, while Armenians
have not.

Also to be considered is the fact that Armenians have refused
to take the case to World Court, which would seem to damage their
credibility. Fein mentioned that the American Congress is prepared to
vote on the matter, determining whether genocide did indeed occur. He
noted the irony of this measure, to the applause of audience members.

"Politicians do not study history when they vote [on] historical
events, they study constituencies."

He asserted that Armenians are very wealthy and very well organized in
their attempt to portray their version of history. He claimed that the
construction of an Armenian genocide museum in Washington, D.C., as
the byproduct of active petitioning, is an attempt to rewrite history.

When asked whether free speech was the correct tool to resolve the
two irreconcilable versions of history, Fein was skeptical. "Truth
is not self-executed," therefore characteristic Turkish reticence
was part of the problem: in order to defend themselves Turks would
have to vociferously present their [point].

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