Book Review: A restless, kaleidoscopic view of an empire’s legacy

The Christian Science Monitor
Thursday
A restless, kaleidoscopic view of an empire’s legacy
Journalist Alev Scott’s book ‘Ottoman Odyssey’ traverses the cultural and social history of the region to explain the present.
 
by Peter Lewis Correspondent
 
 
The Ottoman Empire stretched from Baghdad to Algiers, Mecca to Budapest, Benghazi to Tbilisi before it was dismantled in the wake of World War I. It left its mark, not only on present day Turkey, but also throughout the region. Journalist Alev Scott, whose mother is Turkish and father is British, set out to explore the empire’s legacy.
 
Halfway into her project, Scott was barred from reentering Turkey, where she had been living for a number of years. Her reporting had run afoul of the current Turkish regime. “My entry ban motivated me to go out and explore the ways in which the empire shaped the histories of people,” she writes – putting the odyssey in Ottoman Odyssey. She roams through 11 countries, “asking questions about forced migration, genocide, exile, diaspora, collective memory and identity, not just about religious coexistence.”
 
Under the empire, non-Muslims were allowed to organize their own law courts, schools, and places of worship “in return for paying ‘infidel’ taxes and accepting a role as second-class citizens: a system of exploitative tolerance that allowed diversity to flourish for centuries.” Such was not to be the fate of modern Turkey, with what Scott witnesses as the state’s “fierce nationalism and a racism derived from the long-held belief that Turks are genetically superior to Arabs, and, by extension, anyone with dark skin.”
 
Scott’s writing is restless and kaleidoscopic, hurrying from anecdote to anecdote, insight to insight. One minute you are in Armenia with her, driving past the ruins of a village that was toppled in the 1988 earthquake and in the next you are passing a village inhabited by Yazidis, a persecuted minority who were branded devil-worshippers. This type of minutiae peppers the travelogue.
 
As for the Armenian slaughter of the early 20th century, which nations around the world have condemned as genocide, “It is the one thing that almost all Turks, regardless of religion, background or political alliance, agree on: the genocide is a myth.” This denial, Scott suggests, in rooted in the Turkish educational system, which is dictated by the state.
 
As Scott travels on – to the Dodecanese islands, the Balkans, the Levant – she experiences and writes compellingly of those serendipitous moments of travel. After being denied permission to return to her apartment in Istanbul, she writes, “I can be ‘of’ Turkey while I am not in it. Geography does not confer identity. It makes us homesick, but it does not define us.”
 
Speaking Turkish is a great pleasure for her and a thread that ties together these far-flung journeys. “Again and again on my travels, I saw this – language is the key to a shared culture, and to understanding people.” On the other hand, she acknowledges the many barriers: “I thought about people who lack this privilege to cross borders freely, about  those who have never left home, those who can never return, and those who identify with an ancestral land they have never seen.” She continues, “The more I travelled, the more powerful and yet obscure I found the emotional connection between geography and identity.”
 
For all the empire’s scope, Scott brings an intimacy to the proceedings. This is true not only because of the family memories she recalls, but also because of the tight focus she keeps on her subjects. She’s attentive to all their idiosyncrasies.

EU Urges Armenia to Normalize Relations With Turkey Without Preconditions

Sputnik News Service
Thursday 8:17 PM UTC
EU Urges Armenia to Normalize Relations With Turkey Without Preconditions
 
 
BRUSSELS, June 13 (Sputnik) – The European Union confirmed its support for the normalization of relations between Armenia and Turkey and called upon both sides to proceed without preconditions, the EU-Armenia Partnership Council said in a joint statement on Thursday.
 
“On Turkey, the EU reiterated its support for the normalization of Armenia-Turkey relations and stressed the need for both sides to engage in this process without preconditions,” the statement said.
 
The statement also said that Yerevan was designated to receive over 160 million euros ($181 million) worth of assistance from the European Union throughout 2017-2020 and an additional 25 million euros ($28 million) in 2019 “in recognition of Armenia’s determination to pursue a reform agenda and to implement the CEPA [Comprehensive and Enhanced Partnership Agreement] effectively.”
 
The European Union signed CEPA with Armenia in November 2017, saying it does not preclude Yerevan from membership in the Eurasian Economic Union. The partnership agreement covers political dialogue, economic and security spheres.
 
 Armenia and Turkey have strained relations due to their differing assessments of WWI history. Armenia has maintained that around 1.5 million of its people were killed or starved to death by the Ottoman Empire during the war, and insisted on the international recognition of these events as genocide. Turkey has repeatedly denied accusations.
 
As of 2019, a total of 33 states, including Russia, Canada, France and Germany, as well as all states but Mississippi of the United States, have recognized the massacre as genocide.

Rep. TJ Cox Introduces Amendment to Ensure U.S. Aid to the Republic of Artsakh

The office of California Rep. TJ Cox
Thursday
Rep. TJ Cox Introduces Amendment to Ensure U.S. Aid to the Republic of Artsakh (Nagorno Karabakh)
 
 
 
Today, Congressman TJ Cox (CA-21) introduced an amendment to the State-Foreign Operations Appropriations Bill for Fiscal Year 2020. Congressman Cox’s amendment would ensure that vital funding is allocated for the ongoing demining projects in the Republic of Artsakh (Nagorno Karabakh), and would support regional rehabilitation services for infants, children, and adults with physical and cognitive disabilities. The amendment was incorporated with additional foreign aid related amendments, which will be voted on together in en bloc next week as the House concludes debate on H.R. 2740.
 
“Karabakh has one of the highest civilian casualty rates from land mines and unsolicited remnants of war. Children and families shouldn’t have to live under the constant threat of a crippling injury or death from exploding mines,” said Congressman TJ Cox. “My amendment will ensure continued funding for demining and rehabilitation projects in Karabakh. I’m committed to working with my colleagues on the Armenian Caucus, the Armenian National Committee of America, and the HALO Trust to restore communities, and ensure the region is landmine free in the near future.”
 
“We join with Armenian Americans from across California’s Central Valley and throughout the United States in thanking Congressman Cox for his leadership in securing continued appropriations for the U.S. aid program for Artsakh a meaningful American investment in peace and Artsakh’s democratic development,” said ANCA Executive Director Aram Hamparian. “We are particularly gratified that this humanitarian aid will help de-mine Artsakh saving lives and opening up new land for families and farming and also to provide desperately needed regional rehabilitation services for individuals injured by mines and for all those living with physical or cognitive disabilities.”
 
Watch Congressman Cox Speak on his Amendment Here
 
Background: The Republic of Artsakh (Nagorno Karabakh) is locked in a frozen conflict that flared amidst the collapse of the Soviet Union. The conflict which became an all-out war between 1992 1994 took the lives of close to 20,000 people and hundreds of thousands more were displaced as a result. While an agreed ceasefire has been held for over two decades, the lack of a formal end to the war has left the Armenian people of Artsakh isolated. Since 2000, USAID funding for demining projects in the region has allowed for the clearing of 4,727 acres of former minefield and the eradication of close to 4,000 landmines and 8,000 items of unexploded or abandoned ordnance.

Sports: Armenian football team advances 9 spots in FIFA rankings

Panorama, Armenia
Sport 19:42 14/06/2019 Armenia

FIFA announced on Thursday the new ranking for national teams as of June 2019, with the Armenian national team moved up by 9 positions to hold the 97th now.

According to the new ranking, the list is still topped by Belgium, followed by France and Brazil.

Among Armenia’s competitors in the Euro 2020 Group J Italy holds the highest 14th position, Bosnia and Herzegovina is the 39th, Greece – 52nd, Finland – 56th, and Lichtenstein is the 186th.

Turkish press: Turkey’s first-ever Armenian-Turkish TV channel begins airing

DAILY SABAH WITH AA
ISTANBUL
Published13.06.201912:42
Updated13.06.201917:36

The first-ever Armenian-Turkish TV channel in Turkey began broadcasting after two years of preparation work and efforts to establish the channel.

Luys TV, which means “light” in Armenian, was established by journalist Aram Kuran and has began airing with a team of 21 employees.

Aram Kuran. (AA Photo)

Kuran, editor in chief of the new channel told Anadolu Agency that they went through many arduous ways during the establishment process of the channel but they received great support, especially from President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan.

One of the early high-profile guests of the channel was former Parliament Speaker, Prime Minister and Transport Minister Binali Yıldırım, who appeared on the channel on March 3 for a broadcast ahead of the March 31 local elections, in which he ran for Istanbul mayor as the candidate of the People’s Alliance formed by the ruling Justice and Development Party (AK Party) and the Nationalist Movement Party (MHP).

The channel initially started broadcasting on Jan. 6, 2019 by publishing Christmas rituals online, while it broadcasts weekly news now in Western Armenian — one of the two branches of the modern Armenian language — for the first time in Turkey every Friday evening at 8:00 p.m. There is also live broadcast twice a week.

“Once we started broadcasting, we received amazing feedback from the audience. This has doubled our excitement,” said Kuran, adding that when they examined the ratings, they saw he need for such a channel.

“That’s why I’m so happy. I thank my team and my country. I would especially like to thank our Armenian citizens who watch us abroad. Especially those who watch our broadcasts from abroad are very happy,” Kuran said.

Anchor Barkev Samuelian during the recording of the channel’s news bulletin. (AA Photo)

The channels programs, which range from shows in which guests discuss the most important issues of the Armenian community to cultural ones, and 70 percent of the programs specifically prepared for children are in Armenian and 30 percent in Turkish.

Kuran said that they are currently broadcasting news provided by national channels and agencies such as Anadolu Agency by translating them into Armenian, adding that they are planning to publish news on a daily basis in the near future.

He also thanked Turkish public broadcaster the TRT for its support as it provided the channel with documentaries about minorities from its own archives.

Publishing and broadcasting is a family business for Kuran, whose father was among the first masters in Turkey that made color printing. Kuran himself worked as a photojournalist and columnist before launching the Luys newspaper.

Apart from Luys, Istanbul houses other Armenian minority newspapers, such as the 110-year-old Jamanak, the bilingual Agos, the Marmara and the Paros magazine, as well as a publishing house called “Aras”, which mainly prints Armenian literature and works on Armenian culture.

Turkish press: First Turkish-Armenian TV station launched – Turkey News

Turkey’s first Turkish-Armenian television station has hit the airwaves, according to the journalist spearheading the project.       

 “Every Friday night, for the first time in Turkey we’re broadcasting news in Western Armenian,” said Aram Kuran, the station’s chief, referring to one of the two branches of the Armenian language.       

“We also have live broadcasts two days a week,” he told Anadolu Agency, adding that they hope to expand the program schedule.        

Turkish, a multiethnic, multicultural society, has a sizeable population of ethnic Armenians.       

The station’s team started work on Luys TV- meaning “light” in Armenian – nearly two years ago, Kuran explained.       

Kuran thanked Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan for his support during the setup process, even as they faced some difficulties.       

The station will include news items from Anadolu Agency as translated into Armenian, as well as spotlights on politics, fashion, culture, contemporary issues, and music and programs for children, he added.     

Most of the programs will be in Armenian, he explained, but some will be in Turkish as well.       

National Turkish broadcaster TRT has also given the station access to its archive, including documentaries on minorities, he said.       

Turkey, Armenian, tv channel

Turkish press: US gets new archbishop from Istanbul’s Bakırköy – Turkey News

 

For the first time in history, a Turkish citizen has been chosen as the archbishop of the U.S. to lead the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America.

Elpidophoros Lambriniadis, who was born and raised in the Bakırköy district of Istanbul, is chosen to lead all the Orthodox and Greek congregation in the U.S.

A native of Istanbul, Lambriniadis had been serving as the principle of the closed Halki Seminary on Heybeliada, an island off Istanbul’s coast, and teaching as a professor at the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki in Greece. Lambriniadis said he was chosen by the council called “Holy Council’ (Synod) of the Greek Orthodox Church, which consisted of 12 members and led by the Patriarcht Bartholomeos in Istanbul.

“It is the first time in history that a Turkish citizen is chosen as the archbishop of the United States. This has a significant importance for Turkey because the archbishop of the U.S. is the religious leader of all the Greek foundations in the United States. It means he also has a political impact. Therefore this is great opportunity for Turkey because someone who knows Turkey, who understands Turkey and who speaks Turkish is going to lead the Greekcongregation in the U.S., the importance of this, is so obvious,” Lambriniadis told daily Hürriyet in a recent interview.

Lambriniadis said this situation could also serve to improve relations between Turkey, the U.S. and Greece.

“The archbishopric in the U.S. has an open line with the White House constantly. The U.S. government has many times expressed the problems of the Fener Greek Patriarchate in Istanbul in its human rights reports. Starting from the issue of the closed Halki Seminary in Heybeliada, it is not easy to find solutions to these problems in Ankara or Athens. However, there is a much higher possibility of finding a solution to these kind of problems by sitting around the same table in Washington. Especially re-opening the Halki Seminary in Heybeliada would have a very positive impact on U.S.-Turkey relations,” he added.

Lambriniadis said a big ceremony will be held in the Holy Trinity Cathedral in New York on June 22 before he takes on the post. Besides the diplomats of some other countries, he also invited Turkish diplomats to this significant ceremony.

Lambriniadis was born and raised in Bakırköy, recalling the formative days of his youth in the district which has been home to a diverse population.

“I had a very beautiful childhood in Istanbul. We used to play all together as Turkish, Greekand Armenian children. I had wonderful friendships, and we had very good relations with our neighbors. Our next door neighbor, who were a Muslim family, were sharing with us their meat every Feast of the Sacrifice Holiday [Eid al-Adha], and we were sharing with them our Yeast bread and Christmas meal every year. My best friends are still my friends from Bakırköy,” he said.

Lambriniadis said following the events in Cyprus in the 1970’s, they had to flee Greece in 1977 – when he was 10 years old — because of rising reactions toward the Greek population in Istanbul. “It was very hard for us to leave our motherland and move. The Greeks in Greece were mocking us because of our different Greek accent and the children at school were shouting and despising us, saying, ‘You are Turks!” he added.

Having completed his military service in the southern town of İskenderun in Turkey and graduating from the university in Thessaloniki in 1991, Lambriniadis moved to Germany for his master’s studies.

During that time, Patriarch Bartholomew was chosen as the patriarch of Istanbul, triggering a new wave of excitement among the young Greek religious community abroad. “He was the most loved metropolitan bishop, and after his election, I decided to return to Istanbulimmediately. I came back to Istanbul in 1994, I was already a Turkish citizen, therefore following my sanctification as a priest, I did my military service in Ankara and İskenderun,” he added.

When asked where he felt he belonged to the most, Lambriniadis said, “Istanbul, of course!”

“I think my father has had a huge impact on me about Istanbul. Because he never wanted to go to Greece, he never liked it there and he always wanted to return to Istanbul. In 2004, he had a stroke and had said, ‘I don’t want to die in Athens, take me to Istanbul with you.’ You won’t believe me but my paralyzed father started walking again one week after he returned to Istanbul! ‘Well! Bring me a Turkish newspaper and make me a cup of tea, I am going to do a crossword puzzle,’ he had said to me, because he could only solve the crossword puzzles in Turkish! I lost him two years ago, and I buried him in the Bakırköy GreekCemetery,” Lambriniadis said.

“I am moving to the U.S., but I will be visiting Istanbul often, because my heart remains in Istanbul.”

Turkey, U.S., Greek Orthodox Archdiocese, Lambriniadis, Istanbul

Verelq: Will Pashinyan forget his past? the deputy’s proposal raised a wave of dissatisfaction

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Armen Khachatryan, a deputy of the ruling “My Step” faction of the National Assembly, has put into circulation a project on making an addition to the RA Criminal Code, which plans to criminalize actions aimed at publicly insulting a representative of the government or obstructing the performance of his official duties, and punish for it with a fine or even imprisonment.


According to the draft, it is proposed that publicly insulting a representative of the government in connection with the performance of his official duties shall be punished with a fine in the amount of one hundred to three hundred times the minimum salary or imprisonment for a maximum period of one month.


In addition to this, taking actions to hinder the performance of official duties of a representative of the government, if there are no features of the crime provided for in Article 316 of the Criminal Code (exerting violence against a representative of the government), will be punished with a fine in the amount of two hundred to five hundred times the minimum salary or imprisonment for a maximum period of two months.


Passions have been boiling over this project since yesterday, social media users are calling on the MP as well as Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan not to go down this path, which leads to the final dictatorship. After all, Pashinyan himself has been criticizing government officials for years, being both a journalist and a member of the National Assembly.


Political scientist Stepan Danielyan thinks that how? Serzh Sargsyan prepared a constitution for Nikol Pashinyan, so the latter’s deputies are preparing a gift for the next government.


“Actually, everything that Nikol Pashinyan has been doing all his life, what environmentalists, activists of Mashtots Park, Electric Yerevan, 100 dram movements, some of which are still in the parliament and the government, are being criminalized.


In the next phase, the law on rallies will be tightened and restrictions on the right to freedom of speech will be introduced.


All this was predicted, but the people of Imkayl do not believe that these laws will work against them in the not-too-distant future, because they will find themselves on the other side of the barricades again.


Unlike in the past, all this is done on behalf of the people, so in the future no one will be able to protest against these laws,” says Danieline.


He also drew a parallel between this project and the introduced thesis that since there is a danger of counter-revolution, it is necessary to put aside playing democracy and strengthen the government.

Verelq: “Black swan” on the Karabakh front: Baku may be attacked

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The Ministry of Defense of the Republic of Artsakh announced that there is an increase in training flights of Azerbaijani drones and military aviation along the front line, which often violate the established flight zone.


Within the so-called elevator diplomacy, Azerbaijan maintained a ceasefire on the border for some time, but it did not last long. A few days ago, an Armenian soldier was killed on the border of Artsakh, and the Azerbaijani armed forces started firing larger-caliber weapons in the direction of Armenian positions.


All this is happening in the conditions of Turkish-Azerbaijani military exercises in Nakhichevan. In this way, Baku is trying once again to use the threat of force to achieve unilateral concessions from the Armenian side on the Karabakh issue.


The Armenian parties have clearly stated that they are not going to cede territories, that is, the Madrid principles, on which the negotiations have been going on in recent years, are no longer relevant.


However, the co-chairs sent a clear message to Yerevan that Artsakh’s return to the negotiation table is impossible at the moment due to Baku’s uncompromising position. In order not to bring the issue to a dead end, RA Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan has to continue the negotiations in the RA-Azerbaijan format, meeting with the president Ilham Aliyev: If the negotiations break down, the alternative is a full-scale war, which is not in the interest of the superpowers, including the Minsk Group member Russia, the United States and France.


A full-scale war in Karabakh will cross the East-West energy-transport logistics, the Southern Gaza Corridor, which involves the delivery of Caspian energy carriers to Europe, bypassing the Russian Federation. A large-scale war that would disrupt the creation of that energy-transport corridor bypassing Russia is not in the USA’s interest.


As for the Russian Federation, Moscow is creating close economic, energy and transport ties with Azerbaijan, besides, the military-technical cooperation is also at a high level. Russia does not want the destabilization of its southern neighbor, Azerbaijan, which will also affect Russia’s North Caucasus. Parallel to that, RA is Russia’s number one strategic ally in the South Caucasus, a CSTO member ally, which means that in case of Azerbaijani aggression against RA, Russian troops must stand by RA and the Armenian people.


However, in geopolitics there is the so-called “black swan” (“чёрный лебедь”) phenomenon, that is, when unforeseen developments occur that change the entire geopolitical landscape. The April 2016 four-day war was also such a “black swan”. No one predicted such a military operation by Azerbaijan. Baku, finding the right time and the gaps in the Armenian positions and the vanguard, went on the attack and recorded success. Baku occupied certain positions in the north of Artsakh and the Lele Tepe hill in the south of Artsakh. They are springboards for a future full-scale war against Artsakh.


Azerbaijan can get Turkey’s support and, taking advantage of the tense internal political developments in Armenia, including the RA-Artsakh contradictions, make a miscalculation, hoping that the Armenian parties are busy fighting each other and go on the offensive without receiving the silent consent or neutral position of the superpowers.


RA and Artsakh should beware of Baku’s unpredictable behavior, which may be based on miscalculations: internal political tension in RA, pre-election situation in Artsakh and internal contradictions between Artsakh elites and certain problems observed in Armenian-Russian relations.

Verelq: The CE appreciates Pashinyan’s commitment to be ahead of judicial reforms. Jagland

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The Secretary General of the Council of Europe Thorborn Jagland sent a letter to the RA Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, emphasizing that the Council of Europe greatly appreciates the commitment of the RA Prime Minister to pursue the agenda of judicial reforms.


Here is an unofficial translation of Jagland’s letter, as well as a copy of the original.


“Dear Mr. Prime Minister,


I want to thank you and your government for the warm reception shown to the members of the Council of Europe delegation who visited Armenia on May 30 and 31, as well as for the constructive discussions with them.


The Council of Europe greatly appreciates your commitment to pursuing the judicial reform agenda. We also share your assessment that it is necessary to multiply the efforts aimed at fighting corruption and to reform and restructure the judicial system in accordance with the Constitution of Armenia and Armenia’s international obligations.


A strategy of comprehensive and forward-looking judicial reforms implemented quickly and decisively will properly realize the legitimate goals of your government. That strategy can be built on three pillars: vigorous anti-corruption efforts, increasing the independence and effectiveness of the judiciary, and addressing human rights violations. It can be guided by the conclusions of the relevant structures and monitoring mechanisms of the Council of Europe, in particular, the European Court of Human Rights, the Venice Commission and GRECO. Such a strategy will ensure credibility towards reforms, their predictability and continuity of international support.


The Council of Europe is ready to actively participate in the implementation of these reforms within the Action Plan, which will be launched in a few days in Yerevan with the participation of the Deputy Secretary General.


Looking forward to continued cooperation,


Sincerely yours,


Thorbjorn Jagland.”