Yerevan Agrees To Meeting Between Sargsyan, Aliyev – Armenian Foreig

YEREVAN AGREES TO MEETING BETWEEN SARGSYAN, ALIYEV – ARMENIAN FOREIGN MINISTER

Interfax News Agency
March 31 2008
Russia

Yerevan is ready for a meeting between Armenia’s President-elect Serzh
Sargsyan and Azerbaijan President Ilham Aliyev at the NATO summit in
Bucharest in April, since the initiative comes from the OSCE’s Minsk
Group mediating in the Karabakh conflict, Armenian Foreign Minister
Vardan Oskanian said.

"The idea was proposed by the OSCE MG, and it was accepted by Armenia,"
he told journalists on Monday.

However, Azerbaijan is trying to block the efforts of the Minsk Group,
he said. "Everything that has been done recently is an attempt to
dissolve the OSCE MG, to reject the document on the negotiating
table, which took both Armenia and Azerbaijan two years to prepare,"
Oskanian said.

"Today Azerbaijan is demonstrating its rejection of the principles
that were jointly developed and reflected in this document with its
own consent. The violation of the cease-fire, Azerbaijan’s military
rhetoric and its attempt to take the Karabakh issue to the United
Nations – all of this reflects Azerbaijan’s obvious program and
tactics," the Armenian foreign minister said.

The Armenian Weekly; March 29, 2008; Community

The Armenian Weekly On-Line
80 Bigelow Avenue
Watertown MA 02472 USA
(617) 926-3974
[email protected]

http://www.a rmenianweekly.com

The Armenian Weekly; Volume 74, No. 12; March 29, 2008

Community:

1. ‘Your Pain is My Pain’:
Yalcin on Turkey’s Crypto-Armenians
By Andy Turpin

2. ‘Out of Darkness’:
A Stand Up and Cheer Success
By Andy Turpin

3. ALMA Presents Armenia Exhibit

4. Poetry Reading in NY

***

1. ‘Your Pain is My Pain’:
Yalcin on Turkey’s Crypto-Armenians
By Andy Turpin

BELMONT, Mass. (A.W.) – On March 24, Turkish author and journalist Kemal
Yalcin spoke at the Holy Cross Armenian Catholic Church about his
experiences interviewing and interacting with Turkey’s underground
crypto-Armenian communities and about his newly English translated book You
Rejoice My Heart. The Tekeyan Cultural Association, the Armenian
Mirror-Spectator and Holy Cross presented the event. Varujan Khachikian
provided the Turkish to English translation for Yalcin.
Marc Mamigonian, director of programs and publications at the National
Association for Armenian Studies and Research (NAASR) introduced Yalcin,
stating, "I grew up in the Armenian no-man’s land of Southern New
Hampshire.so even after 10 years, the novelty of being in an Armenian
community has not worn off."
Of his own family experience, Mamigonian said, "It’s the thought of my
grandmother that serves as the reality of historical events for me." He
added of his few face-to-face experiences with Turkish people until
adulthood, "I can’t say I was raised to hate anyone, but what were the
chances I would meet a Turkish person?"
Mamigonian related that meeting scholar Taner Akcam was his first remembered
experience with a Turk and said of his work and of Yalcin’s that "He is
changing the idea that Turks are somehow all against us."
Yalcin began his remarks by recalling, "Very Reverend Father, my dear
Armenian friends, four years ago I was with you in this great hall. It is a
pleasure to see you all again." He said in rebuke of Turkey’s denialist
governmental policies, "They are destroying the mental health of their
society. We will only bring honor to ourselves by creating a culture of
peace."
Speaking of his work in genocide research and exposure, Yalcin said both in
seriousness and some jest, "My dear brothers and sisters, I want to address
two questions I know you will ask: ‘Are you of Armenian origin? Do you have
Armenian relatives?’" He added, "In Greece they asked me, ‘Are you Greek?’ I’d
like to assure you that I’m 100 percent Turkish and a Sunni Muslim. Both my
grandparents were Turkish as well. This pain and suffering is so great, you
don’t have to be of any certain race or religion to feel it."
Yalcin explained, "It’s my job and responsibility to talk about these
wrongdoings. We’re talking about very dangerous subjects. Someone from the
Turkish government could assassinate me. I am like you, I am afraid."
He continued, "But it’s my job to talk about these subjects. The reality is
greater than the fear. Being afraid is a good thing. But to be truthful, it
is our job as human beings to be truthful."
Yalcin remembered, "In my hometown there are many Greeks, but I was never
aware that there were Armenians as well. . It was like everything about the
Armenians came from a machine: uniform and fabricated."
He related how his investigations began, saying, "I’ve been trying to learn
about the Armenian issue for 15 years. In 1994, my father sent me to Greece
to return the family dowry entrusted to him from the Minolu family [during
the genocide]. I started in Athens and located them in Rhodes."
He noted, "During my search, I met people originally from Izmir and other
cities. They told me where they were from and their stories."
Yalcin recounted an interview told alone in the backseat of a cab, in which
"an old grandmother told me her story" and her real Armenian name. "As the
conversation went on, she started crying and said, ‘How could I tell my
grandchildren about my real origin?’"
Yalcin praised Turkish authors and political dissidents Taner Akcam and
Halil Berktay, saying he strove to their example. "What I am trying to
achieve is this: I’m trying to do my best to learn from them. My main
purpose is to meet survivors and write their accounts. But I have only
written 2,000 pages. Compare it to your pain and suffering and it is
nothing."
Unlike other scholars, he continued his indictment of the Turkish government
into more modern epochs, saying, "The Turcification of the land was
continued by the Republic of Turkey."
Speaking of those he interviewed, Yalcin said, "Some Armenians said, ‘We’ll
tell you the whole story, but do not print our names.’ Others said, ‘For 80
years we were silent and gained nothing. Write down everything I say.’"
"Our People," he said, referring to the internal name for Turkey’s
crypto-Armenians, "in their own houses pray secretly to the picture of Jesus
Christ and only marry their own people. You need to earn their trust, and I
was fortunate enough to do that."
He explained the rituals of Anatolia’s crypto-Armenians, stating, "Before a
wedding, the bride must be baptized in the [usually Syriac] church." He
noted that wedding parties were held in isolated places to avoid ambushes
and that everyone young came armed. Groomsmen showed him machine guns in
their cars’ trunks saying, "We have to be ready for anything."
Yalcin ended the evening by saying to those in attendance and on stage
beside him, "My dear Armenian friends, your pain is my pain. As a Turkish
writer I’d like to express my sorrow for what happened under my name-and for
all humanity. I also share the suffering of the Kurds and the Assyrians and
all the others that suffered. I present to you my heart. You rejoice my
heart."
———————————— ————————————————– —————

2. ‘Out of Darkness’:
A Stand Up and Cheer Success
By Andy Turpin

BOSTON, Mass. (A.W.) – On March 22, The Liz Lerman Dance Exchange and the
Sayat Nova Dance Company presented a joint collaboration anti-genocide dance
performance titled Out of Darkness at the Cutler Majestic Theatre of Emerson
College.
A grandiose reception was held prior to the performance, presented by the
show’s partners Facing History and Ourselves, Springstep, the Jewish
Community Relations Council of Greater Boston, and the Cutler Majestic
Theater of Emerson College.
Nancy K. Kaufman, executive director of the Jewish Community Relations
Council of Greater Boston, introduced the event, stating of the performance’s
cooperations, "There is all too much that we share between the Jewish
community and the Armenians."
Anthony Barsamian, chairman of the Armenian Assembly of America, said of the
show’s artistic milestone, "I’m very proud of the Massachusetts Jewish and
Armenian communities. Two words come to mind tonight: redemption and
sacrifice. Tonight we will see alongside Shabbat and Easter, artistic
redemption."
Also present at the reception and performance, seen literally stopping
traffic to escort elderly Jews and Armenians across the street, was State
Representative Peter J. Koutoujian (D-Mass.).
"Out of Darkness" played to a packed house with much anticipation in the
air. Daniel Neuman, CEO for the New Center for Arts and Culture, presented a
short welcome to the crowd before the evening’s entertainment.
In a reversal from the originally planned program order, the Liz Lerman
dancers presented their solo segment of the performance, "Small Dances About
Big Ideas," in the first half of the show instead of the second. It was a
moving, multi-layered and emotional experience of original and hard-edged
dance about infinitely more razor-backed topics of wholesale death and
annihilation.
Like "A Clockwork Orange," producing artistic director Peter DiMuro and Liz
Lerman didn’t let you look away or escape the realities and legacies of
genocide, regardless of what kind of news-hound, cynic, granola liberal or
hardnosed economist you may have been.
If you believe that "Dance is dance and news is news and never the two shall
twain," then it’s clear you haven’t yet seen "Out of Darkness."
Part modern dance, part Edward R. Murrow broadcast and part Marshall McLuhan
dream about the best of possibilities for the melding of art and political
culture, "Out of Darkness" delivers a surreal and powerful timeline of
genocide and those who fought to combat it over the past century.
They use every trick in the book: from machine-gunned dancers in
choreographed death knell, to doppelganger wrestling between the duality of
genocidal and nurturing African tribalism, to genocide definition creator
Raphael Lemkin as a character screaming and signaling the world to finally
be heard in action among a siege of moving quotes and conjectures about the
nature of genocide and human rights.
In the second half of the performance Sayat Nova and the Armenian community
picked up the gauntlet and told through dance the story of Armenia’s heroic
Herculean trials and survival across an ocean of genocide, denial and the
sands of time.
Beginning with "A Child Questions History" and ending with "A Prologue of
Pictures," the latter performed by both troupes onstage simultaneously,
director Apo Ashjian propelled the audience’s expectations to new heights.
For those that have already been impressed in the past by the dancing of
Sayat Nova, the impetus and chance to show off their abilities as being at
the same arc of Lerman’s dancers forged everyone to shine at their absolute
best, and the audience reciprocated in spades.
Dances that were already strong in their conviction became fanatical, and
crowd enthusiasm that could have merely been "happily folksy" surged with
the help of the Armenian community to the point of a near rampage kef.
During the question and answer session that followed the performance, Lerman
said of the inspiration for her troupe’s segment of the show that "’Small
Dances About Big Ideas’ was actually originally commissioned to be not about
the Holocaust but a commission from Harvard Law School about the anniversary
of the Nuremberg trial and bringing human rights law into the present."
Ashjian said of the first-time collaboration between the two companies that
"There were a lot of challenges. We are folk dancers, not modern dancers.
But those challenges were met."
As an Armenian, he said," Our struggle is to continue the struggle for
recognition. That is why we’re dancing. We want to celebrate life and
existence."
He also praised DiMuro for his tireless work and patience as dual-troupe
middleman and coordinator, saying, "Peter very quickly understood our
culture and our history, and from there it was like magic. Very soon I
couldn’t believe the things our guys and girls were doing!"
Lerman ended by stating, "Collaborations are full of hope, but there’s
arguing. But I have to say that it was exactly the right order."
See p. 10 for Andy Turpin’s interview with Liz Lerman.
—————————————— ————————————————– ——–

3. ALMA Presents Armenia Exhibit

WATERTOWN, Mass.-Through mid-May, the Armenian Library and Museum of America
(ALMA) will be hosting a photography exhibit titled "Armenian Village
People: A Country Kaleidoscope" in their gallery on 65 Main St. in
Watertown.
The pictures, three of which are featured below, are part of a collection
taken by Tom Vartabedian during his trip to Armenia in 2006. Particular
focus was paid to the outlying regions.
Proceeds from sales will be donated to ALMA and the Armenian Relief Society’s
Centennial Fund.
A public reception will take place on Sun., April 6, from 2-5 p.m.
Vartabedian spent 40 years as a writer and photographer for the Haverhill
Gazette before retiring in 2007. A previous exhibit on photojournalism was
hosted by ALMA three years ago.
——————————————— ————————————————– ——–

4. Poetry Reading in NY

NEW YORK (A.W.)-On March 15, the Greek-American Writers’ Association held
its monthly reading event at the Cornelia Street Cafe in the Greenwich
Village section of New York City. The series, hosted by Dean Kostos,
presented a slightly different program this month with the theme of
translation.
During the course of two hours, Miltiades Matthias read from his
translations of two poetry cycles by Nobel laureate George Seferis; Susan
Matthias read from her new translation of Seferis’s only novel, Six Nights
on the Acropolis; Andriana Rizos read from her own poems; and Lola
Koundakjian read from her own poems and translations.
This was Koundakjian’s second appearance with the Greek-American group at
the Cornelia Street Cafe. She read from her most recent work and finished
her segment with some old favorites.

Chess: Anand Is Joint Sixth, Aronian Wins Amber

ANAND IS JOINT SIXTH, ARONIAN WINS AMBER

Indian Express
March 29 2008
India

Nice, March 28: World champion Viswanathan Anand played out two draws
with Loek van Wely of the Netherlands to finish overall tied sixth
after the final round of Amber Blindfold and Rapid chess tournament
here.

Levon Aronian of Armenia won the tournament after two easy draw with
Hungarian Peter Leko. The Armenian ended up with an impressive 14.5
points out of a possible 22 games played in this unique event that
featured one blindfold and one rapid game in each round. It was a
four-way tie for the second spot in the combined standings with
Vladimir Kramnik of Russia, Veselin Topalov of Bulgaria, Magnus
Carlsen of Norway and Leko sharing the honours on 12 points each.

Anand tied for the sixth spot alongside Vassily Ivanchuk of Ukraine
with both ending with 11 points in all.

Apart from winning the combined title with a 2.5 points lead, Aronian
also won the rapid section with a 1.5 margin.

"Coutry Where Authorities Violate Law Cannot Be Source Of Inspirati

"COUTRY WHERE AUTHORITIES VIOLATE LAW CANNOT BE SOURCE OF INSPIRATION FOR ITS CITIZENS AND DIASPORA," ARMENIAN COUNCIL OF AMERICA MENTIONS

Noyan Tapan
March 27, 2008

LOS ANGELES, MARCH 27, ARMENIANS TODAY – NOYAN TAPAN. The Armenian
Council of America has come up with an open letter addressed to
Armenian Americans on the occasion of the recent events, which took
place in Armenia. In this letter it condemns the authorities of
Armenia and persuades American Armenians to uphold the democratic
principles for the sake of an independent, democratic and prosperous
Armenia. Below we present the open letter completely.

"We read with interest the joint statement of the Armenian Assembly of
America, The Armenian General Benevolent Union, the Armenian National
Committee of America, the Diocese of the Armenian Church of America
(Eastern/Western) and the Prelacy of the Armenian Apostolic Church
of America (Eastern/Western) regarding the recent events in Armenia.

We join them in expressing our heartfelt sympathies to all families of
the victims, condemn all violent acts and expect that the perpetrators
will be brought to justice.

We reaffirm our commitment to strive toward our shared aim of
strengthening an open and democratic Armenian homeland, based upon
the rule of law, social and economic justice, freedom of expression
and the media, and equal opportunity for all.

However, we do not understand how these noble principles could be
justly served with simultaneously cooperating with the newly-elected
President and the government, when we have all witnessed how, for
the past 10 years, the latter have trampled those same principles.

How can we expect rule of law from these authorities, when they have
repeatedly violated the constitution by rigging the presidential and
parliamentary elections, falsified the constitutional referendum and
have made a mockery of the Oct. 27 legal proceedings, just to name
a few.

What kind of social and economic justice can we expect from these
authorities when they have created a class of oligarchs by usurping
the rights of their citizens, and monopolized the economy.

What kind of freedom of expression and the media can we expect from
these authorities, when they have banned independent TV stations from
the airwaves, established a public TV reminiscent of totalitarian
regimes.

What kind of equal opportunity for all can we expect from these
authorities, when they have unjustly exploited the resources of the
country, leading to a deep mistrust between them and ordinary citizens.

A country, where the authorities capriciously violate the law, trample
justice, and usurp the rights and freedom of its people cannot be an
inspiration to its citizens or to the Diaspora. Rather than using empty
rhetoric, we should steadfastly uphold he aforementioned principles
for the sake of an independent, democratic and prosperous Armenia."

ANTELIAS: Private audience with UN delegation to Armenia

PRESS RELEASE
Catholicosate of Cilicia
Communication and Information Department
Contact: V.Rev.Fr.Krikor Chiftjian, Communications Officer
Tel: (04) 410001, 410003
Fax: (04) 419724
E- mail: [email protected]
Web:

PO Box 70 317
Antelias-Lebanon

Armenian version: nian.htm

PRIVATE AUDIENCE WITH UNITED NATIONS DELEGATION TO ARMENIA

On March 26, prior to the roundtable discussion, His Holiness Aram I granted
a private audience to the UN delegation.

The Pontiff congratulated Ms. Vidal for the UN’s achievements in Armenia. As
the Catholicos praised the UNDP for its "Global Armenia" initiative, he
stressed that the Diaspora must be viewed as a key participant in the UNDP’s
goal to help effect positive change in the homeland.

In elucidating his vision for such a partnership, the Pontiff said the
Armenian Church is a vital part of civil society and the voice of the
people. As such, the Catholicos continued, the Armenian Church considers
education and awareness of contemporary issues as keys to fostering a
responsible and dynamic citizenry upholding the highest ideals of freedom
and democracy.

##
View photos here:
tos/Photos227.htm#3
*****
The Armenian Catholicosate of Cilicia is one of the two Catholicosates of
the Armenian Orthodox Church. For detailed information about the history and
the mission of the Cilician Catholicosate, you may refer to the web page of
the Catholicosate, The Cilician
Catholicosate, the administrative center of the church is located in
Antelias, Lebanon.

http://www.armenianorthodoxchurch.org/
http://www.armenianorthodoxchurch.org/v04/doc/Arme
http://www.armenianorthodoxchurch.org/v04/doc/Pho
http://www.armenianorthodoxchurch.org

Shavarsh Kocharyan: Armenian Society Does Not Know Where It Is And W

SHAVARSH KOCHARYAN: ARMENIAN SOCIETY DOES NOT KNOW WHERE IT IS AND WHAT DOES IT WANTS

arminfo
2008-03-25 14:59:00

ArmInfo. ‘The Armenian society does not realize what steps it should
take to achieve progress, it just does not know where it is and
what it wants’, Chairman of the National-Democratic party Shavarsh
Kocharyan told journalists today in "Pastarq" club in response to
ArmInfo question "what is the reason that the majority of the protest
electorate supported Levon Ter-Petrosyan, and does it indicate absence
of trust to the other oppositional forces and parties, which played
an opposition. S. Kocharyan said that in the situation, developed
in Armenia before the presidential election, the public conscience
was affected by such factors as hatred and populism. "The hatred
was inculcated by the first president, while "Orinats Yerkir" party
played on the populism. Even these candidates, by the official data,
gained support of over 600,000 voters", S. Kocharyan said.

He explains receipt of considerable support by the ex-president
by the fact that the sufficient part of the Armenian society is
very much displeased with the existing state of things. "You see,
under the conditions, when the voters are convinced more and more
that they vote for one candidate and another one becomes a president,
they start to support the candidate around which an aura of possibility
to force the power is created", S. Kocharyan said.

China Strengthens Relations With Armenia

CHINA STRENGTHENS RELATIONS WITH ARMENIA

Panorama.am
16:36 24/03/2008

On 22 March the president elect Prime Minister of Armenia Serzh
Sargsyan received the delegation presenting autonomic region of
Minczian-Uigurski from the Chinese People Republic. The political
coalition colleague, the chairman of the Prosperous Armenia party
Gagik Tsarukyan and the president of the Central Bank Tigran Sargsyan
were present at the meeting.

The delegation representatives notified that the region is intended
to strengthen the economic relations with Armenia and to conduct
investment project in the current field country. The Prime Minister
greeted the delegation members and mentioned that the relations
between Armenia and China are being highly developed in politics,
economy and other spheres also.

In the meeting the Chinese delegation discussed questions on mining,
metallurgy and other speres to be invested.

The Armenian Weekly; March 22, 2008; Features

The Armenian Weekly On-Line
80 Bigelow Avenue
Watertown MA 02472 USA
(617) 926-3974
[email protected]

http://www.a rmenianweekly.com

The Armenian Weekly; Volume 74, No. 11; March 22, 2008

Features:

1. The Politics of official apologies
An Interview with Melissa Nobles
By Khatchig Mouradian

2. Mephisto’s Coffee-Table Book
‘Never Again, Again, Again.’ Scrapbooks Humanity’s Genocidal Descent
By Andy Turpin

***

1. The Politics of official apologies
An Interview with Melissa Nobles
By Khatchig Mouradian

Melissa Nobles is associate professor of political science at MIT. She holds
a BA in history from Brown University and an MA and PhD in political science
>From Yale University.

Her research interests include retrospective justice and the comparative
study of racial and ethnic politics. She is the author of Shades of
Citizenship: Race and the Census in Modern Politics (Stanford University
Press, 2000) and The Politics of Official Apologies (Cambridge University
Press, 2008).

In this interview, conducted in her office at MIT on March 11, we discuss
why and how governments apologize-or do not apologize-for crimes committed
in their country in the past and what significance apology-or the absence of
it-can have on the descendents of the victims and the perpetrators.

Khatchig Mouradian-How did you become interested in the politics of official
apologies?

Melissa Nobles-I became interested when, in 1998, I read an article in the
New York Times about the Canadian government’s apology to indigenous
Canadians. I thought that was interesting and unusual, because governments
don’t usually apologize. Then I became aware of the Turkish government’s
refusal to apologize for the Armenian genocide. That also interested me. I
knew that the U.S. government had apologized to Japanese-Americans for their
internment during WWII, but also realized that the U.S. had not apologized
to Native Americans or to African-Americans for their experiences. So my
interest was both in cases where governments did apologize and where
governments did not apologize.

K.M.-In the book, you make a distinction between apology offered by
governments and ones offered by heads of state. Why is this distinction
important?

M.N.-It is important because government apologies typically require more
actors and tend to be the result of more deliberation. The parliament,
commissions and historians are involved, so more people are weighing in and
it’s more of a collective decision. Moreover, typically government apologies
have been accompanied by reparations. Examples of such apologies and
reparations are the German government’s apology and ongoing reparations to
surviving Jews after WWII and the state of Israel, and U.S. President Ronald
Reagan providing $20,000 to surviving Japanese-Americans affected by the
internment.

Apologies that come from heads of state are important, of course, because
the person giving them is either the executive or government official, but
they are not necessarily the result of deliberation, so they are more
unpredictable and don’t usually come with any kind of compensation. They
tend to be more fleeting. I thought that’s the distinction that should be
taken into account.

K.M.-Speaking of reparations, in the book you write, "For vulnerable and
disadvantaged groups, moral appeals are often central to political argument
and action. . But at the same time, group members also express skepticism
about the ultimate worth of moral appeals because although they may be
essential, they are infrequently followed by action." Do you feel that
action is necessary for apologies to have meaning?

M.N.-I do. Note that action can be broadly or narrowly defined. We might
think about action as an apology that marks the beginnings of a government
and citizenry talking more seriously about their own history. Action can be
something not regulated by the state or there may be a commission that
recommends compensation. But what is the least desirable is an apology that
is just said and is followed by nothing-no discussion, or any kind of
deliberation or compensation-because then, it falls flat. Action need not be
synonymous with reparations as such, but it needs to be something more than
a mere utterance, which, once said, dies.

K.M.-Have there been cases where an official apology has not been followed
by any concrete steps-a sort of "I apologize, now let’s go home"? You
mention in the book how some governments have refrained from apologizing
mainly because of what might come next.

M.N.-In general, the "let’s go home" apologies have been given by heads of
state. I haven’t found too many cases of governments giving apologies that
haven’t been followed by something. An example would be what’s going on now
in Australia, where there’s resistance at least to doing something that
would be directly tied to the apology. At the same time they’re saying, We
are going to change Aboriginal policy-making, we’re going to take action,
but we’re not going to give money to the specific victims of this particular
government policy [of forcibly removing Aboriginal children from their
parent’s care].

Governments are reluctant to apologize precisely because of the concern that
there are going to be demands for money. But governments have more power;
they decide what they’re going to do. So while there is a tension, I don’t
think it’s a tension that’s insurmountable. The issue is framed by political
elites. They can decide to give nothing and they often times make this
decision.

K.M.-Isn’t there also some dominance relation here? After all, it’s the
dominant group that is deciding what to say and what to give.

M.N.-Absolutely. This is certainly an unequal dynamic. Much of the
dissatisfaction with symbolic politics is that it points up the relative
powerlessness of the groups that are asking for apologies.

If you’re in power and feel that you don’t need anything from the groups
that have victimized you, you would not ask for apologies. It is the less
powerful that do. The less powerful groups have fewer resources and rely
upon moral appeals in order to get what they want. And there’s value, of
course, in bringing morality to bear. That’s just the dynamic of the world
in which we live.

But you’re absolutely right, there is asymmetry here. The powerful can do as
little as they want and, many times, they do nothing. They ignore them. They
won’t apologize. On the other hand, the group can continue to express their
dissatisfaction, and continue to demand it. The demand-just the idea that
they’re being asked for it-can be discomforting to the powerful. That may be
all that the side demanding apology can do.

K.M.-I want to bring democracy into the discussion. It would be easy to
argue that democracy should help countries face their past, but there are
some very striking examples that show that this is not the case. For
example, the United States has not apologized for slavery or the genocide of
the Native Americans. What are your thoughts on this?

M.N.-Democracy is the rule of the majority and there are inherent
disadvantages for minority groups within democracies. (Native Americans, in
this example, are less than one percent of the American population; black
Americans are 12 percent). And even though democracies allow for an
expression of desires and preferences, it doesn’t necessarily mean that you’re
going to get what you want. It typically means that minority groups have to
get the majority on board. That’s why moral appeal is sometimes what’s
needed.

The majority decides whether it will pay any attention to the minority. They
can choose to ignore the minority, and, as I’ve said, they oftentimes do. So
what minorities have to do is try to find a way to make the majority listen.
And usually appeals to history, appeals to the conscience are the peaceful
ways that are used. There are violent ways, of course, but those haven’t
been the avenues chosen by Native Americans or African-Americans for obvious
reasons.

The hope is that public discourse within democracies will force a
discussion. There’s a need for a robust debate in the public arena, which
makes freedom of speech, freedom of universities and other freedoms that
democracy provides so important. Without those freedoms, change definitely
wouldn’t happen.

K.M.-In the context of democracy and the minorities within that democracy,
do you feel that as long as there has been no apology, the power asymmetry
and the domination are still there?

M.N.-Yes, it’s kind of unavoidable. Look at the situation of the Native
Americans. It’s disgraceful and makes one despair a great deal. It’s our
country’s history. We don’t want to talk about it, or we barely talk about
it. Even when we do talk, we certainly talk about it incompletely. And more
than that, I think many Americans thing that the dispossession of the Native
Americans was justified in some way. They think, we certainly are not going
to give anything back, we love the U.S. now and the Native American
circumstance is just the unfortunate result of history. I think that some
dimension of domination will always be there and seems to be unavoidable. It
is also, of course, not a thing that anyone who has a conscience would
celebrate. It should cause us discomfort at the very least and I think there
is no real discussion in the U.S. about Native Americans because of that
discomfort and the implications of taking their situation seriously.

K.M.-You have written, "Feelings of ‘nonresponsibility’ are powerful
constraints against state support for apologies. Feelings of national pride,
derived from certain interpretations of national history, also play a role."
What is shocking is that in each and every case that I know of and that you
mention in the book, the victimizers or their descendents-the dominant
group-deal the exact same way with the victim group and its demands. This
issue seems to cut across civilizations.

M.N.-It is shocking. There are lots of justifications for not feeling
responsible. The most obvious is the argument that "I was not personally
responsible." But, of course, that’s a pretty easy one to challenge. People
aren’t responsible for what goes well in their countries, but they claim it,
right? So it’s kind of selective claiming: "I like the constitution but I
hate slavery." Being part of a country requires the good and bad, but it is
human nature to want to bask in the glory and then ignore the bad. Once I
decide that I’m not responsible for the act, why would I apologize for it?

Once this particular position takes hold, everything else follows and makes
apology impossible. So the point is to always try to deal with that issue of
responsibility by telling the person, "You are not individually responsible,
we get that, but somehow you are a beneficiary of, or you benefited from,
the historical circumstances in which you were born in such a way that you
must now think about making amends."

The challenge is to try and get people to see that they are somehow
responsible. Not that they themselves are responsible, but that somehow they
should accept responsibility, even if they were not personally involved.

One thing the research has shown is that feelings of guilt are determined by
whether you think you are personally responsible or not. If you recognize
that your group, the group with which you are associated, was responsible
and you feel guilt about it, then you’re likely to apologize.

K.M.-How can the descendants of the victimizers argue for an apology?

M.N.-Politicians make it such that the descendents are able to say, "OK,
this happened in the past, apologizing is the right thing to do." It helps
to talk about the past but think about the future. So they use the term
acknowledgement without necessarily assigning guilt. That’s what Australia’s
Prime Minister did. He apologized to Aboriginal Australians
straightforwardly. He basically said, "We acknowledge what happened and we
are sorry." But then he said, "Now we’re moving forward. The reason we are
apologizing is to make a better community for Australian Aboriginal
peoples." So one approach that politicians use is not to dwell upon the
past; even as they acknowledge the past, they quickly move from it. That
seems to be the tactic that works best. If you dwell too much on the past,
if there’s too much discussion about the past, then it becomes fertile
ground for those who oppose giving the apology. The idea is to always keep
looking at the big picture, and one useful big picture is the future. I
think that’s the way that successful apologies are done and politicians
recognize that.

K.M.-Countless massacres and crimes against humanity have been committed in
the last two centuries alone. At some point, one might argue that everyone
has to say sorry to everyone else. Why are some apologies more "important"
than others?

M.N.-The aggrieved groups themselves must ask for it and others have to see
something in it for them. In fact, not everyone is asking for apologies
because there’s a certain distrust of apology. Some people ask, "What’s that
apology going to do?" They think, "They don’t mean it," or "If I have to ask
for it then it’s not worth getting," or "They are morally bankrupt and don’t
even know that they should apologize," or "Whatever they could do for me
wouldn’t be worth it." So there are reasons why some people wouldn’t even
think about asking for an apology, because they think it would be somehow
tainted.

Are some apologies more important than others? I don’t think there are
absolute measures. But at least in politics, it seems, the ones that are
considered worthy are the ones where the people who are giving it stand to
gain too.

K.M.-If a crime happened in the past but continues to have great
implications today and cause great distress, do you think it’s more "worthy"
of being addressed? I have in mind the Native Americans, African-Americans.

M.N.-I agree with the gist of your argument. But many would argue that what
happened in the U.S. happened. That we have found other ways of dealing with
African-American and Native American grievances, and apology is kind of
beside the point. They would say that an apology would be so polarizing that
it will do more harm than good.

In general, though, I think that if any party is going to do it, it’s the
Democrats, although they haven’t endorsed an apology-not even Bill Clinton.

K.M.-What do you think about gestures by ordinary people who apologize
despite their government’s reluctance to do so?

M.N.-Australia is a good example of that. When former Prime Minister John
Howard refused to apologize, he ended up inadvertently fostering what is
known as the people’s movement. Australians themselves were signing sorry
books. Some critics judged it as political theatre, but I didn’t view it
that way. The Australians were telling Aboriginal Australians, "Listening to
you makes me think about what happened, makes me think about you as a
neighbor that I care about. The government can’t change our attitudes. We’re
citizens, and we can apologize."

It seems to me that an official apology accompanied by real, serious
engagement by the population-as we’ve seen in Canada, Australia and New
Zealand, yet haven’t seen here in the U.S.-makes a big difference in the
quality of life in those countries.
————————————— ————————————————–

2. Mephisto’s Coffee-Table Book
‘Never Again, Again, Again.’ Scrapbooks Humanity’s Genocidal Descent
By Andy Turpin

Far flung from the likes of Rachel Ray and strategically placed back issues
of "Architectural Digest" is a very different kind of coffee-table
photography book that doesn’t scream to be elegantly in the background.
Rather, it just screams.

Human rights and genocide photographer Lane H. Montgomery’s newly compiled
book, Never Again, Again, Again (Ruder Finn Press, Inc., 2008) is a
gruesome, moving and comprehensive masterwork of photographic timelines
encompassing all the major genocides of the 20th century, beginning with the
Armenian genocide and ending its coverage only a few months ago with the
latest news of devastation from Darfur.

Up-to-the-minute death is never something to be proud of, but the book does
its homework.

Contributors on the history of the various genocides, their origins and
aftermaths, include Richard G. Hovannisian, professor of Modern Armenian
history at UCLA; Rabbi Arthur Schneier, president of the Appeal for
Conscience Foundation; Ambassador James Rosenthal, the former director of
State Department Vietnam, Laos and Cambodian Affairs; Terry George, the
writer and director of "Hotel Rwanda"; and Chuck Sudetic, New York Times
Balkan correspondent.

The pictures themselves speak volumes about man’s plunges into the lowest
depths of himself, but the texts chosen to represent each epoch are well
selected and tell recollectory passages, rather than being simply caption
fodder.

An example of which comes through in a cable from Lee Miller, Vogue’s
photographer, on May 8, 1945, upon accompanying the 7th Army to liberate
Dachau. He wrote: "I implore you to believe this is true. No question that
German civilians knew what went on. Railway siding into Dachau camp runs
past villas, with trains of dead and semi-dead deportees. I usually don’t
take pictures of horrors, but don’t think that every town and every area isn’t
rich with them. I hope Vogue will feel that it can publish these pictures."

Vogue ran Lee’s cable below the headline in extra bold: "BELIEVE IT."

Also of note is the extensive coverage of the Cambodian genocide, one rarely
understood and seldom taught in American education facilities. And the
appendix notes on the equally understated Ukrainian genocide perpetrated by
Stalin in the 1930s.

Written of Cambodia to paraphrase the events and mindset of the genocidaires
is the Khmer Rouge slogan, "’To spare you is no profit, to destroy you is no
loss’. 17,000 people entered Tuol Sleng [death camp], only 6 survived."

Perhaps Never Again, Again, Again isn’t Arendt’s Eichmann in Jerusalem or
Werfel’s Musa Dagh, but for those with just a New York minute to spare, it
only takes a minute to look at these photos and be leveled to your core.

ANKARA: Ocaktan: Course of Dink murder trial may change

Today’s Zaman, Turkey
March 22 2008

Ocaktan: Course of Dink murder trial may change

A confirmation by two soldiers of an earlier testimony by a witness
that they had been clearly warned about a plot to assassinate ethnic
Armenian journalist Hrant Dink might change the course of the Dink
trial, according to a member of Parliament’s Human Rights Commission.

Sgt. Maj. Okan S. and Special Sgt. Veysel Þahin appeared in a
Trabzon court on Thursday on charges of dereliction of duty by
failing to take the necessary measures to prevent the murder of Dink,
gunned down outside his office in early 2007. They testified for the
first time at the hearing, corroborating the earlier testimony of
witness Coþkun Ýðci, the ex-husband of a relative of one of the prime
suspects in the Dink murder, that they had previous knowledge of the
plot.
They also said they had informed their superior, Trabzon Provincial
Gendarmerie Commander Col. Ali Öz. The two suspects testified that
they had previously given false statements during the course of the
investigation after being pressured to do so by Öz.

Speaking to Today’s Zaman about the testimony, Human Rights
Commission member and Justice and Development Party (AK Party) Bursa
deputy Mehmet Ocaktan said: `We have investigated whether there was
any neglect or failure to act on the part of the senior officials in
this murder. We received a lot criticism for not listening to the two
gendarmes; however, our authority was limited. We made a decision not
to listen to people who were charged by the court; those individuals
would already be questioned in court, so we did not include them in
the scope of our investigation. We also were careful not to talk
about the involved subjects as the judicial process was still in
progress.’

Ocaktan pointed out that the soldiers’ confession of having been
informed about plans to kill Dink may change the course of the murder
trial. `This has been a total surprise for us. To be frank, we did
not expect these gendarmes to make such a deposition. It seems that
the gendarmerie acted more negligently than the police [in not
preventing this murder]. This may change the course of the Dink
trial. From now on, people will want to know if there are other facts
that need be uncovered in this murder,’ he stated.

22.03.2008

ERCAN YAVUZ ANKARA

National Assembly Makes Amendmemt And Addition To Law On Ensuring Se

NATIONAL ASSEMBLY MAKES AMENDMEMT AND ADDITION TO LAW ON ENSURING SECURITY OF PERSONS SUBJECT TO SPECIAL STATE PROTECTION

Noyan Tapan
March 20, 2008

YEREVAN, MARCH 20, NOYAN TAPAN. The RA National Assembly on March
20 passed in second reading and completely the government-written
bill, by which an amendment and an addition are made to the current
Law on Ensuring the Security of Persons Subject to Special State
Protection. After the first reading, the bill has undergone partial
changes based on some proposals acceptable to the government.

Under the law, if a person subject to special state protection commits
an administrative offence or crime (illegal action), the head of the
group carrying out state protection is obliged to immediately inform
the person subject to special state protection that state protection
may be suspended during the illegal act committed by this person,
as well as he is obliged to immediately inform the head of the
authorized body about expediency of further protection. The acting
president, speaker of the National Assembly and the prime minister
make an exception. By the law, they are subject to state protection
during their term of office. If the person subject to special state
protection continues his/her illegal action after being informed, by
the decision of the head of the group carrying out state protection,
state protection may be suspended during this illegal action, while
in case of committing an administrative offence or crime once more,
state protection may stop.

The law envisages that persons subject to special state protection,
except for those holding the three above mentioned positions, may
temporaraily renounce state protection by informing in writing the head
of the authorized body about it. A retired president of the country,
who also has the right of personal lifelong state protection, may also
behave the same way. He may also renounce state protection for ever.